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Dovre Line





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(Redirected from Dovre Railway)
 


The Dovre Line (Norwegian: Dovrebanen) is a Norwegian railway line with three slightly different lines which all lead to the historic city of Trondheim.

Dovre Line
Dovrebanen at Kvam Station
Overview
Native nameDovrebanen
OwnerBane NOR
Termini
  • Trondheim S
  • Stations25
    Service
    TypeRailway
    Operator(s)SJ Norge
    Vy
    CargoNet
    Rolling stockClass 73, El 14, El 16, El 18
    History
    Opened1921, the original Dovre Line
    Technical
    Line length553 km (344 mi)
    Number of tracksSingle or double
    Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)
    Electrification15 kV  16.7 Hz AC
    Operating speedMax. 200 kilometres per hour (120 mph)

    Route map

    year
    closed

    Trondheim Central

    Skansen

    Nidareid tunnel

    Marienborg

    Stavne

    Hoem tunnel

    Selsbakk

    Selsbakk tunnel

    Lerbroelva bridge

    Heimdal

    Hegstad
    1987

    Stamvei E6.svg E6

    Kvammen
    1987

    Melhus

    Melhus

    Kvål

    Ler

    Lundesokna bridge

    Lundamo

    Gulfoss
    1993

    Gulfossen bridge

    Hovin

    Støren

    Basmoen

    Snøan

    Soknedal

    Garli

    Berkåk

    Ulsberg

    Orkla bridge

    Orkla tunnel

    Granholtet
    1951

    Indsetveien
    1966

    Gisna
    1966

    Byna bridge

    Fagerhaug

    Myrplass
    1966

    Rønningen
    1951

    Garå
    1966

    Oppdal

    Hevle
    1966

    Driva

    Holan

    Kolstad tunnel

    Drivstua

    Driva

    Øilien tunnel

    Klemma tunnel

    Kleivane tunnel

    Stølan tunnel

    Hestekrubben tunnel

    Grimsdal tunnel

    Nystubekk tunnel

    Høgsnyta tunnel

    Gammelhullet tunnel

    Kongsvoll

    Svoni

    summit (1,024.4 m)

    Hjerkinn

    Gjeitberget tunnel

    Vålåsjø

    Fokstua

    Grønbogen tunnel

    Dombås tunnel

    Dombås

    Dovre

    Tallerås bridge

    Brennhaug

    Sel

    Otta

    Sjoa

    Kvam

    Vinstra

    Harpefoss

    Hundtorp

    Ringebu

    Kvitfjell

    Fåvang

    Losna

    Tretten

    Øyer

    Hafjell

    Hunderfossen

    Hunder

    Fåberg

    Hovemoen

    Lillehammer

    Bergseng

    Brøttum

    Ring

    Moelv

    Ringsaker

    Rudshøgda

    Veldre

    Brumunddal

    Jessnes

    Nordvika

    Hamar

    Akersvika

    Ottestad

    Stange

    Sørli
    Timber freight terminal

    Steinsrud

    Tangen

    Skaberud

    Espa

    Strandlykkja

    Skrårud
    1980

    Morskogen

    Korslund
    1980

    Ørbekk
    1980

    Minnesund bridge

    Minnesund

    Bunes
    1980

    Dokknes
    1967

    Eidsvoll

    year
    closed

    Definition

    edit

    The most inclusive of these meanings of Dovre Line thus includes the other two. To complicate the pattern even more, the first use of the Dovre Line was on the section between Dombås and Støren, completed in 1921. When this last section of the new standard gauge main line between Oslo and Trondheim via Lillehammer and Dombås was opened in 1921, the originally 49 km long narrow gauge section between Støren and Trondheim was made the northern part of the new Dovre Line. When talking about construction of railways in Norway, Dovre Line is the 158,1 km long Dombås - Støren section.[3]

    Sections of the most inclusive use of Dovre Line (Dovrebanen)

    edit
    Section Km Original Name Opened Remark Illustration
    Oslo - Eidsvoll 64 Gardermobanen 1998 Replaced Hovedbanen
    Eidsvoll - Hamar 59 Eidsvold-Hamarbanen 1880
    Hamar - Tretten 88 Eidsvold-Trettenbanen 1894
    Tretten - Otta 83 Eidsvold-Ottabanen 1896
    Otta - Dombås 46 Eidsvold-Størenbanen/Syd 1913
    Dombås - Støren 158 Dovrebanen 1921
     
    Hjerkinn station at the Dovre Line, 1970
    Støren - Trondheim 51 Trondhjem-Størebanen 1864 Narrow gauge until 1919, dual until 1921[4]

    General description and short history

    edit

    The section south of Eidsvoll was until 1998 Norway's first public railway, Hovedbanen, from 1854, 68 km long. The present line between Oslo and Eidsvoll is the 4 km shorter Gardermoen Line, the only high-speed line in the country. Hovedbanen is still in service for freight trains (and local commuters to Dal), but is not considered as a part of Dovre Line. The entire line from OslotoTrondheim is 548 km today. It is a more heavily traveled line than the older Røros Line and electrification was completed 1 November 1970.[2] Between 1935 and 1958, the Dovre Line was served by some of Norway's largest steam locomotives, the 2-8-4 NSB Class 49 "Dovregubben" ("Dovre Giant").

    Compared to the Røros Line, the Dovre Line takes a more westerly course running through the town of Lillehammer and over the mountainous stretches of Dovre, before merging with the Røros Line again at Støren. There is one branch line, the Rauma Line which leaves the Dovre Line at Dombås.

    To avoid the fairly regular river flooding on the railway line along the river Gaula, the Gulfoss Tunnel was completed in 1918 in the Hovin area of Melhus in what is now Trøndelag county.

    On 14 August 2023, the line was severed when the Randklev Bridge, which crosses the Lågen River in Ringebu, slid into the river. The river was swallowed by floodwater, a result of Storm Hans. The bridge was 172m in length and was opened in 1957. It had been closed when the collapse occurred. An adjacent road bridge, which is a former railway bridge, was not affected by the floodwater, but it has been closed as a precautionary measure.[5] The bridge was repaired, and reopened 20 May 2024.[6][7]

    Service

    edit

    The Norwegian State Railways used to be the sole operator of passenger services on the Dovre Line. Since June 2020, the service is operated by SJ Norge under the brand "SJ Nord".[8] In each direction they are four express trains between Oslo and Trondheim, of which two daily departures with the tilting Class 73 units, offering travel times down to 6:37, with departures in the morning and afternoon. There is also a locomotive-hauled afternoon train and a night train with sleeper cars. In addition there is a morning service from Dombås to Oslo. At Dombås there is correspondence with Møre og Romsdal via the Rauma Line.

    The southern part of the line has hourly departures with regional trains from Lillehammer to Oslo operated by Vy. In the northern end, the Dovre Line is served by the Trøndelag Commuter Rail.

    Accidents

    edit

    The original Dovre Line was completed and officially opened on 17 September 1921. The inauguration ended on a tragic note when the train returning from the celebrations collided just after leaving Trondheim in the Nidareid train disaster the next day. The worst Norwegian railway disaster in peacetime also happened on the Dovre Line on 22 February 1975 when two trains collided one kilometer north of Tretten station, killing 27 people and wounding 25. There were approximately 800 people on the two trains.

    Plans

    edit

    The section between Eidsvoll and Hamar is currently being rebuilt and partly realigned as a double track line capable of 200-250 km/h. Some sections has already been opened, and the whole section is scheduled to be complete by 2027.

    Further north, there may be constructed some shorter double track sections between Hamar and Lillehammer. North of Lillehammer there are no plans for lager expansions. Longer crossing loops and renewal of the existing line and its infrastructure are the only plans in the foreseeable future.

    References

    edit
    1. ^ "Norway rail trips: The Dovre line - Fjord Travel Norway". Fjord Travel Norway. Retrieved 14 July 2017.
  • ^ a b Bjerke & Holom 2004, p. 75.
  • ^ Bjerke & Holom 2004, pp. 74–75.
  • ^ Bjerke & Holom 2004, p. 90.
  • ^ Bryant, Miranda (14 August 2023). "Storm Hans: railway bridge collapses in southern Norway". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Archived from the original on 14 August 2023. Retrieved 15 August 2023.
  • ^ NRK (2024-04-12). "Dovrebanen åpner igjen 20. mai". NRK (in Norwegian Bokmål). Retrieved 2024-04-12.
  • ^ "Dovrebanen åpnet for fullt etter gjenåpning av Randklev bru". Tu.no (in Norwegian). Teknisk Ukeblad. 20 May 2024.
  • ^ "Om SJ Norge". www.sj.no. Retrieved 18 September 2019.
  • edit

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dovre_Line&oldid=1224925220"
     



    Last edited on 21 May 2024, at 09:26  





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    This page was last edited on 21 May 2024, at 09:26 (UTC).

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