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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Early years  





2 Final years and closure  





3 Other narrow gauge railways in the Douro Valley  





4 See also  





5 References  














Corgo line






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Linha do Corgo)

Linha do Corgo
Overview
StatusClosed
Termini
  • Chaves
  • Service
    Operator(s)Comboios de Portugal
    Technical
    Line length71.4 km (44.4 mi)
    Track gauge1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) metre gauge

    Route map

    L. M. C. C.
    Ourense

    L. M. C. C.

     Portugal Spain
    (cancelled proj.)

    96.167
    Chaves

    94.343
    Fonte Nova

    89.489
    Tâmega

    L. T.
    Livr. (cancelled proj.)

    87.027
    Vilela do Tâmega

    84.601
    Peneda

    80.993
    Paranheiras

    77.515
    Campilho

    L. Tâmega
    → Livr. (cancelled proj.)

    76.535
    Vidago

    75.788
    Sálus

    74.827
    Oura

    70.557
    Loivos

    64.382
    Sabroso

    L. Tâmega
    → Livr. (cancelled proj.)

    61.268
    Pedras Salgadas

    T. Valpaços
    Mirandela (cancelled proj.)

    57.770
    Nuzedo

    54.187
    Vila Pouca de Aguiar

    T. Valpaços
    Mirandela (cancelled proj.)

    50.443
    P. Aguiar
    (formerly Parada)

    Ponte da Parada

    48.121
    Zimão

    45.134
    Tourencinho

    38.883
    Samardã

    34.958
    Fortunho

    32.228
    Cigarrosa
    (dem.)

    28.787
    Abambres

    25.069
    Vila Real

    17.960
    Cruzeiro

    14.362
    Desvio de Carrazedo

    14.269
    Carrazedo

    11.422
    Povoação

    07.188
    Alvações

    Tanha Bridge × Tanha River

    03.401
    Tanha

    01.183
    Corgo

    Workshops

    B. Corgo L. D.
    Pocinho

    × A24

    L. L.
    Lamego (cancelled proj.)

    00.000
    Régua

    L. Douro

    Location on the network

    Railway map Portugal

    + Régua × Chaves (🔎)

    The Corgo line (Portuguese: Linha do Corgo) was a 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) metre gauge railway line in northern Portugal. It closed in 2009. It ran north from Régua (a junction station on the main Douro railway line running along the Douro Valley) to Vila Real and Chaves. The line was latterly operated by Comboios de Portugal.

    A diesel multiple unit train (secondhand from ex-Yugoslavia) of CP's Série 9700 at Vila Real station
    Vila Real station in 1996

    Early years

    [edit]

    The section from Régua (also known as Peso da Régua) to Vila Real was 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) metre gauge opened in 1906. The extension to Chaves was built in stages, but not completed until 1921. The distance from Regua to Chaves was 97 kilometres. The first short section of track north from Regua was dual gauged (including a large metal girder bridge over the Corgo River), shared with the main Iberian gauge Douro railway line.[1]

    In its early years the line was operated by the CF do Estado (State Railways). Following privatisation of the CF do Estado in 1928, the line came under the Companhia Nacional (CN) until taken over by the CP in 1947. CP introduced economy measures, such as diesel railcars and eventually diesel locomotives in place of steam traction (notably a small fleet of Mallet locomotives built by Henschel).[1]

    Final years and closure

    [edit]

    The Corgo line was steam operated until the 1970s, with steam shunting engines continuing in limited use until the 1980s. The introduction of the Série 9000 and later the Série 9020 diesel locomotives replaced steam working on the line. In 1982 the line featured in an episode of the BBC television series Great Little Railways.

    Due to road improvements and falling passenger numbers, the northern section of the line between Vila Real and Chaves was closed in 1990.

    On 25 March 2009 the remaining service on the line (between Regua and Vila Real) was suspended due to the condition of the track. Repairs were promised and the line was expected to reopen by 2011. In practice, due to budgetary constraints, the repairs have not been forthcoming and the replacement bus service was itself withdrawn with effect from 1 January 2012.[2] The tracks were lifted from Vila Real station by 2011.

    Other narrow gauge railways in the Douro Valley

    [edit]

    See also

    [edit]

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ a b Organ, John (2010). Portugal Narrow Gauge. Midhurst, England: Middleton Press. ISBN 978-1-906008-67-3.
  • ^ Comboios de Portugal, CP press release confirming the closure of the line

  • t
  • e
  • t
  • e

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Corgo_line&oldid=1178626206"

    Categories: 
    Railway lines in Portugal
    Metre gauge railways in Portugal
    Railway lines closed in 2009
    Railway lines opened in 1906
    1906 establishments in Portugal
    Europe rail transport stubs
    Portugal transport stubs
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description is different from Wikidata
    Articles containing Portuguese-language text
    Portugal articles missing geocoordinate data
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    This page was last edited on 4 October 2023, at 21:25 (UTC).

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