Mountain railway

Summary

A mountain railway is a railway that operates in a mountainous region. It may operate through the mountains by following mountain valleys and tunneling beneath mountain passes, or it may climb a mountain to provide transport to and from the summit.

Brienz Rothorn Bahn ascending Brienzer Rothorn in the Swiss Alps
Vall de Núria Rack Railway, Spain

Mountain railways often use narrow gauge tracks to allow for tight curves in the track and reduce tunnel size and structure gauge, and hence construction cost and effort. Where mountain railways need to climb steep gradients, they may use steep grade railway technology, or even operate as funicular railways.

List of mountain railways edit

Argentina edit

Australia edit

Austria edit

Bolivia edit

Brazil edit

Canada edit

Chile edit

China edit

Colombia edit

Croatia edit

  • Lika line
  • Rijeka line

Eritrea edit

France edit

Germany edit

Georgia edit

Greece edit

Hong Kong edit

India edit

Isle of Man edit

Israel edit

Italy edit

Japan edit

Mexico edit

New Zealand edit

Norway edit

Peru edit

Romania edit

 
View from Oravița – Anina railway in 2010.

Russia edit

 
Apsheronsk railway

Slovakia edit

Slovenia edit

Bohinj railway

Spain edit

Switzerland edit

Taiwan edit

United Kingdom edit

United States edit

Venezuela edit

Vietnam edit

Mountain railways in fiction edit

The Culdee Fell Railway is featured in the book Mountain Engines, part of The Railway Series by Rev.W.Awdry.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Described by the operator, Linz AG Linien In German
  2. ^ Se construye Archived 2007-03-10 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Schwarza valley line
  4. ^ "Georgian Railway".
  5. ^ Map of Huancayo – Huancavelica
  6. ^ "Huancavelica upgrade". Railway Gazette International. 1 Jun 2006. Retrieved 16 September 2019.
  7. ^ "El Tren Macho reanudó sus operaciones entre Huancayo y Huancavelica". El Comercio (in Spanish). 5 Dec 2011. Retrieved 16 September 2019.
  8. ^ Apsheronsk railway
  9. ^ Tourist Railway
  10. ^ "Unsere Geschichte: Von der Visp-Zermatt-Bahn bis zur BVZ Holding AG" (in German, French, and English). Brig, Switzerland: BVZ Holding AG. Retrieved 2017-07-03.

External links edit