Berlin–Palermo railway axis

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File:TEN-1 Berlin-Palermo.gif
Planned Berlin–Palermo high-speed rail corridor

The Berlin–Palermo railway axis (German: Eisenbahnachse Berlin–Palermo) is project No. 1 of the Trans-European high-speed rail network (TEN-R), which involves the creation of a 2,200-kilometre-long (1,400 mi) high-speed rail line between Berlin and Palermo.[1][2] It is designated as one of the main transport links connecting Central and Southern Europe, tracking through Germany, Austria and Italy.

Course and sections

From Berlin the line will run to the Central German Metropolitan Region of Halle/Leipzig, to Erfurt and to Southern Germany at Nuremberg, Ingolstadt and Munich. Crossing the border with Austria, it will continue through the state of Tyrol along Kufstein, Wörgl and the capital Innsbruck. It will enter Italian South Tyrol, passing Franzensfeste and Bolzano, run through Northeast Italy via Verona and Bologna, through Central Italy along Florence and Rome, and reach Southern Italy at Naples and finally shall ferry over to Messina and Palermo on Sicily.

Germany

File:Parallelfahrt NIM.jpg
Two ICE 3-trains running on the Nuremberg–Munich high-speed railway line, parallel to the BAB 9 near Greding

The corridor begins at Berlin Hauptbahnhof opened in 2006 and runs via the rebuilt Anhalt Railway (up to Bitterfeld) and Dessau–Leipzig railway to Leipzig Hauptbahnhof. The line shall continue to Erfurt Hauptbahnhof on the Erfurt–Leipzig/Halle high-speed railway, which is currently under construction with the opening scheduled for 2015. Likewise, the southern continuation of this route along the Nuremberg–Erfurt high-speed railway is due to be completed in 2017.

In the meantime, service is provided by tilting ICE T trains running on sections of the Leipzig–Großkorbetha railway, the Thuringian Railway, and the winding Saal Railway via Jena Paradies station, bypassing Erfurt on their way from Leipzig to Nürnberg Hauptbahnhof. From Saalfeld station they cross the Rennsteig ridge of the Franconian Forest via the Leipzig–Probstzella railway and the Franconian Forest Railway and continue along the Bamberg-Hof railway (from Hochstadt-Marktzeuln) and the Nuremberg–Bamberg railway

Further to the south, the corridor runs via the Nuremberg–Munich high-speed railway line opened in 2006 to München Hauptbahnhof passing Ingolstadt Hauptbahnhof. The following section of the Munich–Rosenheim railway has already been upgraded to four-tracks up to Grafing station in order to separate mainline and suburban traffic. Finally the Rosenheim–Kufstein railway runs to the Austrian border and Kufstein station.

Austria

Concrete shell for the New Lower Inn Valley railway

The heart of the Austrian section is the New Lower Inn Valley railway. In particular in the section between Wörgl and Baumkirchen is the most congested line of the whole TEN-network. This congestion is a result of the Austrian national east-west traffic and the international north-south traffic sharing the same line. The largest part of the new Lower Inn Valley railway is already under construction (Kundl– Baumkirchen) and the shorter section between Kundl and Kufstein (or Brannenburg in Bavaria) is being planned. After the completion of the Austrian section trains will be able to operate at up to 250 kilometres per hour (160 mph). In Baumkirchen, new high-speed curves link with the Innsbruck bypass including the Inn Valley tunnel (German: Inntaltunnel), which is already in operation, but still needs to be upgraded for passengers and connected with the existing line to Innsbruck station. The Inn Valley tunnel will connect directly with the future Brenner Base Tunnel, the southern entrance of which leads to the Brenner Railway. The combined Inn Valley and Brenner Base tunnels will be the longest railway tunnel in the world (62.8 kilometres (39.0 mi)).

Italy

In recent decades, the following lines have been built or significantly upgraded in Italy:

The former Berlusconi cabinet had announced that construction of a bridge across the Strait of Messina as a combined rail/road bridge with a length of 3.3 kilometres (2.1 mi). The construction has been halted by later governments.[3] An upgrade of the 400-kilometre (250 mi) Salerno–Reggio Calabria line is also proposed to increase speeds and capacity. On Sicily the 230-kilometre (140 mi) long Messina–Palermo railway to Palermo Centrale is being substantially upgraded.

EU coordinator

On 20 July 2005, the European Union appointed coordinators for the five major trans-European rail transport projects to accelerate the realisation of these projects. It appointed the Belgian Karel Van Miert to coordinate the Berlin–Palermo rail corridor, who upon his death in June 2009 was succeeded by the Irish Pat Cox.

See also

References

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  3. http://www.stradeanas.it/index.php?/content/index/arg/stretto_messina