Haapamäki–Seinäjoki railway explained

Haapamäki–Seinäjoki railway
Status:Open
Locale:Central Finland
South Ostrobothnia
Start:Haapamäki
End:Seinäjoki
Continuesfrom:Tampere–Haapamäki railway
Owner:Finnish government
Operator:VR Group
Linelength Km:117.9
Tracks:1
Electrification:None
Speed Km/H:100
Map Name:map_name
Map State:uncollapsed

The Haapamäki–Seinäjoki railway is a railway running between the Haapamäki railway station and the Seinäjoki railway station in Finland. It is part of the historical TampereVaasa railway; its other segments as known today include Tampere–Haapamäki and Seinäjoki–Vaasa.[1]

Overview

The Haapamäki–Seinäjoki railway stretches approximately 117.9km (73.3miles) long, connecting the regions of Central Finland and South Ostrobothnia. It consists of one track for its entire length, and is unelectrified.[2]

History

The construction of the Tampere–Vaasa railway became relevant towards the end of the 1870s. In 1877-1878, the line was confirmed, and the formal decision to build the line was made during the concurrent session of the Diet of Finland. The construction was initiated in 1879; the section between Vaasa and Alavus was opened for provisional traffic on 10 November 1882, and the Tampere–Alavus segment followed on November 22. In September 1883, the railway was formally inaugurated and transferred under the ownership of the Railway Administration.[3]

Services

VR Group operates two daily regional train services in each direction on the route Jyväskylä–Seinäjoki, as well as two additional services per direction between Seinäjoki and Ähtäri. On the Haapamäki–Seinäjoki line, these services call in Pihlajavesi, Myllymäki, Eläinpuisto-Zoo, Ähtäri, Tuuri and Alavus.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Iltanen, Jussi . Radan varrella: Suomen rautatieliikennepaikat . fi . 978-951-593-214-3 . Karttakeskus . 2010.
  2. Book: Voutilainen, Jarkko . Vähäliikenteiset radat: Tilanne ja tulevaisuus 2020 . Peni-Nyman . Anniina . Kiiskinen . Lauri . . 2020 . 978-952-317-789-5 . Helsinki . 68-72 .
  3. Book: Valanto, Sirkka. Suomen rautatieasemat vuosina 1857-1920. Finnish Heritage Agency. 1982. 951-9074-68-6. Helsinki. 44. fi.
  4. Web site: VR long-distance traffic timetable for the period 28 March−6 June 2021. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20210314105112/https://assets.ctfassets.net/gshi3wijcp49/7kKMlTE3e0gkd137zUT712/eb6301cf99ad3326f66febb134b3ca31/Kaukoliikenteen_aikataulut_28.3.-6.6.2021.pdf. 14 March 2021. 3 April 2021. VR Group. fi.