Type: | Heavy rail |
Status: | in use |
Locale: | Italy |
Owner: | RFI |
Operator: | Trenitalia |
Tracks: | 2 |
Linenumber: | 32, 72, 73 |
Electrification: | 3 kV DC |
Map State: | collapsed |
The Genoa–Milan railway is a major Italian rail line, connecting the cities of Genoa and Milan. It is 157km (98miles) long and fully electrified at 3,000 V DC. Passenger traffic is managed by Trenitalia.
Unlike the Turin-Genoa line, the Milan-Genoa line was not built as a single project. Instead it developed from the joining of different lines by a shortcut. The first part of the line from Milan to Genoa is the section from Milano Rogoredo to Pavia, which was opened on 10 May 1862 as a branch off the line from Milano Centrale to Piacenza, opened on 14 November 1861. Earlier, on 25 January 1858, the Alessandria-Tortona-Voghera-Casteggio line opened to the public along with the connection between Tortona and Novi Ligure, providing good connections to the by now completed Turin-Genoa line. On 14 November 1867 the opening to traffic of the rail link from Pavia to Voghera completed the link between Milan and Genoa.
The section between Genoa and Novi Ligure over the Giovi Pass used by both the Turin-Genoa and the Milan-Genoa lines, however, was extremely difficult and therefore a new link between Arquata Scrivia and Tortona was built which was opened on 1 October 1916, completing the current form of the line, except for improvements made in Genoa and the deviation opened in 2007 between Milan Rogoredo and Locate Triulzi replacing the 1862 route.
Track | Opened | Note | |
---|---|---|---|
Arquata Scrivia-Busalla | 10 February 1853 | Part of the Turin–Genoa line | |
Busalla–Genoa | 18 December 1853 | Part of the Turin–Genoa line | |
Voghera-Tortona | 25 January 1858 | Part of the Alessandria–Piacenza | |
Milan–Pavia | 10 May 1862 | ||
Pavia–Voghera | 15 November 1867 | Part of the Voghera–Pavia–Cremona–Brescia line | |
Tortona–Arquata Scrivia | 1 October 1916 | Replacing the original line via Novi |
See main article: Tortona–Genoa high-speed railway.
The Tortona–Genoa high-speed railway (also known as the "third Giovi pass") project has been under development to bypass the mountainous and more congested southern section of the line since 1991. this line is forecast to open in 2026.[1]