Narrow-gauge railways in Portugal explained

Portugal formerly had several hundred kilometres of narrow-gauge railways, but by 2010 only two lines were still in operation – the Vouga line and the Metro de Mirandela. The lines were operated by Comboios de Portugal and maintained by REFER (or the predecessor CP).

History

The majority of railway lines in Portugal were built to . To reduce construction costs, some lines (notably in rural and mountainous parts of the country) were built to narrow gauge. Portugal's narrow gauge railways were largely built to metre gauge. The lines were mostly constructed from the 1880s onwards, with the final line not completed until as late as 1949.The first major wave of closures took place in the 1980s, notably the Sabor line and the Dão line. The northern extremities of the Corgo, Tâmega and Tua lines (all running north from the main Douro line through the Douro Valley) were closed in 1990/1, with the rest of these lines closing in 2008/9.

Operational lines

Closed lines or converted to broad gauge

Closed in the 20th century

this line ran from Pocinho to Duas Igrejas, passing through very rural areas in the north-east of the country. The line closed in 1988.

Closed in the 21st century

this line ran between Livração and Amarante in the District of Oporto, near the River Tâmega. In 1949 the line was extended as far north as Arco de Baúlhe; it was projected that the line would continue along the Tâmega river valley until the Chaves and Corgo line, but this extension was never built. The section between Amarante and Arco de Baúlhe closed in 1990. The remaining part of the line closed in 2009.

this line ran from Regua, on the Douro River to Vila Real. The line previously ran further north to Chaves (until 1990). The line closed in 2009. There is a small Railway Museum at Chaves.

Converted to broad gauge

this line (Oporto-Guimarães-Fafe) was built as a metre-gauge line. It closed between Guimarães and Fafe in 1986; the trackbed was converted into a cycle way. The rest of the Guimarães line (west of Guimarães to Oporto) was converted to broad in 2004.

Converted to standard gauge (metro)

this formed the basis of the narrow-gauge section of Porto's suburban railway system, starting from Trindade station in Porto along with the Guimarães line. The narrow-gauge lines are no longer in operation, but part of the trackbed of this system has been rebuilt for use by the Porto Metro.

Rolling stock

The narrow-gauge lines were steam-operated, predominantly by Mallet locomotives, for much of their existence. Diesel railcars were introduced as an economy measure in the 1940s, notably the Série 9100 built in Sweden for the Tâmega line in 1949 and the Dutch-built Série 9300 railcars used on several other lines from the early 1950s onwards. The Série 9700 diesel multiple units were purchased secondhand from the Yugoslav Railways in 1980, but frequently proved unreliable.

Metre-gauge diesel locomotives were built to replace steam haulage, especially on freight or mixed trains, notably the Série 9020 built in 1976. Steam remained in use on some lines until the 1980s.

Trams

The tram system in Lisbon, operated by Carris, is also narrow gauge – with a track gauge.

See also

References

Bibliography