Val Gardena Railway Explained

The Val Gardena Railway or Klausen-Plan (Italian: Ferrovia della Val Gardena, German: Grödner Bahn, Ferata de Gherdëina) was a narrow gauge railway operating in the Val Gardena in the Dolomites of northern Italy. It was constructed in 1915/6 when the region was part of the Austrian Empire. Construction was remarkably rapid: begun in September 1915, the line was completed and opened on 6 February 1916.[1] This feat was accomplished by the conscripted labour of some 6,000 Russian prisoners of war.[2] The railway was 32.5km (20.2miles) long, ran between Chiusa (Klausen) and Plan, and had the distinction of being the highest line operated by FS with a summit (at Plan) of above sea level.[3] It closed on 28 May 1960.[4] [5] A long section between Santa Cristina Val Gardena and Ortisei is now a public footpath, the Val Gardena Railway Trail.[6]

Locomotive no. R 410.004 (FS numbering) is preserved adjacent to the Railway Trail at Ortisei. It is an outside cylinder 0-8-0 well tank with outside frames which was built in 1916 by Krauss of Linz (works number 7174) as no. 4154 Class IVc for the KUK Heeresbahn (Austro-Hungarian Military Railways). It was one of seven similar locomotives which worked on the line.[7]

References

46.5753°N 11.6683°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Val Gardena Railway .
  2. Web site: Walk on the Val Gardena Railway Trail - Val Gardena - Dolomites, Italy .
  3. Preserved Steam Locomotives of Western Europe Volume Two, P. Ransome Wallis, pub. Ian Allan, Shepperton, 1971
  4. Narrow Gauge World 15, Oct/Nov 2001, pp.26-29
  5. Web site: Val Gardena Railway .
  6. Web site: Walk on the Val Gardena Railway Trail - Val Gardena - Dolomites, Italy .
  7. Preserved Steam Locomotives of Western Europe Volume Two, P. Ransome Wallis, pub. Ian Allan, Shepperton, 1971