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The Guardian Lifestyle Travel – 23rd May 2026 – Part 6 – Over Land & Sea: Magical Views and Sea-Hugging Routes on Europe’s Best Coastal Train Lines – Part B – Spain and Italy

The featured image for this article comes from the FEVE lines of Northern Spain. It shows a typical DMU in use on the FEVE network, together with a number of single-car units, these vehicles provide services across the network, (c) Elfo del Bosque and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [151]

The travel section of the Saturday Guardian Magazine on 23rd May 2023 included a few pages about train journeys in Europe (pages 72 to 77). This is the sixth part of a look at those pages. …

Nicky Gardner is lead author of Europe by Rail: The Definitive Guide (Hidden Europe, £21.99). The 19th edition of the book was published on 22nd June 2026. To order a copy for £19.79 go to guardianbookshop. com. Delivery charges may apply!

The featured image for this second part of a look at the coastal routes highlighted by Nicky Gardner focusses on two railways – one in Spain and the other in Italy.

D. Spain: Galicia’s Spectacular Fjords

This railway journey runs from Ribadeo to Ferrol. Best advice is to sit on the right as the train sets out on the journey. This is a 91 mile journey which will take 3hours and 10 minutes. A single ticket will cost about €11.15 single. four trains a day are operated by Renfe.

Nicky Gardner writes:

“This is a superb short journey that follows the western extremity of Europe’s most extensive narrow-gauge rail network, which runs from the French border at Hendaye through the Basque Country and along Spain’s north coast through Cantabria, Asturias and Galicia. I have mixed feelings about the route as a whole, which veers well inland and is often quite humdrum. Hendaye to Ferrol demands 20 hours on trains, but the short ride on the final section is a slow travel adventure running west from Ribadeo, with twists and turns as the train navigates the rugged coastline around Ortigueira.” [1: p77]

“The tacky beach-front development west of Ribadeo is best ignored. Soon we cut away from the motorway and regain the coast, waves breaking to the right and rich eucalyptus forest to the left. There are superb views across the great fjords which are a hallmark of the Galician coast. These are called rías. Look out for Cape Ortegal away to the north. When I rode this route on a mid-winter morning, there were barely a dozen passengers aboard for most of the journey, although numbers picked up on the final half hour as we were joined by shoppers heading into Ferrol.” [1: p77]

“This is the humblest of local trains – those in search of luxury on rails may prefer the El Transcantabrico charter train, which includes Ribadeo to Ferrol as part of a wider seven-night itinerary – at eye-watering prices.” [1: p77]

The train operates as a slow, scenic commuter-style railcar on metre-gauge track. It offers sweeping views of the Atlantic, dramatic eucalyptus forests, and passes directly by the dramatic cliffs and rugged rias (estuaries) of the Rías Altas coast. The journey is only a part of a metre-gauge network which runs West from Bibao. Nicky Gardner suggests that the line between Bibao and Ribadeo is of lesser interest. Other commentators are more positive. “There are two outstanding sections of the Santander to Oviedo section of the railway. Firstly, between Roiz and San Vicente de la Barquera you enter a real wilderness alongside the Rio del Escudo. Secondly, climbing out of Ribadesella towards Oviedo, there is half an hour of very dramatic scenery, cliffs and drops to the river, alongside the River Sella.” [2]

Spain’s FEVE (Ferrocarriles de Vía Estrecha) was a vast,1,250-kilometre network of metre-gauge railways spanning Northern Spain. These lines are now operated by the national rail company Renfe-Feve. The network offers slow, Immersive, scenic travel from Bilbao to Ferrol through the rugged mountains and fishing villages of España Verde. [3]

This MapCarta extract shows the length of the line to the East of Ribadeo. It serves to illustrate the way in which these lines must be seen as an immersive experince of slow travel. The journey is the holiday! [4]

Staying within the length suggested by Nicky Gardner we set off West from Ribadeo. …

Ribadeo Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Ribadeo Railway Station seen from the South from the road LU-P-5207 which bridges the line. [Google Streetview, July 2025]
At the North end of the station site the line passes over the N-634. [Google Streetview, August 2019]
Trains travelling West from Ribadeo set off North from the station, crossing the N-634 before heading West. [Google Maps, June 2026]
On this extract from MapCarta Ribadeo Railway Station is in the very bottom-right of the image – marked ‘A Estacion’ [4]

The line passes in tunnel under the Autovia del Cantabrico (A-8). [Google Maps, June 2026][Google Streetview, August 2023]

The photograph of the tunnel under the Autovia was taken from the minor road which bridges the line just to the East of the tunnel.

A glimpse of the line back towards Ribadeo and an even more fleeting view of the line ahead to the West. both views come from an industrial access road bridge over the line. [Google Streetview, August 2019]

The line East towards Ribadeo from the overbridge carrying the LU-P-5202 road, and the line ahead to the West. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

Typical of the construction of a number of underbridges on the line is this masonry arch structure. It spans a minor road which Goggle sees no need to name. Parapet protection is limited to a tubular steel two-bar fence on both sides of the line. This view is from the South. [Google Streetview, January 2014]

Rinlo is the first station on the route out of Ribadeo. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

The next stop on the line – Os Castros. The short platform is seen here from the Southwest on the approach to the bridge carries the LU-P-5208 road over the line. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

Our first glimpse of one of the two-car DMUs which are part of the fleet serving the line. This is the next stop – seen from the Southwest. The tram/DMU is stationary at the next station on the route – Esteiro.
[Google Streetview, July 2025]

The same stop seen on another occasion from the overbridge to the West of the station. [Google Streetview, January 2014]

A little further West, the line bridges a more significant road – Praia das Catedrais. The single span bridge is of concrete construction, possibly of reinforced beams made of prestressed concrete.
[Google Streetview, July 2025]

The next stop on the line is Reinante which is followed by Barreiros. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The next significant location on the line in the crossing of the estuary of the Rio Masma near Foz. This view looks from the West and shows the two span arch bridge at the western end of the embankment across the estuary. [Google Streetview, October 2013]

This extract from OpenStreetMap.org shows the immediate area of the Masma estuary/Ria del Foz. The embankment and bridge are shown clearly, so is the tunnel which trains enter soon after crossing the bridge heading Northwest. The Green flag in the top-left of the image is the location of Foz Railway Station. [5]

Foz Railway Station: This is the first passing loop on the single-track line West of Ribadeo. This is easier to make out on the extract from MapCarta. [Google Maps, June 2026]

This Mapcarta extract shows the passing loop at Foz Railway Station. [6]

The next station is just a short distance further along the line – Marzan. It is shown here on the extract from Google’s satellite imagery. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Visible also in this close up of the image is another 2-car DMU either entering or leaving the short tunnel under the N-642. [Google Maps, June 2026]

A closer view from above of Marzan Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The station/halt seen from the Southwest on Rua Pena Parda. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

The next significant location is the rail bridge over the estuary of the Rio Ouro close to Bargado, which is one of three bridges in close proximity. [6]

Two of the three bridges are road bridges. [Google Maps, June 2026]
The three-span rail bridge over the Rio Ouro near Bargado. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

North of the Rio Ouro, the line runs through Bargado and into the station at Fazouro, as can be seen on the MapCarta extract above.

Fazouro Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Fazouro Railway Station seen from the South. [Google Streetview, July 2025]
Fazouro Railway Station seen from the Southeast. [Google Streetview, October 2013]

Looking West from the bridge carrying Camiño Praia over the railway, we can see that the line North of Fazouro begins to run closer to the coastline. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

The next stop on the route is Nois Railway Station/Halt, seen here from the road bridge over the line to the South of the station. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

The location shown by MapCarta. [6]

The line continues Northwest on a straight path. This view is taken from the bridge carrying Estrada Ribela over the line at Moreiras. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

The location shown by MapCarta. [6]
The next station/halt is at Canga de Foz, seen here from the South on Cam. Paralelo a Via.
[Google Streetview, July 2025]

Northwest of Cangas de Foz, the line curves over the tightly wooded valley of Rego Real, although close to the N-642 it is well camouflaged by the vegetation. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The line then curves sharply to the North to pass under the Estrada Xeral (N-642). This photograph is taken from the N-642 and shows the line appearing from under the road and then turning back towards the Northwest. [ Google Streetview, July 2025]

The line continues heading Northwest. It is seen here from a minor road running parallel to it. [Google Streetview, August 2019]

Also facing Northwest, this view shows the line running through the eastern suburbs of Burela. [Google Streetview, August 2019]

The station at Burela is another crossing point on the line. [Google Maps, July 2026]

MapCarta also shows the existence of a single siding at the station. [6]
The station in Burela seen from the South, from Rua do Correo. [Google Streetview, August 2025

By this time trains are running very close to the coast. This view from the bridge carrying Estrada Marosa (LU-P-1510) over the line illustrates this. [Google Streetview, August 2025]

MapCarta shows the next length of the line. [6]
A little further to the West, the line dramatically bridges the estuary of the Rio Xunco (c) Jose Enrique Lopez (2018). {google Maps, June 2026]
It then reaches the station/halt of Madeiro, seen here from the access road to the South.
[Google Streetview, November 2013]

The next stop is in the seaside town of San Cibrao. [Google Maps, July 2026]

San Cibrao as shown by MapCarta. [7]
The station at San Cibrao seen from the Southwest on Estrada Cuina Urbana.
[Google Streetview, August 2025]
On the West side of the town of San Cibrao the line bridges the Rio Covo. This view is from the North on Ctra. General -San Cipri [Google Streetview, August 2025]

The next stop travelling West is Bidueiros Halt/Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

After travelling a little further inland, the next stop is Lago Halt/Station which is seen here in a photograph looking West from the LU-P-2602 road. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

Lago Halt on Google’s satellite imagery. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Xove Railway Station is the next when travelling West along the line. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The station as it appears on MapCarta which shows that two loops leave the main running line at the station, one of which allows for passing traffic, there is also a single storage siding which is in use in the Google Maps image above. [7]

A short distance further West is Xove Apeadero Station/Halt. This halt also appears on maps as Xove-Pobo. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The view from the bridge carrying Calle Urbanizacion el Palmeiro across the line at the West end of the station site. [Google Streetview, August 2025]

A few kilometres further West after passing through a series of wooded areas the line dives into tunnel. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The view West from the bridge carrying the minor road over the line which can be seen on the right of the Google satellite image above. [Google Streetview, November 2013]

The tunnel runs almost due West as shown on this extract from OpenStreetMap.org. [8]

The western end of the tunnel is camouflaged by the tree cover and not visible on satellite imagery.

A short distance further West trains stop at Xuances Station/Halt.

Xuances Railway Station/Halt. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Xuances Halt seen from the Northeast. This image is a still from a short video and is low resolution, (c) Ezequiel Donadio, October 2013. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Beyond Xuances, the railway passes under the CG-2.3 road and runs through woods to the South of the road before passing under the LU-862 and running through the woods to the South of that road which eventually is first (according to Google Maps) given the name ‘Estrade Ribadeo’, then ‘De Viveiro a Ribadeo’. Both these lengths of road are named ‘Estrada da Marina’ on MapCarta and ‘Estrada Marina’ on OpenStreetMap.org.

The MapCarta extract below shows the line as it runs through Celeiro, Viveiro and Covas around the estuary of the Rio Landro (Ria da Viveiro).

Ria de Viveiro and the Rio Landra require the railway to run inland to a suitable river crossing point. [9]

Celeiro appears not to have its own halt on the line, Viveiro has two halts – ‘Viveiro Apeadero’ and ‘Viveiro’.

Viveiro Aperdero Railway Station seen from the North, (c) Vanbasten 23 and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [12]

‘Viveiro Apeadero’ or ‘Viveiro Apeadoiro’ Halt. [10]

The Halt seen from the East on Camino Alamira. [Google Streetview, October 2015]
Seen from the West, this is the viaduct which spans both Camino Alamira and Bo. Campo de Verdes (OpenStreetMap.org shows the second of these two roads as being named ‘Rua Campo de Urraca) to the South of the Halt. [Google Streetview, October 2015]

Immediately after crossing the viaduct to the South of Viveiro-Apeadero Station trans entered a tunnel which took the line to the station throat of the main station in Viveiro.

The tunnel between the two stations in Viveiro. [13]

The railway leaves the tunnel and curves round into Viveiro Railway Sation. The points at the throat of the station can be made out towards the top of this image. This is the view looking Southwest from Rúa Alonso Pérez. [Google Streetview, August 2023]
Viveiro’s main railway station sits to the South of the Ria de Viveiro waterfront. [11]
The same area as it appears on Google’s satellite imagery. [Google Maps, June 2026]
Viveiro Railway Station building. [Google Streetview, November 2013]
Looking West along the platform at Viveiro Railway Station, (c) Certo Xornal and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [14]

West of Viveiro Railway Station the line crossed the Rio Landra/Ria de Viveiro via a causeway and bridge.

The bridge across the bay/river at Viveiro. [Google Maps, June 2016

The bridge seen from the  Av. Ferrol (LU-540). [Google Streetview, August 2023]
The next station on the line is at Covas (Covas de Viveiro). [15]
Covas de Viveiro Railway Station. [Google Streetview, November 2013]
Beyond Covas, the line runs parallel to Lugar O Cruceiro with the ocean close by, before it turns inland again to run through a short tunnel and on into forested hills. This view looks West along the line.
[Google Streetview, August 2023]

After wandering through the woods, the line passes through Folgueiro Station/Halt and then into tunnel under the village of O Folgueiro. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Folgueiro Station/Halt facing Southeast. The Viaduct carrying the line over Rego de Escourido can be seen in the distance, (c) Martín Rei Leis. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The Village of O Folgueiro sits over the FEVE line’s tunnel. [16]

The next station on the line is Mosende Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Mosende Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Mosende Railway Station seen from the Northeast on Ave Fraderia. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

North of Mosende, the railway runs under the next forested hill-side in tunnel and wanders around above ground but heavily camouflaged by the forest, then enters another tunnel which runs North-northwest. AT the end of the tunnel trains burst out into open air just short of the LU-862 road.

The line passes under the LU-862 twice after leaving the tunnel. [17]

The tunnel mouth is there in the darkness! [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The line ahead seen from the bridge carrying Lugar O Cruceiro (LU-862). [Google Streetview, June 2025]

There is little to see from the road at the second bridge location the tree canopy obscures the view from the bridge down onto the railway.

Running on the South side of the LU-862, the line crosses the valley of the Rio Sor and enters O Porto do Barqueiro. [18]

The next Halt is at O Vicedo. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

A Satellite image of the station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Continuing heading West, the line runs immediately alongside the LU-862/AC-862 before swinging left into a tunnel and then bridging the Rio Sor as shown below. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

A short tunnel gives way to a bridge over the Rio Sor before the line enters another tunnel and curves round to the North. [19]
The three bridges over the Rio Sor: the railway bridge is furthest from the camera. The bowstring arch viaduct is a wooden deck footpath across the river. The parapets of the LU-862 road bridge can be seen in the right-foreground. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

In tunnel the line swings round through North to North-northeast, before swinging back to the Northwest and entering the Railway Station at O Barqueiro.

The station ‘O Barqueiro’ is on a Southeast-Northwest axis and has a passing loop. [20]

The station seen from the West-Northwest. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

Beyond the station the line turns West and runs in tunnel under O Barqueiro.

O Barqueiro is in the bottom-right of this next OpenStreetMap extract. [21]
The line remains in the hills above the coast wandering around to follow the contours of the land. [22]

The next stop is at Loiba near Pimpin on the map extract above. [Google Streetview, December 2013]

This photograph is taken at the bottom-left of the OpenStreetMap extract above. The camera is facing Southwest from the AC-862 at O Fecellido. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

This image heralds the next length of the line on the extract from OpenStrweetMap.org below. O Fecellido in in the top-right of the extract.

The line now seems to be heading generally Southwest, another relatively long tunnel features on this section of the line. [23]
On this next length of the line trains pass through Espasante Railway station and then a further tunnel. [24]

The view West from the bridge carrying Luger Abasteira over the Line. [Google Streetview, December 2013]

A short distance after the line is bridged it runs into Espasante Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026][25]
Espasante Railway Station, seen from the West. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

The tunnel mouth to the Southwest of Espasante. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The southern portal of the same tunnel. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Breaking out of the tunnel trains travelling West crossed the estuary of the Rio Baleo by means of a bridge and an embankment/causeway.

The Rio Baleo bridge and causeway. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The bridge over the Rio Baleo, (c) Burli 1 (October 2025). [Google Maps, June 2026]
The bridge and causeway seen from the Southeast, (c) Tom Unterwegs (2024). [Google Maps, June 2026]
This extract from OpenStrretMap.org shows the route between Rio Baleo and Ortigueira Railway Station. [26]
The line crossing the tidal zone of the estuary close to the shore, seen from the AC-862 near A Brea.
[Google Streetview, July 2025]

On the approach to Ortigueira Railway Station the line curves to the South passing under three road overbridges. This is the view of the line ahead from the first of those bridges which carries the DR-6123 over the railway. [Google Streetview, July 2013]

This is the view of the line ahead from the second of the two bridges, in Cortés. [Google Streetview, July 2013]

The third of the overbridges carries Estrada da Praia over the line. The site of Ortigueira Railway Station can be seen opening out ahead. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

Ortigueira Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Ortigueira Railway Station as it appears on MapCarta. This is one of the more significant stations on the route. [27]

Ortigueira Railway Station building as seen from the East on Av. Juan Luis Pía Martínez. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

To the Southwest of Ortigueira Station the line runs at high level the AC-862.

The view Southwest under the railway line on the AC-862. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

The line just to the Southwest of the bridge above, seen from Rúa Vía Feve. [Google Streetview, July 2013]

To the Southwest of Ortigueira Sation the line turns beyond South towards Southeast before crossing the next bridge and embankment/causeway. Just before reaching the water it passes under both the older and more modern AC-862. [28]

The view from the older road bridge ahead along the line. [Google Streetview, July 2025]
South of the latest bridge and embankment the line passes through Senra Halt and under a couple of accommodation bridges before once again running over an embankment (quite short this time) with the waters of the Ria de Ortigueira on either side, before passing through San Claudio Halt and then accompanying the AC-862 on its journey West. [29]
A minor road runs immediately alongside the line with the AC-862 visible to the left of this image.
[Google Streetview, July 2025]

The line passes through a short tunnel under the AC-862. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

And runs alongside the AC-862 heading West-northwest. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

The next length of the line turns inland following the valley of the Rio Mere. [30]

As the line turns inland it runs through A Ponte de Mera Railway Station which has a loop to allow services to pass each other. [27]

The same location as it appears on Google Maps satellite imagery. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Two views of A Ponte de Mera Station, both seen from the South. [Google Streetview, July 2013]

South of the Station, the line is carried over the River Mera on a high viaduct. These images show the North end and the South End of that viaduct both seen from the West. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

Given the density of the trees at this location, the viaduct is best seen from the air. Click here and then scroll down through the photographs. [64]

South of the Viaduct, the line continues to follow the west bank of the Rio Mera heading South. [32]

At Raxeiro de Abaixo, the line bridges a minor road, seen here from that road looking East through the bridge. [Google Streetview, July 2025]
The Halt at Santa Maria de Mera is marked as ‘O Rio’ on the OpenStreetMap extract. [Google Maps, June 2026]

A short distance South of Santa Maria de Mera Halt the line crosses the steeply sided and wooded valley of Rego de Guitin (a tributary of the Rio Mera. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The line continues South through relatively dense wood land on the Westside of the valley of the Rio Mera. [33]

The line continues South through the hamlet of A Cuqueira following the valley of another tributary of the Rio Mera – Rego de Loureira. [34]

The Halt which serves the hamlet of A Cuqueira is a couple of hundred metres North of the hamlet as can be seen on this satellite image. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The view North from the road bridge over the line at A Cuqueira. The halt is visible a short distance to the North of the road bridge.

Further South, the line follows the West bank of the Rego de Loureira until close to Cerdido. The line then crosses the river before curving to the West, crossing the river again and, after a short tunnel, heading North for a short distance. The line then curves through West to Southwest and enters the station at Cerdido. [35]

The Rego de Loureira is crossed from West to East bank, then the line curves West. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The track layout at Cerdido Railway Station is shown on this MapCarta extract. [36]

The station on Google’s satellite imagery. [Google Maps, June 2026]
The station building. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The line bridges two roads to the South of Cerdido Railway Station. The arched bridge on the left spans the old road, the later bridge on the right spans the modern AC-110. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
South of the bridge over the AC-110, the line heads Southwest away from the road and then turns West. [37]

The view Southwest along the line from the minor road overbridge one third in from the right side of the OpenStreetMap extract above. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The next halt along the line is at Entrambarrias which can be seen at the bottom left of the last OpenStreetMap extract. [Google Maps, June 2026]

There is little of note along this next length of the line. [38]
Approximately at the centre of this next length of the line is the hamlet of Labacengos. [39]

The hamlet of Labacengos had its own Halt. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Labacengos Halt seen from the minor road on the hillside above. This view looks Southwest through the site of the Halt which is visible in the distance. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The bridge over the road at the East end of the halt, seen from the Northwest. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

At the centre of this next length of the line shown as an extract from OpenStreetMap.com, is the Halt at Moeche. [40]

The line heading West-northwest from the overbridge carrying the CP-4904 across the line. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

A short distance to the West this is the view of the line from the track which provides access to the East side of the track at the halt at Moeche. [Google Streetview, August 2019]

The Halt at Moeche, as it appears on MapCarta. [41]

The Halt at Moeche: seen from the East. Pedestrian access to the Halt was from the West where a gravel track left the minor tarmacked road to the Northwest of the line. [Google Streetview, August 2019]
An accommodation bridge Southwest of Moeche, seen from the track to the South. [Google Streetview, September 2011]

The line turns South after passing over another local road. As it heads South it passes under another local road and then runs into the Halt at A Palia. [42]

The rail-over-road bridge mentioned first above. [Google Streetview, September 2011]
The road-over-rail bridge mentioned above. Google Maps, June 2026]

Before looking at A Palia Halt, it is worth noting the single car DMU on the line just North of the minor road bridge in the last image.

The Halt at A Palia. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The Halt at A Palia seen from the North. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The line leaves A Palia heading South but then turns first to the West and then to the Northwest before curving round to the South and then West again.

The next length of the line as described above. [43]

Just as the line turns to the North is passes over and then under access roads from the farm seen here. [Google Maps, June 2026]

This photograph is taken from the minor road running on the North side of the line at the left hand side of the image, looking back towards the structure at the centre of the image above. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

Looking back along the line from the next overbridge. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

Looking ahead along the line from the same overbridge. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The line bridges the next minor road. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

At Vilaverde, the line passes under one village access road. [Google Streetview, September 2011]

And then a second access road bridges the line. [Google Streetview, September 2011]

The line continues heading generally in a westerly direction. [43]

The next halt is at Lamas, shown here with the bridge to its Southwest over the AC-862. [Google Maps, June 2026.

Lamas Halt next to the AC-862. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The bridge over Rivoira (AC-862) to the Southwest of the Lamas Halt and seen from the North. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

A short distance to the West, the line is bridged by another minor road. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Then it is bridged by a farm access track. [Google Maps, June 2026]

A 180 degree loop takes the line round towards the station at San Sadurnino (just of this extract to the bottom left0. As it runs round the loop it passes under three accommodation bridges and over the Rio Aceiteiro – all shrouded in tree cover. Approaching the station, it is bridged by a minor road at A Casa da Miguela. [44]

The view Southwest along the line towards San Sadurnino Railway Station. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

San Sadurnino Railway Station sits at the top right of this next extract from OpenStreetMap.com. [45]

San Sadurnino Railway station as it is shown by MapCarta, [46] and by Google’s satellite imagery, below. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The Station seen from the South. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

Looking back towards San Sadurnino Railway Station from the bridge carrying the DP-7603 across the railway line. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The old road bridges the line literally only a couple of metres to the West of the more modern road bridge. Theis view looks ahead down the line from the older bridge. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

Further West the line crosses a minor road by means of this arch bridge. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

Perhaps 800 metres further West the line in bridges by another minor road. This is the view West from the bridge. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The next length of the line heads West through Pedroso de Naron Halt. [47]

A short distance before reaching Pedroso de Naron Halt the line bridges Aldea Catasol. This image is taken from a point just to the North of the bridge. [Google Streetview, December 2013]

Pedroso de Naron Halt. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The Halt seen from the East. [Google Streetview, December 2013]
The Halt from the Southeast on the AC-112 [Google Streetview, June 2025]

To the West of the Halt the AC-112 (Aldea Pedra) bridges the line. This is the view East from the bridge carrying the AC-112 over the line. The halt can be glimpsed, almost hidden by trees, in the far distance. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The line heading West relatively close to the AC-112 is seen here from the road just to the Northwest of the bridge above. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

This next length of the line shows it continuing to run West, passing through the halt at Sedes and crossing the AG-64 (Autovia Ferrol Villalba), before turning to the South [48]

This view looks back along the line to the East from the Camino da Borrallada de Sedes which runs on the South side of the line. The accommodation bridge in the picture has two ramps on the South side of the line which run parallel to it and the road. [Google Streetview, December 2013]

Further West, the line is bridged by Aldea Carbello which links the Camino da Borrallada de Sedes with the Aldea Placente (AC-112) to the North of the line. [Google Streetview, December 2013]

Looking back East along the line from the bridge carrying the Camino de Vilallonte over the line, and below, looking West from the same bridge. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The Halt at Sedes sits to the North of the Camino da Borrallada de Sedes, which bridges the line immediately to the West of the Halt. The line then bridges the AG-64 (Autovia Ferrol Villalba). [Google Maps, June 2026]

Two views from the bridge carrying Camino da Borrallada over the line. The first shows the Halt at Sedes, the second shows the bridge over the AG-64. [Google Streetview, December 2013]

A short distance to the South of the AG-64, the line bridges Camino do Monte Aberto/ Lugar Prados. This photograph looks Southeast to Northwest under the bridge. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

As the line continues South it bridges one track and is then bridged by another beofre being crossed by, first Camino da Presa do Rei and Estrada do Trece, before passing through the Halt at As Ferrerias.

Camino da Presa do Rei bridges the line. [Google Maps, June 2026]
The view of the bridge from the Northeast on Camino da Presa do Rei. [June 2025]
Just to the North of the Halt the line bridges Estrada do Trece. This is a view of the bridge from the South. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The Halt at As Ferrerias, seen from the North. [Google Streetview, August 2019].

The line continues South-southeast from As Ferrerias Halt. [49]

As Ferrerias Halt seen from the South, from the DP-5404. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The next bridge along the line carries Camino Pena Parda over the line. This view looks South from that bridge which can be found bottom-left on the extract from OpenStreetMap.com. [Google Streetview, December 2013]
Along this next length of the line it passes under another road bridge before entering the site of Xuvia Railway Station. The line is now in the suburbs of Ferrol and wanders its way into the conurbation. [50]

The rail bridge over Estrada San Xiao, seen from the Southeast. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

A satellite image of Xuvia Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Xuvia Railway Station seen from the South on Tra. Feve. [Google Streetview, August 2022]

Xuvia Railway Station facing West, (c) Jose Abuin, January 2021. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The bridge over Rua Camino da Revolta. [Google Maps, June 2026] and seen from the South. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Estradado Feal crosses the line just prior to the line passing through the Halt at O Ponto. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The view Southwest from the bridge. [Google Streetview, July 2025]
O Ponto Halt is at the top-right of this next extract from OpenStreetMap.com. The line continues heading Southwest towards the Ferrol terminus of the line. [51]
O Ponto Halt seen from the North end of Lugar Pedregal. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

The next structure to note along the line is a road overbridge which carries Rúa Rio Deza) across the line. This image shows the line looking back towards O Ponto Halt from the bridge. [Google Maps, June 2026] The image below shows the same location from above. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

Looking back along the line from the next bridge which carries Rúa Ortega e Gasset over the line. [Google Streetview, August 2017]

The bridge location. [Google Maps, June 2026]
Looking North through the bridge. [Google Streetview, August 2017]

Turning to the South, the line immediately passes through Piñeiros Halt. [Google Streetview, August 2017]

The next bridge carries the AC-566 over the line. Views from the bridge are shown below. [Google Streetview, August 2022]

Looking East and West along the railway. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

The line crosses two major modern highways before entering the O Alto do Castiñeiro Halt. It then wanders through the Ferool suburbs, through Santa Icia Halt and on Southwest towards the terminus. [52]

The line bridges a minor road and then passes over the FE-12 and the Rio de Santa Cecilia. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The bridge over the minor road (Rua Perez Arevalo) and the river. [Google Streetview, August 2022]
The rail bridge over the FE-12, seen from the South. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

The high level bridge carrying the railway also spans the AP-9/E-1 and Rua Santa Tecla before running through O Alto Do Castiñeiro Halt. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The bridge carrying the railway extends across the E-1/AP-9. It is seen here from the East. [Google Streetview, July 2025]
It also crosses the Rua Santa Tecla. Seen again looking West. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The O Alto Do Castiñeiro Halt. [Google Maps, June 2026]

One of the single-car units which provide regular service on the line is seen from the Southeast sitting at O Alto Do Castiñeiro Halt. [Google Streetview, August 2022]
The O Alto Do Castiñeiro Halt seen from the bridge carrying the Rúa Bon Xesús which is to the South of the halt. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The view South from the bridge carrying Rúa Bon Xesús over the line. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

A short distance Southwest, the line is bridged by Camiño Roibo. This is the view of the line ahead from Camiño Roibo. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

Again, only a few hundred metres Southwest the line is bridged by Av. Santa Icia. The next halt bears the same name Santa Icia Halt and is seen here looking West from the road bridge. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

A footbridge crosses the line connecting Rúa Fonte da Cruz to Rúa Estación. The line then crosses Rúa Virxen de Covadonga, seen here from the South. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

This next extract from OpenStreetMap.com shows the line meeting the standard gauge line heding West into Ferrol. [53]

The line next crosses Rúa Marina Española before passing through Virxe Do Mar Halt. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The railway bridge and Virxe Do Mar Halt seen fromt he Southeast. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The line then crosses Rúa Illa de Arousa. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The metre-gauge line joins the standard-gauge line to the West of Ponte das Cabras, and the lines run parallel to each other. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The line passes under both the FE-13 and Estrada San Xoan. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The view West from the bridge carrying the FE-13. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The view West from Estrada San Xoan. Bothe this and the last image show the difference in gauge between the two railway lines. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The next structure of note is the bridge carrying Rúa do Cabalo Branco over the line. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Looking West from Rúa do Cabalo Branco. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The final length of the line running into Ferrol Railway Station. Top right of this map extract there are two footbridges crossing the line. These are shown on the first image below. [54]

Two footbridges span the two railways. The first encountered is Nueva Pasarela Peatonal de Santa Marina,

Nueva Pasarela Peatonal de Santa Marina, seen from the Northeast on Loureiros.
[Google Streetview, August 2022]

The second footbridge to the West of the first, also seen from Loureiros. [Google Streetview, March 2014]

The station throat of Ferrol Railway Station. The metre-gauge lines remain on the Northwest of the site. The turntable and the buildings with sky-blue roofs are metre-gauge facilities. [Google Maps, June 2026]
The remaining length of line can be seen splitting into two sections the first heads into Ferrol Railway Station the other runs outside, to the Northwest of, two railway buildings and an access road. [Google Maps, June 2026]
This closer view highlights that the metre-gauge line has three platform faces in Ferrol Railway Station, one of which sits on the Northwest side of the main station complexe, two of which are a double bay on the Northwest side of the standard-gauge platforms. [Google Maps, June 2026]
This MapCarta extract shows all of the track/platforms at Ferrol Station but does not distinguish between metre-gauge and standard-gauge lines. [55]
Ferrol Railway Station seen from Calle Cardosas to the North. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The Southwest end of the loop outside the platform at the Northwest side of Ferrol Station, (c) Public Domain. [57]
Ferrol Rail;way Station Building seen from the South, (c) Pepedo Couto and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence. (CC BY-SA 3.0). [56]

It is worth noting that the length of the FEVE metre-gauge line covered in this article is the Western ‘half’ of the line. The Eastern ‘half’ will need to be covered elsewhere on another occasi

E. Italy: Along the Calabrian Coast

There are two rail lines which hug the Calabrian Coast and provide a spectacular mix of dramatic cliffs, azure waters, and historic fishing villages. Two lines are worthy of note – one on the Costa degli Dei (Coast of the Gods) and the other, the remote Ionian line.

The Costa degli Dei runs along the coast of the Tyrrhenian Sea on the Northwest of the peninsula between Lamezia Terme and Rosarno, with the breath-taking town of Tropea serving as the center-piece. The line hugs the cliffs, providing uninterrupted views of white sandy beaches and rocky coves.

The Ionian Railway running along the coast of the Ionian Sea on the Southeast coast from Reggio Calabria towards Taranto, is one of the most consistently sea-hugging routes in all of Europe. The route is 473 km long running past capes and bays, passing villages like Melito di Porto Salvo and Brancaleone-Marina.

The Ionian Railway, (c) Arbalete and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [61]

It is to a part of this line that Nicky Gardner draws our attention. … The length she recommends runs from Reggio di Calabria to Soverato – about 100 miles. It is covered in around 2hrs 20 mins. A ticket will set you back €11.90 single in 2026. Trains run every 1 to 2 hours. The best views will be seen if you sit on the right side of the carriage when leaving Reggio do Calabria!

The full length of the line was built between 1866 and 1875 to standard-gauge. It runs through the regions of Apulia, Basilicata and Calabria. The dates of opening of the different lengths of the line are tabulated below.

On 13th November 1989 the line between Taranto and Sibari was electrified. The line has also been electrified between Melito di Porto Salvo and Reggio Calabria to allow for the operation of a suburban service. [58]

On 21st February 2013 the station serving Reggio Calabria Airport opened, linking it to the city. On 9 June 2013 the station Melito di Porto Salvo opened in Annà. [58]

Nicky Gardner writes:

“Most tourists on the smart Frecciarossa train down the Calabrian coast decant at Villa San Giovanni to join the ferry to Sicily. From here it is just 15 minutes on to Reggio di Calabria where the fast trains from northern Italy and Rome all terminate. This seems to be the end of the line and the end of Italy. But not quite! For a local railway contours the coast of Calabria, leaving the Strait of Messina to reach Ionian shores.

“No other railway in Europe hugs the coast as consistently as this stretch of the Ionian Railway, part of a longer route which extends all the way to faded Taranto in Puglia, more than 290 miles from Reggio di Calabria.

“This recommended taster of the line follows the coast around the southernmost tip of mainland Italy. It is a route of capes and bays, olives and oleander, the bright drama of a changing coastline and a sharp contrast to the dark forests of Aspromonte that dominate the hills on the left. Away to the right, there is nothing but the sea between here and the Libyan coast!” [1: p77]

The journey starts at Reggio di Calabria Centrale Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Reggio di Calabria Centrale Railway Station, (c) Simon Legner and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 4.0). [59]

The first station was opened on 3rd June 1866, as southern terminal of the first track of the Ionian Railway to Catanzaro, Crotone, Sybaris and Taranto. In 1881, it was linked to the port with a link from Reggio Lido to Reggio Marittima, the port station. The northern track to Villa San Giovanni, linking the station to the Battipaglia–Reggio di Calabria railway, was completed in 1884.” [60]

A new station building designed by futurist architect Angiolo Mazzoni, was inaugurated on 18th April 1938. It is a one storey structure which faces the sea shore. [60]

Looking South from Via Oronzio Pugliese along the line of the railway to the South of the Centrale Station in Reggio di Calabria. [Google Streetview, September 2024]

Looking North towards the Central Station from the level-crossing on Via Soccorso. [Google Streetview, September 2024]

Looking South along the line from the level-crossing on Via Soccorso. [Google Streetview, September 2024]

Looking South from the level-crossing at Via Gebbione through the Reggio Di Calabria Omeca station. To the left of the line is the large facility owned by Hitachi Rail Italy. {Google Streetview, September 2024]

Reggio di Calabria Aeroporto Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The Airport Railway Station as it appears on OpenStreetMap.com. [62]
A dry river channel just to the South of the Airport Railway Station, seen from Via Nazionale S. Gregorio. [Google Streetview, September 2024]

This next OpenStreetMap.com extract shows the dry river bed pictures above and two further similar locations. Spanning the first of these next two dry river beds is another Station, Reggio Calabria San Gregorio Station. [63]

The Station at Reggio Calabria San Gregorio sits over a dry river channel. [Google Streetview, October 2024]
Reggio di Calabria San Gregorio Railway Station. [Google Streetview, October 2024]
The next dry river channel, seen from Via delle Industrie. [Google Streetview, October 2024]

As the line runs down the coast a series of underpasses allow access under the line. This one is on Via Torrente Filici II. [Google Streetview, October 2024]

Another relatively dry river channel is bridged by the line and by Via Nazionale. this view looks West from the road over the railway towards the sea. [Google Streetview, October 2024]

Another underpass beneath the line takes Via Industriale to the west of the line. This view looks east towards the bridge. [Google Streetview, June 2022]

Via Industriale is top-right on this extract from OpenStreetMap.com which shows the next station on the line – Reggio di Calabria Pellaro. [64]

The Reggio di Calabria Pellaro Station as it appears on Google’s satellite imagery. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The Reggio di Calabria Pellaro Station seen from the Southeast, from Piazza Vittorio Veneto. [Google Streetview, October 2024]

Just to the Southwest of Reggio di Calabria Pellaro Station Via Sottolume, seen here looking Northwest towards the railway, seems to burrow under the tracks with very low headroom. It is typical of a number of low=height bridges supporting the line as it runs Southwest along the coast. [Google Streetview, October 2024]

The next length of line as far as Reggio Di Calabria Bocale Station. The underpass on Via Sottolume is just off the top-right of this extract from OpenStreetMap.com. [65]

Towards the top-right of the map extract there is another dry watercourse, seen here looking Northwest from Via Nazionale. [Google Streetview, October 2024]
Reggio Di Calabria Bocale Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The line continues to closely follow the coast through the next Station at Motta San Giovanni Lazzaro. [66]

The Railway Station at Motta San Giovanni Lazzaro seen from the North Via degli Scalpellini.
[Google Streetview, October 2024]
This next length of the line continues to hug the coast. Includes one relatively significant tunnel. [67]

Towards the top-left of the map extract above and at the location of another dry river channel (which is just visible as it enters the sea on the right of this image); we see the railway and the Via Nazionale (Strada da Statale 106 Jonica) immediately alongside each other. This is the view Southeast along the line. [Google Streetview, October 2024]

The Northwest portal of the tunnel seen from the Via Nazionale (Strada da Statale 106 Jonica). [Google Streetview, October 2024]

At the Southeast end of the tunnel there is gallery with views out over the ocean. This view looks Northwest from the Via Nazionale (E90) the railway tunnel is on the left of the image below the road. The road itself is in tunnel for a short distance. That tunnel is visible on the right of the image in the distance. [Google Streetview, November 2024]

A local road (Via dei Tritoni) runs parallel to the railway and a lower level. This view looks Northwest along that road. The railway is carried on a viaduct as it approaches the tunnel noted above (which can just be seen at the end of the viaduct). The Via dei Tritoni passes under the last span of the viaduct before the tunnel portal. [Google Streetview, October 2024]

The next length of the line includes another dry river channel and a large rail-served maintenance facility – Officine Grandi Riparazioni di Saline Joniche (OGR) was a major industrial railway maintenance facility. The site was developed (perhaps as early as the 1970s) and inaugurated in 1989 It specialized in the maintenance of railway vehicles for Ferrovie dello Stato (Italian State Railways).After its closure in the early 2000s, the facility has been considered for redevelopment, including plans for a photovoltaic park as of 2024. [68]

This photograph is taken looking Northwest from a location close to the dry river channel (at Saline Joniche) and shows the railway viaduct which spans it. [Google Streetview, October 2024]

Looking Southeast along the E90 with the railway between the road and the sea. the viaduct crossing both road and railway is a rail access to the Officine Grandi Riparazioni di Saline Joniche (OGR) railway maintenance facility. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

The Officine Grandi Riparazioni di Saline Joniche (OGR) railway maintenance facility. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The plant was opened in 1989 but after 12 years of operation, the plant was closed in 2001 as a result of the rationalisation process of the maintenance facilities implemented by the Italian State Railways. The plant remained abandoned, used for some time also for the storage of rolling stock. [69]

An attempt was made to sell the site in 2017, apparently with little success. At that time a TV news report featured the site and the item can be watched on Facebook, here. The video was posted on the Associazione Ferrovie in Calabria Facebook page on 20th March 2017. [70]

Just a short distance Southeast is the Station of Saline di Reggio. [71]

Saline di Reggio Railway Station. [Google streetview, June 2022]

The platforms at Saline di Reggio Railway Station. [Google Streetview, June 2022]
The next length of the laine as far as Anna di Melito di Porto Salva Railway Station. [72]
The line bridges another access road to the coastal strip to the South of the line, the Northwest abutment of an older bridge can be seen here., together with a pier (to the right. A viaduct at the location spanned (and spans) another dry river bed which sits off to the right of this photograph. This view looks North under the railway line. [Google Streetview, October 2024]

This view looks South from the Via Nazionale and shows the line, running right to left (visible on the right of the image. The greenery here is within the channel of the dry river bed. [Google Streetview, October 2024]

Just a short distance prio to Anna Railway Station, another typical underpass give access to the seashore and Via Lungomare. [Google Streetview, December 2008]

Anna Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Anna Railway Station is entered soon after crossing the dry river bed notes above. This view of the station is that seen from the North on Via Strapuntello, which, as can be seen, passes under the railway to meet Via Lungomare. [Google Streetview, October 2024]

The bridge under Anna Railway Station seen from Via Lungomare. [Google Streetview, October 2024]

The length of the line as far as the Station at Melito di Porto Salva. [73]

Another underpass to the Southeast of Anna Railway Station. [Google Streetview, October 2024]

Another dry river channel, seen from close to the seashore with the railway bridge in the distance. [Google Streetview, October 2024]

Looking East along the line from Via Marco Centola which runs parallel to the line on its North side. [Google Streetview, December 2008]

Again looking East along the line this is a view from Via Cristoforo Colombo which also runs on the North side of the railway line. [Google Streetview, November 2024]

The Railway Station at Melito di Porto Salvo. [Google Maps, June 2026]
Melito di Porto Salvo railway Station looking West, (c) Benjamin Smith and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons licence (CC BY-SA 4.0). [74]
The line to the East of Melito di Porto Salvo. [75]
And on through the stations at Marina di San Lorenzo and Condofuri. [76]

To the East of Melito di Porto Salvo there is another dry river bed which is crossed by the railway and Via Pilati on two adjacent viaducts. as of the mid-2020s the road bridge has been closed for safety reasons.

The road and rail bridges seen for the West in 2010. [Google Streetview, September 2010]

The same view in 2024. [Google Streetview, October 2024]

The railway viaduct seen from Via Pilati at the East end of the road bridge. [Google Streetview, October 2024]

The railway crosses another dry river channel, seen from Via Pilati. [Google Streetview, November 2024]

The railway between he road and the sea, seen from Via Pilati. [Google Streetview, November 2024]

The railway crosses another fry river channel on its approach to Marina di San Lorenzo Railway Station. [Google Streetview, November 2024]

The railway on its approach to the Marina di San Lorenzo Railway Station. [Google Streetview, November 2026]

The Station at Marina di San Lorenzo. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The Marina di San Lorenzo Railway Station seen from the Southwest. [Google Streetview, August 2022]

This is the view from the road crossing on Via Ipponatte shown on the Google Maps image above. It looks West through the Station at Marina di San Lorenzo. [Google Streetview, November 2024]

Tonthe East of Marina di san Lorenzo, the railway bridges another dry water course by means of a two span warren truss girder bridge. This view looks North from the seashore and Via Trinità. [Google Streetview, August 2022]

A number of underpasses allow dry watercourses under the line or take link roads from the coast in land. We show three of them. This the first of the three seen from Via Lungomare on the seashore and looks North. [Google Streetview, February 2021]

The second of the sample bridges. [Google Streetview, February 2021]

The third example is this structure seen from the South on Via Lungomare. [Google Streetview, October 2010]

Condofuri Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The railway station building at Condofuri is very similar to that at Saline di Reggio, seen here from the North on Via Prassitele. [Google Streetview, November 2024]

MapCarta shows that there are a number of loops and sidings at Condofuri Railway Station. [77]
The line from Condofuri to Bova Marina Railway Station. [78]

East of Condofuri another large dry watercourse is crossed.

Looking East between the viaduct carrying the SS-106 (on the left) and the railway. The length of the truss-girder viaduct is obscured by vegetation. [Google Streetview, November 2024]
The length of both viaducts can be seen on this satellite image. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Further East, with road and rail in close proximity a footbridge spans both.

As the line enters Bova Marina, a footbridge spans both the E-90 (SS-106) and the railway (which is on the right of this image). This view looks East along the road.

In Bova Marina the railway bridges both a watercourse and road. The two span viaduct is seen here from the South on Via Marina. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Another dry watercourse is crossed before trains travelling East enter Bove Marina Railway Station.

Bova Marina Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]
Bova Marina Station has long passing loops. [77]

The view West from Corso Umberto across the two bridges at the East end of the railway Station site. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

East of Bova Marina the line continues to hug the coast. [79]
The line continues East through Palizzi. [80]
It passes through Spropoli without stopping. [81]
And then turns Northeast to run through Galati, Brancaleone-Marina and Spatolicchi also without stopping! [82]

Looking back to the West along the line of the railway from a point about a kilometre to the East of Bova Marina Railway Station. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Looking East at the same location, the railway runs in tunnel through the headland ahead. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Beyond the headland road and rail accompany each other along the coast. The view looks East from the Via Nazionale. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Multi-span viaducts across dry watercourses are commonplace along the route.
[Google Streetview, October 2020]
Looking back in a westerly direction, the railway continues to trundle along the coast. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
Via Nazionale enters Palizzi with the railway running alongside both here bridge the Flumara di Palizzi which has a regular water flow year round. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
Palizzi Marina Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]
Palizzi Railway Station building. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Looking West through Palizzi Railway Station, (c) Ndr Fnt, March 2023. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Another dry watercourse bridged by the railway. This view looks South from the Via Nazionale. [Google Streetview, June 20204]

East of Palizzi, the line enters a short tunnel under Torre Mozza. [Google Maps, june 2026]

Looking back West from the Via Nazionale above the West portal of the tunnel. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Looking East from above the East portal of the tunnel. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Yet another dry watercourse bridged by the line. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Apart from a number of small dry drainage ditches this is the next significant structure on the line – seen from the E-90 – near Spropoli. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
Often. along this length of the line, road and rail run in quite close proximity. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
The next signific structure on the line is encountered as the coast begins to turn towards the Northeast. The dry watercourse is named ‘Torrente Aranghia’. Road an rail cross the watercourse in clos proximity. [Google Streetview, June 2026]
The line now continues on a Northeast bearing along the coast through Brancalone-Marina and Brancalone. [83]

A drone’s-eye view of another drainage channel to the southwest of Brancaleone-Marina, (c) Giuseppe Billa (July 2020). [Google Maps, June 2026]

Another dry watercourse and a minor road (Traversa VIII Via Zelante) pass under the line close to Brancaleone. This view looks South towards the line along Traversa VIII Via Zelante. [Google Streetview, October 2010]

Brancaleone Railway Station. [84][Google Maps, June 2026]

A trackside view of the railway station building at Brancaleone, (c) Giovanni De Medici Dalle Bande Nere (May 2025). [Google Maps, June 2026]

A roadside view of the same building. [Google Streetview, January 2009]

The next length of the line from Brancaleone to Ferruzzano. [85]

Looking back Southwest towards Brancaleone Railway Station from the level-crossing at Via Vittorio Emanuele III. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Turning to the northeast at the same road-crossing – this is the view ahead along the line. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

The viaduct which carries the line over Via Tripoli and a dry watercourse. This view looks West under the line. [Google Streetview, June 2024
The railway and the E-90 run immediately next to each other for much of this length of the line. This is the location of another dry watercourse on the approach to Marinella looking Northeast. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Ferruzzano Railway Station as shown on MapCarta and OpenStreetMap.com. [86][87]

Ferruzzano Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Ferruzzano Station seen from the North on the station approach road – Via Giacomo Matteotti. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

A Regional train in the station at Ferruzzano, seen from the Northeast on Via Rossini. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

The next length of the railway heading North includes two short tunnels through small headlands. There is a Halt at Africo Nuovo. [88]

To the Northeast of the station at Ferruzzano, the line crosses Via Rossini and a watercourse. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
Further to the Northeast and looking tot he Northeast, the line can once again be found in close proximity to the E-90/Strada da Statale 106 Jonica. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
Around the first headland, space for the road and railway is tight and there is a short shallow tunnel which carries the road above the line. The Southwest portal of the tunnel is glimpsed here. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

The North portal of the tunnel cannot be seen from the road above it. This is what can be seen from the beach below, looking South. [Google Streetview, November 2017]

Another headland and another tunnel, the South portal is not visible from the road and can only be glimpsed from the beach. [Google Streetview, November 2017]

It is even harder to see the North portal which is hidden just to the left of the white building in this similarly zoomed and therefore grainy photograph. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

The Halt at Africo Nuovo. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The station building at the Halt appears quite run down. [Google Streetview, May 2024]

The line continues North to the next station at Bianco crossing Flumara La Verde. [89]

The rail bridge crossing Fiumara La Verde. [Google Maps, June 2026]
A distant view of the bridge, seen from the E-90 to the West. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Bianco Railway Station as shown by MapCarta. [90]

The crossing at Via Vittorai to the South of the station facing South. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
The same road-crossing looking North. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
Bianco Station seen from the South on Via Lungo Ferrovia. [Google Streetview, May 2024]
Biaco Station building seen from the Southwest on the E-90. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

The underpass at the North end of the station site in Bianco seen from the East on Via Lungo Ferrovia. [Google Streetview, May 2024]

The railway bridge over relatively small watercourse seen from the West on the E-90 (Strade da Statale 106 Jonica). [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Also seen from the E-90 (Strade da Statale 106 Jonica) is this more significant Warren Truss viaduct which spans the Fiumara Bonamico. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
Another substantial Warren Truss girder viaduct spanning the Fiumara Careri just a few hundred metres North of the structure above, also seen from the E-90. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Seen looking Southeast from the Via degli Oleanri another rail bridge spanning an access road to the beach and a small watercourse. [Google Streetview, May 2024]

Looking Southwest from the road crossing at Via Cirillo. [Google Streetview, May 2024]

Looking Northeast from the road crossing at Via Cirillo. [Google Streetview, May 2024]

Bovalino/ bavalino Marina as shown on OpenStreetMap.com. [91]
Bovalino Railway Station as it appears on MapCarta. [92]

Bovalino Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2024]

Bovalino Railway Station with a DMU standing at the platform, seem from Via Lungomare. [Google Streetview, May 2024]

This is the location marked on Google Maps as the station. The platforms extend this far along the line. Is this an error on Google’s part, or was this once the location of the railway station? This view looks North from Via Lungomare. [Google Streetview, May 2024]

The line to the Noertheast of Bovalino Railway Station. [93]

Looking Southwest into the station site from the level-crossing at Travers I Lenza Pelaia. [Google Streetview, May 2024]

Looking Northeast along the line from the level-crossing at Travers I Lenza Pelaia. [Google Streetview, May 2024]

A very short distance Northeast this underpass takes Strade Nuova underneath the line. Low bridges like this are typical on the line. [Google Streetview, April 2021]

A typical underpass for pedestrians in Bovalino, seen from Via Sant’Elena. [Google Streetview, May 2024]

A few hundred metres to the Northeast, this structure permits vehicular access from Via Sant’Elena under the line to the beach. [Google Streetview, May 2024]

On the way Northeast out of Bovalino, the line bridges another watercourse – Vallone Pintammati, alongside Via Treccarlini Ponte. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Another bridge over an access track and watercourse (Vallone Scio) seen from Via Giacomo Leopardi. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

The next station is in Ardore. [94][95]

The approach to Ardore railway Station seen from the level-crossing on Piazza Giuseppe Marando. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Just a short distance to the Northeast the line bridges an access road (seen from the Southeast). [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Ardore and its railway station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Ardore Railway Station appears to be undergoing refurbishment in this view, seen from the Southwest on Strade da Statale 106 Jonica. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

To the Northeast of Ardore Railway Station, the line crosses another access road and dry watercourse, seen here from Via Marina, looking Northwest. There are, along the route of the line, a lot of small structures providing either for pedestrians, vehicles or floodwater, not all of which are shown in this article. [Google Streetview, April 2026]

Some structures clearly need to be recorded, this is another Warren Truss girder viaduct which, alongside the E-90/Strade da Statale 106 Jonica, spans another watercourse – Fiumara di Condojanni. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

This used to be the location of the stazione ferroviaria di Sant’Ilario (Sant’Ilario Railway Station. The station is now closed. This rail side view of the building is taken from the road-crossing just to the Northeast of the building on Via Lungomare. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

The same building seen from the main road. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

The view Northeast from the crossing on Via Lungomare. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Another significant structure – a Warren Truss girder bridge spanning Fiumara Portiglia. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Another small structure a few hundred metres to the Northeast. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Again, a few hundred metres to the Northeast another underpass giving access below the line to the beach. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Another Warren Truss two-span viaduct spanning Fiumara di Gerace
Locri Railway Station is the next station on the line. There are no significant structures or road-crossings between the bridge over Fiumara di Gerace and the station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

The small town of Locri and its railway station. [96][97]

The station building at Locri seen from Via Giuseppe Garibaldi. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Looking back through Locris Railway Station site for the level-crossing on Viale della Regina. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Looking Northeast along the line from the same level-crossing. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Another underpass a few hundred metres along the line to the Northeast, seen from Via Arenile. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Again, a few hundre metres t oteh Northeast, a single Warren Truss girder bridge carries the line over Via Lungomare and a dry watercourse. The view lokks towards the lien from the Southeast. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

A longer span Warren Truss girder bridge carries the line over Fiumara Novito.
[Google Streetview, June 2024]

Looking Southwest from the level-crossing at Via Amedola. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Looking Northeast from the same road-crossing. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Looking Northeast along he line from Via Christofore Colombo. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

The town of Siderno and its railway station. [98][99]

Looking back to the Southwest along the line from the level-crossing at Via Tasso. [Google Streetview, August 2022]

Looking forward to the Northeast from the same road-crossing. [Google Streetview, August 2022]

Another road-crossing within a hundred metres of so carries Via Torquato Tasso across the line. This view looks back to the Southwest from the road-crossing. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Turning to face Northeast, this is the view ahead along the line from the same location. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Looking back Southeast from Via Genova. There is a track panel stored to the left of this photograph (a point). [Google Streetview, June 2024]

At the same road-crossing, this is the view Northeast towards the railway station in Siderno. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

The view Northeast into the station platforms from Via Christofor Colombo. {Google Streetview, April 2024]

Siderno Railway Station is the large building at the centre of this image, unmarked. [Google Maps, June 2026]
Siderno railway Station. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

A short distance Northeast, vehicular underpass carries two lanes of traffic under the line. [Google Streetview, August 2022]

Another Warren Truss girder bridge carries the line over a local road – Lungomare del Palme and a watercourse – Torrente Lordo. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

This and the next image show two similar three-arch structures spanning watercourses. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

In this image a vehicular underpass sits alongside the water course bridges by a more modern concrete structure carrying the railway. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

The line continues Northeast still close to the coast and often flanked by the road closest to the coast. In this case the road is Contrada Grotteria Mare. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Leaving Siderno behind the line crosses Fiumara Torbido on a multi-span Warren Truss girder viaduct, Seen here from the E-90. [Google Streetview, April 2024]
The Northeast end of the same viaduct seen from the Northwest on Via Palmiro Togliatti.
[Google Streetview, April 2024]
The length of the line from Fiumara Torbido Northeast through the station at Gioiosa Jonica as the line curves round to the East. [100]

Looking back Southwest along the line from Piazza dei Mille in Marina di Gioiosa Ionica. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Looking Northeast along the line from Piazza dei Mille in Marina di Gioiosa Ionica (towards the station named Gioiosa Jonica). [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Gioiosa Jonica Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]
Gioiosa Jonica Railway Station showing the full length of the passing loop and sidings. [101]

Gioiosa Jonica Railway Station seen from Via Fratelli Rosselli. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

An underpass just East-northeast of the station seen from Via Napoli on the North side of the railway line. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

The line ahead seen from the level-crossing on Strada Telegrafo Vecchio. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

The line is carried over another torrent which seems to be unnamed on the various online maps. The structure carrying the line is a three-arched viaduct. It is seen looking North from Via Cristoforo Colombo on the seashore. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Another torrent is crossed as the line continues to the East-northeast – Torrente Barruca. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

The railway line from Torrente Barruca to Roccella Jonica Railway Station. [102]
Along this length the railway runs immediately adjacent to the beach and is penned in by the E-90. There are a number of culverts beneath the line, most of which are camouflaged by vegetation.
[Google Streetview, April 2024]

Typical of structures beneath the line on this section is this twin-arched culvert. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Underpasses are only sufficient to accommodate the smallest of vehicles – this is Via Porto in Roccella Ionica. [Google Streetview, February 2009]

At Roccella Jonica Railway Station mouth a level-crossing takes a link road across the line. This is the view back to the West from the road-crossing. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Looking East into the site of Roccella Jonica Railway Station. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Roccella Jonica Railway Station. [Google Maps 2026]
Roccella Jonica Railway Station seen from Piazza Mazzone. [Google Streetview, Aprilo 2024]
The line to the East of Roccella Jonica Railway Station. [103]
Roccella Jonica Railway Station. [104]

The underbridge immediately to the East of the Station, seen from the South on Via Marina. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Looking East-northeast along Via Porto delle Grazie which is on the South side of the line. [Google Streetview, May 2021]

The embankment of the line is breached at various points to allow for floodwater flows. This concrete underbridge is typical, seen from Via Porto delle Grazie. [Google Streetview, May 2021]

The line Northeast to Caulonia. {105]
A two-span Warren Truss girder bridge spans the Fiumara Amusa. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Arched underpass over Via Mare Jonio, Caulonia Marina on the approach to Caulonia Railway Station. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

Caulonia Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]
Caulonia Railway Station building as seen from Strada da Statale 106 Jonica (E-90).
[Google Streetview, June 2024]
The came building seen from Via degli Emigrati, looking Northwest. [Google Streetview, April 2024]
Caulonia Railway Station. [107]
The line to the Northeast of Caulonia. [106]
The railway spans Via Francesco Genovese and Fuimara Allaro by means of a 6-span Warren Truss girder viaduct. [Google Streetview, April 2024]
The same viaduct seen from the E-90. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
Another multi-span viaduct carries the railway over Fiumara Precariti. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
The railway continues to the Northeast. [108]
A two span concrete bridge carries the railway over Fiumara Favaco. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
An access road to the E-90 crosses the railway at high level. This view looks bask Southwest along the line from the flyover. [Google Streetview, April 2024]
The view Northeast along the line form the same flyover. [Google Streetview, April 2024]

A flyover carries the E-90 across the line at high level. This view looks back Southwest along the line. [Google Streetview, April 2024]
The view Northeast along the line form the same flyover. [Google Streetview, April 2024]
The next station on the route is Riace. [109]
Looking Northeast along the line from Via Pescopio. [Google Streetview, May 2021]
Contrada Pipedo crosses the line at a level-crossing. This is the view Southwest from the crossing.
[Google Streetview, April 2024]
From the same crossing this is the view Northeast into the site of
Riace Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]
Riace Railway Station. [110]
Riace Railway Station seen from the South on the E-90. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

An arch-bridge carries the line over Fiumara Guardia – seen from the Via Nazionale. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

OpenStreetMap.com shows the line continuing Northeast alongside the SS106. [111]
Contrada Ellera crosses the line at high level. This is the view Southwest from the bridge.
[Google Streetview, June 2024]
This is the view Northeast from the same bridge. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
A short distance further Northeast the line bridges another watercourse which is not named on the online mapping. [Google Streetview, May 2011]
The Warren Truss girder bridge carries the line over Fiumara Stilaro. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
The same bridge seen from the Northeast (from Strada Provinciale 9) with the line heading back towards Riace. [Google Streetview, May 2024]
The view North from the same bridge. [Google Streetview, May 2024]

This next extract from OpenStreetMap.com shows the line continuing to follow the coast and in doing so turning North. As it does so, it passes through Monasterace-Stilo Railway Station. [112]

Lambrosi-sottopassaggio passes under both the railway and Strada Provinciale 9. [Google Streetview, February 2011]
The approach to Monasterace-Stilo Railway Station, seen from Via Aspromonte. [Google Streetview, April 2024]
An underpass on the approach to Monasterace-Stilo Railway Station, seen from Via Aspromonte.
[Google Streetview, April 2024]
Monasterace-Stilo Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]
Monasterace-Stilo Railway Station. [113]
Closer to Monasterace-Stilo Railway Station, at the points which give access to the passing loop, seen from Via Aspromonte. [Google Streetview, April 2024]
Still closer to Monasterace-Stilo Railway Station also seen from Via Aspromonte. [Google Streetview, April 2024]
A ide-angle view of Monasterace-Stilo Railway Station seen from Via Aspromonte. [Google Streetview, April 2024]
A closer view of the Monasterace-Stilo Railway Station building seen from Via Aspromonte.
[Google Streetview, April 2024]
Monasterace-Stilo Railway Station building seen from the West, from Piazza Stazione. [Google Streetview, April 2024]
The E-90 crosses the railway at high level to the North of Monasterace-Stilo. This is the view South from the bridge. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
The view North from the same bridge. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
Further North the line crosses the Fiumara Assi. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
Just a short distance further North the line crosses Fiumara di Guardavalle. [Google Streetview, May 2024]
The same bridge seen from the East, from the access road to the beach. [Google Streetview, February 2011]
Heading North towards the railway station in Guardavalle, this photograph is taken from Via Lungomare on the East side of the line. The passing loop for the station is evident in the two tracks visible here. [Google Streetview, February 2011]

The line North through Guardavalle. [114]

Guardavalle Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2024]
Guardavalle Railway Station. [115]
Guardavalle Railway Station seen from Via Nazionale. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
The level-crossing to the North of Guaravalle Railway Station on Via Lungomare, looking South towards the station. [Google Streetview, April 2024]
Looking North from the same road-crossing. [Google Streetview, April 2024]
A single-arched bridge carries the line over another watercourse. [Google Streetview, May 2024]
Another Warren Truss girder bridge, partially hidden by vegetation, carries the line over Torrente San Giorgio. [Google Streetview, May 2024]
Another access road to the seashore and another underpass. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

Santa Caterina dell’Jonio is the next station on the route. [116]

Another arched bridge carries the line over a dry watercourse on the approach to the Railway Station. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
Via Giosuè Carducci Passes under the line. [Google Streetview, May 2024]
Santa Caterina dell’Jonio Railway Station. [117]

Santa Caterina dell’Jonio Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Santa Caterina dell’Jonio Railway Station seen from Strada da Statale 106 Jonica. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
North of the station another dry watercourse is bridged by an arch bridge. [Google Streetview, May 2024]
Not all underpasses are easy to see on Streetview. Typically they are single-span concrete bridges. [Google Streetview, May 2024]
Another typical underpass sits a few hundred yards further North. [Google Streetview, May 2024]
And another typical underpass sits a few hundred yards further North. [Google Streetview, May 2024]
And another underpass a few hundred yards further North. Not every underpass has been shown in this sequence of photographs. [Google Streetview, May 2024]
Another Warren Truss girder bridge carries the line over Torrente Carciamite. [Google Streetview, May 2024]

Badolato is the next railway station as the line runs North. [118]

On the approach to Badolato Railway Station the crosses Torrente Voda by means of another truss bridge. [Google Streetview, May 2024]
Badolato Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Badolato Railway Station. [119]

The underpass beneath Badolato Railway Station seen from the Northwest. [Google Streetview, May 2024]
Badolato Station building seen from the west on the station approach road. [Google Streetview, August 2022]
North of the station, the line bridges another dry watercourse. [Google Streetview, Jun 2024]
A three-span truss girder viaduct crosses the Fiumara Galliapari, seen from Via Aquilia. [Google Streetview, April 2021]
The three-span truss girder viaduct over the Fiumara Galliapari, seen from the E-90.
[Google Streetview, May 2024]

The next station is Sant Andrea dell’Jonio which appears towards the bottom of this extract from OpenStreetMap.com. [120]

This next bridge carries the line over the Torrente Valle Oscura. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
A long underpass takes a linkroad from Viale Francesco Lucifero under a road, the railway and then the E-90.
Sant Andrea dell’Jonio Railway Station. [Google Maps, June 2026]
Sant Andrea dell’Jonio Railway Station. [121]
Sant Andrea dell’Jonio Railway Station building. [Google Streetview, June 2024]

The view back South towards Sant Andrea dell’Jonio Railway Station from the next highway bridge over the line. [Google Streetview, May 2024]

The view North from the same bridge. [Google Streetview, May 2024]

Another Warren Truss girder bridge (2-span) carries the railway over the Fiumara Alaca.
[Google Streetview, June 2024]

This next extract from OpenStreetMap.com centres of the Railway Station at San Sostene. [122]

Just before the line enters San Sostene Station, another long underpass takes Via delle Gardenie under the railway. This view faces West along the road. [Google Streetview, August 2022]

The location of the Station/Halt at San Sostene. [Google Maps, June 2026]

Access to the Halt at San Sostene is not celebrious! [Google Streetview, February 2009]

The final length of our journey, running into Soverato. [123]

A three-span viaduct bridges the Fiume Secco. [Google Streetview, June 2024]
An overhead view of both the highway and railway bridges. [Google Maps, June 2026]
An arched underpass takes Via Enrico Fermi under the line. [Google Streetview, March 2021]

Via Francesco Froiio passes beneath the line by an underpass. [Google Streetview, March 2021]

Via Grazia Deledda also runs under the line. [Google Streetview, August 2022]

A 4-span truss bridge carries the line over another wide watercourse. Much of the structure hidden from the road bridge by vegetation. [Google Streetview, September 2022]

Looking back South from the bridge carrying the SP-124 over the line. [Google Streetview, September 2022]

Looking forward towards Soverato Railway Station. [Google Streetview, July 2023]

Soverato Railway Station and the end of the journey! [Google Maps, June 2026]

The lines approaching Soverto Railway Station seen from Viale Stazione (Strada Provinciala 124). [Google Streetview, July 2023]
Soverato Railway Station. [124]

Soverato Railway Station, as it appears on MapCarta. [125]

Soverato Railway Station building is hidden behind trees. [Google Streetview, September 2022]
Soverato Railway Station building seen from the North. [Google Streetview, September 2022]
Soverato Station, looking South, (c) Nicholas Gemini and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0)

The journey highlighted by Nicky Garner finishes at Soverato. There is more of the line to see and to write about but that is definitely for another occasion.

And Finally …

To complete this article here are some notes from Grokipedia about the whole line. … [126]

Current Usage

Passenger services on the Ionian Railway are operated by Trenitalia, providing regional (Regionali) and InterCity connections along the line from Taranto to Reggio Calabria Centrale. [129] Regional trains run frequently, with services departing every 1-2 hours during peak daytime periods on weekdays, offering local stops at coastal towns such as Metaponto, Sibari, Crotone, Catanzaro Lido, Roccella Jonica, and Locri. [130] InterCity services connect the full route from Taranto to Reggio Calabria Centrale, as well as northern and southern segments to intermediate points like Sibari or Catanzaro, with approximately 5 daily direct services end-to-end. [131] Typical journey times for the full route vary by service type: InterCity trains cover the distance in approximately 4.5 hours, while regional trains with more stops take 6-8 hours. [131]

Train types include diesel multiple units on the predominantly non-electrified single-track sections, with some electric multiple units or hybrid configurations used on electrified portions near urban areas, including hybrid InterCity services introduced in early 2024. [130][132] Services see a significant boost during peak summer tourism seasons, particularly along the coastal route serving popular destinations in Puglia, Basilicata, and Calabria, though overall ridership remains modest outside holiday periods and is concentrated in key towns like Rossano and Gioia Tauro. [133]

Ticketing is managed through the official Trenitalia app or website, allowing integrated booking for regional and InterCity services with options for digital tickets and refunds. [134] Fares for the full Taranto to Reggio Calabria route typically range from €15 to €35 for standard class, depending on advance booking and service type, with discounts available for youth, seniors, and weekend returns. [131]

Passenger and Freight Traffic

The Ionian Railway primarily facilitates regional passenger services, accounting for the majority of its traffic, while freight operations remain limited and focused on bulk commodities such as agricultural products including olives and citrus fruits, as well as minerals, cement, and cereals transported to and from coastal ports. [135] These freight movements are managed by Mercitalia, the freight division of the FS Italiane Group, which operates diesel locomotives on the largely non-electrified single-track line to handle intermodal cargo like containers and general merchandise linking ports such as those in Crotone and Corigliano Calabro. However, freight volumes have declined significantly since the 1990s, largely due to competition from road trucking and the closure of local industries, reducing the line’s role in high-volume transport. [136]

Overall, the traffic mix on the Ionian Railway is dominated by passengers at approximately 80%, with freight comprising the remaining 20% as of 2018, concentrated at key nodes like Taranto port for export-oriented goods and Crotone for regional agro-industrial shipments. [135] Annual freight tonnage stood at around 500,000 tons as of 2018, primarily supporting local bulk movements rather than long-haul international flows, though the line integrates with EU TEN-T corridors such as the Scandinavia-Mediterranean route via connections at Sibari and Gioia Tauro for Adriatic-Ionian links. [135]

Economically, the railway bolsters tourism through passenger connectivity to coastal destinations and aids agriculture by enabling the distribution of regional products, contributing an estimated indirect impact of about 0.5% to Calabria’s regional GDP as of 2018 via logistics and employment in port-related activities.[35] This role is particularly vital in underserved areas, where rail supports cabotaggio-dominated ports handling over 7 million tons of goods annually at Reggio Calabria alone as of 2018, fostering sustainable transport alternatives despite infrastructure constraints. [135]

Challenges and Future Plans

Operational Issues

The Ionian Railway, running along Italy’s southeastern coast from Taranto to Reggio Calabria, faces significant reliability challenges primarily due to its exposure to natural hazards in the seismically active and geologically unstable Calabrian region. Frequent landslides and flooding, exacerbated by heavy rainfall common in coastal areas, often disrupt operations; for instance, a landslide triggered by recent rains halted train circulation between Reggio Calabria and Melito Porto Salvo for over an hour, resulting in delays of up to 60 minutes for four regional services. [137] Similarly, severe flooding from the Ferruzzano torrent in 2015 destroyed sections of the line near Brancaleone, suspending services entirely and requiring extensive repairs. [138] The railway’s diesel-powered sections, lacking electrification in much of Calabria, are particularly vulnerable to weather-related breakdowns, as diesel locomotives struggle with wet tracks and debris accumulation, leading to prolonged outages. [139]

Underutilization stems from chronic low investment, resulting in outdated rolling stock and infrastructure that fails to attract passengers or freight. Much of the fleet consists of aging diesel trains from the 1980s and 1990s, prone to mechanical failures and offering uncomfortable travel experiences, which discourages usage despite the line’s strategic coastal route. [140] This neglect is compounded by competition from the parallel A2 Autostrada del Mediterraneo highway, which provides faster and more reliable road travel, drawing away both passenger and freight traffic; regional transport plans note that the railway’s heterogeneous track conditions prevent it from effectively competing or complementing the highway. [141] Consequently, the line operates well below capacity, with passenger numbers stagnating amid decades of deferred maintenance. [142]
Safety incidents, though rare, highlight vulnerabilities inherent to the single-track configuration and level crossings. A notable 2023 collision in Cosenza province between a regional train and a truck at a level crossing resulted in the death of the train conductor, underscoring concerns over inadequate signalling and barriers on the mostly single-track line, where opposing trains must coordinate closely to avoid conflicts. [143] Reports from the 2010s also include allegations of sabotage in Calabria, such as deliberate interference with infrastructure works near local stations, which delayed operations and raised security issues along remote stretches. [144]

Socio-economic factors further exacerbate operational inefficiencies, as depopulation in the rural and coastal areas served by the railway diminishes passenger demand and complicates staffing. Calabria’s ongoing exodus, with many small towns losing residents to urban centres, has led to reduced ridership on regional services, making the line economically marginal. [142] This trend contributes to staffing shortages at remote stations, where low passenger volumes and isolation deter recruitment, resulting in unmanned facilities and reliance on centralized control that slows response times to disruptions. [145]

Proposed Upgrades

The proposed upgrades for the Ionian Railway focus on addressing infrastructure gaps through electrification, technological enhancements, and capacity improvements, primarily funded by Italy’s National Recovery and Resilience Plan (PNRR) under Mission 3, Component 1, Investment 1.7 for the potentiation, electrification, and resilience of southern railways. [146] These initiatives aim to integrate the line into the EU’s Trans-European Transport Network (TEN-T) Mediterranean Corridor, enhancing north-south connectivity and intermodality with ports like Gioia Tauro. [146]

Electrification efforts target the completion of the approximately 472 km line by 2030, with upgrades covering 573 km including transversals, aligning with EU TEN-T guidelines requiring full electrification of core and comprehensive network lines to support seamless rail operations and reduce diesel dependency. [147] Current projects include the electrification of the Sibari-Crotone section (112 km) and Crotone-Catanzaro Lido section (58 km), involving the construction of 11 electrical substations, overhead catenary installation, and trackside upgrades, with works underway since 2024 and electric train operations expected from late 2026.[128][148] This phase, valued at €438 million and partially financed by the PNRR, extends to the transversal Catanzaro Lido-Lamezia Terme Centrale line for improved regional links. [148]

Modernization includes high-speed upgrades to enable maximum speeds of up to 160 km/h in key segments through engineering adaptations, such as the Cutro Tunnel modification and axle load increases to category C3 for better freight compatibility. [127] Technological enhancements feature the implementation of the European Rail Traffic Management System (ERTMS) Level 2 over 172 km, replacing outdated signaling with computerized command systems to boost safety, regularity, and capacity on the single-track sections.[148] Track doubling initiatives are planned near Crotone and Reggio Calabria from 2025 to 2030, including the restoration of a fourth track at Melito Porto Salvo and new connections like the Sibari bypass, to eliminate bottlenecks and support higher traffic volumes. [127]

Sustainability objectives emphasize a transition to electric rolling stock, projected to cut CO2 emissions by enabling Frecciarossa high-speed services and integrating with Calabria’s regional mobility plans for low-carbon transport. [148][146]

Overall funding for these upgrades forms part of the €2.4 billion allocated by Investment 1.7 across 573 km of southern infrastructure; progress has faced delays from environmental impact assessments and site preparations. [146][149] As of December 2024, some PNRR-funded interventions on the line face cancellation risks. [150]

References

  1. Nicky Gardner; Over Land & Sea: Magical Views and Sea-Hugging Routes on Europe’s Best Coastal Train Lines; in Saturday (the Guardian Magazine), 23rd May 2026, p76-77.
  2. https://davesweekends.weebly.com/blog/ribadesella-by-narrow-gauge-rail-october-2024, accessed on 9th June 2026.
  3. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renfe_Feve, accessed on 9th June 2026.
  4. https://mapcarta.com/Ribadeo/Map, accessed on 9th June 2026.
  5. https://www.openstreetmap.org/search?query=foz&zoom=17&minlon=39.2793095111847&minlat=-6.831542380340727&maxlon=39.292205572128296&maxlat=-6.824351778650712#map=15/43.55282/-7.26068, accessed on 9th June 2026.
  6. https://mapcarta.com/36337914, accessed on 9th June 2026.
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The Guardian Lifestyle Travel – Saturday 23rd May 2026 – Part 4 – Readers’ Favourite Railway Journeys – Part B

The travel section of the Saturday Guardian Magazine on 23rd May 2023 included a few pages about train journeys in Europe (pages 72 to 77). This is the fourth part of a look at those pages and includes more reader’s recommendations of journeys by train. It includes a few more uploaded by the Guardian online.

The featured image for this article is a photograph of Le Petit Train Jaune which runs from Villefranche-de-Conflent to Latour de Carol/Enveitg in the Pyrenees, © A1AA1A and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [33]

Further Guardian reader’s recommendations for rail journeys can be found here. [2]

4. Readers’ Favourite Railway Journeys – Part B

F. Vintage Locomotives in Tuscany

“We took the Treno Natura from Siena last May for a whole day out in the beautiful Tuscan countryside. It’s a real steam engine with classic coaches. Most passengers were friendly locals: we only encountered two other foreign tourists, a Swiss couple. A band came aboard to entertain us, and an optional walk through vineyards was also available. Fabulous value at only €42 each.” [3][Reader: Nigel Gould]

The Treno Natura (Nature Train) is a restored historic steam train from the 1930s that takes passengers on scenic, slow-paced journeys through the Tuscan countryside, departing from Siena’s main station.

The Treno Natura (Nature Train). [20]

The Treno Natura has a mixed schedule from March through October, to combine a scenic ride with special events like festivals, markets, sagras and food and wine tastings. Departing from Siena, the train alternates routes, taking you to the gorgeous Val d’Orcia, to Asciano, Montalcino and other historic towns, where you can enjoy special food markets, antique markets, festivals or other events. You can also combine your ride with a walk through Italy’s postcard-perfect landscapes, and dine in authentic Tuscan trattorias. [20]

G. Alpine beauty on the Montreux to Interlaken line

“From Montreux station I took the MOB railway to Interlaken. Weaving up through vineyards, Lac Léman shimmers below as the panorama broadens. Suddenly, you’re in pine forests and glimpsing jagged mountain crests. Bridges straddle rushing white water. The clanging and hooting warnings for road crossings. A long tunnel. Then burst into alpine pastures peppered with chalets. Le Pays d’Enhaut. Valleys filled with crisp air, summer cowbells, flowers and crickets – perfect for long walks. Or winter-snow-muffled land, all skis and fondues. Arriving in Château-d’Œx feels like discovering a new world.” [3][Reader: Christian Vassie]

The Montreux to Interlaken line, operated by the GoldenPass Express (GPX), is a 3-hour and 15-minute scenic journey through Switzerland. Thanks to pioneering variable-gauge technology, the train seamlessly connects Lake Geneva to the Bernese Alps without requiring a change of trains at Zweisimmen.

Montreux, Zweisimmen and Interlaken. [21]

As the train winds up the hillside above Lac Léman’s north shore, leaving Montreux behind, the bustle of the ‘Swiss Riviera’ gives way to the tranquil farming country of the Pays d’Enhaut, followed by the upmarket resort of Gstaad, before a gentle descent to Interlaken, between the twin lakes of Thun and Brienz in the Bernese Oberland.

One of our earliest family holidays abroad was a two week stay in Château-d’Œx. I was probably 14 years old at the time. The memories of the alpine pastures and the train at that time are vague. Much later in my 40s we travelled the line again after a night in Montreux and before staying on a caravan site close to Interlaken. A change of train was necessary at Zweisimmen.

This 70-mile route, crosses the röstigraben (the French-Swiss German language border) and links some of Switzerland’s most famous tourist centres.

Caroline Bishop tells us that since the early 2020s there has no longer been a need to change trains at Zweisimmen. The result of something that counts as a technological first. The Montreux Oberland Bernois railway (MOB) and BLS (the two train companies operating the line) were determined to develop a bespoke bogie which could narrow or widen to fit the different widths of the two railways, as well as adjust to their different platform heights. [21]

At Zweisimmen, The train crosses a special gauge-adapting ramp in Zweisimmen at a low speed of up to 15 km/hr. The train’s weight is momentarily relieved, allowing the variable-gauge bogies to slide the wheels closer together or further apart. The carriage is automatically raised or lowered from 35 cm to 55 cm, to align the doors with the different platform heights. Because the railway networks use different electrical voltages 900 V DC and 15 kV AC, a locomotive is attached or detached during the process. It takes just 8 minutes in all with the physical gauge and height changes happening in just a few seconds. [24]

The video below shows the process: [25]

Incidentally, the Golden Pass Line is not the only line to leave the lake shore at Montreux. The line to Rochers de Naye also claims away from the lakeside town. Rochers de Naye is a 2,042-metre-high mountain in the Swiss Alps, towering over Lake Geneva (Lac Léman) and the town of Montreux. It boasts panoramic views of the Alps (including Mont Blanc and the Eiger), it is easily accessible all-year-round by a historic 50-minute cogwheel train from Montreux.

The journey up Rochers de Naye departs from Montreux Station, climbing over 1,600 metres through forests, alpine meadows, and steep rocky ridges. The Montreux–Rochers-de-Naye railway line is an electrically operated rack railway of 800 mm track gauge of 800 mm. The line operates via the village of Glion, on the mountainside above Montreux, where it connects with the Territet–Glion funicular. [22]

Please see here for more about the Rochers de Naye railway. [23]

H. Slow travel at its best: Belgrade to Bar

” The train trip from Belgrade to Bar must be one of the slowest in Europe, taking 11 hours to cover 296 miles. At €23, it was probably the best-value travel money I’ve ever spent. In fact, the train trip was about the only time in my life when I longed for a journey to go slower rather than faster. It took me through some of the most dramatic scenery I’ve ever seen. Passing through deep gorges, canyons and mountain peaks, the train crossed more than 400 bridges and seemed to stop at every village. The Mala Rijeka viaduct was a highlight. The route took in spectacular dams, ancient monasteries and stone houses where old black-clad women waved at us from open kitchen windows. At one point, the passengers got out to feed a herd of goats and once we were overtaken by a mountain cowboy on a galloping horse. For the last part, you can see swimmers and sunbathers on Adriatic beaches.” [3][Reader: Peter]

The railway journey from Belgrade (Serbia) to Bar (Montenegro) is 476-kilometres (296-miles) in length. It features 254 tunnels and 435 bridges, including the Mala Rijeka Viaduct and it descends from the mountains to the Adriatic coast. There are two direct trains, one during the day and one at night. The Daytime Train (‘Tara’): Runs during the summer season. It departs around 09:00/09:45 and arrives in Bar around 21:00. In 2026, a standard second class single ticket costs €24. The best views can be seen when sitting on the right side of the train travelling from Belgrade to Bar.

Belgrade to Bar a multi-national scenic journey. [26]

Camilla Bell-Davies describes the route like this:

“After leaving a sun-drenched Belgrade behind, it’s not long before we’re gazing out at the rolling hills of the verdant Valjevo and Užice wine regions. The scenery becomes more dramatic as the line reaches the Zlatibor mountain range. We’re tempted to get off and explore Tara national park, which has excellent hiking trails and wild camping spots. But we press on, gathering speed past well tended fields and roaming goats.

“We pass through a slice of Bosnia-Herzegovina and back into Serbia again. In 1976, there were no border checks between these Yugoslav republics. Today, stern border guards rap on the carriage door at each crossing and hawkers board the train and sell beer, burek (pastries) and cigarettes.

“After our third border crossing, the pastoral hills swell into Montenegro’s Black Mountains, which dodge in and out of view between the tunnels and bridges. At Kolašin, a town near Durmitor national park, we stop to stretch our legs and peer up at monasteries atop impossible summits. How fun it would be to climb them. Next time, we think, as the long hoot of the train’s whistle signals our departure.

“Within an hour we reach the dizzying Mala Rijeka viaduct. Our train briefly resembles the Hogwarts Express soaring over the Scotland’s Glenfinnan viaduct in the Harry Potter films. After that, the mountains taper to the brutalist blocks of Montenegro’s capital Podgorica – named Titograd from 1946 until 1992. There’s little to recommend it, so we keep going to Virpazar on Lake Skadar, where we stop and spend a day pottering in a boat.” [26]

Lake Skadar, the largest in the Balkans sits half in Albania and half Montenegro, © GabrielZafra/BokicaK/Ivan25 and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [27]
Lake Skadar. [28]

Camilla Bell-Davies continues:

“Half of the lake falls within Albania’s borders, and the Accursed mountains double up in the reflection of the water. These days the main division is a culinary one: Albania prepares the lake’s carp in a sizzling prune and tomato sauce called tavaë krapi, and Montenegro eats the freshwater fish salted and pickled, which is best tasted right by the water at the Restaurant Silistria.

“The next afternoon, we’re back on the train for the last stretch. At sunset, the Adriatic hoves into view. The sea opens to one side, the oranges and pinks in the sky melting into the water. For the final hour we swing past craggy headlands and sand-swept bays, arriving in Bar as darkness falls.” [26]

The Belgrade to Bar railway was completed in 1976. It was built by the Yugoslav State Railways (JŽ) and was 25 years in the making.

Sections of the railway were completed as follows:

  • Resnik – Vreoci in 1958
  • Podgorica – Bar in 1959
  • Vreoci – Valjevo in 1968
  • Valjevo – Užice in 1972
  • Užice – Podgorica in 1976

It is now operated by JŽ’s successor companies, Železnice Srbije (ŽS), Željeznice Republike Srpske (ŽRS) and Željeznička Infrastruktura Crne Gore (ŽICG). [29]

During the 1990s, the line had a chequered history:

  • In February 1993, the short Bosnian section of the railway was the site of the Štrpci massacre.
  • Maintenance of the Belgrade–Bar railway suffered from chronic underfunding during the 1990s, which has resulted in the railway deteriorating and becoming unsafe. This culminated in the Bioče derailment, when a passenger train derailed, causing the deaths of 47 passengers. As a result, efforts are being made to thoroughly reconstruct the railway.
  • The Serbian part of the railway was targeted several times by NATO during its bombing campaign in 1999, seriously damaging portions of the railway.
  • The small section that passes through Bosnia and Herzegovina was blown up by SFOR ground forces in the late 1990s. [29]

Repair work on the line is progressing gradually. In 2016, Serbia started a thorough reconstruction of its portion of the line in order to restore its original maximum speed of 120 kilometres per hour (75 mph). The first section, between Belgrade and Valjevo (27% of the Serbian part of the line) was completed in 2017. [29]

Since 2017, the Belgrade to Bar railway has undergone targeted, phased overhauls rather than a total route modernization, with hundreds of kilometers of track still awaiting upgrades. Progress has been split between Serbian and Montenegrin territories, heavily backed by the European Union and international loans.

In Serbia:

  • Resnik–Valjevo Section: Completed in 2017/2018, this USD $80 million upgrade by Russian Railways International rehabilitated a 77.6 km stretch of the railway. It restored maximum passenger speeds to 120 km/hr on this length of the line.
  • Valjevo to the Montenegrin Border: Engineering and technical documentation for the reconstruction of the remaining 210 km down to the border was initiated. However, construction has remained in the planning phase, with Serbian authorities estimating the total required investment for their remaining sections at €1.5 to €2 billion. [30]

In Montenegro:

  • Vrbnica–Bar Line Rehabilitation (2016–2020): Technical assistance with – and structural work on – the main Montenegrin corridor were completed with European Investment Bank (EIB) support.
  • Bar–Golubovci Upgrade: The European Union and the EIB committed a €175.6 million financial package to modernize a key 39 km stretch, improving reliability, safety, and increasing network capacity.
  • Kos–Trebešica Section: Targeted rehabilitation actions on this highly vulnerable section were launched to prevent bottlenecks and secure the combined maritime-railway transport with the Port of Bar.
  • Future Upgrades: Montenegro still requires major structural repairs across an estimated 160 km of its portion of the line. [30]

I. Through Italy’s Apennines to Rome from the Adriatic

“The cross-country east-west train trip from Pescara on the Adriatic to Rome is magnificent. It traverses the spine of Italy, single track all the way across the Apennines, stopping at towns such as Sulmona and Avezzano. The scenery changes as the route traverses mountain passes and ridiculous gradients before descending to plains over a period of 3 to 4 hours.” [3][Reader: Stephen]

The railway between Pescara and Rome is a 240-kilometre (150-mile) long railway line, that connects Rome with Tivoli, Avezzano, Sulmona and Pescara. The route operates through the regions of Lazio and Abruzzo. It was built in stages between 1873 and 1888. [9]

The route of the line from Pescara on the Adriatic to Rome, © Sayatek and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 4.0). [5]

The line between Pescara and Popoli opened on 1st March 1873. That between Popoli and Sulmona opened on 1st November 1873. Tivoli to Mandela opened on 10th December1884. Mandela to Cineto Romano opened on 25th November 1885. Rome to Tivoli opened on 1st August 1887. The line between Sulmona and Avezzano opened on 28th/30th July 1888. [10]

A 15 minute introduction to the journey and the trains used on the line. [7]

It seems possible that the great experience that Stephen had on this line is not likely to be available for too much longer. …

Major upgrading of the route has been ongoing throughout the 2020s and was scheduled for completion by 2026. [4] Once all work has been completed, the number of trains covering the route will double and the journey time will drop from 3 hours 20 minutes (at best) to around 2 hours. But it is not at all clear how soon that might be.

The project has faced problems along the way. It was put on hold in October 2023, when Italy missed out on 1.5 billion euros from the EU Recovery and Resilience Fund. Although it seems that “the Italian government is now ready to partly refinance the initiative with 951 million euros. Around 720 million euros were unlocked by the Interministerial Committee for Economic Planning and Sustainable Development (CIPESS) via the EU Cohesion Fund. The remaining 231 million euros are coming from the funds for non-deferrable works.” [6]

On 6th March 2024, RailFreight.com reported that the funding made available by the Italian Government related primarily to the length of the line which is within the Abruzzo region. That scheme is separated into two lots, the first (Lot 1) envisioned the doubling of the line connecting the Interporto d’Abruzzo terminal to Manoppello. Lot 2 entailed laying a second track between Manoppello and Scafa. In total, these lines amount to roughly 13 kilometres of the roughly 240 making up the whole Rome-Pescara line. This is a very small portion of the whole line.

There are two further “lots that still need to be addressed: the Sulmona – Pratola Peligna and [the] Tagliacozzo – Avezzano sections, for which there does not [yet] seem to be any plan.” [6] Original intentions were also to improve the line from the Airport “terminal to Pescara via Chieti. No new decisions have been made for this section either as of yet.” [6]

Railfreight.com note that even after the present schemes are completed much of the route will still be single-track, old and with steep sections and tunnels that do not meet current European standards.

It transpires, even so, that progress has not been without problems. As of May 2026, work on the first two lots mentioned above is underway but the likely completion date is now in 2028.

The low-resolution video below gives an idea of progress made by early 2026: [8]

Work should be completed by 2028 on the two lots which are under contract: Interporto d’Abruzzo – Manoppello and Manoppello – Scafa. [8]

So, perhaps the deduction to be made is that it still might be worth taking a journey along the line for some time to come!

Incidentally, on a journey through Sulmona one should also note the existence of another line which runs from Sulmona to Isernia. It is named ‘Ferrovia dei Parchi’. [11]

Ferrovia dei Parchi

The line is given this name on account of the special nature of the places it passes through. Its spectacular route passes through the Maiella National Park and the Abruzzo, Lazio and Molise National Park. [11]

An invitation card to the opening (Inaugurazione) of the Sulmona-Isernia railway (Della Strada Ferrata Sulmona-Isernia) on 18th September 1897 © Public Domain. [12]

Opened on 18th September 1897, the Sulmona-Isernia was destroyed by the Germans during World War II. It was rebuilt and relaunched in 1955 as far as Castel di Sangro, and reached Carpinone in 1960. The line, which has never been electrified, has always been linked to steam locomotives. In the 1980s, was allowed to quietly deteriorate with no significant maintenance undertaken. In 1995, ticket offices were closed and several stations were downgraded to mere halts, until eventually, the line’s connection to the line from Pescara to Rome was severed in the early years after the millennium. [11]

The route of the Ferrovia dei Parchi, © Sayatek and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 4.0). [14]

Nowadays, the line has been given a new lease of life as a tourist railway. It was superbly engineered when it was built. Despite the mountainous territory through which it runs the Ferrovia dei Parchi climbs gently up the mountainsides using viaducts, curves and tunnels, never exceeding gradients of more than 28%. It is over 128 km in length, 25 km of which are in 58 tunnels. Those tunnels are among more than one hundred engineering works carrying the line including bridges and viaducts. In addition, there are more than 300 aqueducts, bridges, avalanche barriers and overpasses, as well as 21 different stations. [11]

The tourist train runs in the summer months – June to September – booking in advance is advised and packages are available with accommodation in Sulmona included. [12][13]

The service uses vintage carriages consisting of wagons dating back to the 1930s, such as Corbellini and Centoporte carriages , generally hauled by an FS D.445 diesel locomotive.” [15]

Two photographs of Locomotive D445 ‘Bombardone’ and the early 20th century, wooden-bodied coaching stock. [11]

J. Best way to See the Pyrenees? On a Little Yellow Train!

“Le Train Jaune runs between Villefranche-de-Conflent and Latour-de-Carol in France. ‘Le Canari’, as it’s known locally, climbs to 1,595 metres at Bolquère-Eyne during its spectacular 40-mile (63km) route. Fresh mountain air, breathtaking views and valley-crossing suspension bridges can all be experienced either from the train’s bright yellow open-air wagons or from within the cosy comfort of its carriages. It is the best way to discover the wonders of the Pyrenees. My wife and I went for our honeymoon and fell in love with the little yellow train. [3][Reader: Joe Brownen]

Le Petit Train Jaune. [31]

Highlights on the journey include crossing the UNESCO-listed Gisclard Suspension Bridge, the Séjourné Viaduct, and rolling through the Cerdagne plateau.

The train takes 3 hours for a one-way trip from Villefranche-de-Conflent to Latour de Carol/Enveitg and the cost is €22.50 (or €5 if you got a special summer offer from the “Region Occitanie”). A return trip takes 6 hours minimum (there is a stop of a few hours at the terminus) for €45 full price. (Prices correctly in May 2026.) [16]

The Ligne de Cerdagne, usually referred to as Le Train Jaune is a 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 3⁄8 in) gauge railway. The line serves 22 stations, fourteen of which are ‘request stops’. There are 19 tunnels, the longest of which is the Tunnel du Pla de Llaurar with a length of 380 metres.

Amongst the various structures along the line are the two viaducts over the River Têt which are mentioned above. They are classified as Historic Monuments because of their architectural and technical importance:

The Pont Cassagne (also known as Pont Gisclard) is 253 metres (830 ft) long and, unusual for a railway bridge, a suspension bridge – the only one in France located on an operating railway. In 2023, a major project was carried out to replace 12 of the suspension cables © Cevenol2 and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons (CC BY-SA 2.0 fr). [18]

The Pont Séjourné, a 236.70 metre-long masonry viaduct in the town of Fontpédrouse. [19]

The line is single-track with passing loops. Trains are powered by electricity at 850 volts DC, supplied by a third rail. The power is supplied by hydro-electric generators on the River Têt. The maximum speed of the train is 55 km/h (34 mph). Modern two-car multiple units are used, as well as older powered cars with trailer carriages. Line maintenance vehicles are stored at Villefranche-de-Conflent. [17]

Construction started in 1903 and the section from Villefranche-de-Conflent to Mont-Louis was completed in 1910, followed by the extension to Latour-de-Carol in 1927. [17]

The website for le Petit Train Jaune can be found here. [32]

References

  1. Readers’Travel Tips: Favourite Train Trips; in Saturday (the Guardian Magazine), 23rd May 2026, p75.
  2. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2026/05/27/the-guardian-lifestyle-travel-saturday-23rd-may-2026-part-3-readers-favourite-railway-journeys-part-a
  3. https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2026/may/22/readers-favourite-scenic-european-railway-journeys-trains, accessed on 25th May 2026.
  4. https://www.fsitaliane.it/en/strategic-projects/rome-pescara-line-.html, accessed on 27th May 2026.
  5. https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Ferrovia-rm-pe.png, accessed on 27th May 2026.
  6. https://www.railfreight.com/infrastructure/2024/03/06/doubling-of-rome-pescara-railway-partly-back-on-track, accessed on 27th May 2026.
  7. https://youtu.be/ubiP4tuAzbk?si=HsWYksmW14pXdIIe, accessed on 27th May 2026.
  8. https://youtu.be/_L8txHrI_U0?si=TMAn-BwN7z1y_zJe, accessed on 27th May 2026.
  9. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rome%E2%80%93Sulmona%E2%80%93Pescara_railway, accessed on 27th May 2026.
  10. https://www.trenidicarta.it/aperture.html, accessed on 27th Mat 2026.
  11. https://www.italia.it/en/italy/things-to-do/snow-train-ferrovia-dei-parchi, accessed on 27th May 2026
  12. https://ferroviadeiparchi.it, accessed on 27th May 2026.
  13. https://ferroviadeiparchi.it/shop, accessed on 27th May 2026.
  14. https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrovia_dei_Parchi#/media/File%3AFerrovia_Sulmona-Isernia.png, accessed on 27th May 2026.
  15. https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrovia_dei_Parchi, accessed on 27th May 2026.
  16. https://letrainjaune.fr/en/horaires-et-infos, accessed on 28th May 2026.
  17. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ligne_de_Cerdagne, accessed on 28th May 2026.
  18. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ligne_de_Cerdagne#/media/File%3APont_gisclar_082004.jpg, accessed on 28th May 2026.
  19. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ligne_de_Cerdagne#/media/File%3AViaduc_sejourne%2C_train_jaune%2C_fontpedrouse.jpg, accessed on 28th May 2026.
  20. https://www.summerinitaly.com/guide/steam-train-from-siena#google_vignette, accessed on 25th May 2026.
  21. https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2022/dec/07/switzerlands-brilliant-new-train-route-direct-from-montreux-to-interlaken, accessed on 26th May 2026.
  22. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montreux%E2%80%93Glion%E2%80%93Rochers-de-Naye_railway_line, accessed on 26th May 2026.
  23. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2018/04/16/the-rochers-de-naye-line
  24. https://www.gpx.swiss/en/stories/technology, accessed on 26th May 2026.
  25. https://youtu.be/74mKjQpPzNA?si=48XvU8X2a_eNaBZx, accessed on 26th May 2026.
  26. https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2024/sep/18/mountains-beaches-history-belgrade-bar-best-train-rides-europe-serbia-montenegro, accessed on 26th May 2026.
  27. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_Skadar, accessed on 26th May 2026.
  28. https://undiscoveredmontenegro.com/lake-skadar-national-park, accessed on 26th May 2026.
  29. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belgrade%E2%80%93Bar_railway, accessed on 26th May 2026.
  30. https://seenews.com/news/serbia-montenegro-seek-eu-support-for-belgrade-bar-railway-revamp-1262919, accessed on 26th May 2026.
  31. https://www.tourisme-pyreneesorientales.com/destination/incontournables/le-train-jaune, accessed on 28th May 2026.
  32. https://letrainjaune.fr, accessed on 28th May 2026.
  33. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ligne_de_Cerdagne#/media/File%3ATrainJaune_viaduc.jpg, accessed on 28th May 2026.

The Guardian Lifestyle Travel – Saturday 23rd May 2026 – Part 1 – Naples

The travel section of the Saturday Guardian Magazine on 23rd May 2023 included a few pages about train journeys in Europe (pages 72 to 77).

The featured image for this short article is a photograph of a EAV (Ente Autonomo Volturno)-owned Circumvesuviana train at Napoli Garibaldi station, © Falk2 and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [8]

1. Time Travel on the Naples Line

The first of the articles, written by Sophia Seymour picks up on a new film about the region around Naples which “reveals rarely visited villas, seismic landscapes and a ‘civilisation buried mid-sentence’ – all accessible by train.” [1: p72]

The article by Sophia Seymour describes a journey made on the ‘Circumvesuviana’ a narrow gauge line around the Bay of Naples. A journey that she chose to make after watching a Gianfranco Rosi film ‘Pompei: Below the Clouds. [1: p72-73][2]

The film had its world premiere in the main competition of the 82nd Venice International Film Festival on 30th August 2025, where it won the Special Jury Prize. It was theatrically released in Italy by 01 Distribution on 18th September 2025. [2][3]

Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian rated the film five stars out of five, calling it “utterly distinctive” and “a ghostly yet luminous cinematic mosaic.” [2]

Sophia Seymour chose to experience the Naples portrayed by Gianfranco Rosi by travelling on the ‘Circumvesuviana’ a narrow gauge line around the Bay of Naples, a train which Rosi says, is “my time machine“.

Rosi chooses to travel on the ‘Circumvesuviana’ beyond the tourist route to Pompei and Herculaneum. “He stays on the train, camera in hand and traverses this seismic landscape – from the Sorrentine peninsula, crowned by Vesuvius in the east, to the lesser-known crates of the Phlegraean Fields in the West.” [1: p72]

The Bay of Naples, Naples, Pompei Herculaneum, Sorrento and Vesuvius. [1: p72]

Sophia Seymour writes:

“Before the Circumvesuviana reaches the archaeological site of Pompei, it skirts the Gulf of Naples, passing through a number of overlooked towns characterised by a stratification of history visible in the architecture. Drawing into the station of Torre Annunziata, Rosi holds the camera on the visible layers of the town’s history: diamond-patterned Roman brickwork cut from nearby volcanic quarries, Doric columns from an excavated Roman villa, and the still-lived-in mid-century housing blocks rising above them. That Roman villa is worth stopping for. Believed to have been built for Poppaea Sabina, the second wife of Emperor Nero, Villa Oplontis feels like a secret discovery. Its frescoes are almost untouched, its colonnade pristine, and on this day, as always, there was scarcely another soul in sight.

Back on the Circumvesuviana, I head east to Somma Vesuviana. A team from the University of Tokyo has been excavating here for decades, slowly uncovering the Villa Augustea, the imperial estate where the Emperor Augustus is believed to have died in AD 14. It was not the great eruption of AD 79 that buried the villa, but a later one in AD 472. The archaeological treasures still buried across the region are so numerous that tomb raiders have long burrowed into the soft volcanic stone looking for loot to sell on.

A second train line, the Cumana, runs in the opposite direction. It departs from Montesanto station in central Naples and heads west, reaching Pozzuoli in 25 minutes. At the end of the line lies a working port city of 75,000 people living in the basin of one of the world’s most geologically active calderas (volcanic craters). The lore surrounding Vesuvius has long overshadowed the dangers posed by the Phlegraean Fields, which rumble daily beneath the city’s foundations.

Stepping off the train at Pozzuoli, I was hit by the pungent sulphuric smoke drifting over the port. I had timed my arrival for a simple lunch at Abbascio ù Mare (a local favourite serving fish landed from the boats that morning) before visiting the Macellum of Pozzuoli, a 2nd-century Roman market near the harbour. Here, I found the clearest record of what is known as bradyseism, the movement of magmatic fluid and gas beneath the surface of the Earth that lifts and lowers the land, sinking entire towns and raising them again centuries later.

Halfway up the ancient columns, I spotted bands of small holes in the stone. These were bored by molluscs when the columns once stood metres below the bay. Rosi’s camera follows the phenomenon underwater, descending into the submerged ruins of nearby Baia, where robed marble figures stand upright on the seabed as shoals of fish drift over mosaics and between their feet.

Between east and west, at the intersection of the Circumvesuviana and the Cumana, lies Naples – known to the Greco-Romans as Neapolis (the new town) because it was new compared with Pompei and Baia. In the centre of the city, at the Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli, Rosi films Maria, the museum’s archaeologist, deep in the storage vaults. This is what he calls the casaforte (the safe of memory) – shelf upon shelf of fragmented marble torsos, legs and busts, the overflow of 2,000 years of excavation.”  [1: p72-73]

The Circumvesuviana and the Cumana are two essential, distinct commuter rail networks operated by the Ente Autonomo Volturno (EAV) in the Naples metropolitan area. They serve completely different regions and purposes for both commuters and travelers.

The Circumvesuviana is a 950 mm gauge railway network radiating east and south of Naples, circling Mount Vesuvius. It operates 142 km (88 mi) of route on six lines. It is entirely separate from other national and regional railway lines. It has 96 stations with an average inter-station distance of 1.5 km. [4]

It is the primary way for tourists to reach major archaeological sites like Pompei (Pompei Scavi station) and Herculaneum (Ercolano Scavi station). It also runs to Sorrento, making very busy during the tourist season.

Main departures are from Napoli Porta Nolana, though trains stop at Napoli Garibaldi (underneath the main Centrale station).

Because regular Circumvesuviana trains are heavily used by locals, frequently crowded, and lack air-conditioning, EAV operates the Campania Express during the peak tourist season. This premium service guarantees seating, is air-conditioned, and makes far fewer stops between Naples and Sorrento.

The Circumvesuviana Network, © Sukoruma12 and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons licence (CC0). [5]

The Cumana is a standard-gauge commuter railway that heads west from central Naples, traveling through the Phlegrean Fields (Campi Flegrei) along the coast to Torregaveta. [6]

It runs through the western districts of Naples (Fuorigrotta and Bagnoli) out to Pozzuoli, Baia, and Fusaro. It is popular for accessing coastal views, the port for ferries to the islands, and local archaeological spots like the Flavian Amphitheater.

The main city centre station is Napoli Montesanto. The Cumana is typically more modern, less crowded, and used more by local commuters than the chaotic, tourist-heavy Circumvesuviana.

The route of the Cumana, © ArbaleteOpenStreetMap contributors and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [7]

References

  1. Sophia Seymour; Time Travel on the Naples Line; in Saturday (the Guardian Magazine), 23rd May 2026, p72-73.
  2. Peter Bradshaw; Pompei: Below the Clouds review – a ghostly yet luminous cinematic mosaic of Naples crowns a superb trio; in Saturday (the Guardian Magazine), 30th August 2025.
  3. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Below_the_Clouds, accessed on 23rd May 2026.
  4. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circumvesuviana, accessed on 23rd May 2026.
  5. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circumvesuviana#/media/File%3ACircumvesuviana_map_2025.jpg, accessed on 23rd May 2026.
  6. https://www.napoliunplugged.com/naples-regional-metro-system, accessed on 23rd May 2026.
  7. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cumana_railway#/media/File%3AMappa_ferrovia_Cumana.svg, accessed on 23rd May 2026.
  8. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naples_metropolitan_railway_service, accessed on 23rd May 2026.

The Modern Tramway – May 1951 – The Tramways of Udine, Italy – Part 1

The Modern Tramway of May 1951 included a short article by Peter J. Jacques about the Tramways of Udine and District. [1]

The featured image for this article is a photograph of Sante Gerussi probably dating from the early 1920s. The tram is No. 21 serving on the Udine-Tricesimo-Tarcento line. Originally these trams were painted white but were repainted when the management was transferred from the Società friulana di Elettricità to the Società anonima Tranvie del Friuli. The bus in the image may be the one that connected Tricesimo with Buja, © Public Domain. [13]

In 1951, Peter Jacques wrote:

“Udine is the chief town of the north-east Italian province of Friuli and is situated some 80 miles north-east of Venice. Its 70,000 inhabitants are served by the metre gauge tramcars of the Tranvie del Friuli. There are three town services, operated by 18 four-wheel single-deck cars, and two interurban lines, each with its own cars.” [1]

A vintage postcard image of Via Aquileia with a horse-drawn tram prominent in the picture, © Public Domain. [9]

“Horse tramways were established towards the end of the last century, and operated from the Piazza Liberta (then known as Piazza Vittorio Emanuele) to the station (circular) and to Porta Gemona, where a depot was built.” [1]

An early photograph of the historic steam tramway which linked Udine to San Daniele, © Public Domain. [3]

Jacques writing about it, said:

“An interurban steam tramway was constructed to connect the city with San Daniele, to the north-west. The Udine terminus and depot of this line were connected to the town tramways.” [1]

The Udine to San Daniele Tramway opened in 1889. Its engineer was Adolf Gründorf and it was managed in the early years by the German banker Karl Neufeldt, it was the first (and only) steam tramway in Friuli, although as early as 1924, under the management of engineer Giacomo Cantoni, it was able utilise electric locomotives. [3]

Although officially a tramway, due to its numerous stations and depots, the length of its trains, and the fact that it was often separated from the road, the Udine–San Daniele line resembled a small railway. [3]

None of its locomotives or other rollingstock survived its closure. [3]

Jacques continued:

“In 1908, the town lines were electrified and 14 single-truck cars were purchased; they were built in 1907 by the Electric Company of Milan and had bow collectors. The connecting track between the town system and the San Daniele line was closed at the time of the electrification.” [1]

A vintage postcard view of Udine in which one of the original 4-wheel trams features. This image shows a two-axle tram parked in the central Piazza Vittorio Emanuele II, formerly Piazza Nuova and later Piazza della Libertà. On the left is the 15th-century Loggia del Lionello (Town Hall), while in the background is the Porticato di San Giovanni with its Clock Tower, © Public Domain. [4]
An electric tram at Porta Aquileia, © Public Domain. [9]
Another vintage postcard view of The terminus of Piazza Vittorio Emanuele crowded with trams, © Public Domain. [9]
A vintage postcard view of a tram travelling along Via Mercator Vecchio in Udine, © Public Domain. [6]

Jacques continued:

“During the 1920s considerable improvements were made to the system; cars were overhauled and tracks renewed where necessary, most of the station route being reconstructed with double track, partly on reservation. The Porta Gemona service was extended to Chiavris along the track of the newly-opened electric interurban tramway Udine-Tarcento.

“On 2nd July 1932, an extension of the town tramways was opened on the main Venice road, westwards, on side reservation, as far as San Rocco (via Nervesa); in the following October the line was further extended to its present terminus at San Caterina. On 6th January 1947, the reserved-track line from Chiavris to the Hospital, a branch from the Udine-Tarcento interurban, was opened.

“The present tram fleet comprises the original 14 cars built in 1907 (Nos. 1-14), four cars purchased from Gorizia (Nos. 51-54) and the cars used on the San Daniele and Tarcento lines. All are 4-wheeled except the motor trams on the Tarcento line. The San Daniele interurban tramway is now worked by battery operated motor-cars, although occasionally one of the original steam locomotives is seen. Trailers on this line are closed, with end platforms, and are similar to those used on the former Giants Causeway tramway. The four cars bought from Gorizia are larger than the 1907 class and were built in 1927. They originally ran with central-partitioned saloon and end platforms, but in 1949 and 1950 were rebuilt with folding platform doors and conductor’s seat, and the partitions were removed, ready for ‘pay as you pass’ service.

“The management plan to modernise Nos. 1-14 completely, and the first car to undergo this treatment, No. 13, emerged from the workshops entirely transformed. The ends and roof were removed, as were the partitions between the saloon and the platforms. The longitudinal seats were replaced by transverse single seats. New control equipment was fitted and the exterior and new roof finished in streamline fashion with large windscreens. [1: p107]

The Friuli tramways were an interurban and urban transport network, active primarily in the first half of the twentieth century, connecting Udine with neighbouring towns such as Tarcento and San Daniele del Friuli. Operated by the Società Tranvie del Friuli (TdF) since 1923, these electric lines (often nicknamed ‘white trams’) were crucial to the region’s economic development before road transport became more reliable in the 1950s. [2]

The main tram lines in Friuli were:

Udine-Tarcento Tramway (1915-1955): Also known for its white colour, the line arrived in Tarcento in 1927, quickly connecting the Torre torrent valley to Udine and the railway station.

The Udine to Tarcento Tramway (Interurban Line), © Ale Sasso and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [5]
This postcard, dating back to the first half of the 1950s, shows a white tramcar on the Tarcento line, waiting to depart from the Udine terminus located in Piazzale Osoppo, along the city’s northern ring road, © Public Domain. [4]

A vintage photograph showing the “White Tram” in Tricesimo. [3]

Udine-San Daniele Tramway (1889-1955): An important interurban line that connected the capital to San Daniele del Friuli, characterised by a route that acted as a true local railway, operated with accumulator-powered electric locomotives from 1924 onwards.

The Udine to San Daniele Tramway (Interurban Line), © Ale Sasso and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [7]

As this vintage photograph shows,  trams on the Udine to San Daniele Interurban line were more like trains! © Public Domain. [8]

Udine Urban Network (1887-1950 approximately): Started with horse-drawn traction and then electrified from 1908 thanks to Arturo Malignani and the Friulian Electricity Company, the urban network shared depots and infrastructures with the interurban lines.

The Urban Network in Udine is shown here in red, the two Interurban Lines are shown in blue, © Ale Sasso and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [9]

Trams in the centre of Udine in 1922, © Public Domain. [11]

A tram outside Udine railway station building, © Public Domain. [12]

After 1952

In the 21st century, Udine does not have an active tram system. The historic, 1000 mm gauge tramway network, which opened in 1887 and once operated through the city centre (including Piazza Vittorio Emanuele), was decommissioned and closed in 1952. Public transport is now managed by Arriva Udine via an extensive bus network. [10]

When Jacques wrote his short article for The Modern Tramway, little did he know that the Udine tram network had only a year or so before it was closed!

References

  1. Peter J. Jacques; The Tramways of Udine and District; in The Modern Tramway, Volume 14, No. 161, May 1951, p107.
  2. https://www.stagniweb.it/foto6.asp?File=traminte&Inizio=17&Righe=10&InizioI=1&RigheI=50&Col=5, accessed on 15th May 2026.
  3. https://www.vecchibinarifvg.it/le-ferrovie-in-friuli/tranvie-friulane, accessed on 15th May 2026.
  4. http://www.stagniweb.it/foto6.asp?File=carttram&Inizio=15&Righe=10&InizioI=1&RigheI=50&Col=5, accessed on 15th May 2026.
  5. https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tranvia_Udine-Tarcento, accessed on 15th May 2026.
  6. https://ebay.us/m/k66mBE, accessed on 15th May 2026.
  7. https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tranvia_Udine-San_Daniele, accessed on 25th May 2026.
  8. https://www.dlfudine.it/gruppi/articoli_tender/tender69.pdf, accessed on 15th May 2026.
  9. https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rete_tranviaria_di_Udine?oldformat=true, accessed on 15th May 2026.
  10. https://www.welcomeoffice.fvg.it/practical-info/daily-life/transport-facilities/udine-transport-system, accessed on 15th May 2026.
  11. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tram_Udine.jpg, accessed on 15th May 2026.
  12. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Udine,_stazione_ferroviaria.jpg, accessed on 15th May 2026.
  13. https://acrobat.adobe.com/id/urn:aaid:sc:EU:2a54dd68-d611-494a-862a-7667957ff066, accessed on 16th May 2026.

The Railway between Nice, Tende and Cuneo – Part 8 – Drap-Cantaron Railway Station to Nice.

The featured image above is a postcard view of la Trinite-Victor Railway Station in the very early years after the line opened. [20]

In the first seven articles about the line from Cuneo to the sea we covered the length of the line from Cuneo to Breil-sur-Roya and then to Ventimiglia, before beginning to look at the line between Breil-sur-Roya and Nice. These articles can be found here, [9]  here [10] here, [11] here, [12] here, [13] here, [14] and here. [15]

Woven into the text below are a series of stills from a video of the train journey from Breil-sur-Roya to Nice. The video can be seen here. [4]

This article begins the journey from Drap-Cantaron Railway Station.

The length of the line from Darp-Cantaron Railway Station to Nice-Ville Railway Station. [5]
Drap-Cantaron Railway Station, (c) Eugenio Merzagora and licenced for reuse under a Structurae (non commercial use) Licence. [6]

Drap-Canteron Railway Station. [Google Maps, September 2025]

The view South from the cab of a Nice-bound service waiting to depart from Drap-Cantaron Railway Station. [4]
The view from the same train heading South from Drap-Canteron Station. [4]
The bridge over the railway to the South of Drap-Cantaron Station. [4]
Looking North into the site of Drap-Cantaron Railway Station from the road bridge over the line. [Google Streetview, March 2025]
The bridge over the line, seen from the Northwest. [Google Streetview, March 2025]
Looking South from the same road bridge. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

Tunnel de Serradone (33 metres long), seen from the cab of the Nice-bound train. [4]

Tunnel de Serradone. [23]

The same short tunnel seen from Terre d’Eze. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

The view from the cab of the Nice-bound train leaving Tunnel de Serradone. [4]

Looking back along the line towards Drap-Cantaron Station, this is the South portal of Tunnel de Serradone. [23]

A level-crossing and railway house just beyond Tunnel de Serradone. The crossing takes Terre d’Eze across the line. [4]

Looking back Northeast towards Tunnel de Serradone from the level-crossing. [Google Streetview, March 2025]
Looking Southwest at the level-crossing. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

Continuing South along the line, this is the North portal of Tunnel du Moulin (83 metres long), seen from the cab of the Nice-bound train. [4]

Tunnel du Moulin. [22]

Immediately beyond Tunnel du Moulin, and with the sun in our eyes, the Nice-bound train passes under Penetrante de Paillon (D2204B). [4]

Looking back towards Tunnel de Moulin from the Penetrante de Paillon. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

The line continuing towards Nice after passing under the Penetrante de Paillon. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

Looking back under the bridge carry the Pentrante de Paillon towards Tunnel du Moulin. [22]

With the sun in our eyes again, the Nice-bound train crosses the Pont de Paillon, a 95 meter long bridge across the River Paillon. [4]

Pont de Paillon (or Pont de Trinite Victor) seen from the bridge carrying Boulevard Georges Bueno over the river. [Google Streetview, February 2025]
An early photograph of the same bridge which was built in 1928. The bridge has three spans, one 28.7 metres, one 31.6 metres and one 28.7 metres (c) Unknown but probably Public Domain. [7]

Just a short distance further along the line and with the sun once more in our eyes, this cab view shows the bridge carrying Boulevard George Bueno over the railway. [4]

Looking back towards Pont de Paillon from the bridge carrying Boulevard Georges Bueno over the line. [Google Streetview, March 2025]
A strategically place signpost blocks our view Southwest from Boulevard Georges Bueno towards La Trinite Victor railway Station. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

La Trinite-Victor Railway Station as seen from the cab of a Nice-bound service. [4]

The La Trinite-Victor Railway Station. [Google Maps, September 2025]

Old postcard image showing the original buildings at La Trinite-Victor Railway Station, (c) Public Domain. [8]
La Trinite-Victor Railway Station seen from what was the Boulevard National, (c) Editions Gilletta, now Public Domain. [19]
A train heading for Nice arrives at La Trinite-Victor Railway Station, (c) Unknown but probably Public Domain. [20]
La Trinite-Victor Railway Station as seen looking East from Boulevard Anatole France. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

A level-crossing to the South of La Trinite-Victor Station. [4]

The view back towards Lat Tinite-Victor Station from the level-crossing (Road: M2204C). [Google Streetview, March 2025]
The view South towards Nice from the level-crossing. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

Continuing Southwest alongside the Paillon the railway runs to the East of the modern road which sits below the flood defences on the East side of the River Paillon. The road is a later addition to the river bank and is protected from the river by a high retaining wall. To its East, the railway sits on a stone embankment. …

A typical example of the stone retaining wall that holds the railway above the immediately surrounding land and the modern road. The retaining wall is pierced by a stone-arched underpass. A number of such underpasses provided for access under the railway when it was first built. [Google Streetview, February 2025]

The next halt, alongside the River Paillon, is L’Ariane La Trinité. …

The Halt at L’Ariane La Trinité, seen from the cab of the Nice-bound train. [4]

The level-crossing just to the West of the halt at L’Ariane La Trinité. [4]

Another view of La Gare de l’Ariane La Trinité can be seen here. [21]

Looking Northeast from the junction of Pont de la Liberté with Boulevard Riba Roussa, the crossing barriers are closed as a train is just about to set off for Nice from the halt at l’Ariane La Trinité. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

Looking towards Nice from the level-crossing on Pont de la Liberté. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

The line soon passes under the A8 flyover. The sun is still in our eyes as we look out from the cab of the Nice-bound service. The road to the right of the line and at a lower level is the Boulevard Anatole France. [4]

A short distance further along the line towards Nice it bridges the Route de Turin. This view looks West under the railway bridge. [Google Streetview, March 2025]
The same bridge seen from the West on the Route de Turin. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

The North portal of Tunnel du Bon Voyage (369 metres in length), seen from the cab of the Nice-bound train crossing the bridge over the Route de Turin with the sun low in the sky. [4]

The North portal of Tunnel du Bon Voyage and the adjacent bridge over the Route de Turin. [24]

Tunnel du Bon Voyage. [24]

The view from the cab of the same train as it leaves the South portal of Tunnel du Bon Voyage. [4]

The South portal of Tunnel du Bon Voyage. [Google Earth, September 2025]

A short distance further along the line the railway is crossed on the level by a minor road before it reached Tunnel de Roche. [4]

The Northwest portal of Tunnel de Roche, seen looking East from a minor road. [Google Streetview, December 2010]

A better view of the Northwest portal of Tunnel de Roche, from the level crossing mentioned above. [25]

Tunnel de Roche, 96 metres in length. [25]

The view Southeast from the Southeast portal of Tunnel de Roche. [4]

The Southeast portal of Tunnel de Roche. [Google Earth, September 2025]

Pont Michel seen from the cab of the Nice-bound service. [4]

A glimpse of the line to the North, from the carriageway over Pont Michel in Nice. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

Looking North along the line towards Pont Michel. [Google Earth, September 2025]

Looking South across Pont Michel. The running lines from Breil-sur-Roya are on the left of this image. The other lines are part of Nice Depot. Pont Michael Railway Station is at the bottom of the image. See the notes below about the history of this location. [Google Earth, September 2025]

Pont Michel Railway Station. [4]

The platform on the left was part of the Saint-Roch Railway Station, now closed. [4]

The Saint Roch Railway Station is highlighted in the top-right of this map extract. The line continues towards Nice-Ville bridging a number of roads before crossing the River Paillon again. [26]

The area to the West of Nice-Depot and Saint Roche Station. The line crosses three roads on its way to the riverbank. [Google maps, September 2025]
The first of these structures, seen looking North from Avenue Denis Semeria provides access under the line to Nice-Depot. [Google Streetview, February 2025]
The same bridge, seen from the North (from the access road to Nice-Depot. [Google Streetview, October 2022]

Looking towards Nice-Ville from the cab of the Nice-bound service as it crosses the access road to the Nice-Depot. [4]

A more modern structure now spans the M2204B, Route de Turin. [Google Streetview, March 2025]
A similar aged steel bridge spans Boulevard Jean Baptiste Verany adjacent to the River Paillon. A series of graceful arches make up the railway viaduct across the Paillon. [Google Streetview, March 2025]
The Stone-arch viaduct across the River Paillon seen from the Southeast – 3 spans, 127 metres in length. [Google Streetview, March 2025]
The same structure seen from the Southwest on Avenue du Maréchal Lyautey. The three arches over the river are clearly visible and the two steel spans at either end of the structure are also visible. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

After crossing the Paillon the line curves to the South and crosses another modern bridge. …

The bridge which carries the railway over Rue de la Gendarmerie, Nice. This photograph is taken facing West on Rue de la Gendarmerie. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

A short distance further along the line it enters Tunnel de Carabacel.

The line of the Tunnel de Carabacel is shown by the red, blue and green dots. It is 663 metres in length. [27]

The Northeast portal of Tunnel de Carabacel. [27]

The Southwest portal of Tunnel de Carabacel, seen through mesh fencing. The two tracks marked with the green arrows are those from Breil-sur-Roya. The yellow arrow marks the track which runs through Tunnel de Cimiez Nord and the orange arrow marks the track which runs through Tunnel de Cimiez Sud. [27]

The view West from the cab of the Nice-bound train after it has left Tunnel de Carabacel. [4]

Looking North along Avenue Desambrois, Nice the old railway bridge is dwarfed by the concrete structures of the motorway! [Google Streetview, July 2025]

Also looking North, this time on Rue de Lépante, Nice, the motorway structures loom over the old railway bridge. [Google Streetview, July 2025]

Looking North along Rue Miron, the motorway bridge seems to be even higher! [Google Streetview, April 2025]

The final structure before the line runs into Nice-Ville Station. This bridge spans Avenue Jean Médecin. [Google Streetview, May 2018]

The sun is in our eyes as we approach Nice-Ville Railway Station. [4]

Nice-Ville Railway Station seen from the cab of the train from Breil-sur-Roya which terminates in Nice. [4]

Nice Railway Station in 1933, © Public Domain. [31]
A 141R (2-8-2) locomotive sits at Nice Railway Station in 1957, © Michel Braun. [31]
At the head of the “Mistral” Paris-Lyon – Nice, BB 25243 is ready to leave Nice for Marseille in June 1976, © JP Rigouard – Publisher: Le Rail Ussellois in Ussel (Corrèze). [31]
TGV No. 842 to Paris-Lyon is preparing to leave Nice Railway Station in 1992, © Georges Martret – Publisher: AMC Côte d’Azur in Roquebrune – Cap-Martin. [31]
The exterior of the Station in Nice in the early years of the 20th century, © Public Domain. [31]
The exterior of Nice Railway Station in the 1990s, from the collection of M. Caron, © Unknown. [31]

Banaudo et al tell us that The first 5 kilometres of the line in the suburbs of Nice were constructed by the Nice-based company Orizet Frères, work began in August 1909. Their work included three tunnels with a total length of 1,127 metres, a bridge over the Paillon, nine metal-decked road underpasses, an overpass, and three level-crossings. Between Nice-Ville and Cimiez Hill, the track-bed of the existing line to Menton had to be be extensively reworked to accommodate the new tracks. [1: p101]

Work on the site of the Saint Roch station commenced in January 1910 and on the Tunnel de Carabacel in May 1910. Work on the tunnel was only undertaken from the Northeast end so as to avoid the need t remove spoil from close to the railway station in Nice. This also meant that the excavated material could be used in constructing the embankment from the tunnel towards the bridge over the Paillon. The river bad of the Paillon was found to be unstable. “Foundations up to 17 m deep had to be dug using compressed air to firmly establish the piers of the three shallow arches made of La Turbie stone. Despite these precautions, ground movements recurred, which an attempt was made to remedy in the fall of 1912 by overloading the Nice-side arch with a mass of gravel bags representing a pressure of 2,500 kg per square metre, while recording devices measured the gradual settlement of the ground.” [1: p103]

The extensive depot at Nice, Saint-Roch. The large engine shed can be seen at the top-left of this image. The Breil-sur-Roya to Nice line runs around the left-hand side of the site (the Southeast), passing very close to the engine shed. [28]
On 12th May 1960, a 141R locomotive (2-8-2 using UK notation) heads towards the steam depot exit, passing the signal cabin. At that time, Nice-Saint-Roch had 47 No. 141Rs, a number that increased to 56 in 1963, then gradually reduced following the progress of electrification. On 1st March 1968, the depot closed its doors to steam traction; the roundhouse was partially demolished in 1967, and completely demolished in 1969. [29]

Nice Saint-Roch locomotive depot soon after opening. [30]

The Nice Depot was built on the site of orange groves. “The Société des Travaux en Ciment Thorrand et Compagnie, … originally from Grenoble and based in Nice, used reinforced concrete to build a 110 m diameter rotunda for forty-eight locomotives, a maintenance workshop for six locomotives, a water tower supplied by the Paillon water table, a fuel park with an 80 m quay served by 4.40 m turntables, several buildings housing apprentices, administrative offices, … refectory, oil mill, lamp room, etc.” [1: p103]

And Finally ……

Nice-Premium reported on 2nd September 2024 that major works were to be undertaken on the railway between Nice and Breil-sur-Roya. [32]

The ambitious regeneration program for the Nice to Breil-sur-Roya railway line began in September 2024 and is due to be completed by 14th December 2025.

The work will cost about 78.1 million euros. It will strengthen the infrastructure, improve the transport service, and guarantee better comfort for travellers.

The work aims to reinforce the many engineering structures and improve the stability of the tracks. This will not only secure the transportation of users but also protect this vital infrastructure against climate hazards. It promises concrete improvements for users. By the end of the work, it’s planned that one TER per hour, per direction, will run between Drap and Breil. As well as two TERs per hour between Nice and Drap. This increase of 46% in transport service will be accompanied by a notable improvement in traveler comfort thanks to the renewal of equipment and modernization of infrastructure. These changes aim to make the service more reliable and regular!

The closure of the line between September 2024 and December 2025 is necessary, particularly to permit a large number of tunnels to be renovated The closure will ensure the efficiency and speed of the work, as opposed to a partial closure which could prolong the timeline.

The total cost of the work amounts to 78.1 million euros, with an additional approximately 8 million euros for the transport substitution system. The Region is contributing 56.5 million euros, with participation from the State, SNCF Réseau, the Nice Côte d’Azur Metropolis, as well as the Communauté d’Agglomération de la Riviera Française and the Communauté de Communes du Pays des Paillons. [32]

More information can be found here. [33]

References

  1. Jose Banaudo, Michel Braun and Gerard de Santos; Les Trains du Col de Tende Volume 1: 1858-1928; FACS Patrimoine Ferroviaire, Les Editions du Cabri, 2018.
  2. Jose Banaudo, Michel Braun and Gerard de Santos; Les Trains du Col de Tende Volume 2: 1929-1974; FACS Patrimoine Ferroviaire, Les Editions du Cabri, 2018.
  3. Jose Banaudo, Michel Braun and Gerard de Santos; Les Trains du Col de Tende Volume 3: 1975-1986; FACS Patrimoine Ferroviaire, Les Editions du Cabri, 2018.
  4. https://youtu.be/rLXAEz-n4mM?si=RLQC31jynGeM_lQR, accessed on 26th August 2025. Permission to use these still images from the YouTube video has been sought.
  5. https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sch%C3%A9ma_de_la_ligne_de_Nice_%C3%A0_Breil-sur-Roya, accessed on 17th September 2025.
  6. https://structurae.net/en/structures/drap-cantaron-station, accessed on 27th September 2025.
  7. https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/aJYAAOSwP5pjDPCA/s-l1600.webp, accessed on 28th September 2025.
  8. https://www.cparama.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=11&t=8002, accessed on 28th September 2025.
  9. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/07/22/the-railway-from-nice-to-tende-and-cuneo-part-1.
  10. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/07/26/the-railway-from-nice-to-tende-and-cuneo-part-2.
  11. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/08/06/the-railway-from-nice-to-tende-and-cuneo-part-3-vievola-to-st-dalmas-de-tende
  12. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/08/16/the-railway-between-nice-tende-and-cuneo-part-4-st-dalmas-de-tende-to-breil-sur-roya
  13. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/08/25/the-railway-between-nice-tende-and-cuneo-part-5-breil-sur-roya-to-ventimiglia
  14. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/08/29/the-railway-between-nice-tende-and-cuneo-part-6-breil-sur-roya-to-lescarene
  15. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/09/26/the-railway-between-nice-tende-and-cuneo-part-7-lescarene-to-drap-cantaron-railway-station/
  16. Franco Collida, Max Gallo & Aldo A. Mola; CUNEO-NIZZA History of a Railway; Cassa di Risparmio di Cuneo, Cuneo (CN), July 1982.
  17. Franco Collidà; 1845-1979: the Cuneo-Nice line year by year; in Rassegna – Quarterly magazine of the Cassa di Risparmio di Cuneo; No. 7, September 1979, pp. 12-18.
  18. Stefano Garzaro & Nico Molino; THE TENDA RAILWAY From Cuneo to Nice, the last great Alpine crossing; Editrice di Storia dei Trasporti, Colleferro (RM), EST, July 1982.
  19. https://www.cparama.com/forum/cartes2015/1438155711-06-La-Trinite-Victor-4.jpg, accessed on 28th September 2025.
  20. https://www.cparama.com/forum/cartes2018/1528437503-ZLa-trinite-victor-06.jpg, accessed on 28th September 2025.
  21. https://www.provence7.com/a-a-z-des-articles/lariane-quartier-village-de-nice/attachment/gare-lariane-la-trinite-1c, accessed on 28th September 2025.
  22. https://www.inventaires-ferroviaires.fr/tu06/06149.1.pdf, accessed on 28th September 2025.
  23. https://www.inventaires-ferroviaires.fr/tu06/06149.2.pdf, accessed on 28th September 2025.
  24. https://www.inventaires-ferroviaires.fr/tu06/06088.7.pdf, accessed on 28th September 2025.
  25. https://www.inventaires-ferroviaires.fr/tu06/06088.6.pdf, accessed on 28th September 2025.
  26. https://www.inventaires-ferroviaires.fr/mx06/06088.07B.pdf, accessed on 29th September 2025.
  27. https://www.inventaires-ferroviaires.fr/tu06/06088.5.pdf, accessed on 29th September 2025.
  28. https://papybricolo.over-blog.com/2020/10/nice-st-roch-l-ancien-depot-des-locomotives.html, accessed on 29th September 2025.
  29. https://www.laviedurail.com/bonnes-feuilles/vif-annees-1960, accessed on 29th September 2025.
  30. https://journals.openedition.org/rhcf/1792, accessed on 29th September 2025.
  31. https://www.cparama.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=99249, accessed on 30th September 2025.
  32. https://www.nice-premium.com/eur78-million-invested-to-modernize-the-nice-breil-sur-roya-railway-line, accessed on 7th October 2025.
  33. https://www.soletanche-bachy.com/en/soletanche-bachy-france-contributes-to-the-modernization-and-securing-of-the-nice-breil-railway-line, accessed on 7th October 2025.

The Railway between Nice, Tende and Cuneo – Part 7 – L’Escarene to Drap-Cantaron Railway Station.

The featured image above is a rather grainy image of steam at Drap-Cantaron Railway Station.

In the first six articles about the line from Cuneo to the sea we covered the length of the line from Cuneo to Breil-sur-Roya and then to Ventimiglia. These articles can be found here, [9]  here [10] here, [11] here, [12] here, [13] and here [14]

Woven into the text below are a series of stills from a video of the train journey from Breil-sur-Roya to Nice. The video can be seen here. [4]

This article begins the journey from L’Escarene.

Initially, the line heads Southeast but then gradually turns to the the Southwest through Peille, Peillon and Drap before running into Nice.

The map below shows the two routes which headed from Nice and Ventimiglia North to Cuneo, as they existed prior to the alteration of the border between France and Italy after the Second World War.

The lines Nice to Tende and Ventimiglia to Tende in the period from 1928 to the Second World War, before the annexation, in 1947, of St-Dalmas de Tende and Piene to France. [15]

From l’Escarene to Drap-Cantaron

The line from L’Escarene to Drap/Cantaron. [25]

L’Escarene sits at the head of a long climb from Nice, it was one of the historic staging posts on the old royal road from Nice to Turin. Like Sospel Station, that of l’Escarene has substantial facilities which would allow the reception of military convoys in the event of conflict with neighbouring Italy. [1: p92]

The site of l’Escarene railway station, as shown on Google’s satellite imagery. [Google Maps, September 2025]
L’Escarène Railway Station, seen from the North soon after, or during, construction, © Public Domain. [17]
L’Escarene Railway Station © Public Domain. [17]
L’ Escarene Railway Station, post card image © Unknown. [17]
The station building at l’Escarène. Google Streetview, March 2023]
The underpass, just to the Southeast of l’Escarene railway station, seen from the D2566 to the Southwest. [Google Streetview, March 2023]
The same structure, seen from the Northeast. [Google Streetview, November 2022]
Further to the Southeast, the manmade plateau which created the Station and large Goods facilities is pierced by a tunnel which allows the D2566 to pass under the station site. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
The same structure, seen from the East. [Google Streetview, April 2023]

It is only a very short distance to the abutment of the viaduct that carries the line through l’Escarene.

The D2566 passes West-East under the railway and then curves round to join the D2204 and pass North-South under the West end of the railway viaduct. The Anc. Rte de L’Escarène passes through the first arch of the viaduct. The D2204 passes through the second arch of the viaduct. [Google Maps, September 2025]

Setting off from l’Escarene Railway station, this is the first view of the l’Escarene Viaduct from the cab of a Nice-bound train. The viaduct over the Redebraus has eleven 15 metre arches. [4]

L’Escarene viaduct, seen looking North from the Anc. Rte de l’Escarene. [Google Streetview, November 2022]
The viaduct seen from the North. The D2204 is directly ahead of the camera and to its right the Anc. Rte de l’Escarene climbs through the first arch of the viaduct. [Google Streetview, March 2023]
A train crosses the viaduct at l’Escarène, © Public Domain. [17]
A service from Nice approaches l’Escarene Railway Station across the viaduct, © Public Domain. [17]
The Railway Station and viaduct at l’Escarene, © Public Domain. [16]
A modern train on the viaduct at ‘Escarene, © Unknown. [17]
L’Escarene and its Viaduct, (c) J. P. Chevreau and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 4.0 International). [18]
Viaduc de l’Escarene seen from the town. [Google Streetview, May 2013]

Part way across the viaduct the camera in the cab of the Nice-bound service picks up the metal parapet rails of the viaduct and the short tunnel ahead. [4]

The tunnel at the Southeast end of l’Escarene Viaduct is the Tunnel de Brec (382 metres in length. [19]

The Northwest portal of Brec Tunnel seen from alongside the line. [19]

The same crossing on Google’s satellite imagery. [Google Maps, August 2025]

The view Southeast from the mouth of Brec Tunnel. [4]

Turning through 180, provides us this view of the Southeast portal of Brec Tunnel. [19]

A gated crossing over the line a little further to the Southeast. [4]

The view from Rte de Tres, looking back towards l’Escarene Railway Station. [Google Streetview, November 2022]
From the same location looking Southeast. Notice the bridge over the line. [Google Streetview, November 2022]

The view of the same bridge from the cab of the Nice-bound train. [4]

The bridge carry Rte de Tres over the line. [Google Maps, August 2025]

Looking Northwest along the line from the bridge carrying Rte de Tres over the line. [Google Streetview, November 2022]

The view Southeast from the same bridge. [Google Streetview, November 2022]

The next overbridge carries Rte de l’Eira over the line. [4]

Looking North from the bridge carrying Rte de l’Eira over the line. [Google Streetview, April 2013]

Looking South from the same bridge. [Google Streetview, April 2013]

Southeast, the line enters Tunnel de Ecluse (136 metres in length). Just before this, there is a footpath access under the embankment. [34]

The underbridge mentioned above, seen from the D21. [Google Streetview, March 2023]

The Northwest portal of Tunnel de Ecluse, seen from the cab of a Nice-bound train. [4]

The same tunnel mouth, seen from the lineside. [34]

The view from the cab of the Nice-bound train at the Southeast portal of Tunnel de Ecluse. [4]

Turning to face Westnorthwest, this is the Southeast portal of the Tunnel de Ecluse. [34]

The next feature on the line is a short tunnel – Tunnel d’Euira (63 metres in length). [32]

Tunnel d’Euira is on the right side of this satellite image. [Google Maps, September 2025]

The North portal of Tunnel d’Euira. [32]

The South portal of Tunnel d’Euira and the galleried retaining structure which carries the line from a point very close to the tunnel portal. [32]

From many an angle, you would be forgiven for thinking that the railway crosses a viaduct. It appears, however, that the structure is a galleried retaining structure which creates a platform for the railway to run on while limiting the wight of the structure on the rock face beneath. [Google Maps, September 2025]

This view of the location from a little further ‘South, shows that the trackbed abuts the rockface on the East side of the line. [32]

Looking East from a short length of the D21, the galleried retaining structure, which is almost a viaduct, can be seen. [Google Streetview, March 2023]

The railway continues on a ‘berm’ built out from the East face of the Paillon valley and high above the D21, until it reaches the Ruisseau d’Euira.

This small extract from Google’s satellite imagery shows Le Paillon, the D21 and the railway in parallel. The railway bridge over the Ruisseau d’Euira is on the right of this image. [Google Maps, September 2025]

The Viaduc d’Euira crosses the valley of the Ruisseau d’Euira. The viaduct has one 30 m arch and two 5 m arches. [31]

The Viaduc d’Euira was designed by Paul Sejourne. It is a beautiful masonry arch structure which features a large central semi-circular arch framed by two smaller semi-circular arches piercing the spandrel walls, © Public Domain. [31]
The same viaduct seen in much more recent times from the West side of the Paillon valley. The tunnel mouth is the north portal of the Tunnel de Santa Augusta which is the next structure on the line. [31]

The Tunnel de Santa Augusta (754 metres in length) runs under the Ste-Augusta Chapelle. [30]

The South portal of the Tunnel de Santa Augusta. As can be seen the tunnel runs straight between the two portals, allowing the light from the North portal to be seen from outside the South portal. This photograph was taken alongside the track crossing the Viaduc d’Erbossièra. [30]

The Viaduc d’Erbossièra (205 metres in length). [29]

The Viaduc d’Erbossièra is another of Paul Sejourne’s elegant designs. It comprises 9 semi-circular arches of 8-metre span; a large 36-metre span arch across the Erbossiera torrent/stream and a final arch of 10-metre span. The spandrel walls of the arch, in this case being pierced by three small arches. The portal to the Ste-Augusta Tunnel can be seen on the left of this picture, © Public Domain. [29]
The main span of the viaduct, as seen from the D21 in the valley floor. [Google Streetview, March 2023]

More pictures of this structure, including some early photographs taken during construction can be found here. [29]

A short distance further South the line enters Tunnel de la Verna (197 metres in length). [28]

The North Portal seen from the cab of a Nice-bound service. The sun is low in the sky and the tunnel mouth is in deep shade. [4]

The view from the same train, looking South from the South portal of Tunnel de la Verna. [4]

Turning round to face North, this is the South portal of Tunnel de la Verna. [28]

About a further kilometre to the South the line enters Tunnel de’Ecluse.

Tunnel de l’Ecluse (78 metres in length, sits just to the North of Viaduc de Faquin. [21]

The North portal of Tunnel de l’Ecluse. [21]

The South portal of Tunnel de l’Ecluse and the Viaduc de Faquin. [21]

Viaduc de Faquin. [22]

Viaduct de Faquin as seen on Google’s satellite imagery (seven 11-metre arches). [Google Maps, September 2025]

Viaduct de Faquin soon after construction, seen from the Southwest, © Public Domain. [20]

Viaduct de Faquin seen from the West on Chemin de Sainte Lucie in the valley floor. [Google Streetview, January 2011]

The northern mouth of Tunnel de Coletta, seen from a Nice-bound train. [4]

Viaduct de Faquin, seen from the D53 which crossed the line above the tunnel mouth to the South of the viaduct (Tunnel de Coletta). [Google Streetview, April 2023]

Tunnel de Coletta. [23]

Immediately to the South of Tunnel de Coletta the railway enters Peille Railway Station in Grave de Peille.

The approach to Grave Railway Station, seen from the cab of a Southbound service at the mouth of Tunnel de Coletta. [4]

The southern portal of Tunnel de Coletta, seen from the end of the platform at Peille Railway Station (Grave de Peille), © Eugenio Merzagora and carried on the Structure website. [24]

Le Gare de Peille is situated on the East bank of the River Paillon on a pan artificial plateau which was created as part of the construction of the line from Nice to breil-sur-Roya. [26]

Peille Railway Station is located 6 km from the village of the same name, and serves the La Grave district, where the Vicat company operated a quarry and cement factory from 1924. A branch of the TNL tramway network reached this point from Pont-de-Peille. [1: p92]

The view from the carriage door of a Nice-bound train of Peille Railway Station (La Gare de Peille), © Eugenio Merzagora (2019) and shared on the Structurae Website. [28]

The island platform shelter, La Gare de Peille, seen from the Northwest, © Eugenio Merzagora (2019) and shared on the Structurae Website. [28]

The station building at Peille, seen from the South through the window of a Breil-sur-Roya train, © G CHP, and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY 2.5). [34]
A roadside view of the Station building at Peille. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
A Briel-sur-Roya-bound service sits at Peille Railway Station. The train is an “XGC” railcar X 76583/76584, © R. Gibiat (2011) and shared on Le Rail Ussellois (Modern Postcards with Railway and Urban Transport Themes) Website. [36]
1925: Earthworks underway for the PLM Railway Station at La Grave de Peille © Public Domain. This image was shared on the L’Histoire de Menton et ses Alentours Facebook Page by Pierre Richert on 22nd November 2017. [14]
1925: Earthworks underway for the PLM Railway Station at La Grave de Peille © Public Domain. This image was shared on the L’Histoire de Menton et ses Alentours Facebook Page by Pierre Richert on 22nd November 2017. [7]
An early postcard showing the railway station at Peille with the cement works visible in the distance on the right side of the image, © Public Domain. [7]
La Gare de Peille as seen on Google’s satellite imagery. [Google Maps, September 2025]
A narrow underpass under the station site, seen from the West on Chemin de Nogairet at a point adjacent to the lilac flag on the satellite image above. [Google Streetview, April 2023]

At the South end of the Station site the line becomes single track once again adjacent to a house built originally for railway staff. [4]

South of Peille Railway Station the line passes this railway-built home, usually these houses were built for railway employees, either at a nearby station or working on track maintenance. [Google Streetview, April 2013]
The line continues South towards Tunnel de Nogairet. [Google Streetview, April 2013]

Further South the line passes through Tunnel de Nogairet (32 metres in length). [Google Maps, September 2025]

The North portal of Nogairet Tunnel, seen from the cab of a Nice-bound service. [4]

The view South from the cab of the Nice-bound train at the South portal of Nogairet Tunnel.

Turning through 180°, this is the South portal of the Tunnel de Nogairet as seen from the cab a Breil-sur-Roya-bound train in 1995. [37]

And then a short distance further South trains pass through Tunnel de Bouisses.

Tunnel de Bouisses as it appears on Google’s satellite imagery, (107 metres in length). [Google Maps, September 2025]

The North portal of Tunnel de Bouisses, seen from the cab of a Nice-bound train. [4]

Low sun shines on the cab of the same Nice-bound service as it leaves Tunnel de Bouisses and is about to cross the first of two viaducts with the name ‘Bouisses’ (Viaduc de Bouisses No. 2). [4]

Turning through 180°, this low definition view shows the South portal of Tunnel de Bouisses as seen from the cab of a Breil-sur-Roya-bound train in 1995 which is just about to cross Viaduc de Bouisses No. 2. [37]

Viaduc de Bouisses No. 2 (three 6-metre arches), as it appears on Google’s satellite imagery. [Google Maps, September 2025]

A very short distance South-southwest the line crosses Viaduc de Bouisses No. 1. …

Viaduc de Bouisses No. 1 (six 6-metre arches).[Google Maps, September 2025]

In the light of the low sun this is the view South-southwest across Viaduc de Bouisses No. 1 from the cab of the Nice-bound service. [4]

The two Bouisses viaducts seen from across the valley to the West. No. 1 is on the right, No. 2 is on the left, with the portal of Tunnel de Bouisses visible top-left. [Google Streetview, March 2023]

A little further to the South, after running along a trackbed supported by retaining walls trains travelling towards Nice cross the Viaduct de Adrecia, seen here from the cab of the Nice-bound service. [4]

Viaduc de Adrecia (three 6-metre arches). [Google Maps, September 2025]

Viaduc de Adrecia, seen from the D21. [Google Streetview, April 2023]

The line has curved round to the Southeast before it enters Tunnel de Launa, shown here by the red, blue and green dots. Viaduc de Launa sits immediately to the Southeast of the tunnel. [38]

The Northwest portal of Tunnel de Launa (309 metres in length). [4]

This slightly overexposed image shows the view from the cab of the Nice-bound service as it leaves the Tunnel de Launa. The Viaduc de Launa is just beyond the railway house on the left of the image. [4]

The Southeast portal of Tunnel de Launa with a railway house on the right of the image. The viaduct is immediately behind the camera. Note also the level crossing close to the tunnel mouth. [38]

The view East across the railway on Rte du Vieux Village (D121). [Google Streetview, March 2023]
This photograph, taken at the apex of a hairpin bend on Rte du Vieux Village (D121) has the tunnel mouth top-left, the railway house just to the right of centre at the top of the image with the railway in front of it spanning a bridge which carries the road under the railway. [Google Streetview, March 2023]

The bridge carrying the railway over Rte du Vieux Village (D121). [Google Streetview, March 2023]

Viaduc de Launa (100 metres in length – six 12-metre arches over the Galimbert stream) seen from the cab of the Nice-bound train running through the level-crossing. The viaduct was rebuilt during 1992 and 1993 as the first viaduct suffered settlement due to ground movement. [4]

Viaduc de Launa towards the end of the construction contact circa 1928, © Public Domain. [39]
A similar view of the viaduct in the 1970s, © Unknown. [39]
Looking North along the viaduct in the 1970s, © Unknown. [39]
The replacement reinforced concrete viaduct was opened in 1993. This view looks from the West on the D121 which passes under the viaduct.

Both this and the next image of the pedestrian crossing at Chemin de Laghet – a couple of hundred metres further along the line toward Nice – are of poor quality because of bright and low sunlight. [4]

An unmetalled lane (Chemin de Laghet) used to cross the line at this location, now only pedestrian access across the line is permitted. The crossing-keeper’s cottage remains. {Google Streetview, January 2011]
A short distance further Southwest the Chemin du Canton Soubran passes under the line. The structure is only suitable for a cattle creep and pedestrian access. This view looks East toward the structure. the line heads toward Peille Railway Station on the left and to Drap-Cantaron to the right. [Google Streetview, March 2023]
Peillon-Sainte-Thècle Railway Station building forecourt, seen from the South West, © August III Sas (July 2023. [Google Maps, September 2025]

Looking directly into the sun, this is the view from the cab of a Nice-bound service coming to a halt at Peillon-Sainte-Thècle Railway Station. [4]

A better view of Peillon-Sainte-Thècle Railway Station as seen from the East along the platform, © Yann Cochois (September 2023). [Google Maps, September 2025]

Immediately to the West of Peillon-Sainte-Thècle Railway Station, the line crosses Pont de Brauschet (five 9 metre arches), seen here from the South on Avenue de la Gare. [Google Streetview, March 2023]

Pont du Brauschet sits just to the West of Peillon-Sainte-Thècle Railway Station and is marked on this map with a red arrow. It is 70 metres long and is a 5-arch viaduct.

Pont de Brauschet, seen from the cab of a train heading for Nice. [4]

The next structure along the line is Tunnel de Châteauvieux (219 metres in length). This in the East portal of the tunnel. [4]

Tunnel de Châteauvieux is the first of three tunnels which Nice-bound trains now pass through. It is marked by the red, blue and green dots on this image. Immediately to the West of this tunnel are the two side-by-side Viaducs des Mortes. [40]

This is the West portal of Tunnel de Châteauvieux, seen from alongside the line between the tunnel and Viaduc des Mortes. [40]

Just to the West of the Tunnel de Châteauvieux there are 2 viaducts next to each other (Viaducs des Mortes) of which only one is in service; the southern one which gives access to the Tuhet tunnel. The viaduct to the north (which has seven arches) leads to an unfinished tunnel. An accident occurred during the drilling of the original tunnel in 1925. The accident, which caused the death of 3 workers, resulted in the need to drill a new tunnel and, as a result, the construction of another viaduct in 1927 (with five 11 metre arches).  The viaducts are named, Viaducs des Mortes, not because of the accident but because the viaducts bridge a footpath which was used to take deceased inhabitants of Borghéas to the cemetery of the neighbouring village of Drap.

The two viaducts mentioned above. [Google Maps, September 2025]

The two viaducts, seen from the North. The green arrow indicates the operational viaduct, the red arrow, the redundant viaduct. [48]

A view of both of the two viaducts and the Tunnel de Tuhet beyond. [46]

The East portal of Tunnel de Tuhet, seen from the cab of a Nice-bound service on the Viaduc des Mortes. [4]

The Tunnel de Tuhet (346 metres long). [46]

The West portal of the Tunnel de Tuhet. [46]

The East portal of Tunnel de la Ribosse. [47]

Tunnel de la Ribosse. [47]

The West portal of Tunnel de la Ribosse. [47]

A short distance further West, the line passes through Fontanil-Drap High School Halt.

Fontanil-Drap High School Halt seen from the Southeast on Route des Croves. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

At the West end of the station/halt, the Route des Croves passes under the line. The low arch bridge seen from the South. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

The same structure seen from the North side of the line. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

The next bridge carries the line over Chemin de de l’Ubac. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

The South side of the same structure. [Google Streetview, March 2025]

A short distance further West the line crosses the D2204, the River Paillon and the D2204B. …

The steel girder bridge, Pont des Vernes, which now carries the line over the the D2204, the River Paillon and the D2204B, seen from the Northeast on the D2204. The bridge is made of two spans of 28.64 m and two of 26.09 m, the easternmost span of which crosses the Contes road and what was the Nice-Bendejun tramway line of the TNL. [Google Streetview, March 2025]
The same bridge seen from the South on the D2204B. [Google Streetview, March 2025]
The same bridge seen from above. The mouth of Tunnel de Moulin-de-Cantaron is in the top-left of the image. This postcard image was shared on the Comte de Nice et son Histoire Facebook Group by Jean-Paul Bascoul on 19th April 2025, © Public Domain. [50]
Pont des Vernes seen from the middle of the Paillon of its four spans the outer two were 26.1 metres in length and the middle two were each 28.5 metres long, (c) Unknown but probably Public Domain. [52]

Once across the river and adjacent roads the line enters Tunnel de Moulin-de-Cantaron.

The East portal of Tunnel de Moulin-de-Cantaron. [Google Streetview,

Tunnel de Moulin-de-Cantaron. [26]

The Southwest portal of the Tunnel de Moulin-de-Cantaron, seen from the end of the platform at Drap-Cantaron Railway Station, © Eugenio Merzagora and shared on the Structure website. [51]

The railway station at Drap also served the village of Cantaron which was on the opposite bank of the River Paillon. This old postcard image was shared by Roland Coccoli on the Comte de Nice et son Histoire Facebook Group on 22nd January 2016. [5]
A closer view of the Station at Drap. This postcard image was shared on the Comte de Nice et son Histoire Facebook Group by Charles Louis Fevrier on 5th January 2021. [6]

This length of our journey finishes here at Drap-Cantaron Railway Station.

References

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  2. Jose Banaudo, Michel Braun and Gerard de Santos; Les Trains du Col de Tende Volume 2: 1929-1974; FACS Patrimoine Ferroviaire, Les Editions du Cabri, 2018.
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  50. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1Jr5MoEinB, accessed on 19th September 2025.
  51. https://structurae.net/en/structures/moulin-de-cantaron-tunnel, accessed on 19th September 2025.
  52. https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/cV8AAOSwPONjDPCD/s-l1600.webp, accessed on 28th September 2025.

The Railway between Nice, Tende and Cuneo – Part 6 – Breil-sur-Roya to L’Escarene.

The featured image above shows an unidentified steam locomotive crossing the highly unusual Viaduc de Bevera. The train is heading toward Sospel.

In the first five articles about the line from Cuneo to the sea we covered the length of the line from Cuneo to Breil-sur-Roya and then to Ventimiglia. These articles can be found here, [9]  here [10] here, [11] here, [12] and here [13]

I want to acknowledge that a series of stills from a video of the train journey from Breil-sur-Roya to Nice have been used in this article. The video can be seen here. [4]

This article begins the journey from Breil-sur-Roya to Nice.

South of Breil-sur-Roya a junction allows direct access to Ventimiglia and to Nice. The map below shows the two routes as they existed prior to the alteration of the border between France and Italy after the Second World War.

The lines Nice to Tende and Ventimiglia to Tende in the period from 1928 to the Second World War, before the annexation, in 1947, of St-Dalmas de Tende and Piene to France. [40]

The project was finally agreed by the PLM on 7th January 1907 but various portions of the work would be delayed by disputes relating to the transfer of land. “Acquisitions began in the suburbs of Nice in May 1907, at Saint-Roch … and Roccabiliera, where the PLM had decided to build a vast facility with a goods station, marshalling yard and engine depot to relieve congestion at Nice central station, whose rights of way, enclosed in the urban fabric, could no longer expand. This program for the redesign of Nice’s railway facilities also provided for a 3,610 m connection between the new Saint-Roch station, Riquier station and the port.  In the hinterland, events also began to take shape and in December 1908, a section of engineers set up in Fontan and undertook the first work along the Roya the following January.” [1: p90]

Banaudo et al continue: “In 1909, Chief Engineer Paul Séjourné (1851-1939), then fifty-eight years old and already renowned for his original designs for civil engineering structures, took over the direction of the construction department. The line from Nice to the Italian border would give him the opportunity to exercise his talent in the design of structures that were as daring as they were harmoniously integrated into the landscape.” [1: p90]

In this series of articles, we have already seen Séjourné‘s Scarassoui Viaduct spanning La Roya to the North of Breil-sur-Roya.

The line from Breil-sur-Roya to l’Escarene. [

This article follows the line South from Breil-sur-Roya to l’Escarene in two parts. The first from Breil to Sospel and the second from Sospel to l’Escarene.

1. The Line South from Breil-sur Roya to Sospel

Banaudo et al tell us that, “In December 1912, tranches 8 and 9 were awarded in turn for a length of 10,500 m from Sospel to Breil to the François Mercier company, of Moulins-sur-Allier.  The work included three tunnels with a combined length of 5,307 m, including the Mont Grazian and Caranca structures established at double-track gauge and equipped with defensive devices, as well as seven bridges and viaducts representing twenty-five masonry arches and two metal spans. Among them, the exceptional structure of the Bévéra viaduct. There were also three culverts and three level crossings in this section.” [1: p102-103]

Banaudo et al take up a significant part of Volume 1 of the story of the line with an album of photographs of the construction work on the French side of the border. [2: p152-331] A superb record of the work undertaken.

On the Sospel-Breil section of the line the contract works were gradually completed. By the end of 1921, the Bancao and Caranca tunnels were completed. The Mont Grazian tunnel was finished in 1923. The Bévéra viaduct’s abutments and masonry arch were ready by then and only awaited the delivery of the metalwork of the decking. [1: p141]

The length of the lien from Breil-sur-Roya (top-right) to l’Escarene (bottom-left). [8]

This drawing/map shows the two routes heading South from Breil-sur-Roya. [40]

As with the line immediately to the North of Breil-sur-Roya, the works to the South and Southwest were constructed by the French. Both of the lines heading South from Breil-sur-Roya entered tunnels just a short distance South of Breil.

The first length of the line South of Breil-sur-Roya is common with the line to Ventimiglia. The two lines separate at the Lavina bridge.

A colourised postcard view of Breil-Sur Roya Railway Station looking North through the station site in advance of the official opening in 1928. This colourised image was shared on the Stura-Cuneo Facebook Page on 20th February 2020, (c) Public Domain. [29]
Breil-sur-Roya station during its very early operation (1928-35), before electrification, with numerous passenger carriages standing idle. The passenger building is in the background; in the foreground are the buildings on the second platform, the only ones today significantly reduced in height and length, publisher Frédéric Laugier, (c) Public Domain. [30]
Breil-sur-Roya Railway Station at the height of its development, with electrification completed (1935), with the passenger building, the large freight yard filled with wagons, and the concrete sheds with arched vaults. Those in the background still exist but are used for non-railway purposes. The Breil Ecomuseum is now located on the north side, half-hidden by the foliage of the tree in the foreground. The photograph was taken from the hillside to the Northwest of the station site and faces Southeast, (c) Public Domain. [30]
After the war, the line to Nice was reopened in 1947, but the station, reduced to the simple terminus of a secondary section, was greatly simplified, removing almost all the sidings (the long straight lines of which can still be made out). In the background, the line to Fontan still features the electrification poles (removed from the rest of the station), but it was naturally abandoned and remained there until its reconstruction in the 1970s. In the 21st century, platform 2, which had been removed at the time, has been restored, the buildings on the second platform have been scaled down, and the third platform has been eliminated. The turntable, which still exists, is part of the Ecomusée, publisher Lapie à Saint-Maur, 1955, (c) Public Domain.[31]
Breil-sur-Roya Railway Station in 2013, (c) Gilles Tagadaand licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [32]
The southern end of the railway station site in Breil-sur-Roya. Two lines leave the station heading South-southwest. [Google Maps, August 2025]

The view from the cab of a Nice-bound service waiting to set off from Breil-sur-Roya. [4]

South of the station adjacent parallel bridges cross the Voie de la Première Dfl and Vallon de la Lavina (the Lavina Bridge).

Lavina Bridge seen at rail-level from the cab of the Nice-bound train. [4]

Looking East under the railway bridges (the Lavina Bridge) along Voie de la Première Dfl. [Google Streetview, October 2008]
Looking West under the railway bridges (the Lavina Bridge)along Voie de la Première Dfl. [Google Streetview, October 2008]

A short distance to the South the two lines can be seen to be separating both geographically and in level. This view looks Northeast with the station off to the left. [Google Streetview, October 2008]
The view South from the cab of a Ventimiglia-bound train. Again, the separation in level is quite marked. [55]

At the same location, this view looks Southeast. Both lines enter  a tunnel just to the South. One tunnel mouth is visible on the left of the image at a lower level. The other tunnel mouth is behind the vegetation on the right of this image. [Google Streetview, October 2008]

The two tunnel mouths seen from the cab of a Nice-bound service. [4]

The two tunnel mouths. On the left, that of Gigne Tunnel, on the right, that of Caranca Tunnel. Left for Ventimiglia, right for Nice! The whole structure is provided with a series of small openings to facilitate the holding of the tunnels in the event of war. [17]

Caranca Tunnel North Portal prior to vegetation growth. The tunnel was built to accommodate double-track to allow for possible future growth in traffic. [20]

The North portal of Caranca Tunnel in the 21st century (915 metres long). [4]

This extract from the OpenStreetMap mapping shows the close correlation of the two different routes over the first fe kilometres. The short red lines are the locations of tunnel mouths. [14]

The route of Caranca Tunnel crosses twice over the Gigne Tunnel which is on the Ventimiglia line. The lines to both Nice and Ventimiglia are shown as dotted lines when in tunnel. [1: p126]

Nice-bound trains exit Caranca Tunnel heading Southeast. This is the view from the cab of a Nice-bound train. [4]

Turning round to face the Tunnel portal, this is the Southeast portal of Caranca Tunnel. [20]

The next tunnel is Tunnel de Bancao (508 metres long). This is the North portal of the tunnel. [4]

The North Portal of Bancao Tunnel is at the higher level. the lower tunnel mouth is that o Sanfurian Tunnel. [19]

The South portal of Bancao Tunnel gives way onto Viaduc Bancao. [19]

The line leaves Bancao Tunnel and immediately crosses Bancao Viaduct. [4]

Bancao Viaduct on the line from Breil-sur-Roya to Ventimiglia is a single span arch close to the D6204 on this extract from OpenStreetMap. The line to the West is the line we are now following from Breil-sur-Roya to Nice which is at a much higher level and its viaduct is a multi-span structure. [15]

Both the Nice line and the Ventimiglia line can be seen in this image. That to Nice is at the higher level. The longer viaduct at the lower level is Viaduc Eboulis. Viaduc Bancao is at the higher level. [18]

An earlier monochrome view of Viaduc Bancao. The viaduct has eight 9 metre arches. [18]

Looking West from the D6204/E74, a small culvert close to the road is dwarfed by the bridge carrying the line to Ventimiglia which in turn is dwarfed by the viaduct carrying the line to Nice. [Google Streetview, April 2008]

Viaduc de Bancao on the Nice to Breil-sur-Roya line appears, in part, at the top of this image.

The two rail lines are still running in parallel, only beginning to separate significantly at the bottom of this extract from Open StreetMap.

The line we are following enters the Mont Grazian Tunnel, bottom right of this OpenStreetMap extract. [16]

Before the Tunnel three structures are crossed – two 10 metre-span arched bridges and then Viaduc d’Arbousset none of the three are marked on this map extract. The Viaduct sits at the point where the line which has been curving round to the South begins to turn to the Southwest, just before entering Mont Grazian Tunnel. [16]

Viaduc d’Arbousset (63 metres long with three 7 metre arches). Ahead the line curves to the right and enters Mont Grazian Tunnel. [4]

The Northeast portal of the Tunnel de Mont Grazian, seen from the cab of a Nice-boud train. [4]

The Mont Grazian Tunnel was built wide enough to accommodate double-track to allow for possible future traffic growth. “It was lined with defensive measures at both ends, a precaution imposed by the major strategic importance of this structure, which connects the Roya and Bévéra valleys.” [1: p94] Details of the defensive measures can be found here. [27]

The Northeast portal of Tunnel de Mont Grazian. This view from above shows the Viaduc d’Arbousset and the high retaining wall on the right of the mouth of the tunnel. [27]

Tunnel de Mont Grazian is 3891 metres in length. [27]

The view Southeast from the cab of the Nice-bound service as it leaves the tunnel mouth. A very short distance beyond the tunnel mouth the line crosses Viaduc de Bassera. [4]

Turning through 180, the Southwest portal of the Tunnel de Mont Grazian. [27]

The Southeast portal of the Mont Grazian Tunnel before the opening of the line in 1928. Viaduc de Bassera is in the foreground. There are detailed differences between the appearance of the tunnel entrance in this view and the photograph of the entrance above. As part of the Maginot strategic defence plan for the SFAM (Alpes Maritimes Fortified Sector) the Southeast portal of Mount Grazian Tunnel had fortified side chambers with loopholes overlooking the tunnel to guard against enemy incursion. More details can be found here. [27]
A different postcard view of the Bassera Viaduct and the tunnel mouth of the Mont Grazian Tunnel. [46]

The Bassera Viaduct is curved with seven 12-metre arches and crosses the Basséra River.

A broader view of the Viaduc de Bassera at the time of its construction, (c) Public Domain. [23]

In this image, Viaduc de Bassera is on the right and Viaduc Cai (over the River Bevera) is on the left. [23]

The two bridges as seen on Google Earth. [Google Earth, August 2025]

The original bridge over the Bevera (Pont de Cai) which was built in time for the opening of the line in 1928. More details can be found here. [24]

A very short distance beyond the end of Viaduc de Bassera, the line crosses the River Bevera on another viaduct – Viaduc Cai. [4]

This extract from OpenStreetMap illustrates the proximity of the two viaducts and Mont Grazian Tunnel. [22]

The Bevera viaduct was of unusual construction. It consisted of four masonry arches, each of 26 ft span, and of two steel girder spans, each 150 ft long. These steel girders are, as can be seen, supported in the centre by a single masonry arch set at right angles to the axis of the bridge, and crossing the gorge. [25]
The Bevera Viaduct was rebuilt in the 1960s. [ID: 355520] Bévera Viaduct (Pont de Caï) (© Eugenio Merzagora, 25 June 2021, Structurae License (non-commercial use). [21]

The Bevera Viaduct was an ingenious design solution to the need to thread the line through the narrow Bevera Gorge to the East of Sospel. Engineer: Paul Séjourné, © Markus Schweiss and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [26]

Due to its proximity to the Italian border, this unused tunnel (marked with a red arrow) was built for strategic reasons as part of the Maginot Plan for the defense of the SFAM (Fortified Sector of the Alpes Maritimes). [28]

It was intended to provide an emergency route in the event that the large neighboring Caï viaduct needed to be destroyed, and to store the metal spans of a replacement viaduct. [28]

Halfway along its length, on the left wall, it has an annex gallery (tunnel window – marked by the yellow arrow) which opens onto the western abutment of the Caï viaduct. More information can be found here. [28]

The Bevera River flows West to East (its confluence with La Roya (Roia) is adjacent to the village of Bevera which sits on the North bank of the Bevera River). Once across the Bevera River on the Cai Viaduct, the line heads up a gradient of 17 mm/m to Sospel Railway Station.

The route of the line between Breil-sur-Roya and Sospel was determined by the military. The military authorities dictated that the line should be routed to ensure that it could “be easily intercepted by the artillery of The Barbonnet fort, above Sospel, in the event of an infiltration attempt from the Roya valley.” [1: p92 & 94]

The Cai or Bevera Viaduct “crosses the river at a very acute angle. [This] inspired an original arrangement by Paul Séjourné: the deck, formed of two metal spans of 45.30 m, framed by four masonry arches of 8 m, rests 30 m above the river on a perpendicular arch of 25 m opening and egg-like in shape, resting transversely on the walls of the gorge.” [1: p94]

The line follows the valley side to the South of the Bevera rising, as we have already noted at a gradient of 17 mm/m. It crosses a minor road by means of a level crossing (Route de Suez).

The level crossing at Route de Suez, seen from above. [Google Maps, August 2025]

The level crossing at Route de Suez seen from the cab of a West-bound train. [4]

The next level crossing on the line is immediately at the East end of Sospel Railway Station site. [Google Maps, August 2025

The same crossing seen from the cab of the Westbound train approaching Sospel Railway Station. [4]

The road crossing of the line (seen from the South) is on the left of this image. The track to the right heads back towards the Viaduc de Cai. A small culvert can be seen alongside the road at this location. [Google Streetview, October 2008]
The road crossing of the line (also seen from the South) is on the right of the image. The track to the left heads into Sospel Railway Station. [Google Streetview, October 2008]

Further West and fully within what was the station site but which in the 21st century is an open plateau of unused land. [4]

The station passing loop seen at its eastern end from the cab of the Westbound train. [4]

The final approach to Sospel railway Station from the East. [4]

Sospel Railway Station. [4]

Sospel Railway Station, seen from above. [Google Maps, August 2025]
The station and forecourt at Sospel, © G CHP and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.5). [29]
A similar view from the early 20th century, of the station building at Sospel. [45]

Sospel Railway Station was to be a station “with substantial facilities which would allow the reception of military convoys in the event of conflict with neighboring Italy.” [1: p92] Arriving on Sospel, trains from Breil-sur-Roya pass through a large flat open area which was designed to accommodate the needs of the military.

The town was, in the middle of the 19th century, the second city of the County of Nice. “The location of Sospel … in … a basin where the Bévéra Valley widens, is very unique. From wherever one arrives from France, one must cross a pass: the Braus pass coming from Nice, the Castillon pass towards Menton, the Brouis pass towards Breil and La Roya, and the Turini pass towards La Bollène and La Vésubie. Towards Italy, the Vescavo Pass road connects Piena and Olivetta, while downstream, the Bévéra flows in impassable gorges where one could only venture on foot.” [1: p101-102]

The year 1912 was quite momentous in the history of Sospel not only was construction work getting underway but on 15th April 1912 the Compagnie des Tramways de Nice et du Littoral (TNL) opened its Menton-Sospel tramway. More about the tramway can be found here, [36] here [37] and here. [38]

Closer to the centre of Sospel, this is the terminus of the Menton-Sospel Tramway. [46]

Banaudo et al comment that “The Gianotti company immediately took advantage of this opportunity to transport the tools and equipment from Nice that would be used for the construction of the Braus tunnel. … In the initial stages of the construction, the Gianotti brothers used a network of portable 0.60 m gauge railways, on which Decauville dump trucks pulled by horses ran.  Later, one-metre gauge tracks were laid, on which steam locomotives pulled larger capacity trains, consisting of Koppel wagons with a load of 6 m³ or wooden-bodied wagons with a capacity of 3 m³. Several locomotives from the contractor were brought to site via the tramway, coupled to a ‘mortrice electrique’ (an electric tram engine) as a safety measure on the steeply graded tramway.” [1: p102]

In the early months of 1913, the Mercier company got to work and obtained permission from the TNL company to open a special branch line at each end of the Menton-Sospel tramway line. The construction site’s supplies then provided the tramway with more than half of its freight traffic. In July 1913, two to three round trips ran daily, and in October, Mercier received 745 tons of materials in Sospel. In May 1914, the Gianotti brothers opened their own branch line in the Careï Valley in Menton, but soon, the saturation of the small freight yard and insufficient equipment forced the TNL to limit shipments to five wagons per day.” [1: p103]

2. Sospel to l’Escarene

The journey from Sospel to l’Escarene takes the line through and under the mountains of the Col de Braus.

The line climbs through a series of embankments and cuttings on a gradient of 9.5 mm/m and enters the Tunnel de Braus.It continues to climb within the tunnel to a high point of 420 metres above sea level. Within the tunnel the gradient then changes to a 2 mm/m downward grade towards l’Escarene. The tunnel was double-track both to aid ventilation and to allow for possible expansion of services if demand required it. At the insistence of the military defensive fortifications surrounded the two tunnel mouths. [1: p92]

Of the 12 tranches of contract work on the French side of the international border, two tranches covered the 9.7 km length between Sospel and l’Escarene – lots 6 and 7. The work was awarded in December 1911 and April 1912 to Jean and Antonin Gianotti. Banaudo et al tell us  that the work included over 6.4 km of tunnel. “As well as a few secondary structures: three culverts, four level crossings, two underpasses and six overpasses, most of which were built using the new reinforced concrete technique.” [1: p101]

After waiting for a Breil-sur-Roya-bound service to clear the line ahead, we set off in a Westerly direction from the station at Sospel.

A Nice to Breil-sur-Roya service arriving at Sospel. [4]

As the Nice-bound train sets off from Sospel Station it crosses Rte d’Erc at a level-crossing. [4]

Rte d’Erc crosses the railway at the West end of the Sospel Station site. [Google Maps, August 2025]
Looking back East towards Sospel Railway Station. [Google streetview, August 2022]
A departure for Nice in 1947. The steam locomotive has just crossed the level-crossing over Rte d’Erc. [47]
A similar view looking back East towards Sospel Railway Station from close to the level crossing featured above. [44]
A view from the railway house which sits beside the level-crossing which shows Sospel Railway Station in very early days! [45]
Looking ahead along the railway towards l’Escarene (on the left of this post and image), the town of Sospel is laid out in front of the camera. In the text of this article we mention the use of concrete on the line. Two bridges of reinforced concrete construction can be seen on the left of this image. [46]
Looking West towards the bridge carrying Mnt des Capuchins over the railway. The station passing loop ends just to the West of the Rte d’Erc level crossing. [Google Streetview, August 2022]

A closer view of the bridge carrying Mnt des Capuchins. [4]

Rte de la Penetrante passes under the railway. [Google Maps, August 2025]
Rte de la Penetrante (D2566A) is crossed by means of a stone arch bridge. This is the North elevation of the structure. [Google Streetview, October 2022]
The South elevation of the same structure. [Google Streetview, October 2022]
Chemin de la Saint-Roch bridges the line a short distance further West. [Google Maps, August 2025]

The bridge carrying Chemin de la Saint-Roch over the line as seen from the cab of a Nice-bound train. [4]

The overbridge carrying Chemin de la Saint-Roch, seen from the North. [Google Streetview, April 2013]
Looking back along the line towards Sospel Railway Station. [39]

The next overbridge carries the D2204 (boulevard de l’Egalite over the line. [4]

Boulevard de l’Egalite (D2204) bridges the line a short distance further West. [Google Maps, August 2025]
Looking Souttheast from Boulevard de l’Egalite towards Sospel Railway Station. [Google Streetview, October 2022]
Looking Northwest from Boulevard de l’Egalite. [Google Streetview, October 2022]

The next structure visible form the cab of the Nice-bound train is an accommodation bridge which carries a driveway to a larger property running Northeast from La Condamine. [4]

An accommodation bridge carries a driveway from La Condamine over the line. [Google Maps, August 2025]
Rte du Moulinet (D2566) passes under the railway. [Google Maps, August 2025]

Just a short distance to the Northwest from the bridge above. The bridge over Rte du Moulinet is seen here from the Northeast. [Google Streetview, August 2021]
The same structure, seen from the Southwest on the D2566. [Google Streetview, August 2021]

A short distance further West the line crosses Rte Sant-Antoine by means of a level-crossing. [4]

Rte Saint-Antoine crosses the line at level a little further to the West. [Google Maps, August 2025]
Looking East from Rte Saint-Antoine towards Sospel. [Google Streetview, October 2008]
Looking West from Rte Saint-Antoine. [Google Streetview, October 2008]

The D2566 crosses the line (heading North-northwest) with the line travelling in a southwesterly direction. [4]

Rte de Moulinet (D2566) crosses the line again. [Google Maps, August 2025]
Looking Northeast from Rte du Moulinet towards Sospel. [Google Streetview, August 2016]
Looking Southeast towards l’Escarene from the same bridge over the line. [Google Streetview, August 2016]

In deep shade, this is the mouth of Tunnel de Braus, seen from the cab of an approaching Nice-bound train.[4]

The same tunnel mouth in better light. [31]

The full length of Tunnel de Braus (5.94 km long), as it appears on OpenStreetMap. [30]
The full length of Tunnel de Braus as it is recorded in the French Inventory of Tunnels. The yellow dot marks the approximate location of a significant water flow intersected by the construction work which required significant remedial works before the construction of the tunnel could proceed. More information and drawings can be found here. [31]

As we have already noted, both the tunnel portals were fortified at the insistence of the military. … Completing the tunnels also required significant additional work to deal with a very high level of water ingress during construction.

The Southwest portal of Tunnel de Braus is flanked to the Southeast by a very high retaining wall and to the Northwest by a water channel created for the Ruisseau de Redebraus. [31]

The Tunnel de Braus was built to accommodate a double-track line to allow for possible future growth in traffic.

This image shows the Southwest tunnel mouth of Tunnel de Braus, an accommodation bridge Southwest of the tunnel portal and a bridge which carries the railway over the Ruisseau de Redebraus [ID: 324493] Col-de-Braus Tunnel western portal (© Eugenio Merzagora, 9 July 2019, Structurae License (non-commercial use)). [33]

This extract from Google’s satellite imagery shows the various structures from above – the river bridge is towards the bottom-left of the image with the tunnel mouth in the top-right. [Google Maps, August 2025]

The view from the cab of the Nice-bound train as it leaves the tunnel behind. [4] The first couple of hundred metres beyond the tunnel portal are within a narrow, damp and dark defile.

The bridge over the Ruisseau de Redebraus. [4]

The Nice-bound train approaches the halt at Touët-de-l’Escarène. [4]

Touët-de-l’Escarène Railway Station (Halt). The village is to the North of the Station. [Google Maps, August 2025]

Touët-de-l’Escarène Railway Station. [4]

Three older images of Touët-de-l’Escarène follow.  Two while the station was under construction. …

Touët-de-l’Escarène Railway Station, seen from the South and under construction, seen from the Southwest.  [49]
Touët-de-l’Escarène also under construction, seen from the West. [49]
Touët-de-l’Escarène, the completed line, seen heading away towards the Tunnel de Mont Grazian. [49]

The line beyond Touët-de-l’Escarène continues West along the North side of the Ruisseau de Redebraus towards the next tunnel. …

The next tunnel is Tunnel de l’Escarène or Tunnel de Coalongia (527 metres in length). [34]

The East portal of the Tunnel de l’Escarène. [4]

The view from the cab of a Nice-bound train as it leaves l’Escarene Tunnel. The points which provide the passing loop at l’Escarene Railway Station sit just outside the tunnel mouth. [4]

The West portal of the Tunnel de l’Escarène. [34]

Within the tunnel the line has begun to turn towards the South and the relatively tight curve continues until between the platforms at Sospel Station the line is on a North-South axis.

The final approach to l’Escarene Railway Station. [4]

L’Escarene Railway Station. [4]

These two images show the Station site from above. The red ring highlights the location of the station turntable which, in the 21st century, is the location of the town’s fire station. [35]]

L’Escarene sits at the top of a long climb from Nice. We will follow the line through to Nice in the next two articles in this series. (The next article can be found here. [5]) Like Sospel, l’Escarene Railway Station had substantial facilities on a wide open plateau designed to allow the reception of military convoys in the event of conflict with neighboring Italy. [1: p92]

References

  1. Jose Banaudo, Michel Braun and Gerard de Santos; Les Trains du Col de Tende Volume 1: 1858-1928; FACS Patrimoine Ferroviaire, Les Editions du Cabri, 2018.
  2. Jose Banaudo, Michel Braun and Gerard de Santos; Les Trains du Col de Tende Volume 2: 1929-1974; FACS Patrimoine Ferroviaire, Les Editions du Cabri, 2018.
  3. Jose Banaudo, Michel Braun and Gerard de Santos; Les Trains du Col de Tende Volume 3: 1975-1986; FACS Patrimoine Ferroviaire, Les Editions du Cabri, 2018.
  4. https://youtu.be/rLXAEz-n4mM?si=RLQC31jynGeM_lQR, accessed on 26th August 2025. Permission to use still images from this video has been sought via YouTube.
  5. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/09/26/the-railway-between-nice-tende-and-cuneo-part-7-lescarene-to-drap-cantaron-railway-station/
  6. Not used.
  7. Not used.
  8. Not used
  9. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=12/43.8804/7.4395&layers=P, accessed on 26th August 2025.
  10. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/07/22/the-railway-from-nice-to-tende-and-cuneo-part-1.
  11. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/07/26/the-railway-from-nice-to-tende-and-cuneo-part-2.
  12. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/08/06/the-railway-from-nice-to-tende-and-cuneo-part-3-vievola-to-st-dalmas-de-tende
  13. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/08/16/the-railway-between-nice-tende-and-cuneo-part-4-st-dalmas-de-tende-to-breil-sur-roya
  14. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/08/25/the-railway-between-nice-tende-and-cuneo-part-5-breil-sur-roya-to-ventimiglia
  15. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=15/43.93077/7.51647&layers=P, accessed on 18th August 2025.
  16. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=17/43.923820/7.520512&layers=P, accessed on 19th August 2025.
  17. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=16/43.91950/7.51623&layers=P, accessed on 20th August 2025.
  18. F. Honore; Le Rail a Travers Les Alpes: De Nice a Coni par la Voie Ferrée; L’Illustration, No. 4470, 3rd November 1928, p499.
  19. https://www.inventaires-ferroviaires.fr/mx06/06023.04D.pdf, accessed on 26th August 2025.
  20. https://www.inventaires-ferroviaires.fr/tu06/06023.1.pdf, accessed on 26th August 2025.
  21. https://www.inventaires-ferroviaires.fr/tu06/06023.2.pdf, accessed on 26th August 2025.
  22. https://structurae.net/en/structures/bevera-viaduct-1962, accessed on 26th August 2025.
  23. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=17/43.886948/7.487220&layers=P, accessed on 26th August 2025.
  24. https://www.inventaires-ferroviaires.fr/mx06/06136.03Y.pdf, accessed on 26th August 2025.
  25. https://www.inventaires-ferroviaires.fr/kc06/06136.04W.pdf, accessed on 26th August 2025.
  26. https://www.railwaywondersoftheworld.com/link-mediterranean.html, accessed on 26th August 2025
  27. https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Viaduc_de_Bevera01.jpg, accessed on 26th August 2025
  28. https://www.inventaires-ferroviaires.fr/tu06/06136.2.pdf, accessed on 27th August 2025.
  29. https://www.inventaires-ferroviaires.fr/tu06/06136.1.pdf, accessed on 27th August 2025.
  30. https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Gare_de_Sospel.JPG, accessed on 28th August 2025.
  31. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=14/43.86371/7.40071&layers=P, accessed on 28th August 2025.
  32. https://www.inventaires-ferroviaires.fr/tu06/06142.1.pdf, accessed on 28th August 2025.
  33. https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/144697687618, accessed on 28th August 2025.
  34. https://structurae.net/en/structures/col-de-braus-tunnel, accessed on 28th August 2025.
  35. https://www.inventaires-ferroviaires.fr/tu06/06057.2.pdf, accessed on 28th August 2025.
  36. https://www.inventaires-ferroviaires.fr/pt06/06057-02U.pdf, accessed on 28th August 2025.
  37. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2013/12/10/sospel-to-menton-tramway
  38. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2018/02/23/the-sospel-to-menton-tramway-revisited-chemins-de-fer-de-provence-51
  39. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2018/06/08/the-menton-to-sospel-tramway-revisited-again-chemins-de-fer-de-provence-61
  40. https://ebay.us/m/GvQ7Pv, accessed on 29th August 2025.
  41. Franco Collidà, Max Gallo & Aldo A. Mola; CUNEO-NIZZA History of a Railway; Cassa di Risparmio di Cuneo, Cuneo (CN), July 1982.
  42. Franco Collidà; 1845-1979: the Cuneo-Nice line year by year; in Rassegna – Quarterly magazine of the Cassa di Risparmio di Cuneo; No. 7, September 1979, pp. 12-18.
  43. Stefano Garzaro & Nico Molino; THE TENDA RAILWAY From Cuneo to Nice, the last great Alpine crossing; Editrice di Storia dei Trasporti, Colleferro (RM), EST, July 1982.
  44. SNCF Region de Marseille; Line: Coni – Breil sur Roya – Vintimille. Reconstruction et équipement de la section de ligne située en territoire Français; Imprimerie St-Victor, Marseille (F), 1980.
  45. https://www.geneanet.org/cartes-postales/view/194490#0, accessed on 29th August 2025.
  46. https://www.cparama.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=898, accessed on 29th August 2025.
  47. https://www.cparama.com/forum/sospel-t898-20.html, accessed on 29th August 2025.
  48. https://www.cparama.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=898&start=40, accessed on 29th August 2025.
  49. https://www.cparama.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=11&t=24506 , 29th August 2025.
  50. https://www.cparama.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=11&t=24506, 29th August 2025.
  51. https://fr.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sch%C3%A9ma_de_la_ligne_de_Nice_%C3%A0_Breil-sur-Roya, 15th September 2025

The Railway between Nice, Tende and Cuneo – Part 5 – Breil-sur-Roya to Ventimiglia

The featured image for this article, above is an FS Series 320 0-6-0 (030 in Italian notation) steam locomotive which was used in the early days of operation on the southern section of the Ventimiglia-Cuneo line, before the North and South sections could be linked. The locomotive depicted is FS3620 and carries a nameplate – ‘Terni’. 201 locomotives of this Class were built between 1904 and 1908. [8]

In the first four articles about the line from Cuneo to the sea we covered the length of the line from Cuneo to Breil-sur-Roya. These articles can be found here, [9]  here [10] here, [11] and here. [12]

I also want to acknowledge the assistance given to me by David Sousa of the Rail Relaxation YouTube Channel https://www.youtube.com/@RailRelaxation/featured and https://www.railrelaxation.com and particularly his kind permission given to use still images from rail journeys that he has filmed on the Cuneo-Ventimiglia railway line. [35][55]

South of Breil-sur-Roya a junction allows direct access to Ventimiglia and to Nice. The map below shows the two routes as they existed prior to the alteration of the border between France and Italy after the Second World War.

The lines Nice to Tende and Ventimiglia to Tende in the period from 1928 to the Second World War, before the annexation, in 1947, of St-Dalmas de Tende and Piene to France. [40]

This article follows the line South from Breil-sur-Roya to Ventimiglia in two parts: the first as far as Airole and the second from Airole to Ventimiglia. ….

1. The Line South from Breil-sur Roya to Airole

This drawing/map shows the two routes heading South from Breil-sur-Roya. [40]

As with the line immediately to the North of Breil-sur-Roya, the works to the South were constructed by the French. Both of the lines heading South from Breil-sur-Roya entered tunnels just a short distance South of Breil.

Breil-sur-Roya to Piene. [22]
A colourised postcard view of Breil-Sur Roya Railway Station looking North through the station site in advance of the official opening in 1928. This colourised image was shared on the Stura-Cuneo Facebook Page on 20th February 2020, (c) Public Domain. [29]
Breil-sur-Roya station during its very early operation (1928-35), before electrification, with numerous passenger carriages standing idle. The passenger building is in the background; in the foreground are the buildings on the second platform, the only ones today significantly reduced in height and length, publisher Frédéric Laugier, (c) Public Domain. [30]
Breil-sur-Roya Railway Station at the height of its development, with electrification completed (1935), with the passenger building, the large freight yard filled with wagons, and the concrete sheds with arched vaults. Those in the background still exist but are used for non-railway purposes. The Breil Ecomuseum is now located on the north side, half-hidden by the foliage of the tree in the foreground. The photograph was taken from the hillside to the Northwest of the station site and faces Southeast, (c) Public Domain. [30]
After the war, the line to Nice was reopened in 1947, but the station, reduced to the simple terminus of a secondary section, was greatly simplified, removing almost all the sidings (the long straight lines of which can still be made out). In the background, the line to Fontan still features the electrification poles (removed from the rest of the station), but it was naturally abandoned and remained there until its reconstruction in the 1970s. In the 21st century, platform 2, which had been removed at the time, has been restored, the buildings on the second platform have been scaled down, and the third platform has been eliminated. The turntable, which still exists, is part of the Ecomusée, publisher Lapie à Saint-Maur, 1955, (c) Public Domain.[31]
Breil-sur-Roya Railway Station in 2013, (c) Gilles Tagadaand licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [32]
The southern end of the railway station site in Breil-sur-Roya. Two lines leave the station heading South-southwest. [Google Maps, August 2025]

South of the station adjacent parallel bridges cross the Voie de la Première Dfl and Vallon de la Lavina (the Lavina Bridge).

Looking East under the railway bridges (the Lavina Bridge) along Voie de la Première Dfl. [Google Streetview, October 2008]
Looking West under the railway bridges (the Lavina Bridge)along Voie de la Première Dfl. [Google Streetview, October 2008]
This extract from the OpenStreetMap mapping shows the close correlation of the two different routes over the first fe kilometres. The short red lines are the locations of tunnel mouths. [13]
A short distance to the South the two lines can be seen to be separating both geographically and in level. This view looks Northeast with the station off to the left. [Google Streetview, October 2008]
The view South from the cab of a Ventimiglia-bound train. Again, the separation in level is quite marked. [55]
At the same location, this view looks Southeast. Both lines enter  a tunnel just to the South. One tunnel mouth is visible on the left of the image at a lower level. The other tunnel mouth is behind the vegetation on the right of this image. [Google Streetview, October 2008]
The two tunnel mouths. On the left, that of Gigne Tunnel, on the right, that of Caranca Tunnel. Left for Ventimiglia, right for Nice! [54]

The approach to the junction from Ventimiglia. The line from Nice is at the higher level on the left. [35]

The mouth of Gigne Tunnel (1188 metres in length), seen from the cab of the Ventimiglia-bound service. The tunnel is S-shaped. Trains heading South turn to the East within the tunnel and then, close to the East Portal, begin to turn to the South again. [55][1: p126]

The view North from the North Portal of Gigne Tunnel, seen from the cab of a Northbound train. [35]

The route of this tunnel crosses twice under the Caranca tunnel on the Nice line. [1: p126]

Just beyond the East Portal of Gigne Tunnel the line begins to curve South again. [55]

The East Portal of Gigne Tunnel, seen from the cab of a Northbound train. [35]

The North Portal of Sanfurian Tunnel (260 metres in length) was in deep shade when this image was taken from the cab of a Ventimiglia-bound train. [55]

The view Northwest from the same portal of Sanfurian Tunnel. [35]

The view South from the mouth of Sanfurian Tunnel. Note the high retaining walls to the right of the image. [55]

The South Portal of Sanfurian Tunnel, seen from the North end of Eboulis Viaduct. This viaduct has eight 18 metre stone arches and nine 7 metre stone arches. [35][1: p126]

The view from the North along the Route de Ventimiglia with the railway viaduct alongside the road. [Google Streetview, July 2014]

Eboulis Viaduct facing South. [55]

Eboulis Viaduct looking North, seen from the cab of a Northbound train.  [35]

Eboulis Viaduct before the construction of the road between it and the River Roya. The quality of this image is not perfect but it is still possible to make out the South portal of Snfurian Tunnel towards the right of the image. [49]

The view along the E74/D6204 from the South with the viaduct to the left of the road and the river to the right below the road. [Google Streetview, July 2014]

Looking South over Bancao Viaduct. [55]

Looking North along Bancao Viaduct. [35]

Bancao Viaduct on the line from Breil-sur-Roya to Ventimiglia is close to the D6204 on this extract from OpenStreetMap. The line to the West is the line from Breil-sur-Roya to Nice which is at a much higher level. [14]

Looking West from the D6204/E74, a small culvert close to the road is dwarfed by the bridge carrying the line to Ventimiglia which in turn is dwarfed by the viaduct carrying the line to Nice. [Google Streetview, April 2008]

The bridge carrying the line to Ventimiglia is also known as the Bancao Ravine Bridge. [1: p126]

The length of the line South of Bancao Viaduct. The two rail line are still running in parallel, only beginning to separate significantly at the bottom of this extract from Open StreetMap. Cottalorda Tunnel begins towards the bottom of this map extract. [15]

The line can only be seen fleetingly from the road.

It runs in front of the terracotta-coloured building near the centre of this image. Railings at the edge of a retaining wall supporting the line can be seen to the right of the image. [Google Streetview, July 2014]

The North portal of Cottalorda Tunnel (297 metres long). [55]

Turning through 180°, this is the view North at the same location. [35]

Just a glimpse of the tunnel mouth and the associated retaining wall can be seen from the D6204/E74. [Google Streetview, July 2014]

The view South from the southern portal of Cottalorda Tunnel. [55]

The southern portal of Cottalorda Tunnel. [35]

Looking back towards Breil-sur-Roya and the mouth of Cottalorda Tunnel. Note the arcaded retaining wall on the left, typical of the retaining walls on this length of the line. The D6204 runs alongside and below the line to the right. [35]

This next length of the line from the South portal of Cottalorda Tunnel runs immediately adjacent to the E74/D6204. [16]

This smaller image, looks South along the D6204/E74. The railway can be seen adjacent to, but above the road. To the West side of the line, large retaining walls create space for the line on the steeply graded valley side. {Google Streetview, July 2014]

A little further South the Hydroelectric Plant is now visible. [Google Streetview, July 2014]

This View looks North. The building beyond the trees is Breil’s Hydroelectric Power Station (below). [35]

Now just beyond the Power Station , again looking South with a high retaining wall above the railway which sits a few metres above road level on the right. Three arcades carrying the line are followed by the three stone arches of the Riou Viaduct. [Google Streetview, July 2014]

Construction work on the Italian length of the line in the lower Roya (Roia) Valley began in Ventimiglia. Banaudo et al have chosen to follow the line from South to North to reflect the way this section of the line was constructed. We continue to follow the line from North to South.

The length of the line from the border at Piena (Piene) to Airole was completed before the first world war but traffic along this part of the line had to wait for completion of the length of the line in French territory. The Italian authorities decided that services would commence only between Ventimiglia and Airole. That length is covered later in this article.

The international border at the time of construction was just to the North of Piena (Piene). That border line remained the same through the interwar years. Services North from Airole via Piena to Breil-sur-Roya had to wait until 1928 and the opening of the full line.

The Riou Viaduct (three 6.25m masonry arches) was the location of the international boundary. Banaudo et all tell us that the point that the line crossed the boundary is marked by the letters I and F engraved in a stone on the deck of the structure. [1: p125]

The Riou Viaduct straddled the centuries old border between Genoa and Savoy which became the border between Italy and France. This view looking South along the D6204/E74 shows the arcade retaining wall (3 bays) followed by the three-arch viaduct. [Google Streetview, July 2014]
This view looks North along the D6204/E74 towards Breil-sur-Roya. The three arches of the Riou Viaduct are on the left of the image. [Google Streetview, July 2014]

Immediately to the South of the Riou Viaduct, Piene (Piena) Station was built as a frontier station below the village of Piena-Alta which, Banaudo et al tell us, was for centuries the outpost of the Genoese republic and the border with the States of Savoy. [1: p125-126]

Close to the road border post at Piena-Bassa, the “Italian administration decided to establish a station intended for police and customs control operations. There were three platform faces, a two-story passenger building and a customs clearance hall of the same size for goods, comprising a warehouse, offices and two apartments on the upper floors. The site was hemmed in by the tunnel to the South, the French border to the North, the mountainside to the West, and the Roya River to the East, necessitating the construction of the station, cantilevered over a masonry gallery supported by seven arches, above the SS 20 roadway.” [1: p126]

This photograph was taken in 1925 facing upstream.. It shows Piene (Piena) Railway Station sitting at high level, above the Ventimiglia road, (Collection of J. L. Taylor) (c) Public Domain. [26]

Also facing up stream, this image shows the structures at this location in 2006, (c) Markus Schweiss and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence, (CC BY-SA 3.0). [33]

Since the photograph above was taken a netting protection has been applied to the principal buildings at rail level. This photograph taken in 2019 also faces upstream, (c) Eugenio Merzagora/Structurae and made available for reuse under their non-commercial licence. [34]

This view looks South along the D6204/E74. it is taken a couple of hundred metres South of the Riou Viaduct where the road passes what was Piene Railway Station building. The site was tight and in order to accommodate the necessary station buildings, they were built over the road. [Google Streetview, October 2008]

Piene Railway Station (closed) seen from the cab of a Southbound train. [55]

Piene Railway Station (closed) seen from the cab of a Northbound train. [35]

Writing about the length of the line between Ventimiglia and the border at Piena (Piene), Banaudo et al say: “In the lower Roya Valley, the seven tranches of the Ventimiglia – southern border section were successively awarded in 1908, 1910, 1911, 1912, and 1913. Despite the lower altitude, the route was as difficult as on the purely Alpine section of the line, with steep gorges and terrain that offered highly varied resistance to earthworks: unstable marly limestone, very hard black limestone, clayey marl, schist, sandstone, etc. Of the 17,260 m route, nearly half way to be in tunnels, with nineteen structures totaling 8,259 m, fifteen bridges and viaducts representing sixty-four masonry arches, as well as various secondary structures for crossing waterways and rural roads.” [1: p118]

Piene Railway Station to Airole Railway Station. [22]

South of Piene (Piena) a series of structures carry the line over or through the obstacles in its path:

• the Fromentino Tunnel, 645 m long;
• a viaduct with three 10 m arches;
• the Arme Tunnel, 333 m long;
• a viaduct with four 10 m arches;
• the Agrie Tunnel, 820 m long;
• the Fanghetto tunnel, 419 m long, extended by a gallery (the post-WW2 border was established at the North end of this tunnel);
• the Sardinesca Tunnel, 820 m long;
• a single span arch bridge over the Tron valley.

These are all illustrated below.

The North Portal of Fromentino Tunnel (645 metres in length) in shade. [55]

The view from the North portal of Fromentino tunnel. [35]

It is just possible to see the tunnel mouth above, when looking up from the road. [Google Streetview, October 2008]

The view South from the D6204/E74 above the South portal of Fromentino Tunnel. Before reaching the Arme Tunnel, the line crosses a 3-viaduct of three 10 m span arches. The stone parapets of the viaduct can be seen below the top rail of the parapet immediately in front of the camera. [Google Streetview, September 2010]

The view South from the cab of a Ventimiglia-bound train at the southern portal of Fromentino Tunnel. The viaduct parapets are in the foreground. [55]

Turning round, this is the view of the South Portal of Fromentino Tunnel. [35]

Looking toward the northern portal of Arme Tunnel (333 metres long) which again is in shade. [55]

A view looking north along the railway from the road immediately above the North portal of Arme Tunnel. The parapets of the viaduct can again be seen between the two tunnel mouths. [Google Streetview, September 2010]

A similar view back towards Breil-sur-Roya from the cab of a Northbound service the mouth of Arme Tunnel. [35]

This next length of the line is heading South-southeast. Arme tunnel is at the top of this extract from OpenStreetMap. The line bridges (on a four-arch viaduct) a tributary of La Roya before being swallowed by Agrie Tunnel.

The view South from the mouth of Arme Tunnel. [55]

Turning through 180°, this is the South portal of the Arme Tunnel. [35]

The railway and the bridge are just visible over the edge of the road, looking East. The bridge is a viaduct of four 10 m spans. [Google Streetview, September 2010]

The northern portal of Agrie Tunnel (820 metres in length). [55]

The view from the cab of a Northbound service leaving Agrie Tunnel. [35]

A better view is obtained from the road above the North portal of Agrie Tunnel. This view shows the viaduct mentioned above. [Google Streetview, September 2010]

This is the view from the cab of a Southbound train at the South portal of Agrie Tunnel. The train is travelling at 68 km/hour and the still image from the video is much less distinct. [55]

A similar view but from the road. A metre high wall separates the road and the railway. [Google Streetview, July 2014]

Turning through 180°, we see the mouth of the Agrie Tunnel from the cab of the Northbound service. [35]

A similar view from the road. It is at this location that we cross into Italy! The border was adjusted as part of reparations after WW2. [Google Streetview, July 2014]

At high speed the video stills are less distinct. This is the northern mouth of the Fanghetto Tunnel which is in shade. This tunnel is 419 metres in length and trains cross the border between France and Italy as they enter it. [55]

A much more distinct view from the road of the mouth of Fanghetto Tunnel. [Google Streetview, July 2014]

Here, we are looking from Italy into France in this view back towards Breil-sur-Roya from the mouth of the Fanghetto Tunnel. [35]

The southern end of the Fanghetto Tunnel is galleried/arcaded with low level arches letting in light before the tunnel mouth is reached. [55]

The arcades close to the southern mouth of Fanghetto Tunnel seen from the East side of the valley. [Google Streetview, July 2021]

The view along the line from the southern portal of Fanghetto Tunnel. [55]

The southern portal of the Fanghetto Tunnel. [35]

With the Southbound train now travelling at 75 km/hr, small structures (like this accommodation bridge) whizz by and, certainly in this direction with the bridge face in shadow, it is impossible to make out any detail.. [55]

The structure is seen in better light, from the cab of the Northbound service. [35]

The northern mouth of Sardinesca Tunnel (820 metres long) again in shadow and indistinct because of the speed of the train. [55]

Looking back towards Breil-sur-Roya from the cab of a Northbound train at the mouth of the Sardinesca Tunnel. [35]

The view South beyond the southern portal of Sardinesca Tunnel. The parapets of a single span arch bridge are visible close to the camera. [55]

Turning through 180° we get a look at a footbridge over the line just outside Sardinesca Tunnel. [35]

The same footbridge seen from the SS20 road. the arch bridge over the Tron, a tributary of the Roya, can be seen on the left of the image. [Google Streetview, August 2021]

An extract from Google’s satellite imagery showing the same location. Note the tunnel mouth and adjacent footbridge in the top-left quadrant of the photograph. [Google Maps, August 2025]

Next comes the Olivetta-San-Michele Station and the San-Michele Tunnel (133 m long).

A very short distance South of the footbridge is Olivetta San Michele Railway Station. [Google Maps, August 2025]

Olivetta San Michele Station, seen from the cab of the Ventimiglia-bound service. [55]

A better railside view of the station building at Olivetta San Michele, this time from the cab of a Northbound train. [35]

The station building seen looking South from the SS20/E74 road. [Google Streetview, August 2021]

The station building seen from the East, (c) Pampuco and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 4.0). [36]

The view ahead along the line towards Ventimiglia from the cab of the Southbound train as it pulls out of Olivetta San Michele Station. The tunnel ahead is San Michele Tunnel which is 126 metres in length. [55]

A view, looking South from the SS20, of the northern mouth of San Michele Tunnel with an Italian Locomotive heading into the tunnel (I may well need correcting on this) is shown in more detail below… It appears to be a Belgian locomotive (SNCB) No. 7336 with the name, ‘Mexico’. [Google Streetview, August 2021]

This picture it taken just a short distance to the South of the image above. It shows a side-on view of the same locomotive. I would not expect to see this locomotive at this location! [Google Streetview, August 2021]

This is SNCB 7304 – the image is provided by Wikipedia. The family resemblance with 7336 is manifest. The Class 73 locomotives formed the backbone of the SNCB/NMBS shunting locomotive fleet. [20]

Class 73 locomotives were built in three batches: 7301-7335 during 1965–1967, 7336-7375 during 1973-1974 and finally 7373–7395 in 1976–1977. [20]

This is the view North through the station site as seen from the cab of a Northbound service at the North postal of the San Michele Tunnel. [35]

Looking out from the Southeast portal of San Michele Tunnel, the line ahead crosses Roya IV Bridge which is 126 metres in length and then enters Mantici Tunnel which is 604 metres long. [55]

One hundred metres further South and turning through 180°, this is the view across Roya IV Bridge towards the San Michele Tunnel. Note that the road tunnel is just above the railway tunnel, although on a different line. [35]

The view from the road above the Southeast portal of San Michele Tunnel. The mouth of Mantigi Tunnel (604 metres long) can be seen at the end of the railway viaduct. [Google Streetview, August 2021]

A very short distance along the road a somewhat better view of the viaduct. [Google Streetview, August 2021] More views of the viaduct can be seen here, [17] here, [18] and here. [19]

Roya IV Bridge was also known as the San-Michele Viaduct. It was made up of five 15 metre arches. [1: p125]

The Mantigi tunnel has a short section where it is very close the the surface of the ground above, Banaudo et al, tell us that this allowed the provision of a vertical ventilation shaft. [1: p125]

Trains travelling South to Ventimiglia crossed the viaduct and ran on through Mantigi Tunnel. Airole Railway Station was originally on a large plateau beyond the Southeast portal of Mantigi Tunnel.

The original location of Airole Railway Station. The substantial passenger building remains. The walls of one other building can be seen to the Southeast of the passenger facilities. [Google Maps, August 2025]

Banaudo et al tell that “Airole station was located in an olive grove to the North of the village, in the only place where the shallower slope of the left bank of the Roya allowed the construction of a retaining wall to support all the railway infrastructure: the passenger building, three platform tracks and two freight tracks with a goods shed and high platform, as well as a water column for the locomotives.” [1: p121]

The station was built in 1914 and remained operational until, sadly, the station site was abandoned in the 1970s when it was replaced by a single platform halt in the centre of Airole. [25]

At the southern end of Mantigi Tunnel, trains enter a passing loop (Airole Loop), which is all that is left of the original railway station, before entering another tunnel! [55]

Looking back towards Breil-sur-Roya from within the passing loop. Immediately to the North of the loop, Northbound trains plunge into the Mantigi Tunnel. [35]

This excellent photograph of the old station building looks North towards the Mantigi Tunnel, © Giorgio Stagni and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [25]

The station building and the shell of the old goods shed. This is another photograph © Giorgio Stagni and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [37]

Looking North from the cab of a Northbound train approaching the old railway station building. It is evident from both these pictures that there were originally sidings at this location – confirmation that the station facilities at Airole were once quite significant. [35]

At the end of the passing loop trains enter Madonna Tunnel (249 metres long). [55]

Looking back towards Breil-sur-Roya from the portal of Madonna Tunnel. The passing loop is still provided at this location as there is no room at the present Airole Railway Station for more than a single track. [35]

Leaving Madonna Tunnel trains immediately pass under a local road bridge which appears as not much more than a silhouette as eyes get used to the light on leaving the tunnel. [55]

Airole Railway Station seen from the cab of a Ventimiglia-bound train passing under the accommodation bridge shown above. [55]

The view West from the bridge which carries Via Giacomo Matteotti over the line. [Google Streetview, August 2021]

Turning to face East, this is the present Airole Railway Station as seen from Via Giacomo Matteotti. [Google Streetview, August 2021]

A Northbound train is stationary at Airole Railway Station. This is the view ahead, West towards Olivette San Michele. The road over bridge sits a few metres closer to the station than the mouth of Madonna Tunnel. [35]

A great action shot showing ALn 663 1160 at Airole station, © Giorgio Stagni and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [38]

Airole to Bevera. [22]

Airole Railway Station seen from the cab of a northbound service entering the station from the East. [35]

A similar view but this time the camera is on Via G. Biancheri which crosses the railway line above the West portal of Airole Tunnel (153 metres in length). [Google Streetview, August 2021]

This extract from Google’s satellite imagery shows the village of Airole which sits over the line. Airole Tunnel curves to the Northeast. Its West Portal is bottom-left in this image, its Northeast portal is top-right. [Google Maps, August 2025]

The view Southwest from the cab of a Ventimiglia-bound train at the Northeast portal of Airole Tunnel. [55]

The Southwest portal of Para Tunnel (754 metres long). [55]

Looking Southwest from Via Luigi Trucchi the Northeast portal of Airole Tunnel can be seen below the village of Airole. [Google Streetview, August 2021]

The view from Via Nazionale of the short bridge (Airole Bridge, one 10 metre arch) which sits to the Southwest of the mouth of Para Tunnel. The stonework of the tunnel portal can be seen above and to the right of the viaduct. Para Tunnel is over 747 metres long. [Google Streetview, August 2021]

This is the view back towards Airole Village and Railway Station from the mouth of Para Tunnel. White fencing sits on top of the parapet walls of Airole Bridge. [35]

Para Tunnel curves round to the Southeast. This is the view from the cab of the Southbound train as it exits Para Tunnel and crosses La Para II viaduct (four 10 metre arches). [55]

The viaduct mentioned above can be glimpsed from Via Natzionale. [Google Streetview, August 2021]

This is the view back into the mouth of Para Tunnel. [35]

The Northwest portal of Pian de Para Tunnel. The tunnel is 184 metres long. [55][1: p125]

A view of the Northwest portal of Pian de Para Tunnel from Via Nazionale. There is a single-span arch bridge carrying the line close to the tunnel mouth. [Google Streetview, August 2021]

The next length of the line as it appears on OpenStreetMap and annotated with the tunnel names. [21]

The Southeast portal of Pian de Para Tunnel seen from the cab of the Northbound train. [35]

Immediately to the Southeast of the tunnel portal Southbound trains cross La ParaI Viaduct. The Viaduct appears to have three 5 metre spans. This image looks Northeast from Via Nazionale. [1: p125]

The Southeast portal of Pian de Para Tunnel can be seen in the top-left of this image, looking North from a point a little further along Via Nazionale. [Google Streetview, August 2021]

The Southbound train is now travelling at over 80 km/hr. This is the portal of the next tunnel on the route – Gambetto Tunnel (173 metres in length. [55] [1: p125]

Turning through 180°, this is the view back towards Airole from the mouth of the Gambetto Tunnel. [35]

Gambetto Tunnel opens out onto the next bridge over La Roya – Roya No. III Bridge. [55] This structure is also known as the Lamberta Viaduct, it is made up of three 14 metre arches and two 10 metre arches. The gallery beyond the bridge is the route of the modern SS20. [1: p125]

Turning through 180°, this is the mouth of the Gambetto Tunnel from the cab of a Northbound service. [35]

With the railway running South-southeast towards Bevera and Ventimiglia, it alternates between tunnels and viaducts switching sides of La Roya (Roia) river. [23]

The Roya No. III bridge is also known as the Lamberta Viaduct. [1: p125]

The Roya No. II bridge is also known as the Colombo Viaduct. [1: p125]

A view of Roya No. III bridge from the bridge carrying Via Nazionale of the Roya to the West of the railway. [Google Streetview, August 2021]

The old road, Via Nazionale passes under the five stone arches of La Roya No. III bridge – three 14 metre arches and two 10 metre arches. The concrete gallery allows light into the tunnel carrying the modern SS20/E74. [Google Streetview, September 2011]

A view of La Roya No. III bridge from the Via Nazionala further to the East along the valley. [Google Streetview, September 2011]

Southbound trains then plunge into Lamberta Tunnel which is 750 metres in length. [55]

Turning through 180°, this is the view across Roya III bridge from the mouth of the Lamberta Tunnel. [35]

Leaving Lamberta Tunnel at its southern end, Southbound trains immediately crossed La Roya again on Roya No. II bridge. [55] The bridge is also known as the Colombo Viaduct. [1: p125]

Turning through 180° we see the Lamberta Tunnel Portal. [35]

Once across La Roya on No. II bridge trains ran on into Colombo Tunnel. [55]

Looking back across La Roya from the mouth of the Colombo Tunnel. [35]

Roia (Roya) No. II Bridge, seen from the viaduct carrying the SS20/E74 across the river. The old road down the valley (Via Nazionale) can be seen crossing the river at a lower level. The northern portal of Colombo Railway Tunnel can be seen on the left of this image. [Google Streetview, August 2021]
A similar view, looking West from the Via Nazionale. [Google Streetview, September 2011]
The view from the West of Roia No. II bridge, looking East. The tunnel mouth visible in this photograph is the southern portal of the Lamberta Tunnel. [Google Streetview, September 2011]

Looking South across Roia (Roya) No. 1 bridge (also known as the Bocche Viaduct) from the South portal of Colombo Tunnel. [55]

Roia No. I bridge, seen from the West on Via Nazionale. [Google Streetview, September 2011]
Roia No. I bridge, seen from the East on Via Nazionale. The tunnel mouth visible on the left of the image is the northern portal of Delle Bocche Tunnel. [Google Streetview, September 2011]

The northern tunnel mouth of Delle Bocche Tunnel. [55]

Looking back from the Delle Bocche tunnel mouth across the Roia No. 1 bridge. [35]

Banaudo et al tell us that the length of the Roia (Roya) Valley that we have just traversed is known as the ‘Bocche’, “the wild gorges of the Roya which for a long time represented an abstacle to communications between the Ligurian lands of the Republic of Genova and the Piedmontese domain of the Kingdom of Sardinia. It was only in 1893that the … road from Ventimiglia to Breil was completed … after lengthy construction work hampered by the difficult terrain and the reluctance of the military authorities. The railway tamed this gorge through an uninterrupted succession of tunnels and viaducts.” [1: p121, 125]

Delle Bocche Tunnel (927 metres long) ends at the top of this OpenStreetMap extract. There is a short bridge which carries a length of the line before Southbound trains enter d’Allaveri Tunnel which, although it appears as one tunnel on the map extract is actually two tunnels with a very short open length in between. The Aqueduct illustrated on the map passes under the railway in that opening in pipes, (Pont sur les conduites forcées de la centrale hydroélectrique de Bevera). The first length of the tunnel is named d’Allaveri Tunnel (69 metres long), the second length is known as Serro Soprano Tunnel (245 metres long).

Once beyond these tunnels, Southbound trains have a clear run down to Bevera Railway Station. [24]

Looking South from the South portal of Delle Bocche Tunnel. [55]

Looking back to the North, this is the South portal of Delle Bocche Tunnel. [35]

A glimpse of the line from a local road (Localita Madonetta) at a point a couple of hundred metres South of the South portal of Dell Bocche Tunnel. The camera is facing Northeast. [Google Streetview, November 2011]

A short distance further South the line bridges a shallow valley and crosses a minor access road. This is the East elevation of the Varese Viaduct (three 8 metre arches) seen from Via Comunale di Varase. [Google Streetview, November 2011][1: p121]
The western elevation of the same structure, seen from the Southwest. [Google Streetview, November 2011]

A little further Southwest the line is carried on a low bridge under another minor road. This view looks West from Via Comunale di Varase. [Google Streetview, November 2011]

The same structure seen from the West. [Google Streetview, November 2011]

Continuing South the line is carried alongside the River Roia (Roya) and above Via San Rocco on retaining walls and a series of nine 8 metre arches. The arches comprise one structure known as the Allaveri Viaduct. The North portal of d’Allaveri Tunnel can be glimpsed just to the right of centre in this photograph. [Google Streetview, November 2011]

The North portal of d’Allaveri Tunnel. This and the next tunnel are in the vicinity of the hamlet of Varese and the Bevera Hydroelectric Power Station. [55]

The view North from the cab of a Northbound train at the North portal of d’Allaveri Tunnel. [35]

This extract from Google’s satellite imagery shows the two tunnels at this location and Bevera’s Hydroelectric power plant which is immediately adjacent to the railway. It is the white-roofed building just above the centre of this image.

D’Allaveri Tunnel is the very short tunnel to the North of the Hydroelectric plant (71 metres in length). Serro Soprano Tunnel (244 metres long) extends South from the building to a point near to the bottom of this image.

The grey area at the bottom of the image (surrounding the tunnel mouth) is a series of greenhouses. As shown below.

[Google Streetview, July 2019]

An overexposed photograph showing the view South from the southern portal of d’Allaveri Tunnel. The Aqueduct which carries water under pressure to Bevera’s hydroelectric plant can be seen on the right. The line bridges the penstock on three 5 metre arches before southbound trains enter Serro Soprano Tunnel ahead. [55]

Another over-exposed view, this time facing North at the North portal of Serro Soprano Tunnel. The southern mouth of d’Allaveri Tunnel can be seen ahead.[35]

Looking South towards Bevera at the mouth of Serro Soprano Tunnel. [55]

The South portal of Serro Soprano Tunnel. [35]

An accommodation bridge North of Bevera Railway Station, seen from the cab of the Southbound service. [55]

The accommodation bridge, seen from above. [Google Maps, August 2025]

The same structure seen from the cab of the Northbound train. [35]

As we head South towards Bevera Railway Station, the valley of the Roia widens significantly and we enter the suburbs of Ventimiglia, of which Bevera is one part. Beverea Railway Station was built with a large “classically designed passenger building, two platform faces and and two freight tracks with a goods shed and loading platform.” [1: p121] In the 21st century Bevera is a single platform halt.

A Southbound train approaches Bevera Railway Station. [55]

Bevera Railway Station seen from above. [Google Maps, August 2025]

Bevera Railway Station building and forecourt seen from the Northwest. [Google Streetview, October 2010]
Bevera Station building seen from the South adjacent to a low underpass under the railway. [Google Streetview, July 2019]
A second underpass just a little further to the South. [Google Streetview, August 2021]

The Northbound service sits at Bevera Railway Station which is a single platform halt. [35]

The Southbound train, stationary at Bevera Railway Station. [55]

Bevera to Ventimiglia. [22]

Looking North into the Bevera Station site

South of Bevera Railway Station the railway bridges the Bevera River (Torrente).

The bridge over the Bevera Torrente. The river is quite a significant tributary to the Roia (Roya). [Google Maps, August 2025]
The railway bridge over the Bevera, seen from the main road to the East. The viaduct has four16.35 metre arches and spans the Bevera close to its confluence with the Roia. [Google Streetview, August 2021][1: p119]

The same bridge, seen from the Northwest. [Google Streetview, August 2021]

The view North along the line from the cab of a Northbound train as it crosses the bridge over the Bevera River. [35]

The line runs on to the South on embankment through the suburbs of Ventimiglia.

The bridge over Via Madeira seen from the East. [Google Streetview, August 2021]

The same bridge seen from the West. [Google Streetview, August 2021]

Looking back along the line towards Bevera Railway Station from Pont Bevera (Viadotto Autoporto). [Google Streetview, August 2021]

Facing towards Ventimiglia this image taken from the cab of the Ventimiglia-bound service looks through Pont Bevera (Viadotto Autoporto). [55]

Facing North towards Bevera and looking under Pont Bevera (Viadotto Autoporto). [35]

Looking ahead along the line towards Ventimiglia Railway Station from Pont Bevera (Viadotto Autoporto). [Google Streetview, August 2021]

The North portal of Maneira Tunnel (171 metres in length) is in shadow and difficult to make out from the cab of the ventimiglia-bound train. [55][1: p119]

Turning through 180°, this is the view North from the cab of a Northbound service as it leaves the North portal of Madeira Tunnel. [35]

The view South from the South portal of Maneira Tunnel. [55]

Turning through 180°, this is the South portal seen fr

The line continues on embankment with low height underpasses to provide vehicular access under the line as shown below. [Google Streetview, August 2021]…

In between the second and third underpasses shown above the line passes through d’Isnardi Tunnel (168 metres in length). The North portal is so much in shade that the view from the cab of the Ventimiglia-bound service does not provide any detail. [55] That is the first image below…

The North portal of d’Isnardi Tunnel is so much in shade that no details can be made out from the cab of the Ventimiglia-bound service. [55]

Turning through 180° this is the view North from the North portal of the tunnel. [35]

The view South from the South portal of d’Isnardi Tunnel. [55]

Turning through 180° the South portal is seen from the cab of a Northbound service. [35]

The next few images come from above the level of the line further to the South – the first two from alongside to the West of the line and then from over bridges. ….

The first two of the images above look back along the line and then forward towards Ventimiglia Railway Station from Via Peglia. [Google Streetview, November 2011] The second pair of images look back and forward along the line from the bridge carrying Via Gallardi over the line. [Google Streetview, August 2021] The final par of images look back (across a curve in the line) and then forward along the line from the E80 (close to the toll booths). In the first of this pair of images the bridge carrying Via Gallardi over the line can be seen. [Google Streetview, July 2019]

The next two images show the bridge carrying Via Gallardi over the line. [55][35]…

This next pair of photos show the overbridge which carries the E80. [55][35] …

The next batch of photos continue towards Ventimiglia Railway Station. …

Two further underpasses are shown in the first two images above, the second pair of images are taken from the bridge carrying the SS20 over the line, the first looks back to the West towards the point where the double-track line from Nice begins to run alongside the single-track line from Cuneo. The second looks forward from the same bridge towards Ventimiglia Railway Station. The last two images are underpasses that the 3 lines cross on their way East. [Google Streetview, September 2024]

A cab level view of the diverging tracks seen in the third of the six views in the gallery above. The double-track line heading towards Nice diverges to the left. It is just approximately 6 kilometres to the international border. [35]

The next pair of images show the bridge carrying the SS20 as seen from cabs on services to and from Cuneo. [55][35] The first faces towards Ventimiglia, the second towards Bevera. …

The next three images show the final approach into Ventimiglia Railway Station. [55] …

The middle image above shows a shunter idling in a siding alongside the main running lines – TS D100 Shunter [Vossloh G1000 BB]. The Vossloh G1000 BB is a class of off-centre cab diesel-hydraulic B’B’ 4 axle locomotives built by Vossloh in Kiel since 2002. The class is based upon the standard Vossloh locomotives design, and they are a higher powered development of the Vossloh G800 BB which were produced mainly for the Austrian Federal Railways, with a 1.1 MW (1,500 hp) MTU engine replacing the 0.8 MW (1,100 hp) Caterpillar engine in the G800; as a result the front engine compartment is enlarged, whilst other features: bogie frame and overall dimensions remain the same. [27]

Another view of the TS D100 Shunter [Vossloh G1000 BB], this time from the cab of the Cuneo-bound service. [35]

Looking Northwest from the cab of a Cuneo-bound train about to depart from Ventimiglia Railway Station. [35]

Ventimiglia Railway Station is on a Northwest to Southeast axis. [Google Maps, August 2025]

A postcard view of Ventimiglia taken from the hillside to the Northeast of the Railway Station which features in the foreground of the image. [44]

Ventimiglia Railway Station in very early days, © Public Domain. [28]
The station in the 21st century, seen from approximately the same location. This building was constructed after WW2. [Google Streetview, August 2021]
This satellite image dated 2006 from Google shows: on the left, the abandoned locomotive shed at Ventimiglia; the lighter coloured main station building below the centre of the image; and other railway buildings with red roofs. [45]

Banaudo et al write that “the single track of the Col de Tende line runs alongside the Nice double track for a few hundred metres. [Initially] they crossed the Roya River together on a six-span metal viaduct, which was soon replaced by a new structure with eight 17-metre stone arches. Immediately beyond the bridge, the two routes separate and the Cuneo route climbs up the right bank of the river, at a gradient of 13 mm/m, the valley is still relatively wide. A bundle of three service tracks called Scalo Roia is located to the left of the main track. The Isnardi tunnel (168 m long) and Maneira tunnel (171 m long) precede a four-arch viaduct (with 6-metre arches).” [1: p119] This description assumes that the line is followed West out of Ventimiglia Railway Station.

The earliest rail bridge over the River Roia at Ventimiglia. This single track structure was widened
The early (widened) metal bridge carrying the Nice line and the Cuneo line over the Roia in Ventimiglia, seen from the East, © Public Domain. [28]
The replacement stone arch viaduct. The postcard was posted in 1917. [47]
The same elevation of the bridge in the 21st century, viewed from the next structure downstream. [Google Streetview, July 2021]
The upstream elevation of the same bridge, in 1955. [48]
The upstream elevation of the same bridge, seen from the Northeast. The high-level structure carries the SS20 over the railway line. The upstream elevation of the river bridge is a modern extension to the second bridge which comprised eight 17 metres stone arches. [Google Streetview, July 2021]

Banaudo et al comment that while construction was just beginning between Breil and the southern border, the work begun in 1908 by the Italian companies from the coast was nearing completion. While awaiting the connection to France, the FS decided to operate the Ventimiglia-Airole section (11.970 km), which entered service on 16th May 1914. The service was provided by three round trips, including two local passenger trains and one mixed train, which covered the entire route in about thirty minutes uphill and twenty-five minutes downhill. Traction was provided by three-axle 030 locomotives with separate tenders, Group 320 (formerly the 3600 of the Rete Mediterranea), based to the newly created Savona depot.” [1: p142]

In France, WWI caused the cessation of all work on the line and in the aftermath of the conflict, “the resumption of construction proved very difficult. The PLM’s construction department received only meager allocations from the state, with priority funding being allocated to the recovery of the disaster-stricken regions of the northeast.” [1: p138]

On site, the years of inactivity had allowed serious deterioration, particularly of the tunnels on the unopened line. Following a three-day inspection tour of the entire line, the French decided to begin work once again.

The contractors made a significant investment in manpower and materials at the beginning of 1920 but discovered that rather than dealing with the PLM, the works would be directly funded by the government. The government determined that the budget for the work on French soil would be reduced from 104 to 75 million Francs and indicated that the maximum spend in 1920 would be 17 million Francs. This inevitably led to redundancies and to slower progress of the works. [1: p140]

When the authorities indicated in June 1920, that “only 700,000 Francs of credit remained to complete the year, … the elected officials of the Alpes-Maritimes immediately rushed to Paris to meet with representatives of the Ministry and the PLM management. Following discussions, a new budget was allocated by the State for railway construction. The PLM had a budget of 41 million Francs, 25 of which were allocated to the Nice-Cuneo line. Work could [continue], but the engineers and contractors in charge of it would have to take into account the irregular arrival of funds until the end when organizing their work.” [1: p140]

Work on the Nice to Breil-sur-Roya line and the remaining length of the line between Ventimiglia and Breil ran in parallel. The increased budget meant competition to attract staff was strong and people had to be hired from Italy, Spain, Portugal and Morocco. Stonemasons were in particularly short supply. We will probably see more about what this meant for the work when we follow the line from Breil-sur-Roya to Nice.

Banaudo et al note that in the early 1920s the line was opened between Ventimiglia and Airole for passengers and was used also to supply the French construction site on the length of the line between Breil-sur-Roya and Piena (Piene).

From Breil to the southern border, the [railbed/formation] was passable by 1921 and the final track was immediately laid, while the FS did the same between Airole and Piena on the section removed during the war. On 30th January 1922, the Italian and French rails were finally connected on the Riou bridge, and the Borie company obtained  from then on the authorization to directly route its materials from Nice to Breil by rail.” [1: p142]

Once the line opened fully between Ventimiglia and Cuneo, the line “retained the Ventimiglia-Airole service created before the war, while on the Cuneo San-Dalmazzo-di-Tenda line, the timetable included three daily three-class buses and a seasonal train running on public holidays from July to September. The 58 km journey took 2 hours 30 minutes in the north-south direction and 2 hours 10 to 15 in the opposite direction.  This service included one less return journey than in 1915, because a fast Cuneo Nice bus connection was introduced in 1921 following an agreement between the FS and the Compagnia Generale dei Tramways Piemontesi (CGTP), to avoid the inconvenience of transhipment while waiting for the railway to be fully operational.” [1: p143-146]

In December 1923 it was agreed that on the length of line between the two borders, “all trains … would be hauled by the FS, including maintenance trains; in the event that they had to be exceptionally handled by a French locomotive, the latter would be accompanied by a pilot from the FS. The San-Dalmazzo Piena section would be equipped with Morse-type telegraph devices. The protection signals for Breil station on the Fontan-Saorge and Piène sides would be Italian, but the departure signals for all directions would be the PLM-type. The organization of customs controls between San-Dalmazzo, Fontan-Saorge, Breil and Piena was also [agreed].” [1: p146]

Banaudo et al provide a significant series of photographs of the construction work on the lines between Cuneo, Nice and Ventimiglia which takes up a large proportion of Volume 1 of Les Trains du Col de Tende. The photographs and drawings are predominantly from the French lengths of the line. [1: p152-311] It is a very significant collection of images which stand as a superb tribute to the amazing work of the various contractors employed on the line.

Opening of the line from Cuneo to Ventimiglia to passenger traffic had to wait for the completion of all of the French construction work. “Finally in October 1928 the lines were all completed – the celebrations must have been fantastic events. At last the small towns and villages along the route had access to jobs, schools and universities, cultural activities, hospitals … everything the cities had to offer.” [39]

The next article in this short series will look a the line heading out of Breil-sur-Roya towards Nice. It can be found here. [5]

References

  1. Jose Banaudo, Michel Braun and Gerard de Santos; Les Trains du Col de Tende Volume 1: 1858-1928; FACS Patrimoine Ferroviaire, Les Editions du Cabri, 2018.
  2. Jose Banaudo, Michel Braun and Gerard de Santos; Les Trains du Col de Tende Volume 2: 1929-1974; FACS Patrimoine Ferroviaire, Les Editions du Cabri, 2018.
  3. Jose Banaudo, Michel Braun and Gerard de Santos; Les Trains du Col de Tende Volume 3: 1975-1986; FACS Patrimoine Ferroviaire, Les Editions du Cabri, 2018.
  4. https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=pfbid0eumWUFwJCPBGQUUtr3Apx72qr5cUhihwxpcFzDbkms3fta5zRXYZZLUozkAMmeKvl&id=1412933345657144, accessed on 5th December 2023. The Facebook Page, “L’Histoire de Menton et ses Alentours,” is the work of Frank Asfaux, https://www.facebook.com/franckasfaux06, accessed on 4th December 2023.
  5. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/08/29/the-railway-between-nice-tende-and-cuneo-part-6-breil-sur-roya-to-lescarene/
  6. Not used.
  7. Not used.
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  10. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/07/26/the-railway-from-nice-to-tende-and-cuneo-part-2.
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  38. https://www.stagniweb.it/foto9/tend8304.jpg, accessed on 25th August 2025.
  39. https://ventimigliaaltawords.com/2013/10/14/all-steamed-up-about-the-ventimiglia-cuneo-rail-link/, accessed on 5th August 2025.
  40. Franco Collidà, Max Gallo & Aldo A. Mola; CUNEO-NIZZA History of a Railway; Cassa di Risparmio di Cuneo, Cuneo (CN), July 1982.
  41. Franco Collidà; 1845-1979: the Cuneo-Nice line year by year; in Rassegna – Quarterly magazine of the Cassa di Risparmio di Cuneo; No. 7, September 1979, pp. 12-18.
  42. Stefano Garzaro & Nico Molino; THE TENDA RAILWAY From Cuneo to Nice, the last great Alpine crossing; Editrice di Storia dei Trasporti, Colleferro (RM), EST, July 1982.
  43. SNCF Region de Marseille; Line: Coni – Breil sur Roya – Vintimille. Reconstruction et équipement de la section de ligne située en territoire Français; Imprimerie St-Victor, Marseille (F), 1980.
  44. https://www.picclickimg.com/images/g/QSkAAOSw4Ihlu1Ul/s-l1600.jpg, accessed on 25th September 2025.
  45. https://www.marklinfan.net/stazione_ventimiglia.htm, accessed on 25th August 2025.
  46. https://ebay.us/m/Ne0trP, accessed on 25th August 2025.
  47. https://www.geneanet.org/cartes-postales/view/7792915#0, accessed on 25th August 2025.
  48. https://casamaini.altervista.org/ancora-treni, accessed on 25th August 2025.
  49. https://youtu.be/rLXAEz-n4mM?si=RLQC31jynGeM_lQR, accessed on 26th August 2025.
  50. Not used.
  51. Not used.
  52. Not used.
  53. Not used.
  54. F. Honore; Le Rail a Travers Les Alpes: De Nice a Coni par la Voie Ferrée; L’Illustration, No. 4470, 3rd November 1928, p499.
  55. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hbzk68KoRj8&t=4533s, accessed on 4th August 2025.

The Railway between Nice, Tende and Cuneo – Part 4 – St. Dalmas de Tende to Breil-sur-Roya

The featured image above is a poster for the Nice-Cuneo line. It shows Scarassoui Viaduct with a Northbound steam service between the wars (c) Adolphe Crossard. … Public Domain. [49]

In the first three articles about the line from Cuneo to the sea we covered the length of the line from Cuneo to St. Dalmas de Tende. These articles can be found here, [9]  here [10] and here. [11]

I also want to acknowledge the assistance given to me by David Sousa of the Rail Relaxation YouTube Channel https://www.youtube.com/@RailRelaxation/featured and https://www.railrelaxation.com and particularly his kind permission given to use still images from rail journeys that he has filmed on the Cuneo Ventimiglia railway line. [35][55]

1. The Line South from St. Dalmas de Tende as far as the French/Italian Border

St. Dalmas de Tende (San-Dalmazzo-di-Tenda in Italian) was “the last station on Italian territory, before the northern border.  This is where the French Forces would install a large-scale border station that will handle customs clearance operations in addition to the French facilities at Breil. In the first phase, a temporary passenger building and a small freight shed were built on the vast embankment created from the spoil from the tunnels upstream of the confluence of the Roya and Biogna rivers. The original layout includes four through tracks, one of which is at the platform, five sidings, three storage tracks, a temporary engine shed, a 9.50 m turntable, and a hydraulic power supply for the locomotives.” [1: p127]

It is here, at St. Dalmas de Tende, that we start this fourth part of our journey from Cuneo to the coast. Before we do set off southwards we note that the Tende to La Brigue “tranche of the work on the line was awarded to the Tuscan contractor Enrico Lévy, and the Briga to St. Dalmas de Tende tranche was executed by the Rosassa company of Alessandria. Work began in 1912 and progressed more quickly than upstream of Tende, thanks to the opening of the construction sites during public holidays and the use of new compressed air drills.” [1: p129]

The line from Tende (Tenda) to San-Dalmazzo-di-Tenda (St. Dalmas de Tende) was opened on 1st June 1915. The three of the four daily services were connected to the Southern arm of the line which by this time had reached Airole, by a coach shuttle. [1: p131]

A temporary station was provided as a terminus of the line from Cuneo. It was sited to the Northeast of the present large station building which was not built until 1928.

A postcard image overlooking the station site at St. Dalmas de Tende prior to the construction of the large station building. This image was shared on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Mauro Tosello on 12th June 2022. [19]
The San Dalmazzo di Tenda station before the construction of the current building. [12]
St. Dalmas de Tende Railway Station as show on OpenStreetMap. [56]
The locomotive Depot at St. Dalmas de Tende. The depot was on the Southeast side of the running lines opposite the railway Station and close to the Biogna River. The road shown on the OpenStreetMap plan of the modern station to the Southeast of the site is the road shown at the top of this plan. This drawing comes from From the December 1929 Technical Magazine of Italiane Ferrovie. It was shared on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group on 13th February 2024 by Francesco Ciarlini Koerner. [18]
The station during construction work. There is scaffolding on the main station building, which appears to have been built in sections with a completed length nearest to the water tower. The engine shed is under construction, centre-right. This image was shared on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Mauro Tosello on 12th June 2022. [20]
A postcard view of the Railway Station at St. Dalmas de Tende, taken from the East. The tunnel at the Southwest end of the station site can be seen on the left of the photograph. This image was shared on the Ferrovia internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Luisa Grosso on 1st November 2021. [57]
The station forecourt, seen from Avenue Martyrs de la Resistance. [Google Streetview, August 2016]
A schematic view of the line South of St. Dalmas de Tende, as far as the French/Italian border. [13]

St. Dalmas de Tende Railway Station seen, looking Northeast, from the cab of a North-bound service. [35]

Looking Southwest from alongside the end of the platform of the modern railway station at St. Dalmas de Tende with the grand edifice of the 1928-built station building fenced off on the right. [55]
A little further to the Southwest, the line bridges the Bieugne (Biogna) River over a 15-metre arch bridge and then heads into the Biogna Tunnel. [55]
The tunnel mouth is in shadow at the bottom-left of this extract from Google’s satellite imagery. The railway bridge over the River Bieugne is centre-bottom with the road bridge (D91) to the left. [Google Maps, August 2025]
The railway tunnel mouth is on the centre- left of this view from the D91 with the rail bridge over the river bottom-left and the road bridge over the river ahead. [Google Streetview, August 2016]
Looking Northeast from the D91 through the station area. [Google Streetview, August 2016]
The view Northeast from the tunnel mouth of the Biogna Tunnel, the road bridge over the river is on the left, the rail bridge over the river is immediately in front of the camera. This photograph is a still image from a video taken from the cab of a Northbound train. [35]
The portal of Biogna Tunnel and the bridges over the Bieugne immediately after Storm Alex in October 2020. This photograph was shared on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Mario Zauli and Olivier Woignier on 3rd October 2020. [17]
One final view of St. Dalmas de Tende railway station. This the Direct 18:83 Turin Porta Nuova – Imperia Porto Maurizio, Locomotive D445.1056 heads a train of five coaches passing through St. Dalmas de Tende on 24th April 1994. This image was shared by Andrea Richermo on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group on 11th April 2020. [21]

From San-Dalmazzo (St. Dalmas), the railway forms two horseshoe loops underground, crossing the Roya three times over a distance of just over a kilometre as the crow flies.

The Biogna Tunnel is the first of these horseshoe tunnels, it is 1154 metres long. We have already seen the approaches to the tunnel from St. Dalmas de Tende Railway Station. The tunnel’s horseshoe shape can be seen on the OpenStreetMap extract below. …

The Biogna Tunnel is horseshoe shaped. [14]

The view Northeast from the southern mouth of Biogna Tunnel. [55]

Turning through 180 degrees this is the mouth of the tunnel, seen from the cab of a Northbound train. [35]

Two viaducts cross the valley off La Roya, San Dalmazzo II Viaduct crosses the River Bieugne (three arches each of 15 metres, then the San Dalmazzo III Viaduct, also three 15 metres arches bridging the Avenue de France (E74/D6204) and then La Roya, before disappearing into the Porcarezzo Tunnel. [15]
The two viaducts as they appear on Google Maps satellite imagery. [Google Maps, August 2025]
In the foreground is a viaduct over the Biogna Torrent; beyond are a viaduct over the River Roya, and then the entrance to the Porcarezzo Tunnel. This section of line is near San Dalmazzo di Tenda. This image was included in an article about the line in Railway Wonders of the World. All that is left of the building at rail level in the left half of the image is the widened surface of the embankment between the two viaducts. [24]

Looking East across San Dalmazzo II Viaduct which has three arched spans, each of 15-metres and crosses the Bieugne River. [55]

Looking East across San Dalmazzo III Viaduct which spans La Roya. This Viaduct has one opening for the road and a narrower archway for pedestrians and has three further 15-metre spans. The mouth of the Porcarezzo Tunnel is in shade. [55]

The bridge over Avenue de France seen from the North. [Google Streetview, August 2016]

The same bridge seen from the South. In this image both the secondary (narrow) arch and the viaduct over La Roya can be seen. [Google Streetview, August 2025]

San Dalmazzo di Tenda Viaduct III, seen from the South on 23rd October 2020. This image was shared on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Federico Santagati on 23rd October 2020. [22]

Reinforcement/repair works in November 2020 on San Dalmazzo di Tenda Viaducts II and III after the damage from Storm Alex on October 2 – 3, 2020. This image was shared on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group on 20th November 2020 by Mario Zauli, courtesy of Bernard Woignier. [23]

Looking West across the same viaduct towards the Biogne Tunnel. [35]

The Porcarezzo Tunnel mouth to the East of La Roya. [55]

Looking West from the Porcarezzo Tunnel mouth across the San Dalmazzo III Viaduct. [35]

The Porcarezzo Tunnel turns through 180°, continuing to drop at a gradient of 25mm/m. It is 1249 metres in length. [16]

Southbound trains leave Porcarezzo Tunnel and immediately cross San Dalmazzo di Tenda Viaduct IV. [55]

Turning through 180° we see the Southwest mouth of the Porcarezzo Tunnel which sits above La Roya and is seen here from the cab of a Northbound train on the San Dalmazzo IV Viaduct. [35]

San Dalmazzo di Tenda IV Viaduct as it appears on Google’s satellite imagery. [Google Maps, August 2025.

The approaches to the Porcarezzo Tunnel from the Southwest cross the San Dalmazzo di Tenda IV Viaduct (six 15-metre spans) over La Roya and the E74/D6402. [35]

San Dalmazzo di Tenda IV Viaduct seen from the North. [Google Streetview, August 2016]

San Dalmazzo San Dalmazzo di Tenda IV Viaduct seen from immediately below on the North side. [Google Streetview, July 2014]

San Dalmazzo IV Viaduct di Tenda seen from the South. [Google Streetview, August 2016]

Once Southbound trains had crossed La Roya, it was just a short distance before they entered Gorges Paganini Tunnel. This is the tunnel mouth. [55]

Turning through 180° this is the view from the cab of a Northbound train leaving Gorges Paganin Tunnel (1,702 metres in length). [35]

Gorges Paganin Tunnel runs South-southwest parallel to the valley of La Roya and only a few metres beyond the valleys western face, occasionally running close enough to the valley side for gallery openings to shed light into the tunnel.

Gorges Paganin Tunnel is marked by the dotted line to the West of the river valley. It is over 1700 metres in length with occasional gallery openings in the valley side. [25]

The Gorges Paganin Tunnel is actually considered to be a series of six different tunnels separated by sections of galleries with arched openings into the valley side. These tunnels are: Foce (167m long); Tornau I (270m long); Tornau II (475 m long); Ravallone I (392m long); Ravallone II (91m long; and Balma (337m long). [1: p129]

One of a series of gallery openings in the walls of Gorges Paganin Tunnel, seen from the cab of a Southbound service. [55]

OpenStreetMap shows a short length of line within the Paganin Valley above the Hydroelectric Power Station which is next to the E74/D6204 in the valley of La Roya. [26]

Google’s satellite imagery shows the hydroelectric scheme in the Vallon de Paganin and the power station next to the road and La Roya. The railway line can be seen just to the left of centre. [Google Maps, August 2025]

Banaudo et al tell us that at “the end of the tunnel, the line opens into the Paganin Valley, which marks the northern border between Italy and France. … In this wild and steep site, where a torrent and the penstock of the Paganin Hydroelectric Power Plant tumble, the portals of the last Italian tunnel and the first French tunnel face each other, each guarded by a roadside cottage in the typical style of the FS and PLM.” [1: p129]

Having reached the old French/Italian border we can stop and take stock. We will look at the construction of the line North from the coast once our journey reaches that portion of the line. Suffice to say that by 1915 tracklaying from the coast had reached Airole.

As far as the line heading South from Cuneo is concerned track laying had reached San Dalmazzo di Tenda and the structures and track formation was in place to the Northern French /Italian border.

2. The First World War

In 1915, Italy entered the war on the side of the allies. “Leading up to WWI, Italy had formed an alliance with the Central Powers of the German Empire and the Empire of the Austria-Hungary in the Triple Alliance. Italy should have joined on the side of the Central Powers when war broke out in August 1914 but instead declared neutrality.” [27]

The Italian government had become convinced that support of the Central Powers would not gain Italy the territories she wanted as they were Austrian possessions – Italy’s old adversary. Instead, over the course of the months that followed, Italy’s leaders considered how to gain the greatest benefit from participation in the war. In 1915, Italy signed the secret Treaty of London and came into the war on the side of the Triple Entente (Britain, France, Russia). By its terms, Italy would receive control over territory on its border with Austria-Hungary stretching from Trentino through the South Tyrol to Trieste as well as other areas.” [27]

After the war ended, at the Paris Peace Conference that led to the Versailles Treaty, the Italian government struggled against the other Allied leaders, the Big Three (Britain, France and the US), to gain all that they believed had been promised to them. Although Italy did receive control of most of the European requests, they failed to gain their colonial ambitions and felt they did not get what they had been promised. This engendered resentment towards the Allied countries, especially as Italians felt they had paid a high price, in terms of men and money, fighting for the Allies. These resentments helped drive the success of Benito Mussolini and his fascist movement – four years after the war, Mussolini and his blackshirts gained power.” [27]

Ultimately, the war stopped all progress on the line. Banaudo et el tell us that “the work begun thirty-two years earlier by the SFAI, then continued by the RM until nationalization, was thus virtually completed by the FS. The construction of the 80.3 km of line in Italian territory cost nearly 85 million lire compared to the 76 million initially planned, representing an average expenditure of 1,058,500 lire per kilometre.” [1: p135]

In France, the war caused all work to be halted. An attempt was made to continue the work in 1915, but failed because of underground conditions encountered. In 1917, an attempt to continue activity using prisoners of war was unsuccessful.

During the war, Italian authorities lifted track between Piena and Airole in the South for use on the front. Work on the new Cuneo railway station halted.

French and British troops were sent to augment Italian forces on 1917. It seems as though many of these passed through San Dalmazzo di Tenda. Between 19th October and 15th December 1917, “192 military convoys departed from San-Dalmazzo, and the Col de Tende line saw up to twenty movements of all categories on some days.” [1: p136]

After the war, resources were in short supply. In France priority was given to the devastated areas in the Northeast of the country. The PLM received very little support. Contractors found recruitment a problem because of the drastic loss of life among working age men. Banaudo et al tell us that in France “tunnels, abandoned for nearly five years, had suffered serious deformation, particularly in areas with high water infiltration. In Italy, the situation was no better, and construction of the new Cuneo station was suspended, even though an arch of the large viaduct over the Stura River, which was to provide access to it, was already being erected.” [1: p138]

Nevertheless, work did resume, supplies began to head North from Menton on the tramway to Sospel and supplies were arriving from the South via the FS on the Italian side of the border at Airole. Transport via Airole proved better than via the Menton-Sospel tramway and by 1920 the two main contractors on either side of the border (Giianotti and Mercier) ceased to use the Menton-Sosel route. [1: p138]

1920 saw a significant budget reduction for the works in French territory – 104 million Francs to 75 million Francs. Only 17 million Francs were allowed in 1920. “The Mercier company alone was spending 4 to 5 million francs per month on its construction sites.” [1: p140] Layoffs were necessary and work slowed significantly to remain within budget.

In June 1920, the Inspector General of Public Works announced to companies that only 700,000 francs of credit remained to complete the year, an insignificant sum that forced construction to be suspended immediately, putting hundreds of workers out of work. Elected officials from the Alpes-Maritimes immediately rushed to Paris to meet with representatives of the ministry and the PLM management. After heated discussions, a new budget was allocated by the State for railway construction. The PLM had a credit of 41 million, 25 of which were allocated to the Nice – Cuneo line. Work could resume, but the engineers and contractors in charge of it would have to take into account the irregular arrival of funds until the end when organizing their construction sites.” [1: p140]

2. The Northern French/Italian Border South to Breil-sur-Roya

Two tranches of construction work covered the length of the line from the French/Italian border to Breil-sur-Roya. Banaudo et al tell us that this length of the line “contained the highest density of engineering structures on the French route, and, with a few exceptions, the war had interrupted work there in its early stages.“[1: p142]

A schematic representation of the line between the historic Italian/French Border and Breil-sur-Roya. [13]

The view across the border from the North, a view from the cab of a Southbound service at the mouth of the Gorges Paganin Tunnel. [55]

Looking back North towards the southern portal of the Gorges Paganin Tunnel, a view from the cab of a Northbound train. [35]

Once on the French side of the border the line immediately entered the Frontiere Tunnel. …

The North portal of the Frontiere Tunnel, seen from the cab of a Southbound train. [55]

Looking North across the border from the cab of a Northbound service leaving the mouth of the Frontiere Tunnel [35]

The view from the cab of a southbound train just to the Southwest of the Frontiere Tunnel mouth. [55]

The short open section of track appears on the left of this extract from OpenStreetMap. Tree cover means it is impossible to show the short section of line on and extract from Google’s satellite imagery. [28]

The view from the cab of a Northbound train approaching the mouth of Malaba Tunnel. Ahead is the southern portal of Frontiere Tunnel. A very short length of line runs between Frontiere Tunnel and Malaba Tunnel. [35]

Malaba Tunnel is 389 metres in length. This image shows the view from the cab of a Southbound service as it leaves the tunnel. [55]

Turning through 180 degrees we see the Southwest portal of Malaba Tunnel from the cab of a Northbound train. [35]

This extract from OpenStreetmap shows the next open length of track running from centre-top to bottom-left. We are just entering the first length of another spiral and can see the lower length of track in tunnel under the line and then bridging La Roya. [29]

Google’s satellite imagery shows the same length of railway high above the Scarassoui Viaduct which can be seen bottom-right. [Google Maps, August 2025]

From the cab of the Southbound service, we see the mouth of Scarassoui Tunnel. The Tunnel is 181 metres in length. [55]

Turning through 180°, we look Northeast from the cab of the Northbound train as it leaves the Scarassoui Tunnel. [35]

The spiral in this location consists of a number of tunnels and open lengths of track. The first tunnel encountered travelling South is the Scarassoui Tunnel (top-right) which has a gallery of a series of arches at its southern end. A length of open track leads to Peug Tunnel, Vernardo Tunnel, Caussagne Tunnel and then Berghe Tunnel. [31]

A view North along the valley of La Roya. Top-left in this image, the line from St. Dalmas de Tende enters the image at high level and on a falling grade, through Scarassoui Tunnel. It passes through Peug Tunnel and, after running parallel to the river for a short distance, curves away to the left in tunnel. It appears again beneath Scarassoui Tunnel to cross La Roya before travelling down the East side of the river in a series of tunnels. Source not recorded. [30]

The high level tunnels of Scarassoui (its South portal can be seen at the top of this extract) and Peug. The metal frames over the open lengths of track are part of an avalanche warning system. [30]

Two views looking South inside the gallery at the southern end of Scarassoui Tunnel. [55]

A driver’s eye view of the South end of Scarassoui Tunnel. [35]

The gallery seen from below soon after it was constructed. This image appear in the Railway Wonders of the World article about the line, (c) Public Domain. [24]

Just a short distance further South, we can look over our shoulder to see the modern Scarassoui Viaduct crossing the River Roya some distance below. In a short while we will cross that viaduct. [35]

Turning through 180°, this is the view South towards the North portal of Peug Tunnel which is just 75 metres in length. [55]

The view North from the mouth of the Peug Tunnel. [35]

A view of the length of track between the Scarassoui and Peug tunnels can be found here. [29] It is a view from the valley floor close to the river, of the length of track between Scarassoui Tunnel on the right and Peug Tunnel on the left (its portal is just visible at the extreme left of the image. The gallery at the end of the Scarassoui Tunnel was added in the 1970s, © Eugenio Merzagora, courtesy of the Structure website. [29]

This Google Earth 3D satellite image gives good idea of how far up the valley side from the river and road the railway is positioned. [Google Earth, August 2025]

The view South from the mouth of Peug Tunnel, seen from the cab of a Southbound train. [55]

The southern portal of the Peug Tunnel seen from the cab of a Northbound service. [35]

A little further South and looking South from the cab of the Southbound service across the Peug Viaduct (50 metres long). [55]

Looking across the valley of La Roya we can see the line heading South . Our train will travel along that length of the line in a short while. [35]

Further South again, a driver’s view from a Southbound service along Capuon Viaduct (45 metres long) towards the North Portal of Verardo Tunnel (53 metres long). [55]

Looking back at the southern mouth of Verardo Tunnel. [35]

The cab of the Southbound train again, looking from the southern end of Verardo Tunnel over Berghe Viaduct (30 metres long) towards the mouth of the Caussagne Tunnel (275 metres long). [55]

Caussagne Tunnel curves West into the valley of the Torrent de la Ceva. The far tunnel mouth faces West-northwest.

The view back towards Vernardo Tunnel over the Berghe Viaduct from the mouth of Berghe Tunnel. [35]

The view from the cab of the Southbound train as it leaves Caussagne Tunnel, heading Northwest up the valley of the Ceva. [55]

Turning through 180°, this is the tunnel portal, seen from the cab of a Northbound train. [35]

The Ceva valley is steep sided and the line sits on a narrow ledge supported above the valley floor by a retaining wall. Before entering the 1881 metre Berghe Tunnel it crosses the Ceva Viaduct (71 metres long).

The view from the cab of a Southbound train crossing Ceva Viaduct before entering the Berghe Tunnel. [55]

This extract from a photograph taken to illustrate the demands placed on cyclists riding up the Ceva Valley shows the retaining structure which holds the railway above the minor road. The tunnel mouth of the Berghe Tunnel can just be made out at the left of this image, (c) Cromagnon. [32]

The Mouth of the Berghe Tunnel, seen from the cab of a Southbound service. The Tunnel curves back to the North and then round to the Southeast. [55]

Turning through 180°, this is the View from the mouth of the Berghe Tunnel, seen from the cab of a Northbound service. [35]

Throughout the spiral the line continues on a falling grade. It opens out, well below the level it enters the spiral, onto the Scarassoui Viaduct.

The view from the mouth of the Berghe e Tunnel across the Scarassoui Viaduct. [55]

Looking back towards the mouth of Berghe Tunnel. [35]

This postcard image shows the Scarassoui Viaduct as built in 1922, (c) Public Domain. [33]
The Scarassoui Tunnel, top-left, and the Scarassoui Viaduct, bottom-right. [46]

The French engineer, Paul Séjourné decided to create a significant structure at the location of the Scarassoui Viaduct. Banaudo et al quote Séjourné: “The Scarassoui Viaduct is the first French structure that one will see when coming from Italy. It is like a gateway to France; it must be worthy of it.” [1: p142] Séjourné was of the opinion that: “Of all the structures — I mean all, even the smallest — appearance matters. It is not permissible to make ugly. It is a strange opinion to consider expensive what is beautiful, cheap what is ugly.” [1: p142] The bridge Séjourné designed was a curved viaduct (radius 300 metres) carrying the railway on a falling grade of 21 mm/m. It was 125 m long, spanning both La Roya and the E74/D6204 at a height of 42 m. Banaudo et all, tell us that “two arches of 11 m on the Nice side and a 13 m arch on the Cuneo side give access to a central arch of 48 m decorated with six vaults, according to a design that Séjourné had applied on other works. … The central arch was supported by two massive pilasters with crenellated facings, whose bases were widened to compensate for the misalignment due to the curvature of the deck.” [1: p142]

Sadly this bridge was destroyed by the retreating German forces in 1944 and it was not reconstructed in any form until the 1970s. Details of this bridge and photographs of its condition prior to reconstruction can be found here. [34] The replacement 1970s structure is shown below. …

The modern Scarassoui Viaduct seen from the E74/D6204, looking South. [August 2016]
The modern Scarassoui Viaduct seen from the E74/D6204, looking North. [August 2016]
One of the regaul=ar service trains posed on the Scarassoui Viaduct in the 21st century. [36]

Scarassoui Viaduct crosses the River Roya close to the top of this image. Trains heading South then pass through a series of short tunnels following the East bank of La Roya. [30]

The northern portal of the Camera Tunnel is in deep shade. [55]

The view back across the Scarassoui Viaduct from the northern portal of the Camara Tunnel. [35]

The view South from the southern portal of Camara Tunnel. [55]

Looking back at the South Portal of the Camara Tunnel. [35]

Just to the South of Camara Tunnel is Camara Viaduct, seen here from the cab of a Northbound train. [35]

While it is not possible to see the line on the West bank of La Roya over this length of the valley from the road, it is possible to glimpse the line on the East side of the valley occasionally. [Google Streetview, August 2016]

The North Portal of Vallera Tunnel No. 1. [55]

The view North from Roches-Rouges Viaduct towards the South Portal of Vallera Tunnel No. 1. [35]

The view South from Roches-Rouges Viaduct towards Vallera Tunnel No. 2. [55]

The North Portal of Vallera Tunnel No. 2. [55]

Looking North from the tunnel mouth above. [35]

Looking South from the southern tunnel mouth of Vallera Tunnel No. 2. [55]

Looking South along Vallera Tunnel No. 2 [55]

Looking back at the South Portal of Vallera Tunnel No. 2. [35]

Looking North from Vallera Viaduct towards Vallera Tunnel No. 2. [35]

The North portal of Torette Tunnel (121 metres long). The village of Fontan can be seen to the right on the valley floor, [55]

The view from the Southern Portal of Torette Tunnel. [55]

The southern mouth of Torette Tunnel seen from the cab of a Northbound train. [35]

The approach to Fontan-Saorge Railway station from the North, seen from high on the valley side to the West of the River Roya. [My photograph, 18th November 2014]

The the track duals to the North of Fontan-Saorge Railway Station. [55]

The D38 (Route de la Gare crosses the River Roya and turns South for quite a length of the road the railway towers over it, held above by a large retaining wall. [Google Streetview, July 2014]
Road and railway become much closer in height before the road passes under the railway. [Google Streetview, July 2014]
Another image from the cab of the Northbound train. Just before arriving at Fontan-Saorge Railway Station the line bridges Route de la Gare – the road between Fontan and Saorge. [55]
After passing under the railway the road continues to climb. [Google Streetview, July 2014]

The final approach to Fontan-Saorge Railway Station. [55]

Fontan-Saorge Railway Station seen from the South, © Georgio Stagni and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [48]

Fontan-Saorge Railway Station, seen from the cab of a Southbound train. [55]

This extract from Google’s satellite imagery shows the site of the Fontan-Saorge Railway Station which sits between the two villages. It is a large site as it was designed to be a frontier station. The historic border between France and Italy was just a short distance North along the valley of La Roya. [Google Maps, August 2025]

A view of the Fontan-Saorge Railway Station from high on the West flank of the valley of La Roya in 1927/1928. This image illustrates the significant earthworks needed to create a ‘plateau’ for the station (c) Public Domain. [50]

Fontan-Saorge Railway Station, seen from the D38 (Route de la Gare). [Google Streetview, July 2014]
Fontan-Saorge Railway Station from the hillside to the East. [37]
Fontan-Saorge Railway Station seen from the Southwest. [38]
A similar view of Fontan-Saorge Railway Station in 2014, © G CHP and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY 2.5). [39]
Fontan-Saorge Railway Station, seen from the North © G CHP and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY 2.5). [44]
A view of Fontan-Saorge Station taken with a telephoto lens, again from high on the valley side on the opposite bank of the River roya. [My photograph, 18th November 2014]

Fontan-Saorge to Breil-sur-Roya

A schematic drawing of the remaining length of line to Breil-sur-Roya. [13]
The view from the cab of a Southbound service while idling at Fontan-Saorge Railway Station. [55]
Fontan-Saorge Railway Station seen from the South, © Georgio Stagni and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [45]

As trains head south from Fontan-Saorge they cross Ambo Viaduct (a short viaduct – just 36 metres in length) before entering Saint-Roch Tunnel . The wall on the left carries the D38 (the road to Saorge). [55]

Ambo Viaduct and the North Portal of Saint-Roch Tunnel, seen from the E74/D6204. [Google Streetview, August 2016]

The road to Saorge climbs above the level of the railway. [Google Streetview, July 2014]

The tunnel carrying the road to Saorge runs just above the railway tunnel. Saint-Roch Railway Tunnel is named for the church close to the road as it enters Saorge. [Google Streetview, July 2014]

This is the view North along the railway towards Fontan-Saorge Railway Station from the mouth of the road tunnel on the D38. The Ambo Viaduct is in the bottom-left of the image, Fontan-Saorge Railway Station is in the top-right. [Google Streetview, July 2014]

Looking back along the line towards Fontan-Saorge Railway Station from the mouth of Saint-Roch Tunnel. The viaduct in the foreground is Ambo Viaduct. [35]

Looking Southwest across the bridge at Saorge from the cab of a Southbound service leaving the mouth of Saint-Roch Tunnel. Tracks cross the bridge 60 metres above the valley floor. [55]

Turning through 180 degrees this is the Southwest portal of the Saint-Roch Tunnel as seen from the cab of a Northbound train. [35]

The bridge at Saorge in the 21st century. It was rebuilt in the 1970s after destruction in 1944. [Google Maps, August 2025]

Early during the construction of the bridge at Saorge. Here we see the formwork for the arch being constructed high above the valley floor, (c) Public Domain. [50]

Work on the bridge at Saorge started “in February 1922 from the Saint-Roch and Nosse tunnels, between which a conveyor cable was stretched for the assembly of the 40 m lowered arch. A suspended footbridge was then launched over the precipice and a 0.60 m track was placed there to supply the materials onto small 500 kg load wagons, maneuvered by gasoline-powered shunters. …  The main work of the bridge was completed in March 1923.” [1: p143]

The bridge at Saorge was completed in 1922, it spanned the valley of La Roya at a particularly tight point along the gorge. The village of Saorge can be seen beyond the bridge. This bridge was destroyed by the retreating German troops in 1944. [47]
This extract from a postcard image shows the bridge in use in the early 1930s. [51]
Looking Southeast from road level, the modern bridge seems to fly between the valley walls! [Google Streetview, August 2016]
The same structure seen from the Southeast. [Google Streetview, August 2016]

Looking Northeast over the bridge at Saorge towards the Saint-Roch Tunnel from the mouth of Nosse Tunnel. [35]

Significant savings on construction costs were made (even when the cost of construction of the bridge was included) by following the right bank of La Roya down towards Breil-sur-Roya. [1: p142]

The Northeast portal of Nosse Tunnel (89 metres in length). [55]

The view Southwest from the tunnel mouth of the Nosse Tunnel. [55]

Turning through 180°, looking Northeast into the mouth of Nosse Tunnel. [35]

The open length of the line between Nosse and Four A Platre tunnels. [Google Maps, August 2025]

The North Portal of Four A Platre Tunnel (316 metres long), seen from the cab of a Southbound train. [55]

The view South from the South Portal of Four A Platre Tunnel. [55]

Turning through 180°, this is the South Portal of Four A Platte Tunnel. The village of Saorge can be seen in the sunlight on the right of the image. [35]

The length of line between Four A Platre (Plaster Kiln) Tunnel and  Commun Tunnel. [Google Maps, August 2025]

The village of Saorge is a lovely ancient perched village sitting high above La Roya. We have stayed there three times over the years renting the same small apartment each time that we have been there. Most recently, we were there post-Covid and after Storm Alex. That short holiday was in November 2023.

The view from our apartment window – the railway can be seen on the far bank of La Roya, high up the valley side. The visible length of railway is that to the South of Four A Platre Tunnel. [My photograph 11th November 2014]
A closer view of the line on the West bank of La Roya, seen from the apartment window. [My photograph, 20th November 2014]
An even closer view, also from the apartment. [My photograph, 19th November 2014]
Another view, focussing, this time, on the vaulted retaining wall which is typical of a number of retaining walls along the line. [My photograph, 11th November 2014]
Saorge village, seen from the road below. [My photograph, 13th November 2014]

The northern mouth of Commun Tunnel (60 metres in length), seen from the cab of the Southbound service. [55]

The view South from the South portal of Commun Tunnel towards Precipus Tunnel over the Petit Malamort Viaduct. [55]

This satellite image shows Petit Malamort Viaduct which cannot easily be seen from the road network. [Google Maps, August 2025]

Turning though 180, just a short distance further along the line, this is the view back towards the South Portal of Commun Tunnel from the Petit Malamort Viaduct (56 metres long). [35]

Petit Malamort Viaduct and the North portal of  Precipus Tunnel (623 metres long). [55]

Between Saorge and Breil-sur-Roya construction works were delayed for a time by high pressure water ingress into tunnels. [1: p142]

Looking North across Precipus Viaduct (46 metres long) toward the South Portal of Precipus Tunnel. [35]

The Precipus Viaduct seen, looking West from the D6204 in the valley floor. [Google Streetview, August 2016]

Looking North from the North Portal of Combe Tunnel. [35]

The South Portal of Combe Tunnel. [35] 262

Looking South across a minor road crossing on the North side of Breil-sur-Roya. [55]

Looking back North across the same road crossing to the North of Breil-sur-Roya, seen from the cab of a Northbound train. The D6204 is off to the right of the image, the museum is off to the left of the camera. [35]

Maglia Bridge looking South from the cab of a Southbound train. [55]

Maglia Bridge looking North from the cab of a Northbound service. [35]

Maglia Bridge seen from Route de la Giandola. [Google Streetview, October 2008]

The bridge carrying the Route du Col de Brouis over the railway. [55]

Looking back North from the same bridge over the railway. [Google Streetview, August 2016]

Looking ahead towards Breil-sur-Roya Railway Station from the bridge which carries Route du Col de Brouis over the railway. [Google Streetview, August 2016]

Looking Back North through the same bridge. This is the view from the cab of a Northbound train. [35]

Looking South from the D6204 adjacent to the level crossing at the North end of the station site, along the line towards Breil-sur-Roya Railway Station. Beyond the crossing is the Eco Musee, Breil-sur-Roya, Haut-Pays et Transports, an exhibition of vintage trains, trams & buses. The road on the right is Avenue de l’Authion. [Google Streetview, August 2016]

The same location looking to the North. The D6204 is on the right of the picture. [35]

The Eco Musee at Breil-sur-Roya, seen from the road to its North, Avenue de l’Authion. [Google Streetview, 2009]

The Eco Museum was founded in 1989 to showcase the history and heritage of the Roya valley, it became a museum focused mostly on industrial heritage in 1991. It now houses exhibits of hydropower and transportation. The collection comprises lots of interesting locomotives, railcars, trams, postal vans and other vintage vehicles.

Looking North from adjacent to the end of the platform at Breil-sur-Roya Railway Station. [35]

Looking North at Breil-sur-Roya as a Southbound service arrives at the Station. [35]

Breil-sur-Roya Railway Station facing North.  [35]

The approach to Breil-sur-Roya from the South, seen from the cab of a Northbound train. [35]

The northern end of the site of Breil-sur-Roya Railway Station. [Google Maps, August 2025]
The southern end of Breil-sur-Roya Railway Station site. [Google Streetview, August 2025]
Breil-sur-Roya Railway Station, seen from the North, © Thierry Szymkowiak, 2021. [Google Maps, August 2025]

We finish this fourth length of the journey from Cuneo to the coast of the Mediterranean here at Breil-sur-Roya South of Breil, there are two routes to the coast. One heads to Ventimiglia, the other to Nice. The next article will look at the line heading South towards Ventimiglia.

In Breil, the earthworks for the international station were constructed starting in June 1920. The area was around 1 kilometre in length and 300 metres wide. To build this the, “National Road 204 had to be diverted towards the Roya for about a kilometre, as was the Goulden power plant canal. The natural ground was cleared on the northern side and raised with excavated material from the tunnels on the southern half. At this end of the station, the modest single-arch bridge over the Lavina valley, which provides access to the Nice and Ventimiglia lines, required considerable work. The foundations for the abutment on the Nice side had to be dug into a gypsum bed sloping to a depth of 16 metres (compared to 2.20 metres on the Breil side, where hard rock quickly emerges).  and a 15.12 m high reinforced concrete cantilever to the abutment anchored it in the loose fill.” [1: p141]

The next article in this series can be found here. [4]

References

  1. Jose Banaudo, Michel Braun and Gerard de Santos; Les Trains du Col de Tende Volume 1: 1858-1928; FACS Patrimoine Ferroviaire, Les Editions du Cabri, 2018.
  2. Jose Banaudo, Michel Braun and Gerard de Santos; Les Trains du Col de Tende Volume 2: 1929-1974; FACS Patrimoine Ferroviaire, Les Editions du Cabri, 2018.
  3. Jose Banaudo, Michel Braun and Gerard de Santos; Les Trains du Col de Tende Volume 3: 1975-1986; FACS Patrimoine Ferroviaire, Les Editions du Cabri, 2018.
  4. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/08/25/the-railway-between-nice-tende-and-cuneo-part-5-breil-sur-roya-to-ventimiglia/
  5. T.B.A.
  6. T.B.A.
  7. T.B.A.
  8. https://youtu.be/2Xq7_b4MfmU?si=1sOymKkFjSpxMkcR, accessed on 20th July 2025.
  9. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/07/22/the-railway-from-nice-to-tende-and-cuneo-part-1.
  10. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/07/26/the-railway-from-nice-to-tende-and-cuneo-part-2.
  11. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/08/06/the-railway-from-nice-to-tende-and-cuneo-part-3-vievola-to-st-dalmas-de-tende
  12. https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stazione_di_San_Dalmazzo_di_Tenda, accessed on 6th August 2025.
  13. https://fr.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sch%C3%A9ma_de_la_ligne_de_Coni_%C3%A0_Vintimille, accessed on 22nd July 2025
  14. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=16/44.05269/7.58357&layers=P, accessed on 6th August 2025.
  15. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=17/44.053045/7.588590&layers=P, accessed on 6th August 2025.
  16. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=16/44.04865/7.59084&layers=P, accessed on 7th August 2025.
  17. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1BAdGi6PXQ, accessed on 7th August 2025.
  18. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/19U2VzU6gT, accessed on 8th August 2025.
  19. https://www.facebook.com/groups/FerroviaCuneoVentimiglia/permalink/5329737250380256/?rdid=6Xne0EJn2Z4xCUiE&share_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fshare%2Fp%2F1C8mWmX57o%2F#, accessed on 8th August 2025.
  20. https://www.facebook.com/groups/FerroviaCuneoVentimiglia/permalink/1747294131957937/?rdid=QhA9x5D943zrICPG&share_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fshare%2Fp%2F1E6w5RsWSL%2F#, accessed on 8th August 2025.
  21. https://www.facebook.com/groups/FerroviaCuneoVentimiglia/permalink/2971697712850900/?rdid=pZp8Yw6OStV8hyrR&share_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fshare%2Fp%2F1BGRNJYMxk%2F#, accessed on 8th August 2025.
  22. https://www.targatocn.it/2020/10/23/leggi-notizia/argomenti/attualita/articolo/da-domani-saranno-ripristinati-i-treni-tra-limone-piemonte-e-saint-dalmas-interrotti-dopo-la-tempest.html, accessed on 8th August 2025.
  23. https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=801433303751161&set=a.157399714821193&__cft__[0]=AZVgB6QBUAuJT_DsZIqZ5_2XW0bESgQUEP3m5sxA2OJLo9XgziRW311bq9dmsWjaMc5L_ePAmzHP9npOmKEubKp7ERTvP3oBmTP94pOMjZYuw_o8iiIlqIzYH2OVjBbmlDI9E2K8X6HBY-CEio542oAV074y9Ax1zJ4eTCIZRryUdlu8cF2cwBh2YnzMKY4LZAM5xt-Jx-_1z4bzNFzanPZQEsRglGr2Xs3JPNfE9V75Bw&__tn__=EH-y-R, accessed on 8th August 2025.
  24. https://www.railwaywondersoftheworld.com/link-mediterranean.html, accessed on 8th August 2025.
  25. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=15/44.03686/7.58127&layers=P, accessed on 8th August 2025.
  26. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=17/44.030812/7.575750&layers=P, accessed on 8th August 2025.
  27. https://www.history.co.uk/articles/italy-in-world-war-one, accessed on 9th August 2025.
  28. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=17/44.024441/7.569864&layers=P, accessed on 10th August 2025.
  29. https://structurae.net/en/media/325629-peug-tunnel-northern-portal-on-the-left-and-scarassoui-tunnel-southern-portal-with-21-m-long-artificial-section-added-in-1970-s, accessed on 19th August 2025.
  30. Sadly, I cannot find the link to the original photograph. I failed to record it when downloading the image.
  31. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=15/44.01911/7.55805&layers=P, accessed on 10th August 2025.
  32. https://climbfinder.com/en/climbs/berghe-inferieur-fontan, accessed on 11th August 2025.
  33. https://cartorum.fr/carte-postale/210107/fontan-fontan-pont-du-sarassoui, accessed on 11th August 2025.
  34. https://www.inventaires-ferroviaires.fr/kc06/06062.01N.pdf, accessed on 11th August 2025.
  35. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_qX8v5gceVU, accessed on 31st July 2025.
  36. https://lamialiguria.it/en/2023/11/10-things-you-didnt-know-about-the-railway-of-marvels, accessd on 11th August 2025.
  37. https://www.cparama.com/forum/fontan-alpes-maritimes-t24510.html, accessed on 11th August 2025.
  38. https://www.geneanet.org/cartes-postales/view/186296#0, accessed on 11th August 2025.
  39. https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Gare_de_Fontan_-_Saorge-7.JPG, accessed on 11th August 2025.
  40. Franco Collidà, Max Gallo & Aldo A. Mola; CUNEO-NIZZA History of a Railway; Cassa di Risparmio di Cuneo, Cuneo (CN), July 1982.
  41. Francohttps://www.geneanet.org/cartes-postales/view/186296#0 Collidà; 1845-1979: the Cuneo-Nice line year by year; in Rassegna – Quarterly magazine of the Cassa di Risparmio di Cuneo; No. 7, September 1979, pp. 12-18.
  42. Stefano Garzaro & Nico Molino; THE TENDA RAILWAY From Cuneo to Nice, the last great Alpine crossing; Editrice di Storia dei Trasporti, Colleferro (RM), EST, July 1982.
  43. SNCF Region de Marseille; Line: Coni – Breil sur Roya – Vintimille. Reconstruction et équipement de la section de ligne située en territoire Français; Imprimerie St-Victor, Marseille (F), 1980.
  44. https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Gare_de_Fontan_-_Saorge-5.JPG, accessed on 11th August 2025.
  45. https://fr.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gare_de_Fontan_-_Saorge#/media/Fichier%3AFontan-Saorge_staz_ferr_D.445.jpg, accessed on 11th August 2025.
  46. https://www.cparama.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=105348, accessed on 11th August 2025.
  47. https://www.cparama.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=11&t=1224, accessed on 12th August 2025.
  48. The link to this specific photograph has been lost (12th August 2025).
  49. https://www.amazon.com/-/es/Adolphe-Cossard-ferroviario-c-1929-8-pulgadas/dp/B09M64HCCX?th=1, accessed on 12th August 2025.
  50. https://www.vermenagna-roya.eu/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/Ferroviaire-à-Fontan-et-Saorge.pdf, accessed on 12th August 2025.
  51. https://www.cparama.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=26208&p=110561, accessed on 12th August 2025.
  52. T.B.A.
  53. T.B.A.
  54. T.B.A.
  55. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hbzk68KoRj8&t=4533s, accessed on 4th August 2025.
  56. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=17/44.055854/7.584440, accessed on 5th August 2025.
  57. https://www.facebook.com/groups/194416750579024/search/?q=st.%20dalmas%20de%20tende, accessed on 5th August 2025.

The Railway between Nice, Tende and Cuneo – Part 3 – Vievola to St. Dalmas de Tende

The first decade of the 20th century saw the existing roster of locomotives on the line South of Cuneo supplemented by two additional series : 130s (UK, 2-6-0) tender locos of the FS 630 series; and 040T (UK, 0-8-0T) tank locos of the FS 895 series. The featured image for this article is one of the tank locomotives of the FS 895 series. [65]

In the first two articles about the line from Cuneo to the sea we covered the length of the line from Cuneo to Vievola. These articles can be found here [9] and here. [10]

I also want to acknowledge the assistance given to me by David Sousa of the Rail Relaxation YouTube Channel https://www.youtube.com/@RailRelaxation/featured and https://www.railrelaxation.com and particularly his kind permission given to use still images from rail journeys that he has filmed on the Cuneo Ventimiglia railway line. [35][55]

The Line South from Vievola

Our journey South down the line continues from Vievola. …

The station building, seen from the Southwest. [Google Streetview, October 2008]
Vievola Railway Station looking North, © Diego Fernández, November 2024. [Google Maps, July 2025]
The station at Vievola, seen from the Southeast. Excavated material from the tunnel was used to create a platform for the new station. This photograph is taken looking South and shows a water column and water tower a red roofed building and a toilet block as well as the main station building and the goods shed. The three buildings nearest to the camera have gone, as has the water column. This image was shared on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Mario Zauli on 16th June 2014, © Public Domain. [12]
Vievola Railway Station looking South, © Baptiste, July 2023 and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence, (CC BY-SA 3.0). [Google Maps, July 2025][11]

Vievola Railway Station, seen from a north-bound train in the 21st century. [35]

Vievola Railway Station, seen from slightly further South from the cab of a train heading North through the station back in the 1990s. [8]

A postcard view from 1910 of Vievola Railway Station. The image faces South. [66]

Before we can head South from Vievola on the railway, it needs to have been built! This, it turns out, was dependent on international agreements and their ratification by national parliaments. This process was fraught with difficulty! It would take until 21st March 1906 for agreements to be ratified!

Banaudo et al tell us that over the final decades of the 19th century, the various interests on the French side of the border sought to persuade the French government that the line from Nice to Cuneo was an important investment which should be made. As a result, the French government “invited the PLM company to undertake a route study from Nice to Sospel in circular dated 30th September 1890, renewed on 28th January 1892, given the lack of response from the railway administration. On 12th May, a prefectural decree authorized the company’s engineers to enter properties to conduct the first surveys.” [1: p57]

Banaudo et al continue: “To meet the requirements of the Ministry of War, the route had to include Lucéram. This resulted in a 15 km extension of the direct route between Nice and Sospel. In 1895, the General Staff showed an initial sign of goodwill by agreeing to the study being extended beyond Sospel towards Italy, subject to certain conditions.  On 19th April 1898, Gustave Noblemaire (1832-1924), director of the PLM company, submitted a preliminary proposal for a line from Nice to the border via the Paillon de Contes valley, the Nice pass, L’Escarène, the Braus pass, Sospel, Mount Grazian, Breil and the Roya valley. The Lucéram service was included as a branch line from L’Escarène, other solutions were not technically feasible.” [1: p57-59]

The military response arrived on 27th September 1899, when the principle of the branch line was accepted. It was a few months, 10th January 1900, before the military confirmed their requirements, specifically: “commissioning of the Lucéram branch line at the same time as the L’Escarène – Sospel section; construction of the extension beyond Sospel after reinforcing the installations at Fort du Barbonnet and orientation of the tunnel under Mont Grazian so that it could be held under fire from the fort in the event of war; development of mine devices and defensive casemates at the heads of the main tunnels between L’Escarène and the border; and authorization for Italy to begin laying the track from San-Dalmazzo-di-Tenda to Fontan only after the completion of the Nice-Fontan section by France.” [1: p59]

Cross-border discussions took place between the French departmental Bridges and Roads Department and “its counterpart in the civil engineering department of the province of Cuneo to determine the main technical characteristics of the railway line built by the RM between Cuneo and Vievola, in order to adopt equivalent standards for the French section in terms of grades, curves, and gauge.” [1: p59]

Banaudo et al continue: “At the dawn of the 20th century, while the choice of a route from Nice to the Italian border at San-Dalmazzo via the Paillon, Bévéra, and Roya rivers was no longer in doubt in France, the same was not true in Italy. Indeed, although this solution was preferred by Piedmontese business circles, it was opposed by multiple pressure groups weary of twenty years of French policy of opposition and uncertainty. For many localities on the Riviera or in the Ligurian hinterland, as well as for a persistently Francophobic segment of the general staff, the construction of a line entirely within Italian territory appeared to be the best way to avoid diplomatic and strategic complications.” [1: p59]

In Italy, Piedmont and Liguria had differing views about the appropriate railway routes. Piedmont secured a promise, in the Italian parliament, to extend the railway to Tende and a decision to connect it to the coast soon. In Liguria, the desire was to secure a connection to Ventimiglia via either the Roya Valley or the Nervia Valley. Serious consideration was given to a tramway in the Roya Valley, the central section of which would run through French territory but this was rejected by the French military. [14]

A number of alternative schemes were put forward by Italian interests and by the city of Marseille. The city of Turin appointed a commission to look at all the options and after its report “concluded that it preferred the most direct route via the Col de Tende and the Roya, towards Ventimiglia and Nice. Similarly, the French Chamber of Commerce in Milan supported this choice in March 1900, also proposing the construction of a new 47 km line between Mondovi and Santo Stefano Belbo, designed by the engineer Ferdinando Rossi to shorten the journey between Cuneo, Alessandria and Milan.” [1: p60-61]

In 1901, French and Italian diplomats and then the Turin authorities agreed the main principles for an international agreement. On 24th January 1902 the PLM was granted the concession for the railway from Nice to the Italian border via Sospel, Breil-sur-Roya, and Fontan, as well as the beginning of the line from Breil-sur-Roya to Ventimiglia. This was ratified by law on 18th July 1902.

After this a further military inspection led to the strategic Lucéram branch being temporarily left aside with the possibility of a replacement by an electric tramway from Pont-de-Peille to L’Escarène, to be operated by the Compagnie des Tramways de Nice et du Littoral (TNL).

Banaudo et al continue: “On Monday 6th June 1904, delegations from both countries met in Rome to sign the bipartite convention regulating the terms and conditions of operation of the future line and its implementation into international service. …  In its broad outline, the agreement provided for the completion of the works within eight years (i.e. by 1912) and the possibility for the Italian railway administration to have its Ventimiglia-Cuneo trains transit French territory, with reciprocal authorization for the French operator to run its own vehicles in Italy on direct Nice-Cuneo trains and to establish a local service between Breil, Fontan and San-Dalmazzo-di-Tenda. … Initially, passenger services on the line would be provided by three direct daily connections Nice-Cuneo and Ventimiglia-Cuneo, and vice versa, offering carriages of all three classes.”

Banaudo et el describe the main points of the convention in respect of the transport of people and goods, particularly for transit between the two borders. “Police and customs controls would be simplified as much as possible for nationals of both countries. Nevertheless travelling between two Italian stations via the international section would require a passenger to have a valid passport. Italian postal vehicles would be permitted to travel duty-free on this section, as would goods and baggage in transit, provided they were placed in sealed vehicles and, for livestock, had undergone a prior health inspection at an Italian station. A special clause authorized the passage of Italian military transports of men, equipment, and animals through French territory, while conversely, the French army would be permitted to transit its consignments from Nice to Breil via Ventimiglia.  Article 20 of the convention regulated a legal situation that was probably unique in Europe, that of the Mont Grazian tunnel, whose straight route would pass over a distance of 2,305 metres in Italian subsoil, although its two portals would be in France: ‘It is understood that for the part of the Mont Grazian tunnel located under Italian territory, the Italian government delegates to the French government its rights of control over the railway and its police and judicial rights’. This unusual situation resulted from a modification of the route decided at the request of the General Council of the Alpes-Maritimes. … This more direct route passing under Italian soil was finally preferred to the entirely French route under the Brouis pass, which would have been longer and would have moved the Breil station further from the village.” [1: p62-63]

In Italy, the ratification of the agreements made at the convention took three weeks – it was all done by 28th June 1904. In France thins would be quite different. “On 27th March 1905, as the convention was about to be submitted to a parliamentary vote, the Ministry of War decided to abandon the branch line to Lucéram, which was too costly and difficult to implement. Instead, the nearest stations, L’Escarène and Sospel, would need to be equipped with facilities for the rapid disembarkation of troops and equipment. At L’Escarène in particular, the station would need to be able to accommodate ten twenty-car trains per day and would have to include a military platform opening onto a large open area, an engine shed, and several water columns/supplies.  In addition, the road from L’Escarène to Lucéram would need to be improved to facilitate access to the defensive sector of L’Authion.” [1: p63]

Banaudo et al comment: “The French Chamber of Deputies finally ratified the agreement on 3rd July 1905, more than a year after its Italian counterpart, but the Senate would continue to procrastinate until 8th March 1906. The senators demanded financial participation from the Alpes-Maritimes department in the land acquisition costs, and the French Consul in Italy, Henri Bryois, made numerous appearances in Paris to convince them. The day after the Senate’s vote, on 9th March 9, a parade, speeches, and demonstrations of sympathy for France enlivened the streets of Cuneo. … On 20th March, a final law officially ratified the agreement. … The municipality of Nice organized a grand celebration to celebrate the culmination of fifty years of effort.  On 21st March 1906, Prime Minister Giolitti and Ambassador Barrère exchanged the documents ratified by the parliaments of both countries. Work could finally begin!” [1: p63]

In Italy, the ratification of the international convention led to the money for the completion of the works being set aside (24 million lire for the length South from Vievola to the then border, and 16 million lire for the length North from Ventimiglia to the southern border). In addition, the decision was taken to build the new station in Cuneo to accommodate the increased traffic that would arise from the new line.

A year later, on 1st July 1905, the Italian state brought all nationally significant rail routes/networks under the direct authority of the Ministry of Public Works (the Ferrovie dello Stato (FS)).  This had only a limited impact on the Cuneo-Vievola line. “The 3200, 3800, and 4200 series locomotives of the Rete Mediterranea now formed series 215, 310, and 420 of the [FS}. … At that time, the Torino depot had a complement of 128 locomotives, including 20 from the 215 series and 18 from the 310 series deployed in the line, to which were added ten locos from the 320 series. These were also 030s [in UK annotation, 0-6-0s] with three-axle tenders, initially ordered by the RM as series 3601 to 3700 and gradually delivered by five manufacturers between 1904 and 1908.” [1: p64]

The first decade of the 20th century saw the existing roster of locomotives supplemented by two other series:

  • 130s (UK, 2-6-0) tender locos of the FS 630 series; and
  • 040T (UK, 0-8-0T) tank locos of the FS 895 series.
Locomotive No. 6301was a 2-6-0 (130) locomotive in the FS 630 series. [64]
Locomotive No. 8955 was an 0-8-0T (040T) locomotiv3 in the FS 895 series, [65]

In 1906, a subsidised bus service was introduced to complement and replace the various horse-drawn and motor services already in existence on the roads between Vievola, Ventimiglia and Nice. [1: p64][c.f. 14] The connection to Nice was later (in 1912) taken over by the Truchi company of Nice. [1: p64]


Vievola to Tende

Banaudo et al, again: In August 1907, the first of eleven work packages between Vievola and the [then] border were awarded: package 1 from Vievola to the Gaggeoetlen tunnel, and package 4 of the Cagnolina tunnel to Tenda. In June 1911, it was the turn of package 2, between the Gaggeo and Alimonda tunnels, and the following month, package 3 from Alimonda to Cagnolina. These contracts were signed with the Tuscan companies Sard and Faccanoni and the Ghirardi company, originally from the region of Lake Maggiore. Over 8.2 kilometres, the line crosses Triassic and Permian terrain cut by Jurassic, Cretaceous, and Carboniferous veins. There are ten tunnels covering a distance of 5.90 kilometres, or 72% of the route, as well as seven bridges and viaducts totaling seventeen masonry arches. The section has no level crossings, but seven “caselli” (houses) were built to house the road workers and their families. Some are isolated in the mountains, sometimes between two tunnels, and accessible only by railway.” [1: p64-67]

A schematic representation of the line from Vievola to Tende. [18]
A short video embedded from YouTube, taken at Vievola Railway Station in 2010. [23]
Vievola Railway Station is at the centre of this extract from Google’s satellite imagery. The hamlet is Northeast of the Station just beyond the top of the image. Trains for Tende and beyond set off to the Southwest. The railway bridge can be seen at the bottom left of this image. [Google Maps, July 2025]

From Vievola, the line begins its journey down the valley of La Roya by crossing a single-arch bridge over the Dente valley which suffered some disruption resulting from Storm Alex in October 2020.

A closer focus on the bridge spanning the River Dente. This image appears to be taken after the inundation which occurred with Storm Alex in 2020. [Google Maps, July 2025]
This pair of images are taken from a report into the majority damage caused by Storm Alex. The image on the left is the condition of the area prior to the storm, that on the right shows the situation after the storm. [15]
The bridge that spanned the Dente, in the immediate aftermath of Storm Alex in October 2020. In the view of the engineers checking the line, the bridge was unstable because of erosion. This image was shared on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Osservatorio Ferrovia del Tenda on 3rd Aprilb2924 and credited to Damien Board. [16]
The same bridge after further flooding at Easter 2024. This image was shared on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Gianluca Morelli on 4th May 2024. [17]

A short distance South of the bridge over the river, looking North towards Vievola from the cab of a north-bound train. [35]

Taken from a point a little further to the South, this photograph shows the parapets of a bridge over a small stream to the South of the Dente river. This image is also taken from the cab of a north-bound train in the 2020s. [35]

After crossing the 12 metre span bridge the line enters the 1273 metre long Branego horseshoe tunnel.

This photograph looks North from the mouth of the Branego Tunnel towards Vievola Railway Station. It is taken from the cab of the same North-bound train. [35]

The 1273 metre long Branego Tunnel. The bridge in the Dente valley is top-left  and the Vievola (Chapel) Viaduct is middle-right in this image. [19]

The tunnel opens onto the right bank of La Roya about 25 metres above the river. The Vievola Viaduct spanned the river on five 15 metre masonry arches. Banaudo et al tell us that, “this structure would later be called the ‘Chapel viaduct’ due to its proximity to the Sanctuary of the Visitation or Madonna of Vievola.” [1: p67]

The East Portal of Branego Tunnel taken from the cab of a train approaching Vievola Railway Station from the South. [35]

The Vievola (Chapel) Viaduct seen from the cab of a train approaching it from Tende. [35]

I believe that the viaduct was fatally damaged by the German forces retreating at the end of WW2. It has been rebuilt in concrete as a 5-span concrete viaduct.

Looking South along the E74/D6204 under the railway viaduct. [Google Streetview, April 2008]
Looking North along the E74/D6204 torads the railway viaduct. [Google Streetview, April 2008]
The same location on Google satellite imagery shows a denuded valley floor after Storm Alex. [Google Earth 3D, July 2025]

Now on the left bank of La Roya, the line passes through a series of tunnels with very brief open lengths spanning narrow valleys or slight depressions. The first tunnel on the Left bank is shown below. …

After crossing the Chapel Viaduct trains heading for Tende ran straight into Gaggio Tunnel (373 metres long) which curves towards the Southeast. [20]

The Southeast Portal of Gaggio Tunnel seen from the cab of a Northbound train at the mouth of Devenzo Tunnel. The parapets of the 12-metre span arched bridge over the San Pancrazio valley can be seen between the two tunnels. [35]

The Bridge over the Vallon Pancrasio (the San Pancrazio valley) is a 12 metre span arch bridge. [21]
The San Pancrazio valley as it appears on Google’s satellite imagery after the damage from Storm Alex. [Google Earth 3D, July 2025]
A closer look at the railway bridge spanning the San Pancrazio valley. [Google Earth 3D, July 2025]

The tunnel portals are generally made of local stone as are the arched bridges. The next tunnel is the Devenzo tunnel, shown below. …

The Devenzo Tunnel (732 metres long) extends Southeast from the San Pancrazio valley to the Mezzora Valley which seems little more than an ‘indentation’ in the valley side. A shorter tunnel is beyond the opening (the Mezzora Tunnel – 351 metres long) which opens out onto the Alimonda Valley at the bottom-right of this map extract. [22]

This photograph is another still from a video taken from the cab of a train travelling North from Tende. It shows the short length of open line mentioned above. The parapets are those of the viaduct of two 6 metre arches. [35]

This Google Earth satellite image shows the railway line breaking cover to cross the Alimonda valley near the top of the image. The E74/D6204 is at the bottom-left of the image. [Google Earth, July 2025]
The same location as it appears on OpenStreetMap. The bridge over the Alimonda valley is at the top-right of the image and the E74/D6204 is in the bottom-left. [24]

The Southeast portal of the Mezzora Tunnel can be seen in this image taken from the tunnel mouth of the Alimonda Tunnel. It is possible to see along the full length of this tunnel to the short opening mentioned above. In the course of travelling this short length of open line the railway crosses the Alimonda Valley. [35]

The next tunnel, the Alimonda Tunnel begins immediately the Alimonda valley has been crossed. The tunnel is 380 m long.

The Alimonda Tunnel: the bridge over the Alimonda Valley is top-left in this map extract, the bridge over the Scara Valley is bottom-right. [25]
The bridge over the Scara Valley is on the right of this map extract. There is very little of the railway open to the elements at this location. [26]

The short length of track and bridge in the Scara Valley between the Alimonda Tunnel and the Frera Tunnel, seen from the cab of a service which has just left the Frera Tunnel heading for Vievola and on to Cuneo. [35]

Before entering the Frera Tunnel, it is worth pulling back a little to see the route of the line ahead. This is the first ‘spiral’ on the line down towards Ventimiglia and Nice. A large section of the spiral is within one tunnel but the engineers made use of the Valley of the Refrei to avoid having to put the entire spiral in tunnel. [36]

The Frera Tunnel (498 m long) runs North-northwest to South-southeast passing over the line ahead which is at a lower level – both are tunneled out of the rock. There is an open length of the line and a bridge at the bottom-right. [27]

The short length of track and the bridge between the Frera and the Rio Freddo tunnels. [35]

After crossing the bridge noted above the line soon disappears into the Rio Freddo Tunnel (376 m long). The bridge is top-left. The tunnel opens out for a short length at the right of this map extract. [28]
A short length of line is open to the elements to the North of the valley of the Refrei and between the Rio Freddo and Morga Tunnels. [29]

The short length of line between the Rio Freddo and the Morga Tunnels, seen from the cab of a train just leaving Morga Tunnel. The Rio Freddo tunnel mouth is ahead. Between the two tunnel mouths is the Morga Bridge (two 8-metre arches). [35]

Banaudo et al tell us that “from the exit of the Rio-Freddo tunnel [on the North flank of the Refrei valley], the village of Tenda (Tende) appears below and the railway describes a helical loop which ends at [the lower end of] the Cagnolina tunnel. … This loop loses about sixty metres of altitude in less than 3 km of travel.” [1: p70]

After the very short open length of line to the East of the Rio Freddo  Tunnel, another short tunnel ensues – the Morga Tunnel (160 m long). [30]
Another short open length of line sits between the Morga and Gerbo Tunnels. [31]

The short open length of track between Morga and Gerbo tunnels, seen from the cab of a Cuneo-bound service and framed by the Southwest mouth of Gerbo Tunnel. [35]

Pulling back a little enables the full length of Gerbo Tunnel (279 m long) to be seen, together with the open length of line and viaduct to the East – Gerbo Viaduct. [32]

The Northeast Portal of Gerbo Tunnel seen from the cab of a Cuneo-bound train in the 2020s. [35]

A short distance further along the line, the Bazara Viaduct (of five 8 m arches) is seen here, with the Gerbo Tunnel beyond – these are seen from the cab of a Cuneo-bound service in the 21st century. [35]

After a short length of line to the Northeast or Gerbo Viaduct the line enter Cagnolina Tunnel and under many tons of rock swings round to travel West while on a downward grade. [33]

Here the Cuneo-bound train is just leaving the South Portal of Cagnolina Tunnel (at the right of the above map extract) and crossing a small bridge close to the tunnel mouth. [35]

Still in tunnel, the line passes under the line we have just travelled before breaking out into the valley of La Roya. It then bridges the river and heads down the the valley side on the left bank of La Roya to Tende Railway Station. [34]

The lower (West) portal of the Cagnolina Tunnel and the bridge over La Roya. Taken from the cab of a train heading North from Tende. The bridge over La Roya has a 12 metre span. [35]

A significant retaining wall to the West of the line, above which runs the E74/D6204. [35]

A short tunnel (Tende Galleria) part way along the length that the E74/D6402 run parallel and in close proximity to each other. The view looks North-northwest along the line. [35]

A train from Cuneo arrives at Tende Railway Station in February 2023. [37]

The Tende Railway Station today has a passenger building and two platform faces. In the past, it had three platform faces and a goods shed of classic Italian design, “the station had a number of goods tracks, two reinforced concrete water tanks supplying two hydraulic cranes, as well as an 8.50 metre turntable which was probably transferred from Vievola when the line was extended.” [1: p70]

Tende Railway Station looking Northwest, © George Ringler and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [38]

Wikipedia tells us that Tende Railway Station “opened on 7th September 1913. [40: p146] … Tende remained the temporary terminus for almost two years, until the opening of the Tende – Briga Marittima – San Dalmazzo di Tende section, which took place on 1st June 1915.” [39][40: p149]

The station and yard were electrified along with the line in 1931. [40: p171-172]

Tende “became isolated from the railway network after the destruction of bridges and tunnels by the retreating Germans between 15th and 26th April 1945.” [39][41: p15] .

It remained under the jurisdiction of the Italian State Railways (FS) until 15th September 1947 and was passed into the hands of the Société Nationale des Chemins de fer Français (SNCF) the following day, when the upper Roja valley was separated from the province of Cuneo and became French territory by virtue of the peace treaty with France.” [39]

After thirty-four years of inactivity, it was reopened on 6th October 1979 , the day of the inauguration of the rebuilt Cuneo-Ventimiglia line.” [39][40: p243]

The station yard was originally of a significant size. [42: p81] For the reopening of the Limone-Ventimiglia line to traffic … it was initially planned that the Tende station would be transformed into a stop equipped with only a single track, but it was subsequently decided to build a loop [43: p34] with a useful length of 560 metres and a single track serving the loading platform and the goods warehouse. [43: p29]

The Goods Shed and Passenger building at Tende seen from Avenue du 16 Septembre 1947 and looking Southeast. [Google Streetview, July 2014]

A French and an Italian train pass at Tende in 2022. The train on the right is, I believe, an ALe501 trainset commissioned by Trenitalia in the early 2000s and produced by Alstom Ferroviaria, (c) Tomas Votava. [Google Maps, August 2025]

TER No. 76671 on the Train des Merveilles service from Nice stands at Tende Station, (c) Kenta Yumoto. [Google Maps, August 2025]

We have travelled as far as Tende Railway Station and noted that the line reached the village in 1913 and remained the terminus of the line from Cuneo until 2015. While the line as far as Tende was still under construction, Banaudo et al tells us that there were continued contacts “between the Italian and French authorities to resolve the remaining issues concerning the connection between the two networks in the Roya Valley. On 3rd January 1910, the Ministers of Public Works of both countries … met to discuss the problems of Franco-Italian communications. On 15th May 1910, the Cuneo Chamber of Commerce approached the government to request the acceleration of work between Vievola and Tenda. … During the same period, … efforts were being made to produce [hydroelectric power]. … The first plants were installed in Airole and Bevera in 1906, and later in San-Dalmazzo between 1909 and 1914.” [1: p70-74]

The Roya hydroelectric power plants were intended to supply the Vallauria Mining Company and its ore processing facilities, public lighting, industries and the tramways of the Ligurian Riviera as far as Savona and Genoa.” [1: p74]

In France, two small power plants were built at the beginning of the century at Pont d’Ambo, downstream from Fontan, and in Breil. Between 1912 and 1914, a larger power plant was built opposite the village of Fontan.

Banaudo et al tell us that “In both France and Italy, the simultaneous construction of the railway and power plants turned the Roya Valley into a huge construction site for a dozen years. The companies had to house, feed, and entertain several hundred workers, most of them from other regions of Italy.” [1: p74]

After the opening of Tende Railway Station in September 1913, “the FS improved the service which had remained unchanged for a quarter of a century. Four Cuneo – Tenda return trips would now run every day, including a mixed goods-passenger one. From July to September, a fifth return trip was added. The 50 km journey took an average of 1 hour 50 minutes.” [1: p75]

Meanwhile, the project to divert the railway line and build a new station on the Altipiano in Cuneo which we noted in the first of these articles, [9] was being developed. Work began in September 1913 [1: p80] but it was to be 7th November 1937 before the new station opened! [44]

While the line was creeping southwards from Cuneo to Tenda, work had begun in Ventimiglia on the northbound line up the Roya Valley. However, by the outbreak of World War I it had only covered 20 kilometres to Airole. Meanwhile, and again interrupted by the war, another line was being built northeast from Nice to join the Cuneo-Ventimiglia line at Breil sur Roya.” [39] Progress on these two lines is covered in other posts in this series of articles. [45][46][47][48]

From Tende to St. Dalmas de Tende (San Dalmazzo di Tenda)

In the first half of 1912, calls for tenders were issued for six lots of the section between Tenda, Briga, San-Dalmazzo, and the northern border of the Paganin Valley, followed in April 1913 by the award of the seventh and final lot. Here again, the tunnels, fifteen in number, account for more than two-thirds of the route, or 8,576 metres out of 12,335 metres. There are also seven bridges and viaducts, comprising a total of thirty-five masonry arches, about ten short-span structures, and there were ten roadside houses.” [1: p127]

The length of the line from Tende to San Dalmazzo di Tenda (San Dalmas de Tende). [51]
Schematic plan of the line from Tende South to the former Italian border via La Brigue and Saint Dalmas de Tende. [18]
Tende Railway Station in the 21st century, seen from the Southeast, from the cab of a northbound train. [35]

Tende Railway Station seen from the cab of a South-bound service. [55]

Leaving Tende Railway Station, the line soon passes onto the curved viaduct spanning the Roya River opposite the village. The viaduct has one 20-metre arch and eleven 15-metre arches. 

The southern end of the station site and the viaduct which crosses the valley of La Roya. [53]

A South-bound service crosses Tende Viaduct. This is the view from the cab. [55]

An old Italian postcard view of the village of Tende, seen from the South. The viaduct features to the right of the centre of the image. [52]
The curve of the viaduct at Tender shows up well in this photograph, © Public Domain. [68]
Tende Viaduct seen from the access road to the village cemetery. [Google Streetview, October 2008]
The first of two views of Tende Viaduct from Rue General Doyen showing the northern half of the viaduct. [Google Streetview, July 2014]
The second of two views of Tende Viaduct from Rue General Doyen showing the more southerly portion of the viaduct. [Google Streetview, July 2014]
The viaduct, seen from Avenue Maurice Barucchi. [Google Streetview, July 2014]

We were in Tende in November 2023 so saw something of the major work being undertaken after Storm Alex hit the area in October 2020 and took these photographs of the viaduct

The northern half of the viaduct. [My photograph, Wednesday 22nd November 2023}
The larger viaduct arch span over La Roya. [My photograph, Wednesday 22nd November 2023]
The southern length of the viaduct. [My photograph, Wednesday 22nd November 2023]
Tende Viaduct seen from the South from the cab of a train heading for Tende Railway Station. [35]

Once across the viaduct, trains heading South ran on through three tunnels on the left bank of La Roya on a falling grade of 25mm/m. These were:

Borgonuovo Tunnel (200 metres long) …

The approach to Borgonuovo Tunnel, seen from the cab of a South-bound train. [55]

Looking North from the mouth of Borgonuovo Tunnel, from the cab of a North-bound train. [35]

The view South from the mouth of Borgonuevo Tunnel., [55]

The southern portal of Borgonuovo Tunnel, seen from the cab of an approaching train. [35]

The view from above the South portal of Borgonuovo Tunnel, (c) Tito Casquinha, June 2019. [Google Maps, August 2025]

The same length of line seen from across the valley. [Google Streetview, October 2008]

Bijorin Tunnel (248 metres long) …

The North portal of the Bijorin Tunnel. [55]

The view from the northern portal of Bijorin Tunnel. [35]

The view South from the mouth of Bijorin Tunnel. Colombera tunnel is just visible ahead. [55]

The length of line between Bijorin and Colombera tunnels, seen from the far side of the valley of La Roya. [Google Streetview, October 2008]

The South portal of Bijorin Tunnel is ahead in this still from a video taken from the cab of a North-bound train. This image also shows avalanche warning wires above the line. [35]

Colombera Tunnel (212 metres long) …

The North portal of Colombera Tunnel. [55]

The view North towards Bijorin Tunnel from the mouth of Colombera Tunnel. [35]

An over exposed view South from the South Portal of Colombera Tunnel. [55]

The South Portal of Colombera Tunnel seen from the cab of a Northbound train. [35]

This OpenStreetMap extract shows the three tunnels named above, and the lengths of open railway line between. [54]

A short distance further South the railway bridges a minor road. These are the bridge parapets seen from the cab of a South-bound train. The minor road is just visible to the left of the image. [55]

The next tunnel is Bosseglia Tunnel. The railway and the main road separate as the line heads into the tunnel which is S-shaped and 1585 metres in length. The southern portal of the tunnel opens out into the Levenza valley, a short distance to the East of La Brigue Railway Station. Banaudo et all refer to the station as Briga-Marittima station, which appears to be the name of the station in Italian. [1: p127]

The Bosselgia Tunnel (which is over 1.5 km long) and the railway station at La Brigue as they appear on OpenStreetMap. [56]

Looking South, this is the northern portal of the Bosseglia Tunnel. [55]

Looking North from the mouth of Bosseglia Tunnel. [35]

Looking West from the southern portal of Bosseglia Tunnel towards La Brigue Railway Station. [55]

Turning through 180 degrees, this is the southern portal of the Bosseglia Tunnel seen from a North-bound train. [35]

La Brigue Railway Station once comprised a passenger building, two platform faces (a third would be built during electrification), three freight tracks with a good shed and a raised platform. The modern station is situated to the East of the old station. [1: p127]

Looking West along La Brigue Railway Station platform, © Remontees, and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 4.0). [57]

A similar view with an ALn501+502 train set in the station, © Georgio Stagni, June 2014 and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [57]

Looking East along the station platform, © JpChevreau and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 4.0). [57]

Looking West from the modern La Brigue Station through the site of the original station. [55]

Further through the site of the old railway station and continuing to face West down the Levenza valley. The old goods shed is on the left. [55]

The site of the two La Brigue Railway Stations. The modern station is on the right of this map extract, the old station and goods shed are left of centre. [58]
The station at La Brigue is a short distance to the West of the village. [Google Maps, August 2025]

The original station building at La Brigue, seen from the cab of a train heading for Ventimiglia. [55]

The bridge over the D43 and the River Levenza. [59]

The bridge over the D43 and the River Levenza. [55]

The bridge which carries the railway over the D43 and the River Levenza, seen from the East. [Google Streetview, August 2016]

The bridge which carries the railway over the D43 and the River Levenza, seen from the West. [Google Streetview, August 2016]

The view back across the bridge over the River Levenza towards La Brigue Railway Station. The D43 can just be made out to the right of the bridge. [35]

Leaving La Brigue Railway Station the line resumes following a falling grade of 25 mm/m. This continues through the Levenza viaduct, which, as we have seen consists of three 8-metre arches abutting a single span road bridge. Beyond this is the Levenza tunnel (418 m long). …

The Northeastern portal of the Levenza tunnel. [55]

The view back along the line from the Northeast portal of the Levenza tunnel. [35]

This overexposed view looks Southwest from the Southwest tunnel mouth of the Levenza tunnel. [55]

The Southwest portal of the Levenza tunnel seen from the cab of a North-bound service. [35]

Beyond the Levenza Tunnels is and an unnamed viaduct of three 8-metre arches) and the line then enters the Rioro Spiral Tunnel.

The Rioro Tunnel forms a loop which describes a circle of 300-metre radius and accommodates a 30-metre drop.

Banaudo et al tell us that the tunnel “is officially divided into two sections: Rioro I (282 m) and Rioro II (1527 m), connected by an artificial tunnel with a lateral opening closed by a gate. At this opening, a ‘casello’ (a ‘hut’) was built into the mountainside to house a road worker and his family.” [1: p127]

Looking Northeast from the mouth of the Rioro spiral tunnel. [35]

The Northeastern portal of the Rioro sprial tunnel. [55]

The Rioro Spiral Tunnel between La Brigue and St. Dalmas de Tende is 1828 metres in length. [60]

Trains are within the tunnel for some minutes as they cover nearly two kilometres of turning track within the tunnel. This view comes from the cab of a South-bound train. [55]

Facing Southwest along the line at the mouth of the Rioro Spiral Tunnel. The picture is overexposed as the camera is reacting to daylight after running through the tunnel. [55]

The Southwest Portal of the Rioro Spiral Tunnel, seen from the cab of a North-bound train. [35]

The Rioro Spiral Tunnel opens onto the left bank of the Levenza River, just before its confluence with the Roya River.

To the Southwest of the tunnel, the line is carried alongside the River Levenza on a retaining wall. The parapet of this wall, protected by railings, can be seen on the right of this image. [55]

The River Roya is crossed by the San-Dalmazzo I viaduct. Banaudo et al tell us that “the seven 15-metre masonry arches of this structure were widened to carry three tracks to accommodate the approach to the station, built on a vast embankment. An underpass beneath it provides a route for the [E74/D6204].” [1: p127]

The line is retained above the Levenza River and then crosses La Roya on a viaduct of seven 15-metre masonry arches. A short tunnel under the wide embankment to the Southwest of the river allows the  D6204 to pass under the railway. [61]

A postcard view of the viaduct and station at the centre of St. Dalmas de Tende. The station building is to the right of this image, the viaduct in the centre. The photograph was taken on the hillside to the North of the village. This image was shared on the Ferrovia internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Luisa Grosso on 1st November 2021. [63]

The bridge over La Roya on the approach to St. Dalmas de Tende. [55]

The bridge over the Avenue de France (the D6204/E74) seen from the North. The road is in tunnel as a large area was dedicated to the station complex at St. Dalmas de Tende as it was originally a border station in Italy. [Google Streetview, August 2016]

The same bridge/tunnel seen from the South on the Avenue de France. [Google Streetview, August 2016]

A long double-track section of the line runs through the station at St. Dalmas de Tende. A small yard remains on the North side of the line entered vis the point seen in this image. [55]

The final approach to St. Dalmas Railway Station from the Northeast. [55]

St. Dalmas de Tende Railway Station seen, looking Southwest, from the cab of a South-bound train. [55]

St. Dalmas de Tende Railway Station as show on OpenStreetMap. [62]
A postcard image overlooking the station site at St. Dalmas de Tende prior to the construction of the large station building. [5]
The station during construction work. There is scaffolding on the main station building, which appears to have been built in sections with a completed length nearest to the water tower. The engine shed is under construction, centre-right. This image was shared on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Mauro Tosello on 12th June 2022. [6]
A postcard view of the Railway Station at St. Dalmas de Tende, taken from the East. The tunnel at the Southwest end of the station site can be seen on the left of the photograph. This image was shared on the Ferrovia internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Luisa Grosso on 1st November 2021. [63]
The locomotive Depot at St. Dalmas de Tende. The depot was on the Southeast side of the running lines opposite the railway Station and close to the Biogna River. The road shown on the OpenStreetMap plan of the modern station to the Southeast of the site is the road shown at the top of this plan. This drawing comes from From the December 1929 Technical Magazine of Italiane Ferrovie. It was shared on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group on 13th February 2024 by Francesco Ciarlini Koerner. [4]

St. Dalmas de Tende Railway Station seen, looking Northeast, from the cab of a North-bound service. [35]

St. Dalmas de Tende (San-Dalmazzo-di-Tenda in Italian) was “the last station on Italian territory, before the northern border.  This is where the French Forces would install a large-scale border station that will handle customs clearance operations in addition to the French facilities at Breil. In the first phase, a temporary passenger building and a small freight shed were built on the vast embankment created from the spoil from the tunnels upstream of the confluence of the Roya and Biogna rivers. The original layout includes four through tracks, one of which is at the platform, five sidings, three storage tracks, a temporary engine shed, a 9.50 m turntable, and a hydraulic power supply for the locomotives.” [1: p127]

It is here, at St. Dalmas de Tende, that we finish this third part of our journey from Cuneo to the coast.

Located at the confluence of the Roya River with the side valleys of the Levenza and Biogna, San-Dalmazzo-di-Tende “was built around a former Augustinian convent that became offices of the Vallauria mining company and then a spa. Since the border was established in 1860 a few kilometers downstream in the Paganin Gorges, first a few dozen, then hundreds of workers, employees, and civil servants gradually settled in San-Dalmazzo with their families. Jobs were plentiful, with the development of mining in the neighboring Val d’Inferno, the creation of a sawmill, the construction of dams and hydroelectric power plants, the emergence of tourism, and the permanent presence of a large number of police, customs, and tax guards.  This influx … was reinforced during the railway works, which attracted many workers: earthmovers, masons, stonemasons, miners, carpenters, etc. These newcomers, who mostly came from other regions, sometimes far away, slowly integrated into the local population.” [1: p130]

The line to San-Dalmazzo-di-Tende was opened on 1st June 1915. The three of the four daily services were connected to the Southern arm of the line which by this time had reached Airole, by a coach shuttle. [1: p131]

A temporary station was provided as a terminus of the line from Cuneo. It was sited to the Northeast of the present large station building which was not built until 1928.

The next length of the line can be found here. [67]

References

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  2. Jose Banaudo, Michel Braun and Gerard de Santos; Les Trains du Col de Tende Volume 2: 1929-1974; FACS Patrimoine Ferroviaire, Les Editions du Cabri, 2018.
  3. Jose Banaudo, Michel Braun and Gerard de Santos; Les Trains du Col de Tende Volume 3: 1975-1986; FACS Patrimoine Ferroviaire, Les Editions du Cabri, 2018.
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