Category Archives: Italian Railways, Tramways, Funiculars, Cog Railways

Miscellaneous Steam-Powered Road Vehicles – Scotte Steam Road Vehicles

Société des Chaudières et Voitures à Vapeur système Scotte was a French manufacturer of steam-powered trucks, tractors, and omnibuses in Paris from 1893 to circa. 1914. The company also built the Train Scotte, an early road train for passenger or freight transport. [1]

I first encountered the Train Scotte when reading about the Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nice international railway line in a book by Jose Banaudo, Michel Braun and Gerard de Santos; Les Trains du Col de Tende Volume 1: 1858-1928. [2] The partial opening of the that railway from Cuneo to Vievola in October 1900 left travellers heading for the Mediterranean in the middle of nowhere!

An experimental steam road train was trialled on the roads from Vievola to Ventimiglia. It was supplied by Société des Chaudières et Voitures à Vapeur système Scotte.

At this time, Vievola was a railway terminal for traffic to and from Piedmont and a hub for road connections onwards to Nice and Liguria. Banaudo et al point us to a magazine published in 1899, which mentions a trial of a steam-powered road vehicle which it was hoped would provide a service to Nice and the coast until such time as a railway was built. [1: p40][37] The service was a trial organised by the House of Ascenso et Cie, and ran from Vievola to Ventimiglia. The journey, lasted a total of six hours, including a 43-kilometre climb. The vehicles used were Scotte trains. The car wagon carried a 27-horsepower engine and seated 16 passengers; it also towed a second 24-seater wagon. [2: p40]

La Locomotion Automobile, 1899, p467, included the paragraph below, quoted/translated above, © Public Domain. [3]

Industrialist Joanny Scotte, [10] originally from Epernay in the Marne department, began his business in the mid-1880s producing steam-powered cars. From 1897, he offered road trains consisting of a tractor or a steam-powered car, pulling one or more trailers designed for the transport of passengers or goods. These vehicles travelled on roads using solid tires. They never really went beyond the experimental stage due to their slowness, the difficulties of driving the vehicles on the narrow roads of the time and the damage caused to the cobbled and cylindered roads. [2: p40] Scotte road train services were reported in the last decade of the 19th century in the Île-de-France region (Fontainebleau, Pont-de-Neuilly, Courbevoie), in the Aube region (Arcis-sur-Aube – Brienne-le-Château), in the Manche region (Pont-l’Abbé-Picauville – Chef-du-Pont), in the Drôme region (Valence – Crest), and for military use. Scotte partnered with the Lyon-based car manufacturers Buire and Audibert-Lavirotte to produce some of its vehicles. [2: p41]

An invitation to a road test of a ‘Train Scotte’ in circa 1895, © Public Domain. [6]
A French pamphlet advertising the ‘Train Scotte’. The wording inside the pamphlet translates as: Scotte trains are made available to buyers after undergoing track and road tests to assess their power, which makes them capable of climbing 7% grades with full load without difficulty, their speed, their rapid stopping and starting, and finally the admirable flexibility of their steering, which allows them to be operated with absolute safety on the busiest and most congested tracks. These preliminary tests are carried out in Paris, before delivery, in the presence of the buyers. Scotte trains have obtained operating authorizations from the various competent authorities. ………. The Scotte passenger train consists of:

1. A power car (steam omnibus) capable of carrying fourteen passengers and the two engine crew;
Weight of the empty car with all equipment: Motor: approximately 3,500 kg; Total length: 5m 20 cm; Width at the waist: 1 m 80 cm; and

2. An unpowered car capable of holding 24 passengers. Weight of the empty car: 1,500 kg; Total length: 4m 65 cm; Width at the waist: 1,080 cm, © Public Domain. [5]
Le ‘Train Scotte’ à voyageurs (Le Génie civil 1897) – in Histoire de l’automobile, Pierre Souvestre, éd. H. Dunod et E. Pinat, 1907. …………………… An English Translation: The ‘Train Scotte’ passenger version (Le Génie civil 1897) – in History of the automobile, Pierre Souvestre, ed. H. Dunod and E. Pinat, 1907, © Public Domain. [1]
Scott steam train in motion at Contrexéville (Vosges). A handwritten note in the margin of the glass plate reads: “Contrexéville. Test of the Scott train.” The newspaper “Le Nouvelliste des Vosges” provides valuable information on the first experiments: “The passenger train, composed of a steam omnibus and a towed car, capable of carrying together forty people at a speed of 12 to 15 kilometers (…) The route adopted for the Scotte train tests is as follows: Châtenois, Aulnois-Bulgnéville, Saint-Ouen-les-Parey, Bulgnéville, Contrexéville, Vittel, Ville-sur-Illon, Épinal via Darnieulles, Thaon, Épinal, Remiremont, Gérardmer via Le Tholy, La Schlucht, Gérardmer, Saint-Dié, Raon-l’Étape, the Celles valley, Rambervillers, Épinal, Xertigny, Bains, Fontenoy-le-Château, Allevillers, Plombières, Remiremont, Val-d’Ajol, Fougerolles, Luxeuil. This journey takes ten to twelve days. We will stay a day or two in Épinal for tests. Later from Giromagny to Saint-Maurice… (Le Nouvelliste des Vosges, Sunday, August 2 to Sunday, August 9, 1896), © Public Domain. [7]
Also at Contrexéville (Vosges) with a crowd of curious onlookers gathered around the Scotte steam train. [8]
The ‘Train Scotte’ in 1897 at Poids, Lourds In trials of early commercial vehicles. The Train Scotte’s motor wagon is loaded with 2 tons and the trailer with 3.5 tons. A series of competing steam road tractors were assessed by a delegation from Liverpool, UK. The delegation formed the opinion that of a range of manufacturers submissions (Scotte, Weidknecht, Le Blant, Do Dietrich, Panhard and Levassor, De Dion-Bouton, De Ellen and Maison Parisienne) to the trials, only the Scotte and De Ellen vehicles were capable of dealing with loads such as Liverpool required to move, © Public Domain. [4]

The wikipedia webpage relating to the ‘Train Scotte’ provides a series of photographs and drawings of the company’s products, including one advertising poster. All are in the public domain and are shown below:

Le train Scotte n°10 au Paris-Rouen 1894 (omnibus de M. J. Scotte, Epernay 51), Voitures sans chevaux. Concours organisé par le Petit Journal, 22 juillet 1894, coll. R.Girard BNF/Gallica – Premier omnibus à traction mécanique – Société des Chaudières et Voitures à Vapeur système Scotte et Buffaud & Robatel. ……………….. An English translation: Scotte train No. 10 on the Paris-Rouen route in 1894 (Mr. J. Scotte’s omnibus, Epernay 51), Horseless Carriages. Competition organized by the Petit Journal, July 22, 1894, R. Girard collection, BNF/Gallica – First mechanically powered omnibus – Scotte and Buffaud & Robatel Boiler and Steam Carriage Company, © Public Domain. [1]
A drawing of the same vehicle, based on the photograph above and carried in the same journal, © Public Domain. [1]
[Collection Jules Beau. Photographie sportive] : T. 12. Années 1899 et 1900 / Jules Beau : F. 48v. [Transsibérien, décembre 1900]; Entre 1899 et 1900. ……………………………… An English Translation: [Jules Beau Collection. Sports Photography]: Vol. 12. Years 1899 and 1900 / Jules Beau: F. 48v. [Trans-Siberian, December 1900]; Dated between 1899 and 1900, © Public Domain. [1]

[Collection Jules Beau. Photographie sportive] : T. 7. Année 1898 / Jules Beau : F. 14v. Train Scotte ; Laszewski; 1898. ……………………………. An English Translation: [Jules Beau Collection. Sports Photography]: Vol. 7. Year 1898 / Jules Beau: F. 14v. Scotte Train; Laszewski; Date 1898, © Public Domain. [1]
Le Train Scotte et son attelage, en 1900; Le Sport universel illustré, 29 septembre 1900, p.618. ……………….. An English Translation: The Scotte train and its train of wagons, in 1900. Source: Le Sport universel Train , September 29, 1900, p. 618, © Public Domain. [1]
Affiche par Henri Gray (1858-1924) pour le transport en commun à vapeur : le Train Scotte [1897];
Source gallica.bnf.fr/Bibliothèque nationale de France. An English Translation: Poster by Henri Gray (1858-1924) for steam-powered public transport: the Scotte Train [1897]. Source: gallica.bnf.fr/Bibliothèque nationale de France, © Public Domain. [1]
Another view of the ‘Train Scotte’. [9]

The tractor was equipped with a vertical Field system boiler, 600 litres of water for which were stored under the passenger seats, and a 14 horsepower, 2-cylinder engine. Coke or coal was its fuel (200 kg for 4 hours of operation). The movement was transmitted to the rear axle by a chain. The trailer was coupled to the tractor by a pivoting front axle. To stop, the steam omnibus had a quick brake operated by a pedal, a screw brake operated by a flywheel and, in an emergency, could work on the gear change. Steering was provided by a steering wheel. [9]

The Train Scotte train ran on wooden spoked wheels with iron tires. The seats were also made of wood, passengers needed to bring a cushion. The machine was quite noisy. It could be heard coming from afar and some houses shook as it passed. Its speed wasn’t very high, 12 to 15 km/h, so there was time to admire the scenery.

When carrying only goods, up to 5 to 6 tons, its speed was reduced to 6 to 7 km/h.

The experiment failed. The attempt to use the ‘Train Scotte’ between Vievola and Ventimiglia was abandoned quite quickly, probably no more than a few weeks after it commenced: driving was difficult, damage to road surfaces occurred, the road gradients were steep. [2: p41]

Elsewhere, experimental journeys had mixed success. Steam road vehicles were slow and they faced serious competition from similar vehicles with internal combustion engines. For a very short time around the turn of the 20th century, these vehicles seemed to have a future but ultimately the experiment failed!

References

  1. https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Scotte_vehicles, accessed on 25th July 2025.
  2. 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.
  3. La Locomotion Automobile, 1899, p467; via https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bd6t53333638/f5.item, accessed on 25th July 2025.
  4. What is France Doing: Fully Illustrated Account of Trails Now in Progress; in Commercial Motor; August 1905, p8-15. The report seems to relate, at least in part, to trials in 1897.
  5. https://www.livre-rare-book.com/book/5472786/AUTO477, accessed on 26th July 2025.
  6. https://ebay.us/m/d270lw, accessed on 26th July 2025.
  7. https://www.image-est.fr/fiche-documentaire-train-scotte-contrexeville-1284-15027-2-0.html, accessed on 26th July 2025.
  8. https://www.image-est.fr/fiche-documentaire-train-scotte-contrexeville-1442-15028-2-0.html, accessed on 26th July 2025.
  9. https://www.archigny.net/spip.php?article=617, accessed on 26th July 2025.
  10. Contrary to what one might think, the name Scotte is not of English origin, but entirely French. Mr. Scotte was previously called Mr. Crotte. Tired of the dubious jokes, he had an S added before the C, then removed the R from the patronymic spelling of his name. [9]

The Railway between Nice, Tende and Cuneo – Part 2 – Vernante to Vievola

The featured image above is a 0-6-0 RM Locomotive No. 3375 ‘Pracchia’, with three driven axles and a tender, built in 1883 by Vulcan of Stettin. In 1905, it joined the FS fleet as Class 215, known as a Bourbonnais, along with 400 other locomotives with similar characteristics. It ended its career with the Porretta in 1927, © Public Domain. [26][27][1: p87] This class of locomotive was the predominant Class of engine used on the line between Cuneo and Limone in the early years of the line.

In the first article about the line from Cuneo to the sea we covered the length from Cuneo to Vernante. The article can be found here. [9]

The Line South from Vernante to Limone

A schematic drawing showing the main locations on the line from Vernante to Limone. [17]

Banaudo et al write that “It was only in 1886, after the creation of the Rete Mediterranea, that the work on the fourth tranche from Vernante to Limone was awarded. It was 8,831 m long and had a gradient of 203 m, which was to be compensated for by a continuous ramp of up to 26 mm/m. This value would not be exceeded at any other point on the line. On this section, the rail remained constantly on a ledge on the steep slope on the right bank of the Vermenagna, where it was anchored by eleven bridges and viaducts totaling sixty-three masonry arches, as well as nine tunnels with a combined length of 4,416 m, or just over half the route:” [1: p28]

  • the Tetti-Chiesa tunnel which is 122 m long;
  • the Elicoidale tunnel (the Vernante Spiral tunnel) is 1,502 m long;
  • the Rivoira viaduct has fourteen 15 m arches and one 23 m arch;
  • the Rivoira tunnel is 251 m long;
  • the Santa Lucia viaduct has three 12 m arches;
  • a short span masonry arch over a minor road;
  • the Santa Lucia-Noceto tunnel is 348 m long with two openings;
  • the Noceto viaduct has six 8 m arches;
  • the Marino viaduct has two 8 m arches and two 12.50 m arches;
  • the Marino tunnel is 202 m long;
  • the Mezzavia viaduct, three 11 m arches;
  • the Mezzavia tunnel is 444 m long;
  • the bridge over the Ceresole valley has two 10 m arches;
  • the Boglia tunnel is 1,086 m long;
  • the San Bernardo viaduct over the Sottana valley has two 6 m arches and three 10 m arches;
  • the Cresta-Molino tunnel is 335 m long;
  • the Boschiera viaduct has twelve 10 m arches;
  • the Rocciaia tunnel is 126 m long;
  • the Rocciaia bridge is a single arch;
  • the first Rocciaia viaduct has four 8 m arches;
  • the second Rocciaia viaduct has eight 8 m arches.

We start this next length of the journey at Vernante Railway Station and head Southeast.

A plan of Vernante Railway Station. [10]
Vernante Railway Station: the route to Limone leaves at the bottom-right of this image. [Google Streetview, July 2025]
The view Southeast from the station car park, after demolition of the old goods shed. The main station building features at the centre of the image. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The main station building at Vernante seen from the West. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

Photographs showing the station building and the goods shed prior to its demolition can be seen here. [58] “Inaugurated in 1889, the station served as the terminus for the Cuneo-Ventimiglia line for nearly two years, until it was extended to Limone Piemonte. The passenger building features classic Italian architecture, with two levels. It is square, medium-sized, and well-maintained. Its distinctive feature is the two murals depicting scenes from the Pinocchio fairy tale, adorning its façade. The lower level houses the waiting room and self-service ticket machine, while the upper level is closed.” [58]

A photograph from the cab of a Cuneo-bound train arriving at Vernante. The passenger building is on the left with the goods shed beyond. [8]

The view from Via Frederi Mistral which passes over the tunnel mouth at the Southeast end of Vernante Railway Station. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The very short tunnel (Tette-Chiesa, 122 metres in length) at the Southeast end of Vernante Railway Station. [Google Maps, July 2025]

The southern portal of the Tette-Chiesa Tunnel seen from a Cuneo-bound train. Immediately beyond the far portal trains would have to stop to manually engage a point for the running line or the train would end up on the safety siding provided for runaways on the steep downward gradient. [8]

The large retaining wall on the left of this image supports the railway as it runs immediately adjacent to the E74/SS20 but at a higher level. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The height of the retaining wall decreases as the E74/SS20 gains height. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

Banaudo et al comment: “Leaving Vernante, the track describes a complete spiral loop at Rivoira, which allows it to rise about fifty metres over a circular length of two kilometres. This loop includes the 1,502 m long ‘Elicoidale’ tunnel, which was completed on 30th December 1889, and the imposing viaduct over the Salet torrent.  With its fifteen arches, from the top of which the rail dominates the lower level of the loop by 45 m, this structure can be considered by its proportions as the most imposing of the whole of line. [25] It is built entirely of cut stone, with the exception of the intrados of the arches which are of brick, and its seven central arches are reinforced at their base by a series of arcades forming an additional level, following a technique very popular in the 19th century.” [1: p30] The lower arcades are seen clearly in the 1929 postcard below.

This photograph is taken from the road at the point that the E74/SS20 begins to turn away from the lower railway (which can be glimpsed through the undergrowth) the viaduct high above both the road and the railway comes into view. This view looks North from the E74/SS20. A spiral tunnel allows the railway to gain height at this location. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
This satellite image shows the portals of the Spiral tunnel to the East of Vernante. The line leaves Vernante Station and passes through a short tunnel before running alongside the E74 ‘Corso Torino’ to another tunnel mouth to the West of the side road. The line then climbs as it circles under that road twice and reappears high above the first length of line towards the top-left of this image. The height gained then means that the line needs to pass over a high viaduct before once again entering a tunnel (the Rivoira Tunnel) and then, at the bottom-right of the image, crossing another side valley on a bridge. [Google Maps, July 2025]
OpenStreetMap shows the same location and illustrates the spiral tunnel quite well. [44]
The lower portal of the spiral tunnel with the high viaduct (Rivoira Viaduct) visible to the left. [11]

The portal of the spiral tunnel at the top-left of the satellite image above, seen from a Cuneo,-bound train. Trains heading for Tende and beyond gained height while turning through 360 from the tunnel portal shown in the image immediately above. [8]

A 1929 postcard view of the Rivoira Viaduct in winter. This image was shared on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Nonna Nuccia on 6th March 2023. [15]
This photograph of the Rivoira Viaduct is taken from the road through the hamlet of Tetto Salet. [Google Streetview, 2012]
Closer to the viaduct it is possible to get a good impression of the height difference between the lower and higher arms of the spiral. [Google Streetview, 2012]
Rivoira Viaduct seen from a distance! [12]
A 1946 photograph of Rivoira Viaduct. This is the first train over the  viaduct after the war. The fleeing Germans blew up part of the viaduct and the scaffolding which can be seen is a remnant of the repair work undertaken. This image was shared on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Mario Zauli on 11th June 2025, © Public Domain. [13]
A similar modern view of the viaduct. This is a still image from a video shared on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Luc Gentilli on 14th July 2024. [14]

The Southeast portal of the short tunnel at the bottom-right of the satellite image above. This is the Rivoira Tunnel. [8]

The Santa Lucia viaduct just to the Southwest of Rivoira Tunnel. [8]

Between the Rivoira Tunnel and the Santa Lucia & Noceto Tunnel, the line crosses a minor road serving a few small hamlets. [Google Streetview,

The Santa Lucia & Noceto Tunnel runs diagonally across this extract from Google’s satellite imagery. [Google Maps, July 2025]

The Southeast Portal of the Santa Lucia & Noceto Tunnel seen from the cab of a Cuneo-bound train. [8]

The Noceto Viaduct to the Southeast of the Santa Lucia & Noceto Tunnel spans a local stream. [8]

This bridge is a short distance further Southeast. [8]

The Marino Viaduct further to the Southeast. All these views look towards Vernante and are taken from the cab o a Cuneo-bound train. [8]

The Southeast portal of the Marino Tunnel. [8]

Another viaduct over a short side valley to the Southeast of the Marino Tunnel, this is known as the Mezzavia Viaduct. [8]

The East portal of the Mezzavia Tunnel. [8]

Immediately to the East of the Mezzavia Tunnel the line bridges a stream before entering the Boglia Tunnel. The bridge spans the Ceresole valley. [8]

The view of the line looking West from Frazione Ceresole, above the West portal of the Boglia Tunnel. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The Boglia Tunnel carries the line around a significant curve. This is the South-southwest portal of the tunnel from the cab of a train which has recently left Limone. Trains from Cuneo enter the tunnel traveling East and leave in a south-southwesterly direction. Just beyond the South-southwest portal the line bridges another side road serving a number of hamlets. It is the San Bernardo viaduct over the Sottana valley. [8]

The bridge shown in the image immediately above is at the centre of this satellite image. The tunnel to the North-northeast is Boglia Tunnel, that to the South-southwest is Cresta Molino Tunnel. [Google Maps, July 2025]

Looking East along the Sottana Valley, it is difficult to believe that the San Bernardo Viaduct has two 6 m arches and three 10 m arches, it is so well camouflaged by vegetation. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
Looking West along the road through the structure, it is possible to see three of the five arches. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The Cresta Molino Tunnel curves throughout its length (see below). Towards the South portal, it has an open gallery facing out into the valley. [8]

The Cresta Molino Tunnel curves form a South-southwest bearing to just to the East of South along its length. The gallery shown above is at its southern end. [Google Maps, July 2025]

The South portal of the Cresta Molino Tunnel is the South end of the gallery. [8]

After a very short length of track open to the elements, the line enters another short tunnel, the Rocciaia Tunnel. This tunnel is also on a curve with the line leaving the tunnel heading Southeast. [Google Maps, July 2025]

The Southeast portal of the Rocciaia Tunnel. After this tunnel the line crosses a bridge and two viaduct on its way into the station at Limone. [8]

The length of the line from Rocciaia Tunnel to the station throat at Limone is shown on the satellite image below. The parapet railings associated with the Rocciaia Bridge can be seen on the image of the South portal of the tunnel above. There are then two viaducts, as shown on the satellite image below. They cast shadows onto the valley side to the east of the line.

The bridge mentioned above, seen Looking Northwest from the cab of a Cuneo-bound train. [8]
The viaduct immediately to the North of Limone Railway Station, also seen looking Northwest. [8]
Limone Piemonte as shown on OpenStreetMap. Note the bridge at the South end of the station site and the tunnel that trains enter soon after crossing that bridge. [18]

The good shed at Limone Station with the passenger facilities beyond. This image is a still from a video taken from a train heading for Breil-sur-Roya. [31]

Limone Railway Station as it appears on Google’s satellite imagery. [Google Maps, July 2025]

Looking North from the end of Via Colonello Domenico Rosetto.The goods shed is close to the centre of this image. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
Limone Railway Station building and forecourt. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
A very early view of Limone Railway Station which shows the civil engineering work necessary to make room for the station, © Public Domain. [6]
Limone Railway Station, seen from the East. This image was shared on the Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook on 24th July 2024, © Public Domain. [20]
Steam at Limone! © Unknown Photographer. [7]
Limone Railway Station in 1980: this image comes from the cover of the March 1980 edition of La Vie du Rail. It was shared on the Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Internazionale Facebook Group by Limone Piemonte in Foto Color Vintage on 15th July 2024. [21]
The station of Limone Piemonte (Italy), seen from the South with all of its four tracks occupied, April 1989. Left to right, on Track 1 the Espresso 981 Torino-Nice/Imperia (formed by four ALn 663 DMUs, which were separated at Breil-sur-Roya), on Track 2 the Locale 4396 Cuneo-Ventimiglia (two ALn 663), on Track 3 some more ALn 663 parked, and on Track 4 the car shuttle for Tende (since the road tunnel was closed for a few months), with a D.345 Diesel locomotive at its head. … An interesting detail is the shape of the supports for the overhead line, still the adapted AC three-phase 3.6kV ones that had been adjusted for DC working (basically removing a wire and placing the other in the middle) in 1974, when the line was converted. Under it, it was mandated for locos and EMUs to keep both pantographs up, © Mauro Tosello. [19]
Limone Railway Station Plan. [10]

A few more photographs of Limone Railway Station can be found here, [22] here, [23] and here. [24]

Express services took 1 hour 30 minutes to travel from Cuneo to Limone, mixed goods and passenger trains were scheduled to take 2 hours. Services from Limone to Cuneo were scheduled for 1 hour 20 minutes and 1 hour 50 minutes respectively [1: p31]

Banaudo et al tell us that a single third class ticket between Cuneo and Limone cost 1.65 lire. The service was deemed to be a local service and as a result the RM allocated older stock to the line, “consisting mainly of single-axle coaches, side door stock, and brake vans acquired from other companies. Traction was provided by 030 [in the UK these would be 0-6-0] locomotives coupled to two- or three-axle tenders, from the RM 3201 to 3550 series (future 215 FS Class),” [1: p31] out-stationed to the Cuneo shed by the Turin Shed. These locos had a range of different manufacturers in Italy, France, Belgium, Great Britain, Austria and Germany. [1: p31]

The construction costs for the length of line from Cuneo to Limone “did not exceed 10 million lire, a remarkable figure given the difficulty of the work and the number of engineering structures completed over nine years: nineteen bridges and viaducts, fourteen tunnels, and a large number of culverts, aqueducts, road overpasses and underpasses, and level crossings. The buildings of the seven stations are of classical design, conforming to the standard plans with hipped roofs used in Italy, as are the twenty-four ‘caselli’, roadside houses, distributed along the line near the level crossings and the main underpasses to house the track maintenance workers and their families. The bridges and viaducts, with the exception of two brick structures, are made of stone masonry with brick arch vaults and metal angle railings. The single track tunnels are lined with brick vaults and dressed stone portals, except where the solidity of the ground allows the exposed natural rock to be preserved.” [1: p32]

Banaudo et al note that “the first years of operation were not easy, … snow and falling rocks sometimes hampered train traffic. On 2nd October 1898, following torrential rains in the high valleys of Piedmont, the Gesso overflowed and the bridge between Boves and Borgo-San-Dalmazzo was destroyed. By December, the installation of a temporary wooden bridge by contractor Salvatore Vignolo of Genova-Sampierdarena allowed service to be restored. A permanent structure would be rebuilt the following year in the form of a single-span 74-metre steel truss bridge.” [1: p32]

Limone to Vievola: Crossing the Col de Tende

The next length/tranche running South from Limone was 10.5 kilometres long and extended the line from Limone to Vievola(in the valley of the River Roya).

Looking into Limone Railway Station from the tunnel mouth South of the Station. A short two-span bridge

At the South end of the Limone Station site the railway bridged Piazza Risorgimento/Viale Valleggia at the East end of Piazza Risorgimento and the River San Giovanni (Valleggia Torrent) on two adjoining bridges. [Google Maps, July 2025]
The two bridges carrying the railway over both the road and the river. [Google Streetview, August 2011]

Omitting mention of the section of the bridge over the road, Banaudo et al tell us that, leaving Limone Station, “the line crosses the San Giovanni valley … on a 13-metre masonry single-arch bridge, then enters the 423-metre-long Limone Tunnel which passes under the San Secondo hill.  A 26 mm/m gradient leads to the tunnel under the ‘Colle do Tenda’ … where the gradient eases to 2 mm/m as far as the highest point on the line, 1040 [metres above sea level, in the tunnel]. From this point a 14mm/m gradient extends to the South portal of the tunnel … at 990 [metres above sea level]. At the Southern end of the tunnel, … a single-span 19.90 m steel truss bridge crosses the Roya River. … A short 25 mm/m slope then leads to Vievola Station.” [1: p34]

The North Portal of Limone Tunnel seen from the station platform on 10th July 2019, © Eugenio Merzagora and licenced by Structurae for non-commercial use. [28]
Limone Piemonte Tunnel: the tunnel mouths are marked by red flags. [Google Maps, July 2025]

The railway is protected by two galleries at the South end of Limone Tunnel. The first effectively extends Limone Tunnel southwards. This is the South portal seen from a train approaching Limone Railway Station. [8]

Also seen from the South from the cab of the same train, this is the South portal of the Short second gallery. The gallery entrance to the tunnel above can be seen only a very short distance beyond this gallery to the North. [8]

A level-crossing on the line just to the South of the galleries illustrated above and also seen from a Limone-bound train. [8]

The line continues South climbing towards the tunnel under the Col de Tende, © Franco Papalia, July 2017 [Google Maps]
An early postcard image of the North portal of the tunnel under the Col de Tende. This image was shared on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Mario Zauli on 10th June 2014. [45]

The northern approach to the tunnel under the Col de Tende as it appears on Google’s satellite imagery. Sadly, the tunnel mouth, in the top-left quadrant of this image, is in shade. [Google Earth 3D, July 2025]

Open Streetmap shows the line heading South into the tunnel. [32]

This image shows the North Portal of the tunnel under the Col de Tende. It is taken from the cab of a train heading for Breil-sur-Roya in the late 20th century. [31]

Interestingly, the two tunnels on this length of the line are large enough to accommodate two tracks – this facilitates ventilation but also allows room for expansion should traffic levels later require it. [1: p34]

Another schematic drawing which this time shows the main locations on the line from Limone to Vievola. [17]

While all the previous construction tranches ended up in populated locations, Vievola was just a place name in the commune of Tende with a few farms and a chapel dedicated to the Visitation of the Madonna scattered in a small green area at the confluence of the Roya and the Dente rivers. Nowhere was available to house workers on the railway. So before works began at the southern end of the tunnel under the Col de Tende, the contractor had to construct a temporary village.

After initial surveys were completed late in 1889, tunneling under the Col de Tende began at both ends. Banaudo et al explain that the 8.1 kilometre tunnel passed through  various different strata: “Jurassic, Triassic and Cretaceous limestone, Permian quartz, Liassic marly schists and Eocene sandstone. The work progressed normally until September 1893, when the works reached a dislocated gneiss bed interspersed with clayey layers made fluid by the infiltration of water from the Roya, whose bed passes three times above the axis of the tunnel.  Soon, mud floods invaded the approach tunnel with each attempt to advance over the course of ten months. The working face advanced only a dozen meters, while some forty flows of various materials obstructed the tunnel, sometimes over a length of 40 metres, while the vault suffered as much as 1.7 metres subsidence in places.” [1: p32][33]

The works from the South were suspended in July 1894 about 1.6 km from the tunnel mouth. Attempts were made to divert ground water from the route of the tunnel with little success and a further collapse occurred in October 1894. [33]

Meanwhile, work progressed from the North until at about 2.7 km from the tunnel mouth ground water started entering the tunnel at a rate of 60,000 litres/minute. The bed of the River Royal above the tunnel began to collapse. The contractor admitted defeat and refused to continue work on the line. [1: p34][33]

After a few months delay and with the work now being undertaken by the state a renewed effort was made to take the work-faces forward. The solution was to bore the tunnel using compressed air drills inside a metal shield and with water being removed by a parallel collector channel. It took 470 days to progress the works beyond the difficult strata. Banaudo et al say that once work was 43 metres beyond the critical zone, the contract was handed back to the original contractor on 31st March 1896. The total delay was 34 months at a cost of 300,000 lire! [1: p34][33]

On 15th February 1898 at 1pm, the team working from the North end of the tunnel broke through the remaining rock to meet the team working from the South.Remaining contract works would mean that opening of the line between Limone and Vievola would not take place until 1st October 1900. [33][34: p116][1: p35]

When trains left the confines of the 8 kilometre tunnel their crews were probably grateful for the fresh air. I cannot imagine what it must have been like for the crews of steam engines on the line. Electrification could not come soon enough. “The tunnel was equipped with a two-wire contact line when the electrification of Cuneo Gesso – San Dalmazzo di Tenda line in three-phase alternating current 3.6 kV – 16⅔ Hz took place with electric traction starting from 15th May 1931.” [33][35: p171-172]

The South Portal of the tunnel under the Col de Tende, © Eugenio Merzagora and licenced by Structurae for non-commercial use. [30]
In the 1960s, this was the view South from the South portal of the tunnel. This image was shared on the Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Mauro Tosello on 21st April 2018. [36]

South of the tunnel, the railway crosses the River Roya before entering Vievola Railway Station.

This satellite image shows the line leaving the tunnel (at the very top of the image) and crossing La Roya (towards the bottom of the image). [Google Maps, July 2025]

It is not possible to see the tunnel mouth in this panoramic photograph taken from the E74 (D6204), nor is it possible to see the railway bridge over La Roya. The railway can be seen, as can the buildings close to the tunnel mouth on the East side of the line. The railway bridge over the river is behind the trees in blossom one a line from the camera to the red-roofed buildings. [Google Streetview, April 2008]
As the E74 (D6204) descends along the valley of the Rya, the railway bridges it, adjacent to a road (off to the right of the picture) which serves Vievola Railway Station. [Google Streetview, October 2008]

The completion of the fifth contract still required the development of Vievola station. It was to be built on a large platform created using spoil from the tunnel works on a vast embankment formed from the tunnel spoil, with an underpass provided for the then SS20 (now E74/D6204) and shown above.

Vievola Railway Station seen from the North on the minor road which links the station to the E74(D6204). The goods shed fronts onto the road and the passenger building is beyond. [Google Streetview, October 2008]
An early postcard view of the road side of the station building with horse drawn transport seating the arrival of a train from Cuneo. [4]
The station building, seen from the Southwest – a similar view to the postcard above. [Google Streetview, October 2008]
Two early postcard views of Vievola Railway Station, © Public Domain. [4]
Vievola Railway Station, a similar view to the view on the two postcard images above, © Baptiste, July 2023 and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence, (CC BY-SA 3.0). [Google Maps, July 2025][5]
Vievola Railway Station, © Diego Fernández, November 2024. [Google Maps, July 2025]
The station at Vievola, 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. [29]

The approach to Vievola Railway Station from the South, as seen from the cab of a Northbound train. [8]

Banaudo et al tell us that, at the station, “The two platform tracks for passenger service were supplemented by two sidings and a dead-end track running alongside the goods shed and the military platform. At the western end of this section, a small wooden shed, an 8.50 m temporary turntable, a water tower, and two hydraulic cranes allowed locomotives to use this temporary terminus as they would at any terminus. In the same area, a wooden buffet building was built, which a shrewd manager, no doubt hoping to take advantage of the cosmopolitan movement of connecting passengers, dubbed a ‘restaurant’ in French.” [1: p40]

Vievola was a railway terminal for traffic to and from Piedmont and a hub for road connections onwards to Nice and Liguria. Banaudo et al point us to a magazine published in 1899, which mentions a trial of a steam-powered road vehicle which it was hoped would provide a service to Nice and the coast until such time as a railway was built. [1: p40][37] The service was a trial organised by the House of Ascenso et Cie, and ran from Vievola to Ventimiglia. The journey, lasted a total of six hours, including a 43-kilometre climb. The vehicles used were Scotte trains. The car wagon carries a 27-horsepower engine and seated 14 passengers; it also towed a second 24-seater wagon. [1: p40][38]

“Due to their slowness, the difficulties of driving cars on the narrow roads of the time and the damage caused to the cobbled and cylindered roads,” [1: p40] the ‘Trains Scotte’ were not a success, they probably did not circulate for more than a few months or weeks. ….

The next length of the line can be found here. [46]

RM 3201-3519 (FS 215) Locomotives

Banaudo et al tell us that throughout the 19th century and on into the 20th century passenger stock and freight wagons were unchanged. Improved 0-6-0 tender locomotives came available as they were delivered by the Breda and Mavag companies, these were more powerful and faster locomotives than the RM Nos. 3201 to 3519 (which became group 215.001 to 215.398 at the FS). They were given RM Nos. 3801-3868 (which became the FS 310 series).

An ex-works photograph of 0-6-0 Tender Locomotive No. 3804,© Public Domain. [40]

RM 4201-4487 (FS 420) Locomotives

Banaudo et al also comment that “genuine mountain locomotives made occasional appearances: these were 040s [ in UK annotation 0-8-0s] with a three-axle separate tender, series RM 4201 to 4487 (future series 420 FS), built from 1873 to 1905 based on an Austrian model by a dozen Italian, Belgian, German and Austro-Hungarian firms. These machines, reserved primarily for the main lines of the Alps and the Apennines, occasionally intervened on the Col de Tende line, during bridge tests for example. At this time, Cuneo still had no allocation of machines and those going up to Limone and Vievola were attached to the Torino depot and the Moretta shed, on the Cuneo Airasca line.” [1: p41]

An FS Class 420 locomotive. [41]

In the early 1870s, the SFAI needed a locomotive suitable for heavy work on the most important mountain lines, such as the Giovi railway and the Turin-Modane railway, for which the 0-6-0 locomotives were becoming increasingly inadequate. The Ufficio d’Arte di Torino chose a 0-8-0 locomotive of the Wiener Neustädter Lokomotivfabrik (then known as “Sigl”), very similar to the Südbahn Class 35 a that it already produced.” [41][42: p190][43: p31]]

The Class 420 was a typical long-boiler, inside-frame 0-8-0 locomotive of the era, that showed its Austrian derivation with its two-shutters smokebox door, and its outside Stephenson valve gear. The locomotives built before 1884 had the distinction of having curved foot plating over the wheels, while later units had straight foot plating and small splashers. Some of the locomotives were given a replacement boiler before 1914, but their performance remained mostly unchanged.” [41][43: p31]

The first 60 locomotives were built by Sigl (from which they derived the nickname with which they were known for their whole career) for the SFAI. Production continued until 1890, from both foreign (such as Maffei) and Italian firms (such as Ansaldo and Breda), for a total of 189 locomotives; all these were divided in 1885 between the Rete Adriatica and the Rete Mediterranea. Building of further locomotives for the RM resumed in 1897, and continued until 1905, bringing the total of the Class to 293.” [41][42: p190-192]

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://www.cparama.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=105633, accessed on 26th July 2025.
  5. https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Vievola_staz_ferr_ALn_663.jpg, accessed on 26th July 2025.
  6. https://ebay.us/m/nYrstv, accessed on 26th July 2025.
  7. https://ebay.us/m/FMXiiC, accessed on 26th July 2025.
  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://www.facebook.com/share/p/1A6hv4xBsJ, accessed on 20th July 2025.
  11. https://structurae.net/en/structures/rivoira-viaduct, accessed on 22nd July 2025.
  12. https://pin.it/zVWOhZKBn, accessed on Pinterest on 22nd July 2025.
  13. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1Rhi8V8YHV, accessed on 22nd July 2025.
  14. https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1CUGhBU5S5, accessed on 22nd July 2025.
  15. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/16uX2VPqbQ, accessed on 22nd July 2025.
  16. https://trainconsultant.com/2020/10/09/nice-coni-incroyable-derniere-nee-des-grandes-lignes-internationales, accessed on 17th July 2025.
  17. https://fr.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sch%C3%A9ma_de_la_ligne_de_Coni_%C3%A0_Vintimille, accessed on 22nd July 2025.
  18. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=16/44.20109/7.57505, accessed on 23rd July 2025.
  19. https://www.reddit.com/r/trains/comments/1hu18cw/the_station_of_limone_piemonte_italy_with_all_of, accessed on 24th July 2025.
  20. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1CDh61WrHV, accessed on 24th July 2025.
  21. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1AsYn4mLHB, accessed on 24th July 2025.
  22. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1FvLCnvaUr, accessed on 24th July 2025.
  23. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1BsP57TxDs, accessed on 24th July 2025.
  24. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/171GQxreBM, accessed on 24th July 2025.
  25. Structures on the french side of the border would, when built, compete with the dimensions of the Rivoira Viaduct. The Eboulis Viaduct is 270 metres long and the bridge at Saorge is 60 metres high. However, the combination of these two dimensions (length and height) makes Rivoira Viaduct the most imposing on the line.
  26. https://www.rmweb.co.uk/forums/topic/151308-%E2%80%9Cbeyond-dover%E2%80%9D/page/2, accessed on 22nd July 2025.
  27. https://www.fotocommunity.it/photo/locomotiva-3375-rete-mediterrane-roberto-prioreschi/35312169, accessed on 22nd July 2025.
  28. https://structurae.net/en/structures/limone-tunnel, accessed on 25th July 2025.
  29. https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1430625447210493&set=gm.755686417785385, accessed on 25th July 2025.
  30. https://structurae.net/en/structures/tende-tunnel, accessed on 25th July 2025.
  31. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q6ZRqym_Dag, accessed on 25th July 2025.
  32. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=16/44.19247/7.57070, accessed on 25th July 2025.
  33. https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traforo_ferroviario_del_Colle_di_Tenda, accessed on 25th July 2025.
  34. 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; p12-18.
  35. Franco Collidà, Max Gallo & Aldo A. Mola; “Cuneo-Nizza: History of a Railway; , Cassa di Risparmio di Cuneo, Cuneo (CN), July 1982.
  36. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1FxdJ2cugB/l, accessed on 25th July 2025.
  37. La Locomotion Automobile, 1899, p467; via https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bd6t53333638/f5.item, accessed on 25th July 2025.
  38. Industrialist Joanny Scotte, originally from Epernay in the Marne department, began his business in the mid-1880s producing steam-powered cars. From 1897, he offered road trains consisting of a tractor or a steam-powered car, pulling one or more trailers designed for the transport of passengers or goods. These vehicles travelled on roads using solid tyres.  They never really went beyond the experimental stage due to their slowness, the difficulties of driving the vehicles on the narrow roads of the time and the damage caused to the cobbled and cylindered roads. [1: p40] Scotte road train services were reported in the last decade of the 19th century in the Île-de-France region (Fontainebleau, Pont-de-Neuilly, Courbevoie), in the Aube region (Arcis-sur-Aube – Brienne-le-Château), in the Manche region (Pont-l’Abbé-Picauville – Chef-du-Pont), in the Drôme region (Valence – Crest), and for military use. Scotte partnered with the Lyon-based car manufacturers Buire and Audibert-Lavirotte to produce some of its vehicles. [1: p41]
  39. https://ventimigliaaltawords.com/2013/10/14/all-steamed-up-about-the-ventimiglia-cuneo-rail-link, accessed on 25th July 2025.
  40. https://www.ilmondodeitreni.it/Gr310.html, accessed on 25th July 2025.
  41. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/FS_Class_420, accessed on 26th July 2025.
  42. Giovanni Cornolò; Locomotive a vapore; in TuttoTreno (in Italian), May 2014.
  43. P. M. Kalla-Bishop; Italian state railways steam locomotives: together with low-voltage direct current and three-phase motive power; Tourret, Abingdon, 1986.
  44. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=16/44.24035/7.54461 accessed on 26th July 2025.
  45. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1AuQG8SLDb, accessed on 27th July 2025.
  46. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/08/06/the-railway-from-nice-to-tende-and-cuneo-part-3-vievola-to-st-dalmas-de-tende/

The Railway between Nice, Tende and Cuneo – Part 1

The featured image above shows the inaugural train arriving at Breil-sur-Roya in March 1928, © Public Domain, shared by Jean-Paul Bascoul in the Comte de Nice et son Histoire Facebook Group on 25th January 2017. [15]

The railway from Nice PLM Station to Tende was completed in 1928. It was long in the gestation and in construction. The story stretches back more than a century and a half. ‘Le Chemin de fer du Col de Tende’ is historically a significant local and international line. Its inverted Y-shaped layout and its crossing of international borders means that it is known by a number of different names:

  • in Nice it is known as the Nice – Coni Line;
  • generally in Italy it is officially Ferrovia Cuneo Ventimiglia
  • in the Piedmont city of Cuneo’s economic/political circles, sitting at the top of the inverted ‘Y’, it is often referred to as the Cuneo – Nizza line in recognition of good relations with the community of Nice.

Its story is a saga of significant technical achievement: gaining 1000 metres in height ; having a dozen tunnels longer than 1 kilometre (including those of the Col de Tende (8098 m), the Col de Braus (5939 m) and the Mont Grazian tunnel (3882 m), which are among the longest structures on the French and Italian networks); having four complete helical loops,  several S-shaped loops and a multitude of bridges and viaducts (some of which, such as those of Scarassouï or Bévéra, are architecturally significant railway structures. Of a total route of 143.5 km, 6.5 km are on bridges or viaducts and over 60 km are in tunnels. This means that close to 42% of the journey along the line(s) is on or within structures.

The line warrants a comprehensive detailed treatment and Jose Banaudo, Michel Braun and Gerard de Santos have provided just such a work. The 3 volumes of their work cover three distinct periods in the life of the line:

  • Volume 1: 1858 until the completion of construction in 1928; [1]
  • Volume 2: 1929 through to 1974 [2]
  • Volume 3: 1975 to 1986. [3]

The line’s construction spanned over 40 years and as a result a variety of different structural techniques were used. The first length built in Italy in the 19th century has some substantial stone and brick structures. Later work on the length from Nice to Fontane which was built between the two world wars employs much lighter design techniques. Then even later, after sections of the line were destroyed in the second world war, prestressed concrete construction techniques were used in the rebuilding of the line. [1]

The history of the area through which the line has been built has been tumultuous. This meant that the process of developing the line was tortuous. It took more than 75 years for the line(s) to be completed and then after a few short years of operation, the lines usage was disturbed by the machinations of dictatorships and then the second world war literally destroyed the region. Post war recovery was slow but nowhere more so than the length of the line between Ventimiglia and Breil-sur-Roya which was not fully reopened until 35 years after the end of the second world war. [1]

The reopening of the line after the second world war was vital for the economic development of Piedmont, the Riviera dei Fiori, and the Côte d’Azur – between which there was no efficient road connection and where the difficult terrain favored rail access. [1]

The immediate area offered tremendous tourism potential, both the train itself and the region it served. Ski resorts became accessible, particularly Limone, excursion trains came from all over Europe. But, after just a few decades of development the approach of the 21st century saw increased bureaucracy, financial disputes between the increasing number of partners, contradictory regulations and increased journey times. The result was that the line’s value and existence was called into question and that too sparked further conflict. “Paradoxically, European unification, which should have fully promoted this symbolic communication route, marginalized it!” [1: p5]

In 2014, my wife and I stayed in the village of Saorge in the valley of La Roya for the first time. We had travelled by train from Nice to Tende in an earlier year. In 2014, we had a hire car and on one occasion we followed the old road to the Col de Tende. In subsequent years it was not possible to drive up the old road as works on the much more modern tunnel seemed to have blocked access to the old road. On a more recent visit, we stayed in Saorge a year after serious flooding had destroyed much infrastructure in the valley. Travel towards the Col de Tende from Tende was not possible.

Early attempts to create a route from Cuneo to Tende

In 2014, we drove up a road which was constructed by le duc Charles-Emmanuel 1er de Savoie (Duke Charles Emmanuel 1st of Savoy). It seems that he constructed a road over the pass between 1592 and 1616. Of this road, Banaudo et al say that, “the northern road [up to the pass] has about twenty hairpin bends, while access from the south requires an extraordinary … sixty hairpin bends.” [1: p9]

Our hire car was a very small vehicle, but nonetheless needed some careful manoeuvring at each hairpin bend. Once at the top, we were able to walk quite a distance between the different forts that stood on the ridge.

Banuado et al, tell us that since that route was constructed, a series of attempts were made to tunnel from lower points on the pass. Attempts from the North were made: in 1612 (achieved just 75m of tunnel before being halted); in 1781 which was abandoned 3 years later (164m of tunnel was achieved). [1]

In 1784, a carriage managed to traverse the pass for the first time.

Banaudo et al. Tell us that “the public works engineer Deglioli submitted an initial report on 3rd June 1852, supported by the diplomat Francesco Sauli (1807-1893), on the extension of the Marseille-Var railway, then planned in France, to Nice, Ventimiglia, the Roya Valley, and Piedmont, namely Cuneo or Mondovì.” [1: p11]

In 1854, the first train of the Società della Ferrovia Torino Cuneo arrived in Cuneo from Turin (via Trofarello, Savigliano, and Fossano).  The first terminus was built in the Cuneo suburb of “Madonna-dell’Olmo, on the left bank of the Stura below the city.  Ten months later, the time required for the completion of the viaduct over the Stura, Cavour and the Minister of Public Works, Pietro Paleocapa (1788-1869), presided over the inauguration of the new Cuneo platform/station on 5th August 1855, established in a temporary location at Basse-di-San-Sebastiano. The permanent station would not be built until 1870 on the plateau preceding the confluence of the Stura and Gesso rivers.” [1: p11]

In 1856, “Victor Emmanuel II, King of Sardinia, Cyprus and Jerusalem, Duke of Savoy and Aosta, Prince of Piedmont, Count of Nice and Tende, visited [Nice and] personally promised [a] railway to the people of Nice and distributed a lithograph depicting him, ostentatiously bearing a map bearing the dedication ‘Ferrovia  da Cuneo a Nizza. Ai Fedeli Nizzardi’. … The Minister of Public Works commissioned a Roman military engineer, Filippo Cerrotti (1819-1892), to conduct a more in-depth study. On 29th May 1856, Cerrotti submitted a preliminary design for a standard-gauge line from Cuneo, ascending the Gesso and Vermegnana valleys, crossing the Col de Tende through a 6.5 km tunnel accessible by inclined planes powered by hydraulic funiculars, to emerge in the Roya River, which it followed to Airole. From there, two tunnels successively would take it through the Bévéra Valley and then into the Latte Valley, through which it reached the coast, which it then followed to Menton, Monaco, and Nice.” [1: p11]

The Nicois authorities accepted the proposed scheme in September 1856, their counterparts in Cuneo quickly endorsed the plans in principle but asked that an alternative route via the Col des Fenestres and the Vésubie, be explored and that a modification to the initial proposal should be explored, specifically a locomotive-powered line without the use of inclined planes.  The municipality of Nice then commissioned another  survey of alternative routes by Louis Petit-Nispel, but proposals were rejected by the Ministry of Public Works on 4th March 1858. [1: p11, p14]

Nothing happened, so the Nice authorities sent a petition to the Sardinian parliament (16th July 1858) but the request got lost in the midst of political machinations which surrounded the cession of Savoy and the County of Nice to France which was eventually confirmed on 22nd April 1860.

During his first visit to the new border department in September 1860, the French Emperor promised the people of Nice a rapid connection to Marseille and the rest of the country via the Paris-Lyon-Mediterranean Railway Company (PLM) line, whose construction was then well advanced beyond Toulon.” [1: p14]

Nice got its connection to Marseille by 18th October 1864, but hopes for a Nice to Cuneo link were overshadowed by the desire to have a direct link between Marseille and Turin via Sisteron, Gap, Briançon, the Col de l’Echelle, and Bardonecchia – a plan was eventually shelved (even though it was favoured by the French government and the PLM company) as a result of the deal-making associated with the Saint-Gothard line.

In the mid-1860s the Piedmontese railway network became part of the Società per le Ferrovie dell’Alta Italia (SFAI). Its focus became developing internal infrastructure in Italy, with the exception of a very large project …  a 13.7 km (8.5 mile) long tunnel, carrying the Turin-Modane railway line under Mont Cenis, linking Bardonecchia in Italy to Modane in France under the Fréjus. [1: p17][8]

Despite this, economic and political groups in Cuneo remained committed to having a rail link and in 1868 proposed a joint commission of French and Italian engineers. The following year, “the provincial authorities granted a loan of 500,000 lire to the Lombard engineer Tommaso Agudio (1827-1893), who sought to develop the possibilities offered by funicular traction. He, in collaboration with the engineer Arnaud, recommended the construction of a narrow-gauge railway alongside the SS 20 national road, along its entire route from Cuneo to Ventimiglia. This hypothesis suggested curves with a radius of less than 50 m and gradients of 45 mm/m. The Tende Pass was to be crossed by the planned road tunnel, with two access ramps sloping at 87.5 mm/m, on which traction would be provided by a hydraulically counterweighted cable.” [1: p17]

His project was approved by the Italian parliament in 1862 but no progress was made on the French side of the border. The project failed and Tommaso Agudio moved on to other things, “experimenting with his cable traction system in 1874 in Lanslebourg, then by applying it in 1884 to the railway linking the Turin suburb of Sassi to the famous Basilica of Superga.” [1: p17]

With little progress being made on a rail link, road links became paramount, a commission chaired by the civil engineering inspector Sebastiano Grandis (1817-1892) renewed interest in 1870 in a road tunnel under the Col de Tende which Grandis imagined would obviate the need for a railway.

Following the fall of the Empire, France and Italy were finally connected by rail, first through the Fréjus Tunnel, opened between Modane and Bardonecchia on 17th September 1871, and then through the Menton and Ventimiglia on the coast on 23rd February 1872. At the same time, traffic between Piedmont and the former County of Nice was growing at an encouraging pace: the Fontan customs post recorded an annual transit of 22,000 tons of goods and 76,447 head of cattle. Under these rather favorable conditions, Nice’s business community sought to revive discussions with a view to attracting to their port a share of the benefits of the upcoming opening of the Saint-Gothard line, whose traffic, they feared, would exclusively benefit Genoa via the Via Giovi, or Marseille in the event of the construction of the Col de l’Echelle route.  In April 1871, a group of industrialists and politicians from the region, including the mayor of Nice, Auguste Raynaud (1829-1896) and his counterpart from Toulon, Vincent Allègre (1835-1899), founded a Syndicate for the Nice Cuneo Line with the support of the Alpes-Maritimes Chamber of Commerce. On 7th November, the municipal council sent a personal letter to Adolphe Thiers, the new President of the French Republic, to express the desire of the people of Nice to see this project, which had been on hold for some twenty years, realized. On 29th November, the syndicate appointed a study commission headed by engineer Joseph Durandy (1834-1912), … to establish contacts with interested Italian parties and determine the advantages and disadvantages of each proposed route.” [1: p19]

In March 1872, the engineer Henry Lefèvre (1825-1877), a public works contractor and member of parliament for the Alpes-Maritimes, published an ambitious programme comprising two railway lines, Nice – Digne and Nice – Cuneo. They would run as a common trunk up the Var valley to the confluence of the Vésubie; from there, the branch towards Piedmont would follow this river to its source, crossing the Pagari pass under a 7000 m tunnel drilled at an altitude of 1300 m, to then reach Cuneo via the Gesso valley. The gradients would not exceed 35 mm/m, which would however require several reversals from Venanson, as well as the use of articulated Fairlie locomotives.” [1: p19][9]

Lefèvre’s project was based on poor maps and went through areas with a high risk of avalanches and heavy snowfall. Durandy suggested that a longer tunnel (almost 15km long) could be employed, Delestrac suggested following the undulations/contours on the left bank of the Vésubie as much as possible to reduce the number of engineering structures and limit the gradients to 25 mm/m.” [1: p19] Both these suggestions significantly increased the costs of Lefèvre’s 120 km project.

Other projects were proposed:

  • In 1872, Séraphin Piccon proposed a “103 km long narrow-gauge route, crossing the Col de Tende through a 5100 m tunnel at a height of 1150 m. Descending the valley of la Roya to Piena, reaching the Bévéra basin and Sospel through a 1300 m tunnel under the Col de Vèscavo, then heading up the Merlanson valley to pass under Mont Méras through a new tunnel leading to Peille, and thence to Nice through down the valley of the Paillon. Access to the Col de Tende would be via two inclined planes with inclinations of 40 to 85 mm/m totaling a length of 6100 m, while a 60 mm/m gradient over 4700 m would allow the line to gain altitude north of Peille.”  [10] On these steep gradients, traction would be assisted by a rack or an auxiliary central rail (the Fell System). [11][1: p20]
  • Also in 1872, Baron A. Cachiardy de Montfleury of Breil submitted a renewed proposal to the Conseil General, based on the Narrow-Gauge route between Cuneo and Ventimiglia funicular sections developed by engineers Agudio and Arnaud. [12][1: p20]
  • Then in April 1873, Baron Marius de Vautheleret. presented a proposal for a narrow-gauge Cuneo-Ventimiglia line using the planned Col de Tende road tunnel, passing through Briga, then through a 13,000 m tunnel under the Marta peak and then along the Nervia valley to its mouth near Ventimiglia. This route aimed to simplify administrative procedures by bypassing French territory, even if it meant creating a costly underground tunnel to connect the Roya to the Nervia river valleys. Gradients would not exceed 35 mm/m except for 22 km on either side of the Col de Tende, where gradients of 38 to 40 mm/m would require the adoption of a rack or hydraulic funicular. [13][14][1: p20]

These last two projects were discarded, partly because they were narrow gauge and required steep gradients, neither of which would suit the anticipated important international traffic and partly because they only linked two Italian cities while passing through French territory and not serving Nice. Both the protagonists continued to push their case until the end of the 19th century.

The first project proposal by Piccon was also deemed incompatible with heavy traffic flows but in its favour was the intent to link the railway to Nice. The “Durandy Commission preferred this option, subject to significant technical adjustments, such as adopting the standard gauge and replacing the inclined planes with longer base tunnels. On this route, the syndicate hoped for annual freight traffic of 90,000 tons despite a higher cost per kilometre than the routes via the Tinée or the Careï, as well as a revival of passenger traffic.” [1: p20] 

The PLM had little enthusiasm for the proposed line as their experience of lines in the Alps encountered technical difficulties and had profitability problems

In 1878, the Minister of Public Works, Charles de Freycinet (1828-1923), asked regional authorities to consider possible lines  to become part of a network of secondary lines across the country. The Prefect of the Alpes-Maritimes submitted the line ‘from Nice to the Italian border’, running from Nice to Turin via the Paillon Valley, the Col de Nice, L’Escarène, the Col de Braus, Sospel, the Col de Brouis, Breil, the Roya Valley, and the Col de Tende.  This route was registered No. 142 in the network in the law of 17th July 1879, where it appeared alongside the Nice – Digne via Saint-André and Nice – Draguignan via Grasse lines. [1: p21]

While the Cuneo-Nice line was a low priority for the national government in Italy, but Piedmont and Liguria did not give up, encouraged by the interest on the French side of the border. A number of different schemes were considered (from Baron de Vautheleret, Giacomo Pisani and Domenico Santelli).

Renewed interest at a national level led, in April 1876, the ‘conseil superieur des Travaux Publics’ approved the principle of a Cuneo – Ventimiglia railway, following the Roya along its entire course, including crossing French territory. The estimated cost for the 86 km on Italian soil was 38 million lire.

Two years later, while France was preparing its “Freycinet plan”, Italy had its ‘loi Baccarini’ (law 5002) which was passed in parliament on 25th July 1879 and included for a secondary line ‘from Cuneo to the sea’, “leaving all options open South of the Col de Tende so as not to prematurely offend any interests.” [1: p23]

By the end of July 1879, the process seemed well underway but no one allowed for the political machinations that would follow.

The first disappointments emerged in France in 1880 during the budget debates, where the President of the Chamber of Deputies, Léon Gambetta (1838-1882), postponed the vote on construction funding. On 22nd July, the General Council of Bridges and Roads rejected an initial project, which included 30 mm/m gradients and 300 m radius curves, as too costly.  In November 1881, the Ministry of War was even more categorical, formally opposing the extension of the railway beyond Sospel, and demanding that it serve the village of Lucéram from L’Escarène, the supply base for the defensive sector of L’Authion, Turini and Peïra-Cava. In this case, the line would have to adopt even more severe characteristics: 40 mm/m gradients, 150 m radius curves, switchbacks to cross the Col de Nice and helical loops to reach Lucéram…” [1: p24]

In 1882, an important step towards opening up the Haute Roya region was taken with the commissioning of the Col de Tende road tunnel. … This structure, remarkable for its time, was designed for the movement of carts, horses, pedestrians and. cannons, because the defense of the Tenda and Briga area was a major concern for the Italian general staff! The journey now avoided the countless hairpin bends of the pass and the risk of snowstorms and avalanches.” [1: p24]

The Col de Tende Road Tunnel and the border between France and Italy. [17]

But while economic and emotional ties remained strong between Cuneo and Nice, they were weakening between Rome and Paris due to political, commercial, and colonial rivalries that would poison relations … for about fifteen years.  The attitude of the city of Marseille was also difficult. The business community in Marseille was hostile to a new rail link between Nice and Italy. Fearing the expansion of the port of Nice at their expense. They lobbied against any possible expansion of the port of Nice, even to the extent of thwarting standard-gauge lines from Nice to Digne and Draguignan, ensuring that the lines were built to metre-gauge (with less transport capacity and obligatory double-handling of loads). [1: p24]

Locally, in Nice, some pushed for the line to be metre-gauge, thinking that might iron out the technical difficulties and strategic objections. [1: p24] Faced by the administrative impasse which stalled the project in France , the French Ministry of Public Works decided to close its Nice design office on 1st September 1887. Italy, however,  worked unilaterally with the intention of opening up the Haute Roya without prejudging the continuation of the route towards France. [1: p24]

From 1882 until 1900 it was the Italians that took the initiative. A delegation from Cuneo secured 29.5 million lire from the Italian Minister of Public Works. The first length of the scheme received local approval on 25th March 1882. Work on site started in April 1882 on the length of the line from Cuneo to Vernante.

The first length of the line – Cuneo to Vernante

The present passenger station building in Cuneo seen from the East, © Neq00 and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence,(CC BY-SA 4.0). This railway station was built in the 1939s and opened in 1937 by the Communications Minister, Antonio Stefano Benni. At the same time the new Madonna Olmo–Plateau Cuneo–Borgo San Dalmazzo line was opened. It replaced the old Cuneo Gesso–Boves–Borgo San Dalmazzo line. [18]

The present railway station in Cuneo dates from the late 1930s the older station is known as Cuneo Gesso Statzione. At the time of the building of the Line from Cuneo towards Nice and Ventimiglia, Cuneo’s railway station sat alongside the Gesso River across the town from the present station.

The original Cuneo Railway Station from which the line to Nice and Ventimiglia left in a southerly direction. This image was taken in 1903. It was shared on the Facebook Nel dipartimento della Stura – Cuneo – pagina. [19]
This second photograph of Cuneo’s original railway station which was on the banks of the River Gesso shows both the station building and the bridge which carried the railway over the river. This image was taken in 1905. It was shared on the Facebook Nel dipartimento della Stura – Cuneo – pagina on 16th November 2017. [20]
Although dated 6th October 1979 this postcard image originated in the early years of the 20th century. It shows the Cuneo Gesso Station as it was at the turn of the 20th century. The postcard was made to commemorate the reopening of the international railway line that connects the city of Cuneo with the city of Nice. This image was shared on the Facebook Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza page on 11th December 2017. [21]

The railway initially arrived from Turin, via Fossano. It came as far as Madonna dell’Olmo opposite Cuneo across the Sturia River on 16th October 1854 where a small building was built to serve as a temporary station. On 5th August 1855 the inaugural train from Cuneo left for Turin. In the same year the municipality built a bridge over the Sturia (at its own expense). After the construction of the bridge over the Stura, a second temporary station was built on an embankment in the San Sebastiano plain (where Giuseppe Garibaldi had arrived to visit his “Alpine Hunters” in 1856). Only in 1870 was a significant edifice completed which became Cuneo’s railway station. It was alongside the Gesso River and it was again built entirely at the town’s expense. [19]

Cuneo Gesso Stazione in 2010, © Luciano Marco and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). The lines curving off the right of this photograph head towards the bridge over the Gesso River. [22]

The complete opening of the Cuneo-Ventimiglia line, which took place on 30th October 1928, caused significant logistical problems for both travellers and rolling stock at Cuneo station. The old depot, dating back to 1864, soon became insufficient to house the locomotives of the new line, [23: p41] a hastily built locomotive depot was provided (because of delays creating the new line and new railway station, and in the construction of the large mixed-use viaduct over the Stura di Demonte. [24][25]

The Locomotive Depot at Cuneo Gesso Station which was used until the new depot close to Cuneo Altipiano Railway Station was opened. The site was repurposed – it became a sawmill. This plan 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. [62]

The new depot was placed beyond the embankment of the road to Mondovì. A double track arched bridge took the tracks under the road. [26][27] On 7th November 1937[24] the new Cuneo Altipiano station was opened, located to the west of the city centre and connected to the new locomotive depot built on the right side of the Stura River. [24][25]

Cuneo Gesso quickly lost importance, remaining active only as a stopping point for the lines to Mondovì and Boves , the latter closed to traffic in 1960. [23: p55-57][25]

Near the station was the terminus of the Cuneo-Dronero, [28] Cuneo-Saluzzo [29] and Cuneo-Boves [30] tramways, active for different years between 1879 and 1948 [25][31: p120]. The Cuneo Boves line opened in 1903 and closed in 1935.

Ex Stazione Ferrovia Di Cuneo Gesso as it appears on Google Maps satellite imagery. he river is the Gesso Torrent and a modern concrete bridge now spans the river. The line heading South from the station originally served a temporary Locomotive depot but now serves the sawmill that replaced the depot. [Google Maps, July 2025]
The old station buildings seen from the Southwest. The building is in use as a cafe/bar. Tracks remain in place beyond the building. [Google Streetview, May 2025]
The bridge which now carries the railway over the River Gesso. [Google Streetview, 2022]

Construction of the new line started in 1882, it left the station to the South curving sharply to the left to cross the Gesso River on a 3-arch brick viaduct (each span was 24.8 metres) shared with the line from Cuneo to Mondovi which was under construction at the same time. [1: p25]

The line to Mondovi remains today, but no passenger trains use the line any longer. The line we are following from Cuneo to Vernante, left the line to Mondovi heading Southwest and passing through the villages of Boves and Fontanelle-di-Boves. Provision for freight and passengers was made at Boves, just for passengers at Fontanelle-di-Boves.

Preparing for this article, I found a document from 1904 which included the plans and profiles of the line on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group. It was shared as a series of photographs by Davide Franchini on 2nd March 2022.

The 1904 document cover. [47]
The first plan shows the bridge crossing the River Gesso with the line heading for Nice and Ventimiglia bearing away from the line to Moldovi. [47]
The line heading South. [47]
The route of the old railway from Cuneo Gesso to Borgo-San-Dalmazzo, (c) Ale Sasso and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence, (CC BY-SA 4.0). [32]

As far as I can tell, the line to Boves has been built over. It seems to have followed the route of Via del Borgo Gesso South from the river bridge, then Via Bisalta, then Highway SP21 to Boves where the line curved back towards the River Gesso. Boves station was on a relatively sharp curve in the line. [33]

Boves Railway Station building. [35]
A similar view of Boves Railway Station in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The altered station building as seen from the Southeast. [Google Streetview, 2012]
The goods shed/warehouse seen from the East. [Google Streetview, 2012]
The goods shed at Boves, seen from the West on the SP21. The original station building can be seen on the left of this image. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The location of Boves Railway Station in the 21st century. Via Gastalato (SP21) runs along the old railway line. The main station building has a silver coloured roof and sits at the centre of this satellite image. The goods warehouse costs to the West of the main station building and has a red roof. [Google Maps, July 2025]

Boves station had a passing loop and two sidings. The passenger building, converted into residential housing several years ago, was adjacent to a goods warehouse, now used as a provincial warehouse. [35]

Boyes Railway Station plan. [47]
The line beyond Boves Railway Station ran through Fontanelle di Boves and then crossed the River Gesso again. [47]

The hamlet of Fontanelle di Boves was just a short distance beyond Boves Railway Station. It had its own passenger station which opened in 1942 after the line from here back to Cuneo was replaced by a new line on the other side of the River Gesso which ran into the new station at Cuneo. Just a short distance further down the line was the viaduct which took the line back over the River Gesso. Originally, this was a masonry structure of three 24.8 metre arched spans. [1: p25] The viaduct was overwhelmed and destroyed by a flood of the Gesso on the afternoon of 2nd October 1898. It was then replaced with the current 74 m metal truss girder bridge. [34]

This photograph shows the immediate aftermath of the destruction of the bridge between Fontanelle-di-Boves and Borgo San-Dalmazzo. It was shared on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Mario Zauli on 29th February 2024. As well as appearing on the Facebook Group, Banaudo et al include the picture in their book. They comment: “On 2nd October 1898, the Southern Alps suffered violent floods that swept away the three-arched masonry viaduct over the Gesso between Boves and Borgo San-Dalmazzo, built in 1883. It was rebuilt as a metal truss bridge, but initially trains used a temporary structure on wooden beams. In December 1898, this was tested by the passage of locomotive No. 4333 of type 040, series 4201 to 4493 of the Rete Mediterranea. (Photo Giacinto Garaffi – Diego Garel collection).” [37][1: p26]

The bridge is known as Ponte di Sant’Andrea, a second truss was positioned alongside the railway bridge and together the two bridges now carry the SP21.

After crossing the River Gesso and at about 12 km from Cuneo the line arrived at Borgo-San-Dalmazzo.

This schematic map shows the two rail routes. The solid line shows the original alignment that we have just been following. The dotted line shows the route built at the end of the 1930s. The two lines met to the West of Pont Sant’Andre. The 1937-built station is on the banks of the Stura River on the West side of Cuneo and on the dotted line. [34]
The bridge (Ponte di Sant’Andrea) is flagged in the bottom-right, the newer line from Cuneo enters this image middle-top and runs down to the bottom-left. The older line curved round from the SP21 and its route is marked by the curved field boundary. [Google Maps, July 2025]

Returning to the 1937-built Cuneo Railway Station, the line from that station leaves Cuneo in a South-southwest direction. It is easiest to see the route of the line on a sequence of extracts from global mapping provided by OpenStreetMap. …

Cuneo’s Railway Station in the 21st century. [OpenStreetMap, July 2025][38]

A twilight view of Cuneo railway station taken from the cab of a multiple unit entering the station from the Southwest. [45]

The line runs alongside the locomotive depot to the South of the passenger facilities at Cuneo Railway Station and then enters a tunnel which turns South under the city. [39]
The tunnel mouth to the South of Cuneo Railway Station can be made out at the centre-top of this image. [Google Earth 3D, July 2025]
This time looking North, the Southern portal of the tunnel to the South of Cuneo Railway Station can be made out below the roundabout at the centre-top of this image. [Google Earth 3D, July 2025]

A rain-spattered cab view from the South, taken in the late evening, of the Southern portal of the tunnel which sits to the South of Cuneo Railway Station. [45]

After leaving the tunnel, the line began to curve round to the Southwest passing under Via Fontanelle and then under the roundabout at the junction of Via Mellana and Viale Federico Mistral. [40]

Looking North in the evening light under a footbridge close to Via Giuseppe Scagliosi through the cab widow of a multiple unit on the line. [45]

The view North from the bridge carrying Via Fontanelle across the line. [Google Streetview, 2019]
Looking South from the bridge carrying Via Fontanelle over the line. The bridge in the distance sits underneath a roundabout at the junction between Via Mellana and Viale Federico Mistral. [Google Streetview, 2019]

A three arch bridge carries Via Fontanelle over the railway, seen again in the evening light from the South through the rail-spattered cab widow of a multiple unit. [45]

A short tunnel carries the roundabout at the meeting of Via Mellana and Viale Federico Mistral over the railway, seen again from the South through the rail-spattered cab widow of a multiple unit. [45]

Vegetation around the roundabout means that it it not possible to see into the cutting from the road.

The line continues in a Southwesterly direction running alongside Viale Federico Mistral. [41]

A brick-ringed arch bridge carries the railway over a side road off Viale Federico Mistral. This view is from the Southeast. The structure is at the top-right of the map extract immediately above. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

A very similar arch bridge carries the railway over a further side road off Viale Federico Mistral. The bridge is located in the bottom-left quadrant of the map extract above. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

Now on a more Southwesterly course the line passes under a footbridge, obscured on the map extract by the words Tetto Bidetti in the top-right corne of the extract.

Silhouetted in the evening light, this bridge crosses the line carrying a footpath over the railway. The image, again comes from the cab of a multiple unit heading for Cuneo. [45]

Close to Cascina Tallone, the line crosses Lungo Gesso by means of another brick ringed arch. This view looks under the railway from the Southeast. [Google Streetview, May 2022]

Near Cascina David another brick-arched bridge pierces the railway embankment where Via David passes beneath the railway. Again this view is from the Southeast on Via Sant’Andre. [Google Streetview, May 2022]

Near Cascina Landra another brick-arched bridge pierces the railway embankment. Again this view is from the Southeast on Via Sant’Andre. Thestructure appeasr bottom-left on the map extract above and top-right on the extract below. [Google Streetview, May 2022]

And close to where the line of the older route meets the newer route the line is heading South-southwest and turns towards the Southwest. [43]
Now in Borgo San-Dalmazzo we have reached the point where the older line curved in from the East having crossed the River Gesso. [44]

Via Sant’Andrea passes over the line. This view looks Northeast towards Cuneo. [Google Streetview, May 2022]

Also taken from the bridge carrying Via Sant’Andrea over the railway, this view looks across the road SP21 towards Borgo San-Dalmazzo. [Goog;e Streetview, May 2022]

The view Southwest from the bridge carrying the SP21 over the railway. The route of the older line is marked by the field boundary visible to the left of the line. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The older line curved round to the Southwest and followed a straight course towards Borgo-San-Dalmazzo Railway Station. The newer line has taken its place on the approach to the Station from the Northeast.

Looking back to the Northeast towards the bridge carrying the SP21 from the bridge carrying Via Don Giovanni Minzoni. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
Looking Southwest towards Borgo San-Dalmazzo Railway Station from the bridge carrying Via Don Giovanni Minzoni. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
At the Northeast boundary of the Borgo San-Dalmazzo Railway Station site the Via Rocchiuse passes under the station throat by means of this brick-arched subway/tunnel. This is the view from the Southeast through the tunnel. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
Borgo San-Dalmazzo Railway Station in 1906. This old postcard image was shared on the Ferrovia Internazionale Cuneo-Ventimiglia-Nizza Facebook Group by Mario Zauli on 31st March 2025. [52]
Borgo San-Dalmazzo Railway Station passenger building in 2012, © Luigi Tuby and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [46]
Borgo San-Dalmazzo Railway Station in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, July 2025]
In the plans/profiles that we came across earlier the station is shown with the North point reversed. [47]

San-Dalmazzo is a very old trading town located at the crossroads of three valleys: the Stura, the Gesso and the Vermenagna. The station had three platforms, a goods yard, a 5.50 m turntable and a large overflow yard that could be used for the embarkation and disembarkation of military units deployed in the area. “When the railway arrived in Borgo-San-Dalmazzo, this small town had already had a rail service for several years. In fact, private entrepreneurs Ercole Belloli and Carlo Chiapello opened a 1.445 m gauge horse-drawn tramway between Cuneo and Borgo in 1877, passing through the San-Rocco-Castagnaretta district on the left bank of the Gesso.  Horse-drawn traction was replaced by steam locomotives on this modest 8-km line in 1878.” [1: p27][48]

The Cuneo-Borgo San-Dalmazzo-Demonte tramway linked the cities of Cuneo, Borgo San Dalmazzo and Demonte from 1877 to 1948. In the late 1870s, following the success of similar initiatives in the Turin area, the construction of tramways was pursued in the province of Cuneo. [48] As we have already noted, this was just one of a number of such tramways in the area.

The Cuneo Borgo-San-Dalmazzo tramway was extended in 1914 to Demonte (26.4 km) and converted on this occasion to a 1.10 m gauge to facilitate the exchange of goods with the Compagnia Generale dei Tramways Piemontesi (CGTP) which operated the Cuneo Boves line (8.3 km) from 1903.  The Boves steam tramway disappeared in 1935 and that of Borgo and Demonte in 1948. [1: p28] The story of these tramways seems worth investigating, but their histories are a matter for a different article!

The station had an ignominious place in history. During the Second World War two convoys of Jewish deportees departed from the Borgo San Dalmazzo railway station bound for Auschwitz , coming from the adjacent Borgo San Dalmazzo concentration camp. The first convoy, on 21st November 1943, completed its journey via Nizza Drancy with 329 people on board. Only 19 survived. The second convoy, on 15th February 1944, with 29 people on board, headed instead for the Fossoli transit camp where it was combined with transport no. 8 bound for Germany. Only 2 survived. [49][50]

The Deportation Memorial , with a row of cattle wagons similar to those used then (the wagons are from 1953) commemorates the names of the deportees, their age and nationality and their family relationships. [50][51]

Burgo San-Dalmazzo to Robilante: The second construction contract covered the length from Borgo San-Dalmazzo to Robilante. Work began in late 1883. From Burgo San-Dalmazzo the line leaves the plain and begins its ascent up the Vermenagna Valley, heading towards the Tende Pass. The route, was designed to accommodate heavy traffic, so the line does “not include any curves with a radius less than 300 m, with two exceptions: one at the southern end of Cuneo station and one at the exit from Borgo station, where the route curves sharply to the left in a 257-meter curve to reach the left bank of the Gesso River.  There, a 21 m three-arched masonry viaduct, shared by the railway and the SS20 road, crosses this Alpine torrent for the third and final time.” [1: p27]

This satellite image shows the sharp curve from the Railway Station at Borgo San-Dalmazzo to the viaduct across the River Gesso. [Google Maps, July 2025]

As the railway curves round towards the river its embankments are pierced twice to allow local roads to pass beneath the line.

This is the first structure. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The second structure, closer to the River Gesso. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The southern approach to Borgo San-Dalmazzo Railway Station, seen from the cab of a multiple unit. The line to the right of the image is a siding which terminates close to the River Gesso. [45]

The 3-span viaduct across the River Gesso carries both the railway and the SS20. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
Looking South along the SS20 as it crosses the Gesso. The railway cantenary is on the left with the tracks hidden behind the dividing fence. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

A view from the South showing the road on the left. This is a view from the cab of the multiple unit again. [45]

Once over the river the road and railway remain at a high level with an access road to the SS20 passing under both the railway and the road. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

After crossing the river the line ran on through Roccavione. …

The line bridges a minor road. The brick arch structure is seen from the Southwest. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The line crosses Via 8 Agosto at level. The view looks Southwest over the level-crossing. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The view North-northwest from the level-crossing, looking back along the line towards Borgo San-Dalmazzo. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The view South-southeast from the level-crossing, looking towards Roccavione Railway Station. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
Looking Southeast from Roccavione Railway Station car park. The station building is to the right of centre, the platforms are camouflaged by the fencing to the left of the parked vehicles. [Google Streetview, September 2023]
The station building and forecourt seen from the Southwest. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
A view South along the platform of Roccavione
Railway Station © Mattia Vigano. [Google Maps, 2019]

Roccavione Station is a simple station with two public platforms and one track serving a military platform. Another level crossing sits beyond the South end of the station site.

Looking back from the level-crossing at Via Piano Sottano towards Roccavione Railway Station. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

A similar view looking North into Roccavione Railway Station from the cab of the multiple unit. The station has no passing loop. [45]

The view Southwest across the level-crossing. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
Looking South-southeast as the line continues up the Vermenagna valley. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The line follows an easy gradient between the SP259 (which used to be the SS20) and the left bank of the River Vermenagna to Robilante Railway Station. [1: p27]

The line runs Northwest to Southeast across this extract from Google Maps satellite imagery. It runs close to the SP259 between Roccavione and Robilante. [Google Maps, July 2025]
A link road under the railway and under the SP259 beyond. It provides access from Via Piano Sottano to the SP259. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
What in the UK we might choose to call an underpass or cattle-creep under the railway. Apologies for the slight distortion of the image which comes from the way in which Google’s algorithm merges the 360° camera photographs. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

Robilante Railway Station had three platform tracks, a small goods yard, a water feed, a 8.50m turntable and an engine shed.  Beyond the station track gradients increased significantly and provision needed to be made for banking engines in steam days. [1: p27]

Robilante Railway Station. [Google Maps, July 2025]
The station building sat on the Southwest side of the line, This view looks through the station to the Southeast, (c) Gum Gum. [Google Maps: July 2023]
Robilante Station building and forecourt seen from the Northeast on Via Roma. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
This view looks Northwest through the station towards Cuneo, (c) Mattia Vigano. [Google Maps: April 2019]

A similar view to that immediately above but taken from the driver’s cab on a multiple unit. In the distance in this image the old goods shed can be seen to the left of the line. The shed is no longer present in the more modern image above. [45]

A station plan for the station at Robilante. The line is oriented Northwest to Southeast. The turntable is located at the Northwest end of the yard. The engine shed is opposite the passenger building. The goods shed was Northwest of the passenger facilities and is shown here with a single siding passing through the building. The bridge, shown in images below crosses the station throat at the Southeast end of the station site. Not shown on this early plan are five sidings added for clinker wagons from the Buzzi Unicem cement plant nearby. [47][53]

Robilante Goods Shed seem from the cab of a multiple unit. As noted above, the shed has now been demolished. [45]

This image taken from the Southeast of the station from the cab of an approaching Cuneo service gives a broader view of the station site. [45]

A broader view of Robilante Station taken from a road at the Southeast corner of the station site. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The road overbridge at the Southeast end of the station site. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The view Northwest from the road bridge which carries Via Luigi Emina over the line. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The view Southeast from the same road bridge. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The bridge which carries Via Luigi Emina over the line, seen from the Southeast. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The second phase of the construction work on the line terminated in Robilante. “The preliminary design for the third phase from Robilante to Vernante was submitted to the Ministry of Public Works on 11th January 1884, and work began the following summer. On this 6,419-meter-long section, the railway crosses the mountain with gradients of 25 mm/m.” [1: p27]

This extract from Google Maps satellite imagery shows the length of the line from Robilante to Vernante
Via Ferrovieri runs immediately adjacent to the railway for some distance, passing under a road over bridge along with the railway. This view looks ahead up the Vermenaga valley. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The same bridge seen from the Southeast. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The two images immediately above were taken at the end of a road serving a small industrial area. The first looks Northeast, the second, Southeast. [Google Streetview, September 2023]

After passing under the SS20, the line runs alongside the road for a kilometre or so.

Trains can be seen passing immediately adjacent to the road. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

A short distance further South a side road from the SS20, Via Tetto Pettavino, bridges the line. The two photographs below were taken from the bridge.

Looking North towards Robilante. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
Looking ahead along the line towards the viaduct over the River Vermenagna. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The railway crossed the Vermenagna River by means of a viaduct of 5 arched spans – three of 21 metres flanked at each end by an 8 metre span. [Google Maps, July 2025][1: p27]

A photograph of the viaduct over the Vermenagna surrounded by trees can be found here on Flickr. [54]

Banaudo et al tell us that seven further significant structures were included in the contract which covered the line as far as Vernante [1: p27] all of which sit within approximately 3 kilometres along the line:

  • the Rio Vermanera masonry viaduct, with three 8-metre arches;
  • the Ponte Nuovo Tunnel, 425 metres long;
  • the Brunet Tunnel, 161 metres long;
  • the Corte-Soprano Tunnel, 95 metres long;
  • the San Giovanni masonry viaduct, with six arches measuring 7.90 m, three measuring 13.75 m, and one measuring 6 m;
  • the San Giovanni Tunnel, 138 metres long; and
  • the Costa Tunnel, 147 metres long. [1: p27]

The first of these – the Rio Vermanera Viaduct is pictured below.

The Rio Vermanera masonry viaduct, seen from the West, one span of which crosses the Strada Vermanera, another spans the Vermaners stream. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The same viaduct seen from the East. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

Strada Vermanera provides road access to a number of small hamlets to the East of the railway line. [Google Maps, July 2025]

The Ponte Nuovo Tunnel: this extract from OpenStreetMap shows the tunnel curving significantly. It ran from just to the South of the Rio Vermanera Viaduct to open out immediately adjacent to the SS20/E74 but at a higher level. [55]

Immediately beyond the southern portal of the Ponte Nuovo Tunnel, a masonry retaining wall supports the railway above the SS20/E74.

Looking back towards the South portal of the Ponte Nuevo Tunnel the parapet railings of the retaining wall can be seen on the left of this image. [45]

The southern portal of the Ponte Nuovo Tunnel is at the far end of this retaining wall. Immediately at the Southeast end of the retaining wall is the short Brunet Tunnel (161 metres long) [Google Streetview, June 2025]

The Brunet Tunnel is shown dotted on this extract from OpenStreetMap. [56]

The South Portal of the Brunet Tunnel. [45]

The next tunnel is only 200 metres or so along the line, the Corte-Soprano Tunnel is even shorter at only 95 metres in length. [57]

The South Portal of the Corte-Soprano Tunnel. [45]

Just to the Southeast of the tunnel portal is the next structure, the San Giovanni Viaduct. masonry viaduct, with six arches measuring 7.90 metres, three measuring 13.75 metres, and one measuring 6 metres. [Google Maps, July 2025]

It is not feasible to get a photograph of the full length of the viaduct. The three images below give a good impression of its length and height.

Two further short tunnels, the San Giovanni Tunnel (138 metres long) and the Costa Tunnel (147 metres long) follow in the next few hundred metres.

The two tunnels are only separated by a short length of the line. [Google Maps, July 2025]

The South portal of the San Giovanni Tunnel. [45]

The South portal of the Costa Tunnel. [45]

The railway continues to climb higher on the eastern slope of the Vermenagna Valley and reaches Vernante, about 23 km from Cuneo.

Another of the plans and profiles that we encountered earlier in this article. This one shows the final approaches to Vernante Railway Station. Some of the structures described above can be seen on this plan. [47]

On the final approaches to Vernante Railway Station two further structures can be seen on the plan above. They carry the line over minor roads. The first spans Via La Tina, the second spans Vicolo Castello/Strada da Castello.

Looking East through the underpass which takes Via La Tina under the railway. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
Looking East through the structure that carries the railway over Strada da Castello. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

Vernante Railway Station was the end of the third tranche of works on the railway. Vernante is “a busy centre of livestock breeding and craftsmanship where renowned knives are produced.  Vernante station … has two platform faces with a passing loop, … [a goods shed] and platform for goods traffic, a 5.50 m turntable and a curious installation, unique on the line, the “binario di salvamento”. This is a counter-slope safety [line which leaves the main running line close to the station throat] on the Limone side. The switch is permanently positioned to provide access to the safety line, so that any vehicle drifting down the 26 mm/m gradient south of the station can enter it, be slowed down by the opposite gradient and then come to a stop. Each descending train must stop before the switch, so that it can be maneuvered on site to allow normal entry into the station. This simple but effective precautionary measure applies to other steep-gradient lines on the Italian network, in the Alps and the Apennines.” [1: p27]

A plan of Vernante Railway Station. [47]
Vernante Railway Station. [Google Streetview, July 2025]
The view Southeast from the station car park, after demolition of the old goods shed. The main station building features at the centre of the image. [Google Streetview, June 2025]
The main station building at Vernante seen from the West. [Google Streetview, June 2025]

Photographs showing the station building and the goods shed prior to its demolition can be seen here. [58] “Inaugurated in 1889, the station served as the terminus for the Cuneo-Ventimiglia line for nearly two years, until it was extended to Limone Piemonte. The passenger building features classic Italian architecture, with two levels. It is square, medium-sized, and well-maintained. Its distinctive feature is the two murals depicting scenes from the Pinocchio fairy tale, adorning its façade. The lower level houses the waiting room and self-service ticket machine, while the upper level is closed.” [58]

A photograph from the cab of a Cuneo-bound train arriving at Vernante. The passenger building is on the left with the goods shed beyond. [45]

While construction work was underway on the first three tranches (Cuneo to Vernante), the Italian rail network was undergoing a major reorganization. The Law passed on 27th April 1885, placed control of the railways into the hands of “the new Società per le Strade Ferrate del Mediterraneo, more commonly known as Rete Mediterranea (RM), … including the route ‘from Cuneo to the sea’.” [1: p28]

In 1887, the time had come for the first trains! “The Cuneo-Robilante section was inaugurated on Saturday, 16th July 1887, and opened for service on Monday 18th. Less than two weeks later, Francesco Crispi became President of the Council of Ministers, and relations between Italy and France would soon be strengthened. Then came the beginning of the future Cuneo-Mondovi line, which opened on 2nd October 1887, as far as Roccadebaldi. The Roccadebaldi and Robilante lines thus formed a common section for 359 meters, starting from Cuneo [Gesso] station and crossing the Gesso River on the same viaduct. … Two years later, the Robilante-Vernante section was … opened on 1st September 1889.” [1: p28]

As footnotes to this article we note that:

  • Banaudo et al comment: “construction of the Ceva Ormea branch line began in the upper Tanaro Valley. With a terminus about 30 km from Vernante or 25 km from Tenda and Briga, this line would play an important role in the battle of interests that would unfold in the final years of the century to confirm a definitive route to the sea.” [1: p28]
  • They also give details of the locomotives used on the line in these very early years, by Rete Mediterranea (RM). The locomotives were 030s (in the UK 0-6-0s) with tenders and came from the roster of the Turin depot and loaned to the Cuneo-Gesso Locomotive depot. They belonged to just one series: “Nos. 3201 to 3519 RM, which became group 215.001 to 398 at the FS. [The series was built] between 1864 and 1892 based on a model derived from the French “Bourbonnais” locomotives of the PLM. These 450 hp engines were equipped with saturated steam, single expansion, and Stephenson internal distribution.  The [later] Cuneo depot, established in 1907, still had five type 215 locomotives in 1922, mainly operating service trains.” [1: p86] It is also worth noting that some of the locos used on the line after 1899 came from a second series of locomotives (“Nos. 3801 to 3869 RM, later 3101 to 3169, then group 310.001 to 069 at the FS, built from 1894 to 1901 [1: p86]). While these locomotives were old enough to have served in the period from 1887 to 1891, they only arrived on the line during 1901. … I anticipate there being a separate article about motive power on the line in due course.
0-6-0 RM Locomotive No. 3375 Pracchia, with three driven axles and a tender, built in 1883 by Vulcan of Stettin. In 1905, it joined the FS fleet as Class 215, known as a Bourbonnais, along with 400 other locomotives with similar characteristics. It ended its career with the Porretta in 1927, © Public Domain. [59][60][1: p87]

We finish this first part of the journey from Cuneo to the sea at Vernante. The next article about the line will begin at Vernante and head South towards Limone and Vievola. It can be found here. [61]

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://m.facebook.com/groups/ciccoli/permalink/1711973335715195, accessed on 15th December 2023.
  6. https://m.facebook.com/groups/ciccoli/permalink/2989582914620891, accessed on 15th December 2023.
  7. https://www.cparama.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=11&t=14570, accessed on 21st December 2023.
  8. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fr%C3%A9jus_Rail_Tunnel, accessed on 13th July 2025.
  9. The locomotive developed by the Scottish engineer Robert Francis Fairlie (1831-1885) from 1869 on the Ffestiniog narrow gauge railway in Wales, had two boilers connected by a single central firebox. Each boiler supplies steam to a pair of cylinders driving an independent group of axles. This system was developed in France from 1888 by artillery captain Prosper Péchot (1849-1928) and engineer Charles Bourdon (1847-1933), creators of an articulated narrow gauge locomotive widely used by the French army.” [1: p21]
  10. Séraphin Piccon; Etude Comparative de Deux Lignes de Chemin de Fer Entre Nice et Coni; 1872.
  11. The Fell System which created “additional adhesion using a raised central rail, patented by British engineer John Barraclough Fell (1815-1902), was first applied in the Alps in 1868 on the railway running along the Mont Cenis route between St. Michel-de-Maurienne and Susa, pending the completion of the Fréjus Tunnel in 1871.” [1: p21]
  12. A. Cachiardy de Montfleury; Chemin de Fer de Nice a Coni; Imprimerie Cauvan, Nice, 1872.
  13. Marius de Vautheleret; Chemin de Fer Cuneo Ventimiglia – Nice Traversant le Col de Tende; Editions Giletta, Nice, 1874.
  14. Marius de Vautheleret; Chemin de Fer Cuneo – Nice par Ventimiglia et le Col de Tende; Kugelmann, Paris, 1883; Trajet direct de Londres à Brindisi par le Col de Tende; Kugelmann, Paris, 1884; Ligne directe Londres – Brindisi par le Col de Tende; Retaux, Abbeville, 1890; Le Grand Saint-Bernard et le Col de Tende Ligne Ferrée Directe de Londres à Brindisi avec Jonction à la Méditerranée; Malvano & Mignon, Nice, 1897.
  15. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1CzKYeoPoV, accessed on 17th July 2025.
  16. https://trainconsultant.com/2020/10/09/nice-coni-incroyable-derniere-nee-des-grandes-lignes-internationales, accessed on 17th July 2025.
  17. https://cartorum.fr/carte-postale/466792/tende-col-de-tende-le-porte-frontiere, accessed on 17th July 2025.
  18. https://commons.m.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Stazione_di_Cuneo_(2).jpg, accessed on 18th July 2025.
  19. https://www.facebook.com/share/1CP5xtb7Yx, accessed on 18th July 2025.
  20. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/17SDzaUV5x, accessed on 18th July 2025.
  21. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1FsN8Vdact, accessed on 19th July 2025.
  22. https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stazione_di_Cuneo_Gesso#/media/File%3AStazione_di_CuneoGesso.png, accessed on 19th July 2025.
  23. Stefano Garzaro & Nico Molino; La Ferrovia Di Tends Da Cuneoba Nizza, L’ultima Grande Traversata Alpina, Colleferro (RM); E.S.T. – Editrice di Storia dei Trasporti, Luglio, 1982, (Italian text)
  24. Ferrovie dello Stato; Circolare Compartimentale del Compartimento di Torino 54/1937, (Italian text).
  25. https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stazione_di_Cuneo_Gesso, accessed on 19th July 2025. (Italian text translated into English by Google Translate)
  26. Franco Collidà, Max Gallo & Aldo A. Mola; Cuneo-Nizza: Storia di una ferrovia, Cuneo (CN); Cassa di Risparmio di Cuneo, Luglio, 1982, (Italian text).
  27. The locomotive depot area, left vacant after the opening of the new Cuneo station, was later reused by a sawmill connected by a siding to the Gesso station. [25]
  28. https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tranvia_Cuneo-Dronero, accessed on 19th July 2025.
  29. https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tranvia_Saluzzo-Cuneo, accessed on 19th July 2025.
  30. https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tranvia_Cuneo-Boves, accessed on 19th July 2025.
  31. Nico Molino; Il trenino di Saluzzo. Storia della Compagnia Generale Tramways Piemontesi; Immagini e Parole, Torino, 1981, (Italian text)
  32. https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrovia_Cuneo-Boves-Borgo_San_Dalmazzo#/media/File:Cuneo-Borgo_San_Dalmazzo_map.JPG, accessed on 19th July 2025.
  33. https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stazione_di_Boves#/maplink/1, accessed on 19th July 2025.
  34. https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrovia_Cuneo-Boves-Borgo_San_Dalmazzo, accessed on 19th July 2025.
  35. https://airascasaluzzocuneo.jimdofree.com/le-altre-ferrovie-cuneesi-dismesse/cuneo-gesso-borgo-s-dalmazzo, accessed on 19th July 2025.
  36. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/15Te6MP6HJ, accessed on 19th July 2025.
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  39. https://www.openstreetmap.org/#map=16/44.37623/7.52866&layers=P, accessed on 19th July 2025.
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  45. https://youtu.be/2Xq7_b4MfmU?si=1sOymKkFjSpxMkcR, accessed on 20th July 2025.
  46. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Borgo_san_dalmazzo_stazione_ferroviaria.jpg, accessed on 20th July 2025.
  47. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1A6hv4xBsJ, accessed on 20th July 2025.
  48. https://itoldya420.getarchive.net/amp/topics/cuneo+demonte+tramway, accessed on 20th July 2025.
  49. https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Campo_di_concentramento_di_Borgo_San_Dalmazzo, accessed on 20th July 2025.
  50. https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stazione_di_Borgo_San_Dalmazzo, accessed on 20th July 2025.
  51. https://web.archive.org/web/20201006185244/http://comune.borgosandalmazzo.cn.it/citta/monumenti.html, accessed on 20th July 2025.
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  53. https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stazione_di_Robilante, accessed on 21st July 2025.
  54. https://flic.kr/p/Yqh8NC, accessed on 21st July 2025.
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  60. https://www.fotocommunity.it/photo/locomotiva-3375-rete-mediterrane-roberto-prioreschi/35312169, accessed on 22nd July 2025.
  61. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2025/07/26/the-railway-from-nice-to-tende-and-cuneo-part-2
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Genoa’s Early Tram Network – Part 1 – General Introduction, Tunnels, The Years before World War One, and the Early Western Network.

Introduction and Early History

We begin this article with a look at maps of the Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari and its immediate environs over the years around the turn of the 20th century. The Piazza became one of two focal points for tramways in the city (the other was Caricamento).

I found the series of maps interesting and they provoked a desire to find out more about the network of horse-drawn and later electric trams and tramways of Genoa. ….

This map of 1886 shows the Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari a little to the left of the centre. Via Carlo Felice runs away from the Piazza to the North-northeast, Via Roma to the Northeast. The map extract is taken from the Italy Handbook for Travellers of 1886 produced by Karl Baedeker, © Public Domain. [10]
This map of 1906 is taken from Karl Baedeker’s Italy Handbook for Travellers. It shows an enlarged Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari, © Public Domain. [11]
This version of the map was produced for the 1913 Baedeker guide. This has tramways shown and the Piazza is beginning to take a shape that is more recognisable in the 21st century, © Public Domain. [12]

Italian Wikipedia informs us that: “The first public transport in Genoa was provided by a horse bus service linking the city centre and Sampierdarena, that started in 1873. In 1878, the French company Compagnia Generale Francese de Tramways (CGFT, French General Company of Tramways) began to build a horse tram system.” [16][17]

A map of the horse-drawn tramways operated by the French company Compagnia Generale Francese de Tramways, © Arbalete and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [19]

Towards the end of the century, the new urban plan led to the construction of new roads with wider carriageways, principal among these were:

  • Via Assarotti connecting Piazza Corvetto to Piazza Manin;
  • Via XX Settembre, built between 1892 and 1899, widening Strada Giulia and connecting the Palazzo Ducale (Piazza de Ferrari) with Porta Pila and the banks of the River Bisagno (once the eastern boundary of the city);
  • Corso Buenos Aires, once outside the city walls, was lowered to the level of Ponte Pila and the new Via XX Settembre, to form a single artery that would connect the centre with the Albaro district;
  • Corso Torino, perpendicular to Corso Buenos Aires.

After this work was done, the city began to look more modern and the widened streets made room for tramways in the centre and East of the city. The municipal administration began to plan new lines, both towards the eastern suburbs and in the central districts of the city. [19]

The city welcomed competition and set up a series of concessions which were given to different groups: the French Company kept the Western concession; Val Bisagno and the hilly areas to two Swiss businessman (Bucher & Durrer); and the east of the city was granted to a group of local businessmen. [19][20: p66]

The two parties, other than the French, formed companies:  Bucher created the Società di Ferrovie Elettriche e Funicolari (SFEF) in 1891. [20: p85] The Genoese entrepreneurs founded the Società Anonima Tramways Orientali (SATO) in 1894. [20: p120] The two companies took on the two concessions which envisaged electric traction on metre-gauge lines to accommodate running on the narrow winding streets of the city centre. [19]

By 1894, SFEF had achieved no more than a single short electric tram line between Piazza Manin and Piazza Corvetto, whilst SATO had not progressed beyond the planning stage. The CGFT system had extended through the city and the Val Polcevera, but was still horse operated.” [16][17]

In 1894, the German company Allgemeine Elektrizitäts Gesellschaft (AEG) … bought both the SFEF and SATO companies. The following year AEG created the company Officine Electrical Genovesi (OEG), … which took over the city’s existing electricity supply company, and the Società Unione Italiana Tramways Elettrici (UITE), … which purchased the CGFT’s concession. By the end of 1895, AEG had a monopoly of both electricity supply and public transport provision in the city.” [16][17] Under AEG’s “ownership, SFEF and SATO developed a tram network of more than 53 km (33 mi) reaching Nervi and Prato, whilst UITE electrified their lines to Voltri and Pontedecimo.” [16][17]

As we have already noted, the first electric traction line connected Piazza Corvetto to Piazza Manin, running along Via Assarotti. [20: p92] It was activated by SFEF on 14th May 1893 [20: p96] The single-track line was 800 metres long and ran on a constant gradient of 7% [20: p95]; the tickets cost 10 cents. The electrification (600 V DC) was via an overhead cable and was carried out by AEG of Berlin, which, as we have already seen, later acquired a significant shareholding in the company. [19][20: p86-87]

In subsequent years the SFEF network expanded rapidly; in 1895-96 the Monte line to the North of the city centre entered into service, including the Sant’Ugo spiral tunnel; in 1896 the line from Piazza Principe to Piazza Brignole was born. It included two tunnels in the Castelletto area. [21: p20] , In 1897, the Val Bisagno line up to Prato began operation. [19][21: p26]

The first SATO line entered into service on 26th July 1897, connecting Piazza Raibetta to Staglieno through the Circonvallazione a Mare, [20: p122] followed two years later by the long coastal line to Nervi. [20: p127] In 1900 the eastern trams reached the central Piazza de Ferrari, travelling along the new Via XX Settembre which was formed through widening of the old Via Giulia. [19][21: p53]

The two networks, SFEF and SATO, were technically compatible and the two companies, both controlled by AEG, soon unified the two networks. [20: p142]

Finally in December 1901, AEG merged SFEF and SATO into an enlarged UITE.” [16][17]

An early postcard image showing a tram at work on Corsa Andrea Podesta, © Public Domain. [19]
This map shows the three companies’ lines immediately prior to the date of unification under UITE. The Green lines were UITE (the former French Company). The Red lines were SFEF. The Blue lines were SATO, © Arbalete and authorisedd for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0. [19]

The enlarged UITE found itself managing 70 km of network, divided between the 30 km of the ‘Western network’: (formerly the French Company) and the 40 km of the ‘Eastern network’ (formerly SFEF and SATO). [20: p170-171] The unification of the network led to an increase in overall traffic, symbolised by the creation of the vast ring terminus in Piazza de Ferrari in 1906. [20: p129]

This seems the right time to look again at the ‘ring terminus’ in Piazza de Raffeale Ferrari. ….

Trams on Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari Genoa (Genova), © Public Domain. [1]
A similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, 2015]
Trams on Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari, Palazzo Ducale is on the left of the photograph, © Public Domain. [7]
A ground-level view from a similar location.  [Google Streetview, 2009]
Another view of Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari and of Palazzo Ducale, © Public Domain. [8]
A similar view of Palazzo Scale from ground-level across the Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari. [Google Streetview, 2015]
Also on Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari, trams gather again! But when is this? The building to the right in the image below is not present in this image, yet is present in the image of the Piazza earlier in this sequence of images, © Public Domain.
From a similar direction as the image above. The building on the left is very much the same as the building on the left in the monochrome image above. Was that monochrome photo taken prior to the building on the right being built, or was the building destroyed during the First World War and then rebuilt at a later date? [Google Streetview, 2016]
The Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari in the 21st century. North of the piazza, at the top-right of this image two streets run out of the piazza. Via Roma curves away to the Northeast and what was Via Carlo Felice (now Via XXV Aprile) heads North-northeast. [Google Maps, November 2024]
Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari, Via Roma (to the right of the building on the right side of this image), and Via Carlo Felice (now Via XXV Aprile), © Public Domain. [7]
The same location in the 21st century. Via Roma is on the right side of the building at the centre of this image. Via XXV Aprile (once Via Carlo Felice) is on its left. [Google Streetview, July 2015]

In 1908, after three years of construction work, Galleria Certosa (Certosa Tunnel) was put into use. It facilitated tram journeys to and from the Polcevera valley, avoiding the crossing of San Pier d’Arena. [19][21: p38] The tunnel connected Piazza Dinegro, in the port area, to the Rivarolo district in Val Polcevera. It was 1.76 km long. [22]

In 1934, Galleria Certosa was used every day by five lines: Tram No. 9 (San Giorgio-Rivarolo), tram No. 10 (San Giorgio-Bolzaneto), tram No. 11 (San Giorgio-Pontedecimo) and the two circular lines between San Giorgio and Sampierdarena. [22]

Tram No 78 at the southern entrance to Galleria Certosa, © Public Domain. [22]
In the mid-20th century, Tram No 836 providing the No.10 service exits the South Portal of the tunnel. This image was shared by Paolo Siri on the Sei di Certosa Se … Facebook Group on 2nd February 2014. [23]
The South Portal (seen in the monochrome image above) is no longer in use, © Arbalete and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0) [22]
Galleria Certosa was a lengthy tunnel. It is shown here superimposed on a modern map of Genoa, © Arbalete and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0) [22]
A view looking towards Galleria Certosa from some distance to the Northwest through the site of what became Brin Metro Station. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 28th September 2020 by Pietro Spanedda, © Public Domain. [37]
Tram service No. 9 (Tram No. 831(?)) is about to enter the North portal of the tunnel. This image comes from the mid-20th century. [24]
The North Portal of Galleria Certosa. Much of the tunnel is now used by the Metro. Brin Metro Station is immediately behind the camera, © Arbalete and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0) [22]

Tram Tunnels (Galleria)

Having noted the construction of Galleria Certosa in the early years of the 20th century (above), it is worth looking at some other tunnels which were built to facilitate the movement of trams.

Galleria Vittorio Emanuele III (renamed Galleria Giuseppe Garibaldi on 27th November 1943)

There seems to be quite a story to the life of this tunnel! The first two photographs show the first tunnel. They focus on the portal in Piazza Della Zeccan.

Piazza della Zecca with trams approaching and leaving a single track tunnel on the line of what will be Galleria Giuseppe Garibaldi. Piazza della Zecca has still not reached its fullest extent and the tunnel portal still has to be constructed, © Public Domain. [70]
Piazza della Zecca in a more complete form but still with a single track tunnel. [71]

These next two photographs show the tunnel as it was first widened in the form which preceded the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele III which had a much smaller bore.

Two views of Piazza Portello with trams exiting and entering the Galleries which preceded Galleria Vittorio Emanuele III, © Public Domain. [38][39]
An engraving of the proposed Galleria Vittorio Emanuele III, © Public Domain. [26]
The Southeast end of Galleria Vittorio Emanuele III during construction with trams using the narrow older tunnel which preceded the larger bore seen on other photographs below, © Public Domain. [26]
Galleria Vittorio Emanuele III later during construction work the full size bore is now complete but the decorative portal still has to be built, © Public Domain. [26]
A postcard view of the Southeast Portal of Galleria Vittorio Emanuele III (later Giuseppe Garibaldi), © Public Domain. [26]
The Southeast Portal of Galleria Giuseppe Garibaldi in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The Northwest Portal of Galleria Vittorio Emanuele III (later Giuseppe Garibaldi) soon after construction, © Public Domain. [25]
A 21st century view of the Northwest portal of Galleria Giuseppe Garibaldi. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Galleria Sant’Ugo

A tram at the lower Portal of Galleria Sant’Ugo, © Public Domain. [27]
The route of Galleria Sant’Ugo appears on city centre maps North of Principe Railway Station. Its lower entrance was on Salita Della Provvidenza. Its upper entrance only a very short distance away to the Northeast but at a higher level in Piazza Ferreira. [27]
Galleria Sant’Ugo left the surface at the North end of Salita Della Provvidenza. [Google Maps, November 2024]
The lower entrance to Galleria Sant’Ugo in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, December 2020]
The Upper Portal of Galleria Sant’Ugo in Piazza Ferreira, © Public Domain. [28]
The upper (marked by the purple flag) and lower entrances of Galleria Sant’Ugo were geographically very close together! [Google Maps, November 2024]
The upper entrance to Galleria Sant’Ugo in Piazza Ferreira. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Galleria Chrisoforo Colombo

Named after Christopher Columbus, whose house was nearby, the gallery was opened to the public in the 1930s and was hailed as the city’s gateway to the sea. It connected Piazza de Ferrari and Piazza della Vittoria.

The Northwest Portal of Galleria Chrisoforo Colombo in its early years, © Public Domain. [28]
The Northwest Portal of Galleria Chrisoforo Colombo in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The Southeast Portal of Galleria Chrisoforo Colombo in its early years, © Public Domain. [29]
The Southeast Portal of Galleria Chrisoforo Colombo in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The blue flag points to the line of the Galleria Chrisoforo Colombo.
A closer view of the location.

Galleria Regina Elena (today Nino Bixio)

The West Portal of Galleria Regina Elena (now Nino Bixio), © Public Domain. [30]
The West Portal of Galleria Nino Bixio in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The East Portal of Galleria Regina Elena (now Nino Bixio), © Public Domain. [30]
The East Portal of Galleria Nino Bixio in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The location of Galleria Nino Bixio. [Google Maps, November 2024]

Galleria Dei Tram Via Milano

Now long gone, there was a tram tunnel on Via Milano to the Southwest of the city centre. It took the tramway (and roadway) under San Benigno Hill. It was.built in 1878 by the Compagnia Generale Francese dei Tramways for its horse-drawn trams. Its Southwest portal was in Largo Laterna. Its Northeast portal is shown in the first image below.

The Northeast portal of the Galleria on Via Milano before its demolition when the San Benigno Hill was raised to the ground. The three images below show the Southwest end of the tunnel. This image was shared by Silvia Brisigotti on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 3rd February 2024, © Public Domain. [34]
A similar location on Via Milano in the 21st century. There are no features to tie the two images together! [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Three different images showing the Southwest portal of the Galleria Via Milano and its immediate environment. The third of the images illustrates its proximity to Genoa’s (Genova’s) Lighthouse on Largo Laterna. These images were shared by Silvia Brisigotti on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 16th January 2024, © Public Domain. [35]
A similar location on Via Milano in the 21st century. The lighthouse can be seen on the right of this photograph. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Until Galleria Certosa was constructed all tram services for the Western suburbs of the city had to pass through this tunnel.

Galleria Goffredo Mameli

This tunnel curved through the Eastern parts of the city from Via Piave to Via Carlo Barabino at the bottom of Piazza Palermo.

Galleria Goffredo Mameli. [Google Maps, November 2024]
In Piazza Palermo, UITE No. 937 exits Galleria Goffredo Mameli in service on the Line 15, De Ferrari – Galleria Mameli – Nervi Service in the later years of the network’s life, © Public Domain. [36]
Looking East at the bottom of Piazza Palermo towards the West Portal of Galleria Goffredo Mameli. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The South Portal of Galleria Goffredo Mameli, © Public Domain. [40]
The South Portal of Galleria Goffredo Mameli. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

The Years Before World War One

In the early years of the 20th century, the municipal administration began to consider the idea of taking control of the tram service. In anticipation of this, in 1913, it built its own line from Marassi to Quezzi, known as Municipal Line A, it was operated by UITE on behalf of the Municipality. [19][21: p44]

Before the start of World War 1, the tram network provided these services: [19]

I. Western Network:

1 Caricamento – San Pier d’Arena (Sampierdarena in other sources) – Sestri – Pegli – Voltri
2 Caricamento – San Pier d’Arena – Sestri – Pegli
3 Caricamento – San Pier d’Arena – Sestri
4 Caricamento – San Pier d’Arena
5 Caricamento – San Pier d’Arena – Rivarolo
6 Caricamento – San Pier d’Arena – Rivarolo – Bolzaneto
7 Caricamento – San Pier d’Arena – Rivarolo – Bolzaneto – Pontedecimo
8 Caricamento – Galleria Certosa – Certosa
9 Caricamento – Galleria Certosa – Certosa – Rivarolo
10 Caricamento – Galleria Certosa – Certosa – Rivarolo – Bolzaneto
11 Caricamento – Galleria Certosa – Certosa – Rivarolo – Bolzaneto – Pontedecimo

II. Eastern Network:

21 De Ferrari – Manin – Staglieno
22 De Ferrari – Manin
23 De Ferrari – Manin – Castelletto
24 De Ferrari – Manin – Castelletto – San Nicholo
25 Circuit in the hilly suburbs
26 Piazza Principe – Corso Ugo Bassi
27 De Ferrari – Zecca – Principe
28 Caricamento – De Ferrari – Galliera ‘Ospital
29 De Ferrari – Carignano
30 Circular Raibetta – Brignole – Corvetto – Raibetta
31 De Ferrari – Staglieno – Molassana – Prato
32 De Ferrari – Staglieno – Molassana
33 De Ferrari – Pila – Staglieno
34 Staglieno – Iassa
35 Pila – Staglieno
36 Pila – Staglieno – Molassana
37 De Ferrari – San Fruttuoso
38 De Ferrari – Foce
39 De Ferrari – San Francesco – Sturla – Priaruggia – Quinto – Nervi
40 De Ferrari – San Francesco – Sturla – Priaruggia – Quinto
41 De Ferrari – San Francesco – Sturla – Priaruggia
42 De Ferrari – San Francesco – Sturla
43 De Ferrari – Villa Raggio – Lido
44 De Ferrari – Tommaseo – San Martino – Borgoratti
45 De Ferrari – Tommaseo – San Martino – Sturla
46 De Ferrari – Tommaseo – San Martino
47 De Ferrari – Tommaseo
48 Raibetta – Pila

III. Municipal line:

A De Ferrari – Quezzi

The Western Network, particularly before World War One

Lines 1 to 11 constituted the Western Network. All of these lines had their city centre terminus at Piazza Caricamento. The Piazza is shown on the adjacent 1916 map.

The map shows part of the Port area of Genoa (Genova) in 1916 with a significant series of standard-gauge railway sidings in evidence (black lines) and some red lines which indicate the metre-gauge tram routes. Piazza Caricamento is close to the water halfway down the map extract. [31]

A typical photograph of a freight movement on the standard-gauge railway serving the port. The building behind the locomotive front onto Piazza Caricamento., © Public Domain and shared by Enrico Pinna on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 22nd January 2023. [33]

The postcard images below show trams operating in Piazza Caricamento at different times over the life of the tram network in the 20th century.

Piazza Caricamento, (postcard dated 1908), © Public Domain. [31]
Piazza Caricamento (postcard dated 1910), © Public Domain. [31]
Piazza Caricamento, (postcard dated 1936), © Public Domain. [31]
Piazza Caricamento, later than the previous view, © Public Domain. [31]
Piazza Caricamento in October 1942 sowing war damage to properties on the East side of the Piazza, © Public Domain. [32]

There were three main routes out of Piazza Caricamento, one of which followed the coast round to meet the lines on the East of the city. The other two shared the bulk of the services leaving the piazza. One of these two routes ran West through San Pier d’Arena (Sampierdarena), the other ran through Galleria Certosa.

The only tramway route serving the western suburbs before the construction of Galleria Certosa is shown here in black between Pizza Caricamento, Principe and San Pier d’Arena (Sampierdarena), © Arbalete and authorisedd for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [19]
The distribution of tramway routes in the West of the city after Galleria Certosa was put into use, © Arbalete and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [19]

The route to San Pier d’Arena (Sampierdarena) closely follows the coast and ran through the Galleria on Via Milano before the San Benigno Hill was raised to the ground.

The 1916 map shows the first length of the tramway Northwest of Piazza Caricamento (red line) which served both the two routes mentioned above. It ran on the south side of Principe Railway Station across the top of the Port. [31]
A crowded Pizza Acquaverde, located in front of the Principe Station, dominated by the statue of Christopher Columbus. Among buses and trolleybuses there is a tram waiting at the station. Another tram (a 900) is on the route from Piazza Caricamento towards Sampierdarena. This image probably comes from the late 1950s or early 1960s, © Public Domain. [36]
The redline marking the tramway runs down the West side of the Port on this next extract from the 1916 – Via Milano, later Via Bruno Buozzi. [31]
An early postcard image showing the curve from Via San Benedetto into Via Milano.[42]
The same location, also prior to the widening of Via Milano and the renaming of the fist length ahead as Via Bruno Buozzi. [41]
The same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, 2010]
Via Milano (eventually Via Bruno Buozzi) with tram tracks on the seaward side. A promenade separates the FS sidings from the carriageway and trams, © Public Domain. [47]
A view Northeast along Via Milano before the widening of the highway and its renaming as Via Bruno Buozzi. [49]
A later view of Via Milano/Via Bruno Buozzi with tramway tracks in the centre of the widened carriageway, © Public Domain. [46]
Somewhat later in the 20th century and taken a little further to the West, this postcard image shows the same centre-of-carriageway tracks the section of Via Milano seen here was renamed Via Bruno Buozzi. [45]
Via Bruno Buozzi in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
This extract from the same 1916 map shows the line of the Galleria which carried the tramway West towards San Pier d’Arena (Sampierdarena). [31]
The view back towards the centre of Genoa from the point where the tramway turned to run through the Galleria under San Benigno Hill, © Public Domain. [48]
It is difficult, given the modern layout of this area of Genoa, to be definitive about the location of the monochrome image immediately above. This image is taken from a very similar position. The skyline at the rear of this image is a very good match for that in the image above.  [Google Streetview, May 2014]
The tramway turned to the right to enter the tunnel under San Benigno Hill. The tunnel portal was beyond the end of the masonry wall behind the steeply inclined accessed road onto the hill. There is no practical modern equivalent to this view, © Public Domain.  [44]

Pictures of the Galleria can be seen earlier in this article.

West of the Galleria, the original tramway ran along what is now Via Giacomo Buranello (what was Via Vittorio Emanuele) to Sampierdarena. This route appears to the North of the SS1 on the satellite image below.

In this extract from Google’s satellite imagery Sampierdarena is marked top left. The modern SS1 runs along the line of what was Via Milano. Careful inspection of this image shows the railway sidings which remain on the South side of the SS1.
Via Vittorio Emanuele (later Via Giacomo Buranello) looking West, (c) Public Domain. [93]
The same view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking West, Sampierdarena, Piazza Vittorio Veneto. A tram is arriving in the Piazza from the West. It has travelled along Via Cornigliano, © Public Domain. [50]
A view of Piazza Vittorio Veneto from a similar bearing, but this time at ground level in 21st century
  Via Cornigliano leaves the Piazza to the left rear. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Before looking at line further West from Sampierdarena we need to note a line which was added to the network before WW1.

A second tramway was built which ran alongside the railway sidings on what is now the SS1, it was then Via Milano, towards Sampierdarena. The route is illustrated by the mid-20th century view below.

Trams on Via Milano/Via Sampierdarena – in this image, the tracks of the Genoese port can be seen, populated by a range of FS goods wagons. Two 900 UITE units are passing each other on tram tracks which occupy the centre of Via Milano, © Public Domain. [36]
Looking East along the SS1 during some major roadworks. The railway sidings are just off to the right side of the photograph. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

That route along Via Sampierdarena (Via Milano and Via Colombo) and then Via Pacinotti is illustrated at the bottom of the map below. After running along the centre of Via Sampierdarena, trams turned inland, heading Northwest to join the earlier route, West of Piazza Vittorio Veneto on Via Pacinotti.

A map provided by the Marklinfan.com Forum which shows the new coastal tram route mentioned above. [92]

The Western Network’s Coastal Line(s)

At Sampierdarena the original lines of the Western network separated. Some lines continuing along the coast and others turning inland. The lines diverged at the West end of Piazza Vittorio Veneto. The coastal line ran along what is today Via Frederico Avio, then turned onto what is now Via Antonio Pacinotti, before turning West on what is now Via Raffaele Pieragostini, crossing the River Polcevera at Ponte di Cornigliano, running along Via Giovanni Ansaldo before joining Via Cornigliano at Piazza Andrea Massena.

This image shows the tramway at what is now the junction between Via Frederico Avio (entering bottom right) and Via Antonio Pacinotti (which heads away from the camera). At the time this was Via Garibaldi. (c) Public Domain. [61]
The same location in the 21st century. The vacant lot is the location of the building on the right of the monochrome image above. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
This mid-20th century postcard view shows trams following Via Cornigliano West of Piazza Massena, © Public Domain. [50]
Piazza Massena at the East end of Via Cornigliano as it appears in the 21st century. The tramway followed Via Cornigliano round to the left ahead. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Another view of Piazza Massena in Cornigliano. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Gianfranco Dell’Oro Bussetti on 8th March 2017, (c) Public Domain. [2]
A similar view of Piazza Massena in 2024. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking West along Via Cornigliano to the West of San Pier d’Arena (Sampierdarena), © Public Domain. [36]
The same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The route West followed the yellow road on this extract from Google Maps satellite imagery. A modern flyover takes the present SS1 over the railway. The original route of the tramway follo
Two images which show the metre-gauge tramway crossing the standard-gauge railway, © Public Domain. [4]
The tramway/road underpass built in the 1930s. A significant amount of excavation was required to take trams under the railway, © Public Domain.[5]
Looking West along the line of the Tramway towards the underpass in the 21st century
Looking back Northeast towards the underpass in the 21st century.[Google Streetview, Aug 2024]
Tram No. 999, the last of the UITE series, is in transit on the Pegli seafront, in service on Line No. 1, Caricamento to Voltri. Miramare Castle is on the sea front. The Castle is in use as a hotel in the 21st century, © Public Domain. [50]
Lungomare di Pegli (SS1) and Miramare Castle in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
This photograph was taken from Miramare Castle. A 900 series tram is heading West and a tram is approaching from the West.  [50]
A similar view, taken from a point a little further to the West, in 21st century
Looking East at Pegli 1925. [58]
At ground level in the 21st century. Looking East from a similar location on the SS1( Via Pegli). [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The terminus of some tram routes at Pegli!, (c) Public Domain. [91]
The same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Beyond Pegli, only Line No. 1 travelled on to Voltri. These next few photographs were taken in Voltri.

An early view West towards Voltri along Via Voltri. [52]
The same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The tramway outside Voltri Railway Station, © Public Domain. [60]
The same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking East along Via Dom Giovanni Verita towards Genova, © Public Domain. [51]
The same location in 21st century. The station building can be seen on the right of the image. [Google Streetview, August 2024
Back in the day, Via Dom Giovanni Verita was Corsa Garibaldi. This view looks East along the road towards the railway station. The buildings in the distance match those in the two images above., © Public Domain. [43]
Looking West on Via Dom Giovanni Verita, the station building is just beyond the red lorry cab. The three roofs of the furthest buildings are the same as those in the three images above. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking West across the bridge on Don Giovanni Verita, Voltri, early in the 20th century, © Public Domain. [54]
The same location, looking West. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking West along Via Carlo Camozzini, Voltri in the mid-20th century, © Public Domain. [57]
Looking West from a very similar location on Via Carlo Camozzini. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

The tram depot was in Voltri close to the mouth of the River Cerusa (below).

The bridge in this image spans the mouth of the Cerusa River. The photograph looks East towards Genoa. The building just beyond the river on a platform above the beach is the Tram Depot. There are clearly tram tracks running towards the camera which suggests that the line’s terminus was to the West of the Cerusa River. [56]
The same view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The tram depot in Voltri seen from the Northeast. The bridge over the River Cerusa is off to the right o, © Public Domain. [55]

We have followed the Western Network as far as we can along the coast. We now need to look at the line(s) of the Western network which ran up the valley of the River Polcevera from Sampierdarena.

To do this we need to return to Piazza Vittorio Veneto in Sampierdarena.

The Western Network and Val Polcevera (the Valley of the River Polcevera)

The lines to the North left Piazza Vittorio Veneto at its Western end, passing immediately through an underpass under the FS Standard Gauge railway.

In the 19th century the route was known as ‘Via Vittorio Emanuele’. In the early years of the 20th century the road was renamed ‘Via Umberto 1’. In 1935, the city gave the road the name ‘Via Milite Ignoto’ (the Unknown Soldier). This decision appears to have been short-live as very soon the road was divided into two lengths, the more southerly length becoming ‘Via Martiri Fascisti’, the remaining length, ‘Via delle Corporazioni’. After the end of Word War Two renaming again occurred. In 1945 the names which continue to be used in the 21st century were chosen – ‘Via Paolo Reti’ and ‘Via Walter Fillak ‘. Fillak and Reti were partisans in WW2. [59][66]

A view from above … This is Piazza (Via) Vittorio Emanuele seen from the West. The tram tracks can be seen heading away through the underpass in the foreground. [75]

The route of this part of the old tramway network begins at this rail underpass (where the street is now named, ‘Piazza Nicolo Montano’, having once been Via Nino Bixio), [65] before running along Via Paolo Reti and then Via Walter Fillak. Just beyond the underpass the railway station access left the road on the left. The first old postcard views below show this location.

Two pixelated, low definition images showing the bottom end of what was Via Umberto 1. One the left in both images is the incline leading to the Sampierdarena Railway Station forecourt. [59]
A tram sits at a stop at Piazza Montano. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group by Annamaria Patti on 22nd May 2022. [3]
Three further postcard views, of better quality, of the bottom end of Via Umberto 1, (c) Public Domain. [59][62][63]
The view to the Northeast from the rail underpass in 2024. The station approach is on the left. The old tramway curved round to the left below the station approach’s retaining wall. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Just a little further along the old tram route. The retaining wall on the left supports the station approach road. The tramway ran on along what is now Via Paolo Reti. For some distance the road was flanked by a retaining wall supporting the FS standard-gauge railway. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

The adjacent Google satellite image shows roads over which the old tramway ran. In the bottom right is Piazza Nicolo Montano. It is also possible to make out the station approach ramp which has a number of cars parked on it. In the immediate vicinity of the passenger railway station, railway buildings can be seen separating Via Paolo Reti from the railway but very soon the road and the railway run side-by-side with the railway perhaps 2 to 3 metres above the road. Via Eustachio Degola passes under the railway just to the North of the station buildings. Towards the top of the satellite image, Via Paolo Reti can be seen turning away from the railway wall. [Google Maps, December 2024]

Via Paolo Reti (the former Via Umberto 1) turns away from the railway wall which is now much lower than it was near the station buildings. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Via Umberto 1, looking North from the bend visible in the photograph above where the road leaves the side of the railway, (c) Public Domain. [68]
Via Paolo Reti (once Via Umberto 1) at the same location as the monochrome image above. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

The monochrome image below purports to show Piazza San Marino. As far as I can work out the piazza was historically, ‘Piazza Vittorio Emanuele III’ and later renamed for another partisan from World War 2 – ‘Piazza Ricardo Masnata’.

A relatively low quality image of Piazza San Marino and Via Umberto 1. The piazza later became Piazza Ricardo Masnata. This view looks North with a tram visible on the left, (c) Public Domain. [64]
Piazza Ricardo Masnata, looking North. There is little to link this image from 2024 with the monochrome image above, other than the alignment of the roads and the shape of the piazza. However, at the centre of this image is a lower building which also appears in the monochrome image. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Via Umberto 1 looking North from what became Piazza Ricardo Masnata, (c) Public Domain. [67]
The same location in the 21st century. [G
Via Umberto 1, now Via Walter Fillak with a tram heading towards Genoa. [69]
The same location on Via Walter Fillak in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

The line from Sampierdarena ran towards Certosa where, once Galleria Certosa was completed, it met the line through the tunnel.

A satellite view of Certosa. Trams approached the centre of Certosa from the South-southwest on Via Walter Fillak, from the Southeast on Via Beedetto Brin and from the Northnorthwest on Via Germano Jori. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Galleria Certosa can be seen in the right background of this image. The tram is turning towards the underpass beneath the FS standard-gauge railway, © Public Domain. [72]
A similar view in the 21st century. The Metro station at Brin is at the high level. [Google Streetview, October 2020]
A tram has just passed under the railway (on Via Benedetto Brin) and is approaching the junction with Via Germano Jori (then Umberto 1) and Via Teresio Mario Canepari, © Collection of Stefano Finauri, Public Domain. [73]
A very similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
A mid-20th century postcard view, looking North from junction between Via Germano Jori and Via Teresio Mario Canepari. A tram is heading South along Via Germano Jori, © Public Domain. []
The same view in the 21st century, at the junction of Via Germano Jori, Via Teresio Mario Canepari and Via Benedetto Brin. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Piazza Errico Petrella looking South, Via Germaon Jori is on the left, Via Certosa on the right. A tram can be seen in the distance at the junction of Via Germano Jori with Via Benedetto Brin and Via Walter Fillak. [74]
Looking South from Piazza Errico Petrella with Via Germano Jori ahead and Via Certosa behind the white canopies to the right. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
A tram on Via Umberto 1 in Certosa. It is difficult to locate this photograph in the 21st century as much of the built environment has changed but it is most likely a view North from Piazza Errico Petrella, © Public Domain. [53]
This is a possible location for the monochrome image above. This view looks North from Piazza Errico Petrella, the street geometry is similar, but the buildings do not match. In Certosa, northbound and southbound traffic is separated. This is Via Germano Jori. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking South from the bridge over the River Torbella. The building on the right is the
Biblioteca Civica – Cervetto Rivarolo. Trams ran over this bridge and along Via Germano Jori which is the right fork in the road ahead. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking North from the bridge over the Torbella river which separated Certosa from Rivarolo (Superior). This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Luca Dasso on 17th December 2020, (c) Public Domain. [76]
A tram at the same location in the early 20th century. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Robert Cito on 19th October 2023, (c) Public Domain. [78]
A similar view North from the bridge over the River Torbella in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
This is a 1905 photograph looking North on Via Gioachino Rossini close to its junction with Via alla Stazione di Rivarolo (on the left). This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Luca Dasso on 24th July 2018, (c) Public Domain. [81]
Continuing North through Rivarolo on what was still in the early years of the 20th century, Via Umberto 1. Tram No. 6 is heading for Bolzaneto. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Robert Cito on 18th October 2023. It is again difficult to accurately locate this image. A bridge similar to that shown on this photo remains but the landscape around it seems much altered, (c) Public Domain. [77]
This extract from a file based on openstreetmap.org shows the remaining length of the tramway, from Rivarolo through Bolzaneto and San Quirico to Pontedecimo, (c) Arbalete, and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [19]

The tramway followed Via Celesia through Rivarolo (Superior). Rivarolo and Via Celesia can be seen at the bottom of this extract from openstreetmap.org. [79]

This image from the early 20th century looks North along Via Celesia. Space on the street was clearly at a premium! [80]
Via Celesia in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

North of Via Celesia, the tramway ran along Via Rivarolo.

This postcard shows the junction at the North end of Via Celesia, circa. 1920s. Via Rivarolo is ahead. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Mario Vanni on 18th August 2019, (c) Public Domain. [82]
The smae location in the 21st century. [Google Streeetview, August 2024]
This next extract from openstreetmap.org shows Via Rivarolo entering bottom-left. Trams ran on into Teglia on Via Teglia and continued on to Bolzaneto (in the top-right of this extract) along Via Constantino Reta. [79]
This postcard view looks South along what is now Via Teglia (then Via Regina Margherita. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Elio Berneri on 19th October 2020, (c) Public Domain. [83]
A very similar view at the same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Car 906 in service on line 7 Caricamento – Pontedecimo, one of the longest of the UITE, is seen here running in Bolzaneto. The photograph was taken facing North. In the background you can see another Tramcar, as well as a third on the track in the opposite direction, (c) Public Domain. [84]
A similar North facing view in Bolzaneto in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
A tram waits at Piazza del Municipio in Bolzaneto. This image was shared by Mario Vanni on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group on 8th July 2021, (c) Public Domain. [85]
A very similat view of the same location in the 21st century. The road on which the bus is standing is now known as Via Pasquale Pastorino. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
A few hundred metres to the Northeast is the area known as ‘Bratte’. A tram waits in the mid-20th century to set off for Caricamento. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Roberto Della Rocca on 12th December 2020. [86]
A similar view at the same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

North of Bratte, Trams crossed the River Secca, a tributary of the Polcevera, following Via Ferriere Bruzzo and then continued North alongside the River Polcevera on Via San Quirico.

Tram No 79 leads a trailer car South on Via San Quirico in the first decades of the 20th century. It seems as though Ponte Tullio Barbieri can be seen behind the tram. This image was shared by Sergio De Nicolai on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group on 21st October 2018. [88]
A similar location on Via San Quirico in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, July 2022]

Trams passed under the FS Standard-gauge lines close to Ponte Tullio Barbieri. [Google Streetview, June 2022]
Trams ran on through the centre on San Quirico on Via San Quirico.
Before returning to the side of the river, passing under the railway again. [Google Streetview, July 2022]

The next length of the journey is the last. Trams terminated at Pontedecimo. [79]

A tram and trailercar on Lungo Polcevera in Pontedecimo close to Pontedecimo Railway Station, This image was taken looking South along the river bank and was shared by Giorgio Gioli on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group on 4th November 2020. [89]
This view looks South along the bank of the River Polcevera at a location similar to that in the image above. [Googler Streetview, January 2021]
The central piazza in Pontedecimo. The terminus of the tram service. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Roberto Cito on 29th October 2023. [87]
Trams terminated in Pontedecimo. [Google Streetview, July 2022]
The tram depot at Pontedecimo. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Alessandro Lombardo on 30th October 2019. [90]

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Genova (Genoa) Addendum – Light Rail & Modern Tramway, August, September & October 1995 – including La Guidovia del Santuario della Guardia

After completing a series of articles about Genova’s transport system at the end of 2024, beginning of 2025, I came across a series of three articles in the ‘Light Rail & Modern Tramway Journal’ dating from 1995. This article covers those three pieces. …

Written, 30 years ago, Barry Cross’ articles help us to engage with the changes to the transport systems in Genova over the decades.

Part 1: August 1995 – The Demise of the Old Tram Network and the Development of the Metro

Barry Cross says that “as far as tramway enthusiasts are concerned, the city lost most of its attractions in the 1960s, when the remaining interurban tram routes were abandoned, and public transport became synonymous with travelling by diesel bus. … Nevertheless, the curious topography of the city, which to all intents and purposes is built on a narrow coastal enclave, has meant that some rather curious forms of public transport have survived. Flying the tramway flag during the lean years has been the Granarolo rack tramway, whose two cars resemble both tramway and funicular vehicles. … Then there are the two conventional funiculars: the Sant’Anna and Zecca-Righi, which provide rapid access from the port to the residential districts in the hills above. Finally, the Genova-Casella electric light railway offers one of the most scenic and exhilarating rides to be found anywhere on the European continent.” [1: p251]

In the years prior to 1995, the municipality once again “decided to embrace tramway technology, in a desperate effort to improve public transport because of the severe deterioration in traffic conditions. The result [was] the construction of an entirely new light metro, recreating in part the coastal tramway abandoned in the 1960s. Despite only three stations having so far [in 1995] opened, patronage of the line already exceed[ed] expectations.” [1: p251]

In May and June 1964, Modern Tramway carried a two-part article on the tramways and light railways of Genova by Joachim von Rohr. Barry Cross attempts, in his articles, to show developments in the city up to 1995. This will provide an opportunity to compare the situation in the mid-1990s with that in 2024/2025.

In the 1960s, many Italian cities felt the urge to ‘modernise’ their public transport systems, a term which all too often meant the closure of efficient, if rather run-down tramway networks. Genova was no exception. Unusually, it was the urban routes that closed first, these being abandoned in the late 1950s, although the interurban routes continued to operate (and decline) well into the 1960s. … The interurban system essentially consisted of four metre-gauge routes emanating from the central Genova Caricamento terminus. Two of the routes ran along the coast, one west to Voltri (16.9 km) and the other east to Nervi (approximately 12 km), while the other two served inland destinations, along the Polcevera valley to Pontedecimo (15.1 km) and to Prato (13.6 km), situated in the Bisagno valley.” [1: p251]

Cross continues: “On 25th May 1964, the so-called ponente route to Voltri was abandoned to the west of Sampierdarena, involving the withdrawal of seven separate services. Worse still, tram tracks in Via Francia were also lifted to permit construction of a connection with the strade soprelevata (elevated roadway), in which the municipal authorities had placed so much faith as a means of decongesting the city’s narrow and winding streets. … As a direct result of this, route 7 had to be cut back from Caricamento to Sampierdarena and route 26 entirely abandoned on 27th June. Furthermore, the survival of the Pontedecimo route had become ever more precarious given that its only connection to the rest of the system was henceforth via the Certosa tram tunnel.” [1: p251]

The Pontedecimo route survived until 1st October 1964. On that day, “tramway operation through the Certosa tunnel ceased. All remaining routes were replaced by motor buses on 27th December 1966, the last tram to run in public service being car 935 on route 12 to Prato.” [1: p251]

By the 1960s, trams in the 700 and 800 series were the oldest on the network, dating from 1931 and 1934, both bogie cars. All were very much at the end of their working lives and were the first to be scrapped. Two of the 700 series trams are shown below. The first is No. 762, the second is No. 766. Trams No. 751-800 were bidirectional bogie-cars built in 1931. These were known as ‘long Casteggini’ type trams. [4][5]

The 800 series were numbered from 801 to 820 (UITE) were bidirectional bogie-cars built by Piaggio in 1932. These were known as ‘short Casteggini’ type trams. [4] Tram No. 821 is shown below at the tram terminus at Bratte in Bolzaneto. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group by Enrico Pinna on 14th October 2023. [6]

There were three types of articulated car on the network at that time. Cross says that “the most numerous of these were the 78 cars of the 1600 series, which were single-ended and the result of rebuilding from older stock, while the 15 cars of the 1700 were double-articulated vehicles ‘two-rooms-and-a-bath’ variety, also rebuilt from older cars in 1954-5, Maintenance of all of these cars was poor in their final years in service. … Genova’s most modern interurban cars were the six-axle 1100 series, built in 1942, of which there were only four examples, and the streamlined bogie cars of the 900 series. Both were bi-directional, with the articulated cars carrying two trolleys. The 900-series cars were the backbone of the interurban service and predominantly worked routes 10, 11, 16, 24 and 26. Both series were well maintained. with an eye to resale once the interurban network had been closed.” [1: p251]

Details of these four tram types can be found here. [7]

It was hoped that first, Beograd and then Zagreb might purchase the 900 series, even Madrid seems to have made enquiries, but “two and a half years after the Genova tramways closed, [the 900 series] cars were still to be found standing in their depots and were eventually broken up, with no buyer having been found.” [1: p251]

Cross recorded that “two cars, 962 and 973, were preserved, and in 1989 a scheme emerged to use them to provide passenger services on a metre-gauge heritage tramway, linking Piazza Caricamento and Piazza Ferrari along a pedestrianised Via San Lorenzo. However, in true Italian style, nothing [had] yet been decided.” [1: p252] I have not been able to find any evidence that the heritage service was brought into operation.

Cross goes on to say that “Articulated cars 1101-4 were sold to the Neuchâtel tramway (TN) in Switzerland, with car 1104 arriving on 29th March 1966 for a set of preliminary trials. These were so successful that TN bought all four and put them into service on route 5 in Autumn 1966. The Genova trolley poles were replaced by pantographs, and heating also had to be fitted, since this had been totally unnecessary in the balmy Mediterranean climate.” [1: p252]

Interurban trams were replaced by FS multiple-unit, rapid-transit trains along the coast between Nervi and Voltri or Pontedecimo in order to reach the centre of Genova. Withdrawal of the city centre trams “left Genova with 130 trolleybuses as its only means of electric urban public transport, but even these eventually succumbed to replacement by diesel bus. However, as time passed, it became ever more obvious that a huge mistake had been made in withdrawing the trams. … The elevated roadway did not prove the panacea that its planners had wished for, while motor buses did nothing to improve the traffic flow … their stops on Genova’s narrow, winding and steep roads effectively blocked the flow of all traffic!” [1: p252]

The municipality decided to reopen the Certosa tram tunnel for use by diesel buses. This required forced air ventilation to maintain reasonable air quality in the tunnel.  It “reopened for bus operation on 1st October 1967, although width restrictions made it impossible for two-way working. … Instead, a token block system had to be introduced, with buses passing through the tunnel in alternate directions at nine-minute intervals. This resulted in a serious capacity problem during the rush hour, which could be overcome only by sending convoys of three instead of single buses through the tunnel. … Unfortunately, the tunnel’s ventilation system simply could not cope with the upsurge in exhaust emissions. Indeed, the Il Lavoro’ newspaper shocked the general public when it featured a photograph of a bus on route 10 leaving the tunnel with its driver clearly seen wearing a gas mask!” [1: p252]

Other solutions had to be found. “In the 1920s, Genova had been tempted to undertake construction of a conventional heavy metro, influenced by the developing trend in some other European cities. However. successful implementation of the proper scheme had been undermined by its daunting cost.” [1: p252]

A study by the Marron Institute of Urban Management looking at possible urban transit solutions considered a number of Italian cities including Genova. It comments:  “Despite several attempts in the interwar period to develop metro rail networks in Rome, Milan, Genoa and Naples, the first proper metro line opened only in the mid-1950s. Metro construction finally gained momentum during the postwar years, characterized by fast urbanization and dramatic economic growth, but was hindered by the lack of a national transit policy, which finally emerged in the late 1980s, and by an essentially car-oriented transport policy.” [8: p15]

The idea of Metro for Genova was resurrected in 1972. “Trial borings were undertaken as a prelude to the construction of an 18-km two-line metro system. Ironically, the first line would run along the coast from Multedo in the west to Sturla in the east. duplicating in part the withdrawn coastal tramway! … The economics of building even a single cross-city line with, at most, two branches, proved beyond the financial capability of a city with a population of only 800,000. The decision not to proceed with the scheme was inevitable, leaving the city’s transport planners with little option but to continue with the status quo until a viable alternative could be found. … In the early 1970s, an alternative plan [was] put forward … to reuse old railway tunnels abandoned in the post-war period to provide a metro-style suburban rail service. The success of this scheme relied upon FS permitting metro cars to share tracks with conventional trains on the existing harbour line. But this it was not prepared to do. … After a change of political control in 1975, the Comunale di Genova set up a joint FS-AMT (Azienda Municipalizzata Trasporti) commission to examine the possibility of reusing previously-abandoned railway infrastructure to provide some sort of metro service. … A visit was paid to the Grazie tunnel, linking Brignole with Piazza Cavour, to assess its suitability, and also to the former Certosa tramway tunnel.” [1: p252]

Use of the Certosa tunnel by diesel buses had proved to be a failure. Instead of converting it for use by trolleybuses “it was proposed to build a Metropolitana Leggera (light metro) linking Rivarolo with Brignole by means of the tunnel. … Phase 1 would involve the construction of the Rivarolo Principe section. A reserved alignment would be built along Via Iori and Via Canepari, from where the trams would run through the tunnel to Dinegro. Here, traffic-light priority would allow the cars to cross Via Venezia and move to a further surface reservation along Via Buozzi. Finally, at Principe FS station, there would be a turning circle formed by Via Adua and Via San Benedetto. The Board of Directors of the AMT gave the project its full backing, with the Comunale following suit shortly afterwards. On 24th February 1981, the municipality, doubtless with an eye on the forthcoming June elections, approved an ITL 8000 M grant for the rehabilitation of the Certosa tunnel. although inflation eventually pushed this up to ITL 11 000 M. The central government also became involved, pledging investment worth ITL 165 000 M to build the entire 7.645-km Rivarolo-Brignole line. Ansaldo Trasporti was subsequently awarded a turnkey contract to both build and equip the line.” [1: p252-253]

Cross continues: “On 8th February 1982, the Certosa tunnel was closed to bus traffic for the last time. …  In all, 540 days were spent on rehabilitating the tunnel structure, although much more work was required before tram services could start. … In 1985, work on the project proceeded very slowly, while some drastic changes were made to the eventual alignment. In the revised plan, none of the surface sections of the line had survived. From Rivarolo to Brin, the line would be on an elevated alignment, crossing the double-track FS railway line via the Compasso park. Trams would then pass through the Certosa tunnel and cross under Via Venezia and Piazza Dinegro via a new 300-m cut-and-cover subway, continuing to Principe entirely in subway. The Principe-Brignole section would still run on the dock railway as planned, then via the Grazie tunnel to Brignole FS.” [1: p253]

The municipality set a “theoretical capacity of 36 000 passengers per hour and direction [for] the line, whose trains would draw current from a 750-volt de overhead contact wire. However, curves of 150-m radius would have to be negotiated, and rolling stock would have to be designed to operate on tunnel gradients as steep as 4%. The track design would require sleepers to be enclosed in rubber sleeves to absorb noise and vibration, following successful use of such a system in Wien (Vienna).” [1: p253]

This was a much heavier metro than had originally been planned, and would be both more expensive and slower to implement – the first phase costing ITL 1150,000 M and taking 9 years to build! It was hoped to start passenger services by the end of 1989, in the end it opened in June 1990. The first phase was 2.6 km in length and had cost ITL 100,000 M/km! The line proved to be very popular. “One and a half years later, 3.5 million passengers had used the line. … It had been hoped that the line would be extended from Dinegro to San Giorgio in 1992. However, more delays ensured that only the 900m Dinegro-Principe section would be ready in time. This was duly inaugurated on 27th July 1992, and was expected to increase substantially the initial line’s patronage, since Principe is Genova’s main long-distance railway terminus and a new suburban station, San Tomaso, was being built nearby. A further two ‘metro’ sets were put into service to cope with the expected increase in traffic.” [1: p253]

Cross was writing in 1995 and reported that work was ongoing on the next length of the Metro. In the end, work on that next section of the line to Caricamento was not completed until 2003. The next section to De Ferrari (underground station at Piazza De Ferrari) was completed in 2005, and that to Brignole in 2012. [9][10]

More about the Metro can be found here. [11]

Part 2: September 1995 – Casella Line Begins to Realise Tourist Potential

Cross notes the significant delays which affected the first scheme promoted by the ‘Societédi Ferrovie Elettriche Liguri‘ (SFEL) in 1915, which meant that It was not “until 1926 that construction was able to start on the metre-gauge line, which was to be electrified at 2.4 kV DC by the ‘Societé Ernesto Breda, which won contracts to supply the overhead and sub-stations, as well as the initial rolling stock.” [2: p295]

He also comments on the use of the contractor’s steam locomotive “to power the first train between Genova and Casella Deposito on 24th June 1929; then, on 31st August, the operating company laid on a special train for the Archbishop of Genova’s pastoral visit to Pino, with a regular passenger service starting the following day. However,” he says, “the line’s official inauguration had to wait until 28th October 1929.” [2: p295]

The line was notable for 60-metre radius curves and maximum gradients of 4.5%, imposed on engineers by the need to cross steep gradients between the Bisagno, Polcevera and Scrivia valleys. cross continues: “A non-counterweighted catenary was preferred over most of the line, although a simple transversal suspension overhead sufficed in stations, depot area and between the upper terminus and the depot. Very light 27 kg/m rail was standard throughout. The initial fleet of Breda vehicles operated by SFEL was:

  • 3 Bo-Bo motor baggage cars (001-003) rated at 270 kW, featuring the novel Breda-Somaini energy recuperation system;
  • 4 3rd-class bogie trailers (50-53);
  • 3 1st/3rd-class trailers (20-22);
  • 16 assorted goods wagons.

The Casella Deposito-Casella Paese section, originally planned in 1930, eventually opened in 1952, crossing the Scrivia river via a new combined road/rail bridge. Trains shared the road with cars, and the 1 km line terminated in mid-highway on the village outskirts.” [2: p295]

Cross comments that, throughout its life, the line made use, primarily, of second-hand rolling stock. “The first items acquired as early as 1935. In that year, three railcars came from the Montebelluna-Asolo and Montebelluna-Valdobbiadene lines operated by the former ‘Societé Veneta’, which ceased trading in 1931. These vehicles had been built at Padova by MAN in 1913 for operation at 975 V DC, but had to be modified at Genova. They had distinctive match-boarded sides, maximum-traction trucks, and retained original fleet numbers 054-056. With only two motors per car, they were rather slow, particularly with trailers.” [2: p295]

Cross notes that “World War II did little permanent damage, although rolling stock was worn out after almost continuous use evacuating families from Genova city while under bombardment. The Government Commission, which assumed managerial responsibility for the line in 1949, acquired supplementary stock from the 950-mm ‘Sangritana’ light railway (SFAA), almost totally destroyed in the war.” [2: p295] Of these, two electric locomotives were re-gauged, they were numbered 28 & 29, had 360-kW motors which “drew power via two pantograph-style bow collectors, one leading and one trailing, and could reach speeds of 50 km/h. They kept their original numbers when put on the Casella line in the 1950s and later acquired bus-type seats for 16 passengers.” [2: p295]

In January 1963, the line acquired significant amounts of stock and fixtures of the Ferrovia Elettrica Val de Fiemme (FEVF), which operated the Ora-Predazza metre-gauge line “three Bo-Bo baggage locomotives [B51-52, A2] driven by 310 kW motors and capable of a maximum speed of 60 km/h; three three-bogie rail cars … which drew power via a single rhomboidal pantograph to feed a 310 kW motor permitting speeds of 60 km/h; 36 bogie-trailers, of which C101-2 were long vehicles and C103-6 short; and … several goods wagons.” [2: p295] Of the fixtures, “the FEVF provided two static converters, replacing the FGC’s original generating equipment. These were installed at Vicomorasso and raised the line voltage from 2.4 kV DC to 2.6 kV. Unfortunately, this new equipment did not permit recuperation of energy and resulted in withdrawal of all earlier rolling stock, except that acquired from Sangritana lines.” [2: p295]

Furthermore, “in 1968, the recently-closed Spoleto-Norcia (SSIF) electric light railway yielded four 950-mm gauge railcars, built by Carminati & Toselli/TIBB in 1926 and later rebuilt by Casaltra/TIBB in 1957 with new electrical equipment, with 360-kW motors permitting maximum speeds of 60 km/h. They arrived at Genova in 1970 and entered revenue service a year later, the delay being for regauging. … Although originally numbered A1-4, they were altered to A4-7 to avoid conflict with earlier-acquired FEVF stock.” [2: p295]

Cross talks of the line struggling through the last 40 years of the 20th century. “When Joachim von Rohr visited the FGC in 1963, he noted Casella depot was particularly run down. Although renewal of the ballast was taking place, the use of short, not welded rails, plus a tendency to bend rail at joints, made for some eventful running. … On 17th January 1974, railcar A3 was derailed on poor track. On 31st October, a judge ordered closure on safety grounds, so urgent repairs were undertaken to permit a limited reopening between Genova and Sant’Antonino, and Campi SL and Casella in early 1975. Full operation resumed on 2nd March, with railcars now fitted with speedometers. … Money was not forthcoming to repair damaged A3, and the poor mechanical state of locomotive 28 also prompted its withdrawal. However money was made available to replace original rail with heavier 36-kg/m lengths, a task not completed until 1979. Maximum speeds were raised slightly, to reduce journey times from 1 hr to 55 min. In 1980-1, Casella Paese terminus was relocated from street to reserved track, and a new depot built at Vicomorasso. … In early 1990, Ansaldo Trasporti was awarded a contract to upgrade FGC installations. Overhead was replaced at a cost of ITL 5500 million, with original masts replaced by standard fitments. Voltage was raised to 3 kV DC, and a 1987 government grant allowed replacement of two sets of manual points in stations by electric ones.” [2: p295]

A gradual programme of rolling stock modernisation began in the early 1970s, “two-tone blue livery replaced the original red and cream, replaced in turn in 1980 by brown and cream. This new livery was to grace nine trailers rebodied by the Mantovana-based company ‘Gleismac’ in the early 1980s. However, C103-4 were not included, whilst C22 had already been rebuilt into a bar car at the end of the 1960s. Then, in 1985, damaged railcar A3 was completely rebuilt with a newly-designed body, chopper-controlled electronics from EEA of Genova, and two pantographs. At the same time, two Faiveley double-bracket pantographs were experimentally fitted to B51 and A4. … ‘Gleismac’ also supplied a BB diesel-hydraulic locomotive for works trains and insurance against power failure. Built by Gmeinder of West Germany in 1964, it was sold to ‘Gleismac’ from the ‘Sudwestdeutsche Eisenbahn Gesellschaft’ (SWEG) in 1986, and is now numbered D1. More recently, the bogies of disused locomotives B51-2 have been used by ‘Firema-Cittadella’ to build two new electric railcars, identical in appearance to existing railcar A3. The first, A8, was handed over to the FGC on 28th June 1993, with A9 following on 28th October. Unlike A3, both new cars can operate in multiple.” [2: p 295-296] Writing in 1995, Cross expressed the hope that if new bogies could be found, B51 might return to traffic. As far as I can tell, this did not occur. He also noted that Ferrocarril Genova Casella (FGC) was planning to buy two entirely new railcars similar to A3, A8 and A9 and three new trailers with a baggage compartment and a lift for the disabled. Two were built in 1998 (A11 and A12).

Cross also suggests that FGC planned “to rebuild railcar Al, with only A2 to be left in its original Carminati & Toselli 1920s condition. Both [were] reported fitted with modernised bogies. As for the four ex-Spoleto-Norcia railcars, at least one [was to] be de-motored to become a trailer. A4 [had] been given a new coat of cream and brown, and trailer C21, rebuilt by ‘Gleismac’ in the early 1980s, a curious livery of cream and blue.” [2: p296]

More information about railcars on the line can be found here. [12]


Looking forward from late-1995, Cross anticipated the purchase by the FGC of surviving rolling-stock from the closed Rimini-San Marino light railway. That line was operational for only twelve years between 1932 and 1944. “A significant engineering feat of its time, it included seventeen tunnels, three bridges, and three viaducts to negotiate the steep terrain. During the Second World War, the line was bombed and closed, after which its tunnels sheltered refugees during the Battles of Rimini and San Marino. After the war, the railway was abandoned in favour of the SS72 state road, San Marino Highway, and Funivia di San Marino. … In 2012, an 800-metre (1⁄2-mile) section was reopened as a heritage railway in San Marino, running between Piazzale della Stazione and near Via Napoleone.The restored section comprises the original railway’s final horseshoe turn through the 502-metre (1,647-foot) Montale tunnel.” [13] Cross anticipated that the FGC would buy the “four electric railcars, five trailers and 14 wagons, most for revenue service in Genova,” [2: p296] that were not required for the planned heritage line.

Cross comments that the distance of the Genova terminus at Piazza Manin from the central area of the city, means that the walk is quite daunting in summer months, but an extension into the heart of the city would be impractical because of the difference in height between the city centre and Piazza Manin. The terminus is situated high above the Bisagno valley which means that passengers see some fine views of the city soon after leaving the station. In describing the route, Cross speaks of a long viaduct “at Sant’Antonino which has four 10-metre arches. Departing services climb Sunday me 271 m in 9 km to reach Trensasco, located at 364 m above sea level. The line is cut into a ledge on the valley wall and near Cappuccio runs around the so-called ‘Colombo curve’ over the Viminate slope. The sharp bends give an exhilarating ride and are testament to the fact that the line engineers chose to bend with valley contours and even enter side valleys to avoid major tunnelling and expensive viaducts. … The line passes only through areas of sparse population, and former station buildings are so dilapidated it is often impossible to make out their names. Just before arriving at Campi (10 km), a small tunnel takes the line away from the main valley and shifts interest to the other side of the line. At Campi itself, up and down trains generally pass, and the guard of the ascending train has to advise control of his train’s arrival via a lineside telephone.” [2: p296]

Having arrived at 365 m above sea level, the line then descends towards Torrazza (11 km) and Vicomorasso (15 km), where the only sub-station is located and a spur line gives access to a small car shed. Withdrawn rolling stock has also been dumped here in recent years, while the station also provides passing facilities. Thereafter, the real assault begins and the line passes through some spectacular mountain scenery by means of loops and a spiral tunnel, climbing 100 m in a mere 2km before emerging into the Polcevera basin, with its notable chestnut and acacia woods. For one brief instant it is possible to see tracks below at three different levels! Another passing point is the small halt of Sant’Olcese Tullo.” [2: p296]

Cross continues his anecdotal account of a journey North along the line. He says that “the line continues to climb, although less dramatically in the mountainous terrain. There is one particularly dramatic hairpin bend near Sant Olcese, and near the following halt of Busalletta, fine views can be obtained of Monte Sella, 811 m. The railway summit is reached at Crocetta halt, 458 m above sea level and 22 km from Genova. It is possible to see the parallel road, which has done much to abstract traffic away from the line in recent years. There are also many small level crossings along the length of the line; the insignificant ones remain unprotected, while major crossing points are guarded by either automatic half-barriers and warning tones or simply flashing lights and audible tones.” [2: p296]

Casella Deposito (24 km) is just before the main depot site and has only an anonymous raised concrete platform to betray its whereabouts. The main line leads into a three track fan at the depot, where maintenance equipment is located and vehicle overhauls carried out. Nearby is the site of a quarry which supplied the FGC’s ballast. Appreciable goods traffic (now all lost), led to a ramp being built at Piazza Manin station to permit stone to be directly off-loaded from wagons into lorries in the street below.” [2: p296]

Trains must reverse to gain the Casella village line, sometimes achieved with a second railcar. On the last leg of the journey, the 1952-built combined road and rail bridge has the railway track on reserved and fenced aligament to one side. Thereafter, it is less than 1 km to the terminus, on the outskirts of the small village of Casella. Two-track Paese station is unmanned, although there is a small bar to welcome thirsty passengers. … The village has no special tourist attractions other than a few bars and restaurants, all mentioned in the FGC timetable. However, the cool mountain air makes a change from the oppressive heat of the coast, and an important magnet for day-trippers.” [2: p296]

Cross notes his sources for his article of which two are articles in the predecessor journal to the Light Railway and Modern TramwayModern Tramway. He quotes the news pages of that magazine from 1962 onwards and a specific article by Joachim von Rohr. [14] He also consulted an article in Mondo Ferrovario. [15]

As a separate note within his article, Cross comments on what he records as ‘The FGC’s First Serious Efforts to Attract New Traffic‘. …

At the start of the 1970s, the FGC began its first serious attempts to attract excursion traffic. While Genova municipal authorities were doing their best to dissuade unnecessary car journeys in the city, the light railway offered free parking at Genova Piazza Manin station to holders of return tickets. … This certainly offered scope for development, given the dramatic and beautiful countryside and ancient churches and forts within reasonable walking distance of stations.

This initiative has developed quite dramatically, and the policy of the FGC is now oriented towards the tourist market. It has put together a Belle Epoque train, formed of ‘heritage’ stock. The three-car train made its inaugural run on 5th November 1989 and is powered by the oldest surviving electric locomotive in Italy, No. 29 of the former Sangritana railway. … Passenger accommodation consists of ex-Val di Fiemme trailers C101 and C104, which retain original wooden furniture and bronze and brass fittings, accompanied by bar car No. C22. A major overhaul on No. C22 was undertaken in 1990, considerably upgrading its interior and also increasing capacity. … In expectation of an increase in visitors for the 1992 Columbus anniversary celebrations, the historic train had a regular Saturday working during June, July and August. The train has proved popular with both wedding and communion parties.

Near both Campi and Sardorella stations, the FGC has created playgrounds and picnic areas; the facilities at Sardorella can only be reached via the FGC. In 1990-1, the FGC began a bicycle transport service using a specially converted wagon; alternatively, customers can hire bicycles at cheap rates in Casella village.” [2: p296]

The images below show Locomotive D1 which operates the tourist train. …

Locomotive D1 responsible for a single coach. [18]

And here with two coaches. [18]

And here, escaping from a tunnel portal. [19]

Locomotive D1 was built in 1964 on behalf of the German railways by the manufacturer Gmeinder & Co. by adapting the MaK V100 standard-gauge locomotive to metre gauge, it was numbered V52 902 (later 252 902) and used on the 28 km long Mosbach-Mudau metre-gauge line. When it’s service on that line came to an end (2nd June 1973), it was first converted to standard-gauge by Gmeinder and used by Sudwestdeutsche Eisenbahngesellschaft (SWEG) which put it to work on the Breisach-Endingen-Riegel line (numbered VL46-01). In 1986, it was sold to the Gleismac company which converted it to metre-gauge and then sold it to the FGC. It was used to haul construction and passenger trains during the renovation of the overhead line. It was then set aside at Casella Deposito for over 10 years until in 2008 it was sent to Monopoli where it was rebuilt by 2014 and it returned to service on the line in November 2015.” [12][16][17]

Sadly, when we stayed in Genova in November 2024, the line was not operational and undergoing significant maintenance.

Part 3: October 1995 – Granarolo, Funiculars and the Guidovia

Cross’ third article about Genova begins by looking at the rack railway which ran from Piazza Principe, adjacent to Genova’s principal railway station to the small hilltop community of Granarolo. … Cross says: “The project was approved on 15th February 1896 and the line opened as an electric rack tramway on 1st January 1901, although the SGFM subsequently passed into liquidation on 2nd March 1902. Management of the line was then transferred to the Societé De Bernardi & Co (DBC), but this lasted only until 1907, when the concession passed to one Luigi Parodi, a former director of DBC. Upon his death in 1918, the municipality assumed control of the line, overhauled it and handed day-to-day management over to the Consorzio Nazionale Cooperative Combattenti, which stayed in control until 30th November 1934. On the following day, the Azienda Autonoma Autobus became the new owner of the line, this being then absorbed by the Unione Italiana Tranvie Elettriche! Despite the bewildering number of owners in the early years, the line has somehow managed to remain open ever since with no change in ownership.” [3: p333]

The 1.1-km tramway was built to the unusual gauge of 1200 mm, entirely on reservation. The lower station is at Salita di San Rocco (24 m above sea level) and the upper at Granarolo (220 m). The maximum gradient is about 23.5%. The Riggenbach rack system was chosen, with the rack at railhead level. Rail came from the Ilva company, 21 kg/m in 10.5 m lengths. … In 1950, the line was slightly extended at the upper station to permit a combined depot and workshop to be built. The lower station was also rebuilt, but still contains the inscription Ferrovia Principe Granarolo. The lower terminus is just to the west of Principe FS station and was built between two long tunnels. The lower part of the line runs through the city’s busy San Rocco district. At the passing loop, there is a station for ascending cars only. Beyond, the line has been laid directly on the slope of the Granarolo hill.” [3: p333]

Cross reports that: “The earliest recorded rolling stock was rebuilt in 1929 by Piaggio of Genova with CGE electrical equipment and two 38-kW Ansaldo traction motors. The bodies are unusual, with longitudinal seating, stepped floors and an inclined roof at the upper end, not unlike funicular cars. The two cars are 7.8 m long, 1.9 m wide and have four external doors, two per platform, and two interior doors. Service speed is 7 km/h, both ascending and descending, and capacity is 45 passengers. … The tramway uses a 550 V dc overhead contact wire, with current supplied from a sub-station which also supplied the urban trams. Each car has two trolleys, although during the day descending cars require no current, since the main braking system does not use the trolley; cars descending at night are obliged to raise one trolley to provide on-board illumination. … An interesting safety feature that persisted until recently was the fitting of two small wheels to the lower end of each car to extend the wheelbase and prevent their overturning in the event of an emergency stop. At the end of each journey, the driver wound up a counterweight, to activate an emergency braking system. This unusual device required the driver to keep his hand on a special wheel to hold off the brakes while the car was in motion. The cars had a conventional rheostatic brake which effectively operated on the cogwheel. Since there was no moveable paintwork, the cars were also fitted with double-flanged wheels on my new side and unplanned broad rollers on the other to permit negotiation over the midway passing place.” [3: p333]

Cross continues: “When both the urban and suburban tramways closed, the municipality had to make a decision on the rack line. Rather than scrap a substantial tourist asset, it was decided to undertake a major overhaul of the line and also rebuild the first of the two tramcar-type vehicles. From August 1975 to July 1976, services were suspended while all the rail was renewed and the two cars lost some of their idiosyncratic features. Two-tone green livery was replaced by orange. … In 1981, the service was modified to reflect completion of a parallel road, which at last made it possible for the AMT to put on a parallel bus service. The rack tram now [in 1995] runs every 30 minutes and its 15-minute journey time normally requires only one car, the other being stationed either at the upper terminus or near the Via Bari halt, where there is an inspection pit.” [3: p333]

Cross notes that “The Granarolo rack tramway has always suffered from a lack of traffic. In the early 1960s, it only carried 1000-1200 passengers per day and, today [in 1995] the situation is little changed. However, long-term plans for the line envisage its extension down to the coast and also further up into the mountain, where it will connect with the Genova-Casella light railway, rerouted to serve the planned upper terminus. … Older plans proposed converting the line into a funicular, reducing the current four staff to three, even two if the whole line were automated. However, in 1989, consultants MTC-Italia proposed upgrading the line whilst maintaining it as a rack tramway, suggesting replacement of the Riggenbach system by ‘something easier to maintain’ and widening the gauge to 1435mm.” [3: p333]

Cross reported that plans would have included “two new standard-gauge bogie cars, 24.5 m long and 2.2 m wide, with a maximum permitted axle load of 8 tonnes. Each car would accommodate 36 seated and 172 standing passengers. An acceleration of 1 m/s² was proposed, with a surprisingly high maximum speed of 75 km/h. The traction supply would have to be upgraded to 750 V DC. Although approved by the AMT in November 1990, no finance [had] yet been released to enable it to be implemented. In 1994, both cars were painted in red, bringing their livery into line with that [of] the two urban funiculars.” [3: p333]

Wikipedia notes that “In 2002, car 2 was sent away for an overhaul, but the bankruptcy of the original contractor and the involvement of a replacement in an alleged bribery scandal meant that the overhaul was not completed and the car returned to the line until March 2019. The overhaul included the replacement of the car floor, lighting, safety systems, electric drive, air conditioning and a new driver’s seat. Between 2002 and 2019, service was provided by car 1 operating alone. AMT now [2019] plans to use the rebuilt car to double the service frequency to every 15 minutes. ” [21]

Forward to 2024/2025 and our visit to Genova in November 2024. … When we were in Genova, we found this rack railway closed for maintenance work. Fabio Canessa reported in 20th May 2024 [20] on endless inconvenience for the inhabitants of Genova, with the line to Granarolo to be closed for major works for 2 years and the principality still waiting for news on an additional car for the line. [The notes from his report below have translated into English by Google Translate.]

Canessa noted that a series of interventions that would “force the closure of the system between the valley terminus and the stop on Via Bari for the entire duration of the construction site. …  It [would] involve replicating the same interventions carried out in 2012 on the upstream section. … The project, includes the consolidation of the historic walls, which are no longer up to standard, the creation of a lateral walkway to allow passengers to move away safely in the event of a breakdown, a sort of overflow pipe that runs parallel to the railway and discharges the water collected by the canal, the reconstruction of the pylons with the same look as the upper section and the reconstruction of the overhead line. …In addition, the stop on Via Centurione , which is currently unusable on the downstream side, will be fixed.” [20]

For the works, just over 2 million euros [were] allocated by the Region under an agreement with the Ministry of Infrastructure dating back three years. However, these resources are not yet available to AMT [on 20th May 2024], …the contract is being awarded, … but …. the works cannot be assigned until the Region … [provides] the money. The situation should be unblocked by June [2024] so that the construction site can be opened in the summer. In the meantime, the expropriations are being defined , which will concern small portions of private land necessary to move back the pylons and make room for the walkway.” [20]

The bottom line, for the residents of San Teodoro and Granarolo who often have no alternatives to the rack railway except walking, is that until 2026 the service will be limited to the via Bari-Granarolo section . Initially there was talk of 12-18 months, then the forecasts worsened. Unfortunately not all the work can be done at the same time, safety must be guaranteed.” [20]

The same section of the rack railway was closed for six months in 2021 to replace the tracks, sleepers, pylon plinths and also part of the contact line. The odyssey began in the early 2000s with the start of restyling work  on one of the two cars , a story that lasted almost twenty years. … Speaking of carriages, it is not yet certain what the timing will be for the third one: the Region had allocated 3.5 million euros for the construction.  … The contract was awarded to SVI of Lucignano (Arezzo) with a contractual expiry date set for September 2028. Even in this case, however, the Region must first unlock the necessary resources.” [20]

The Principe – Granarolo Rack Railway. [22]

The Zecca Righi Funicular

Cross tells us that plans to build “the Zecca Righi rack-braked funicular were first brought to the attention of the Genova public by a Mr Bucher on 30th June 1891. This was to start in Piazza della Zecca and proceed northwards in tunnel for 700 m. A station at Carnonara would have public access in an open shaft at 348 metres, while Montegalletto station was to be located at the upper entrance to the tunnel. Here, a transfer would be made to a second line, 820 m long and built entirely above ground. This would feature two intermediate stations, at Fossato and San Simone, with the upper terminus situated at the Chiappe wall on Righi mountain, from where tremendous views can be obtained of the Bisagno valley.” [3: p333]

Cross notes that Abt rack braking was preferred. ABT rack braking utilises two or even three different rack profiles, each half offset from each other. Trackopedia says that, “The tooth spacing is larger than with the other rack systems (120 mm). The advantage is that the profiles are always installed offset, so there are no full joints. Due to the low thickness of the profiles, they can be fitted or rotated much more easily by hand, which makes maintenance easier. In the curve, the outer profile should theoretically be longer. With short profiles, the difference in length is equalized at the joint.” [23]

Initially, a 900-mm track gauge was chosen for the line, “but this was later changed to metre gauge. The project was given the go-ahead and construction of what was classed as a secondary railway was begun. The upper line opened on 30th April 1895, while the steeper gradients encountered on the lower line delayed its opening until 13th February 1897.” [3: p333]

The two lines gave trouble-free operation for the next 70 years, but were rebuilt into a single funicular during a much-needed modernisation programme instigated by AMT, the new owner. Bell of Luzern undertook the conversion, with two high-capacity metal-bodied cars replacing the original wooden rolling stock. The new funicular cars had rigid suspension and driving gear consisted of 2 x 125-kW motors, permitting a speed of 4.4 m/s. Each car could accommodate 100 passengers, restricting the maximum one-way traffic flow to 400 passengers per hour, with a 15-minute journey time.” [3: p333-334]

Cross continues: “A second modernisation programme was announced in 1985. It was decided to introduce partial automation to reduce staff costs, with Ansaldo Trasporti and Nuova Agudio awarded the contract. The line was closed on 3rd August 1987 and replaced by substitute buses. The old track was replaced by heavier 50 kg/m rail mounted on rubber to reduce noise emission, while the winding motors, electrical equipment, telephone system and safety equipment were also replaced. The modern day line is 1.4 km long with a difference in height of 278 m between the two termini. Average gradient is 19.9%, with some sections as steep as 34%. … The new twin-car units, driven by 2 x 458-kW winding motors, and with sliding doors, have a speed of 6 m/s, cutting the journey time to 10 minutes and increasing the one-way passenger capacity to about 1800/hour, each train holding up to 156 passengers (16 seated) on seven stepped levels. Modern suspension has also greatly improved the ride quality, while electricity for car lighting is picked up by a mini-pantograph from a simple overhead.” [3: p334]

Cross concludes his notes about this funicular: “The two-car trains, which have been painted in a striking red livery with an orange zig-zag stripe outlined in white, can call at all seven stations, although the intermediate stops at Carbonara, Santa Nicola (urban bus connection), Madonnetta (religious shrine), Preve and San Simone are request stops signalled both by passengers waiting on station platforms and those inside the cars. The starting sequence is automatic, but cars are nevertheless, single-manned. No tickets are sold on any funicular premises, although ticket cancellers are provided on cars, and the tariff is that of the urban bus network.” [3: p334]

The Sant’ Anna Funicular

The Sant’ Anna Funicular on 18th May 2015 – Car No. 1 at the summit station, (c) Tiia Monto and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licennce (CC BY-SA 3.0). [29]

Cross offers two short paragraphs about this line. …

There are not many rail lines offering an end-to-end journey time of around one minute, but this is all that is necessary to travel on the 353 metres between Piazza Portello and Corso Magenta on the Sant’ Anna funicular. So short is the line that it is possible to see both cars from either station. The present day installations were supplied by Agudio Poma of Torino and consist of two small red cars, driven by a 42-kW motor, with bodywork from Merighi, Neri & Roversi.” [3: p334]

Operation is automatic, although each car has a driving cab, and the 54-m height difference, starting at 20 m above sea level at Piazza Portello, is undertaken at a track speed of 4 m/s, with the passing place at a relatively flat location. Each car has eight seats on two stepped levels with a nominal total capacity of 30, giving a capacity of 180 passengers per direction per hour, with departures every ten minutes. Entry to the funicular is controlled by a turnstile, with boarding and alighting passengers segregated. The line is operated by AMT, so one day FS-AMT passes can be used.” [3: p334]

La Guidovia del Santuario della Guardia

In my survey of the different lines serving Genova, I missed this line completely. This is perhaps not surprising as it closed in October 1967!

A 1934 advertising poster for the line. [26]
The sanctuary of the Madonna della Guardia, on Mount Figogna, in the Polcevera Valley, is frequented by believers from all over Liguria. Around 1490 the apparition of the Virgin to a peasant gave rise first to a simple chapel and then, between 1528 and 1530, to a true sanctuary. In 1890 there was a further renovation with the construction of the current church. A hospice was built next to it and the complex covered the entire summit of the mountain. [27]
This map of the line can be found on the Marklinfan.com website and is embedded here The terminal at Serro can be seen in the bottom-right of the image. The shrine is towards the top-left of the sketch map. [26]
A watercolour sketch of one of the Cars used on the line. [27]

Cross says: “Some 250,000 visitors per year are attracted to the religious shrine on Monte Figogna, 817 m above sea level and from where spectacular views can be obtained over the Polcevera valley and the Mediterranean. The idea of providing a fixed link emerged in 1891, although a Belgian initiative dating from 1906 stalled for want of finance. It was not until 1926 that the Ferrovia Santuario della Guardia company was founded and subsequently undertook construction. … On 29th July 1929, the company inaugurated an initial 8.8-km section, linking the lower station of Serro di San Quirico, halfway between Bolzaneto and Pontedecimo and at 66 m above sea level, with a temporary upper terminus at Ca’Bianca (676 m). From Genova, it was possible to reach Serro, nestling between two steelworks and some oil refineries, via the UITE tramways. The remaining 1.7-km section was finally opened on 23rd June 1934. In all, there was a 130-m height difference between upper and lower termini with maximum gradients of 8.3% (the average was 6.5%) and minimum curve radius of 25 m. The line was single-track, with seven passing points and 10 Intermediate stations.” [3: p334]

Cross comments: “The Guidovia was highly unusual in that it featured petrol-engined solid-rubber-tyred vehicles which followed two parallel 200-mm wide concrete tracks. Inside these, conventional metre-gauge Vignole 9 kg/m rails acted as a guide path for flanges located on the inside of the wheels. … Iron tie-rods separated the rails at a fixed gauge, with conventional sleepers unnecessary since the weight of the vehicles was placed off the rails and on the concrete pathways. Known as the Laviosa guidance system, it was invented by the Corazza brothers, who owned the line. Rubber tyres were chosen because they gave twice the adhesion of steel wheels acting on steel rails, and made it possible for the vehicles to overcome the numerous steep gradients on the slopes of Monte Figogna.” [3: p334]

Annotated in Italian, this sketch shows the construction of the permanent way. [26]
Construction work showing the light Vignole rails and the ties which maintained the guage. This image is embedded from the marklinfan.com website. [26]
This image shows the size of the concrete bed on which the rubber-tyred wheels would run. [26]

This is probably the earliest form of guided bus technology used across the world and should be seen as the precursor of a number of other systems. [25]

Cross continues: “Both freight and passengers were carried, with passenger cars often hauling goods wagons. The journey was usually accomplished in 45 minutes at a speed of 12 km/h, although the cars had a theoretical maximum speed of 18 km/h. … The weekday timetable consisted of five return journeys, ten at weekends, although many other specials were put on for groups of visitors. Indeed, it was not unknown for the Guidovia to carry 3000 passengers in one day. In all, 30-35 staff operated the line, of which 11 were drivers, each responsible for the upkeep of his own vehicle. The depot and workshops were next to the lower terminus, which was equipped with a small turntable; others also at the upper terminus and at Gaiazza.” [3: p334]

The Cars were unidirectional and required turning at both terminii of the line. Staff called the turntables used ‘giostre‘ (carousels).

A Car being turned at the Serro terminus. [26]
A Car being turned at the upper terminus. [26]
A superb view of the Santuario della Guardia and the summit station of the Guidovia. [28]
This image shows both an unidentified Car and the Santuario della Guardia. It is embedded here from the stagniweb.it website. [28]

“The original fleet consisted of five bi-directional 90-hp petrol-engined cars (1-5), built by Officine Laviosa of Piacenza, with bodies made of waterproof oil-cloth. There were two Giardiniera trailers. In 1936, three single-cab cars (6-8) of slightly higher capacity were added. Changes were made to cars 1-5: their rear cabs were removed and a more powerful, 120-hp diesel engine fitted. In 1952, the two existing trailers were motored, using MAN diesel engines, to cater for rising patronage. An eleventh aluminium-bodied car also existed.” [3: p334] Cross was unable in his article to provide details of that aluminium-bodied car. More details have come to light since he wrote his article.

This picture of aluminium-bodied Car No. 11 is embedded from the marklinfan.com website. No. 11 was the last Car built for the line. Built in 1955 to cope with the increase in users, it was made of aluminum
and had different windows, double lights, and was equipped with automatic compressed air doors. It was built in the company’s Serro Workshops. [26]
Another photograph of Car No. 11 taken at the summit station. This image is displayed on one of the explanatory panels at the station. [28]
A drawing of one of the earlier Cars also from the display boards at the summit station. [28]

1:200,000 Touring Club Italiano map from 1964 shows the route of the line. The Guidovia is drawn from Madonna della Guardia to Bolzaneto. [28]

Cross says that at about the same time as Car No. 11 was built, Cars No. 2 and No. 4 underwent a complete revision, involving a livery change from light green to two-tone green. Ultimately, “the line closed in October 1967 with the expiry of the company’s concession. Track and superstructure had been allowed to deteriorate, and rolling stock was also life-expired. In the 1970s, the company laid on a bus service on a new road that had opened up the Santuario.” [3: p334]

A few pictures follow which have been embedded from the stagniweb.it website. They give a good idea of the condition of the line in the 21st century. …

The tie-bars and rails. [28]
The concrete platform. [28]
Approaching the summit. [28]
The display boards at the summit are housed in a shelter which simulates one of the old cars used on the line. [28]

Cross acknowledged the following sources for his notes on the rack railway, the funiculars and the Guidovia line;

Ferrovia Principe-Granarolo by A. Sasso & C. Serra (Mondo Ferroviario, October 1991).

The Tramways and Light Railways of Genova by J. von Rohr (Modern Tramway, June 1964)

Nuova Funicolare per Genova by Alessandro Sasso (Mondo Ferroviario, April 1990).

News pages of Modern Tramway 1962 et seq Guidovia della Guardia by A. Sasso & C. Serra Mondo Ferroviario, December 1990).

The Tramways and Light Railways of Genova byl von Rohr, (Modern Tramway, June 1964)

References for this full article

  1. Barry Cross; Genova: Back in the Tramway Business Part 1: The Interurbans and the ‘Light Metro’; in Light Rail & Modern Tramway, August 1995, p251-253.
  2. Barry Cross; The Tramways of Genova Part 2: Casella Line Begins to Realise Tourist Potential; in Light Rail & Modern Tramway, September 1995, p295-296.
  3. Barry Cross; The Tramways of Genova: Concluded: Granalaro, Funiculars and the Guidova; in Light Rail & Modern Tramway, October 1995, p333-334.
  4. Rete tranviaria di Genova; https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rete_tranviaria_di_Genova, accessed on 26th November 2024.
  5. https://www.marklinfan.com/f/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=4530&whichpage=2, accessed on 21st December 2024.
  6. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/4KDeRr6gMdLiv86E, accessed on 20th December 2024.
  7. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/12/21/genoas-early-tram-network-part-5-world-war-2-to-its-decline-and-closure-in-the-1960s-and-the-rolling-stock-used-on-the-network
  8. Marco Chitti, Eric Goldwyn, Elif Ensari and Alon Levy; Transit Costs Project: The Italian Vase Study Report; The New York University (NYU) Marron Institute of Urban Management, New York, via https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&opi=89978449&url=https://transitcosts.com/wp-content/uploads/Italian_Case_Study.pdf, accessed on 23rd March 2025.
  9. HOME – Rete e orari – Metropolitana Azienda Mobilità e Trasporti S.p.A. (AMT). 2013, via https://www.amt.genova.it/amt, accessed on 23rd March 2025.
  10. Tramways & Urban Transit; Ian Allan Ltd/Light Rail Transit Association, April 2005, p149.
  11. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/11/26/genoas-metro
  12. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/11/25/genoa-casella-narrow-gauge-railway-part-2-sardorella-to-casella
  13. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rimini%E2%80%93San_Marino_railway, accessed on 24th March 2025.
  14. Joachim von Rohr; The Tramways & Light Railways of Genova; in Modern Tramway, June 1964.
  15. Roberto Cocchi & Alessandro Muratori; Ferrovia Genova-Casella; in Mondo Ferrovario, October 1993.
  16. Maria Vittoria Cascino; Il trenino di Casella arranca in ritardo tra guasti e amianto; on ilgiornale.it, 20th March 2008; accessed on 24th November 2024.
  17. Andrea Martinelli, La D1 è tornata!, in iTreni N° 388, January 2016, p24-26.
  18. https://www.ferroviagenovacasella.it/geca/la-seconda-guerra-mondiale, accessed on 19th November 2024
  19. https://www.mentelocale.it/genova/57212-ferrovia-genova-casella-dal-6-settembre-il-servizio-avverr-con-bus-sostitutivo.htm, accessed on 23rd November 2024
  20. Fabio Canessa; Granarolo Rack Railway, two years of stoppage coming for works between Principe and via Bari; in Genova24, 20th May 2024; via https://www.genova24.it/2024/05/cremagliera-di-granarolo-in-arrivo-due-anni-di-stop-per-lavori-tra-principe-e-via-bari-386640, accessed on 25th March 2025.
  21. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Principe%E2%80%93Granarolo_rack_railway, accessed on 25th March 2025.
  22. https://www.reddit.com/r/InfrastructurePorn/comments/qg6cme/principegranarolo_rack_railway_genoa_italy, accessed on 25th March 2025.
  23. https://www.trackopedia.com/en/encyclopedia/infrastructure/superstructure/rack-railways, accessed on 25th March 2025.
  24. https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autoguidovia_della_Madonna_della_Guardia, accessed on 25th March 2025.
  25. https://cs.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autobusov%C3%A1_dr%C3%A1ha, accessed on 25th March 2025.
  26. https://www.marklinfan.com/f/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=4179, accessed on 25th March 2025.
  27. https://sentieridautore.it/2018/02/03/la-guidovia-della-guardia, accessed on 25th March 2025.
  28. https://www.stagniweb.it/mguardia.htm, accessed on 25th March 2025.

Genoa’s Early Tram Network – Part 5 – World War 2 to its decline and closure in the 1960s and the Rolling Stock used on the Network.

The first three articles in this series covered the network as it was established by the beginning of the First World War. These articles can be found here, [1] here [2] and here. [3]

The fourth article looked at the period between WW1 and WW2. It can be found here. [4] This fifth article covers the period after WW2 to the eventual closure of the network.

The Network during World War 2

During the war period, new work was suspended and maintenance was reduced to a minimum; tunnels were used as air raid shelters, and the service schedules were redistributed to avoid the tunnels. Suburban lines acquired considerable importance for the transport of evacuees, especially in the morning and evening. The transport of goods also became important and some older trams were adapted to accommodate the service. Fruit and vegetables were transported to the central market and to the local markets. Building materials for urgent works were carried, as we’re a variety of other goods. Examples of these adapted vehicles can be found close to the end of this article. [36]

After WW2 and the Decline of the Network

The modernization of the tram network, covered in the fourth article in this series, was abruptly interrupted by the Second World War which saw significant damage to the network and rolling stock. After the War the Littorio depot-workshop was renamed for ‘Romeo Guglielmetti’, a tram driver and martyr of the partisan resistance. [19][20: p238-239] .

The poor condition of much of the network resulted in trams being restricted to main arteries and the introduction of trolleybuses on the rest of the network. Trolleybuses were trailed in 1938  but it was 1949 before planned introduction occurred. obsolescence and degradation of large parts of the network were the reasons that led to the choice of maintaining the tram only on the ‘main lines’, introducing tolleybuses as replacements for the tram on the secondary lines. In reality the project had already begun before the conflict (the first trolleybuses had been activated in 1938), [20: p227] but only in 1949 was the decision planned in detail. [21: p88]

Trams were removed from the central area of the city where trolleybuses were perceived, not being tied to tracks, to be more flexible and better able to negotiate heavy traffic. The lines in the hills were also converted to a trolleybus service (the rubber-wheeled vehicles, having greater grip, guaranteed quicker restarts and with less energy expenditure. [19][20: p255-256]

The result of these changes was effectively to create two different networks (East and West), linked only by a line along the coast as shown on the map below which shows the tram network as it existed in 1956. [19][21: p93]

Genoa’s tramway network in 1956, © Arbalete and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [19]

By 1956 trams served the following routes: [21: p126]

1 Banco San Giorgio – Voltri
2 Banco San Giorgio – Pegli
3 Banco San Giorgio – Sestri
4 Banco San Giorgio – Pra’ Palmaro
5 Banco San Giorgio – Sampierdarena – Rivarolo
6 Banco San Giorgio – Sampierdarena – Bolzaneto
7 Banco San Giorgio – Sampierdarena – Pontedecimo
9 Banco San Giorgio – Galleria Certosa – Rivarolo
10 Banco San Giorgio – Galleria Certosa – Bolzaneto
11 Banco San Giorgio – Galleria Certosa – Pontedecimo
12 Banco San Giorgio – Prato
13 Banco San Giorgio – Giro del Fullo
14 Banco San Giorgio – Staglieno
15 De Ferrari – Galleria Mameli – Nervi
17 De Ferrari – Prato
18 De Ferrari – Staglieno
19 De Ferrari – Borgoratti
20 Bolzaneto – Pegli
21 De Ferrari – San Fruttuoso
22 Bolzaneto – Pra’ Palmaro
23 De Ferrari – Quezzi
24 San Fruttuoso – Sestri
26 Quezzi – Rivarolo
42 De Ferrari – Galleria Mameli – Sturla
43 De Ferrari – via Giordano Bruno
44 Banco San Giorgio – Borgoratti
45 De Ferrari – San Martino – Sturla
50 San Martino – Sampierdarena
51 De Ferrari – San Francesco d’Albaro – Nervi
52 Brignole – San Francesco d’Albaro – Nervi
53 Brignole – San Francesco d’Albaro – Priaruggia

The tram terminus on Via Gordiano Bruno. This line does not appear on the map above but is included in the list of services above as Line No. 43. The road in the foreground is Corse Italia, (c) Public Domain. [5]

In the period after WW2, there was a dramatic increase in private car ownership and as a result increased congestion in the city centre and on main arterial routes. Conflicts between trams and private vehicles became regular occurrences and there was increasing wear of the rails.

Despite efforts to adapt the network to the needs of car traffic, the 1949 plan was soon overtaken by events: the economic ‘boom’ then underway was leading to an enormous increase in private motorisation, which had not originally been envisaged on such a scale.

After a few years, even the so-called ‘power lines’, which had been planned to be maintained, revealed all their inefficiency: almost the entire network ran in a mixed manner with road traffic, leading not only to continuous conflicts between trams and private vehicles, but also to an ever-increasing wear on the rails. [20: p265]

Thus in 1956 the decision was taken, despite significant opposition, to manage the decline of the network and to introduce a replacement bus network. Buses had become preferable to both trams and trolleybuses because of their unconstrained movement, not hampered by rails or overhead lines. [19][20: p265]

Bolzaneto in the 1950s: in this postcard view, UITE  No. 954 travels along via Pastorino, the main street of Bolzaneto, in service on Line No. 10 to Piazza Banco San Giorgio. Note the traffic policeman in the middle of the roadway. [7]

The removal of the tram lines began in 1964 with the closure of the Ponente and Val Polcevera lines. [21: p105] This also led to the closure of the Galleria Certosa. After a long period of disuse, Galleria Certosa was reopened in the 1990s and used by the Metro. [19]

“In 1965, the city acquired the remaining holding and the UITE’s activities were transferred to the Azienda Municipalizzata Trasporti (AMT).” [16][17]

However, “the municipalisation of the Company, … did not bring the expected results. The last UITE balance sheets showed a substantial positive balance, the subsequent AMT financial statements showed increasingly significant deficits. This was not, however, unique to Genoa, it was a phenomenon common to many public transport companies which, subordinated to the electoral needs of the parties in government in a local area, saw fare policies being dictated by political imperatives, often only partially covering operational expenses. Additionally: the speed of the general traffic, through which trams had to travel, decreased due to congestion; inflation became a significant factor; lines were established serving new residential areas; personnel costs increased significantly; and AMT were expected to acquire and run services beyond the immediate Genoa conurbation.” [17]

On 18th July 1965, lines along the coast road, which included the terminus in Piazza Caricamento, were closed and, on 10th November 1965, the last line on the East side of the city centre was closed. [21: p106]

Only two lines in the Bisagno valley remained in operation – Line 12 (Via Brigata Bisagno – Prato) and Line 13 (Via Brigata Bisagno – Giro del Fullo) which were left until last because they served as a connection to the Guglielmetti workshop, where the trams were progressively concentrated and decommissioned. Both Line 12 and Line 13 ran along the right bank of the River Bisagno. [19][21: p106]

One of the last trams in service on the Genovese tram network is at the Giro del Fullo tram terminus in December 1966. This image faces North and was shared by Renato Michelina Dore on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 9th July 2022. [6]
The same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
A tram heading for the Prato terminus of Line No. 12. This image was shared in monochrome on the
Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group by Domenico Fornara on 24th March 2021, (c) Unknown. [9]
A similar view looking Northwest on Via Struppa in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, July 2023]
The tram depot at Prato – truly the end of the line in the Bisagno valley, (c) Public Domain. [8]
The site of the depot is now the rear area behind Palazzetto Dello Sport Lino Maragliano This view looks East from Via Prato Verde. The terracotta building on the right is that sports centre. the building in the centre is the tram shed and the tall building beyond remains intact in the 21st century as well. [Google Streetview, April 2019]

Tram services in Genoa ceased definitively on the night between 26th and 27th December 1966, with the last runs of Line 12. [19][21: p110]

Genoa’s tram network was in operation from 1878 to 1966, during this time it was the main public transport service in the Ligurian capital.

Rolling Stock

AMT claims to record details of all the trams used on the network throughout its history. [20: p653-660] This list, however, does not appear to be exhaustive as photographs exist of trams with numbers not included in this list! These are noted below. ……

Trams No. 1-45 (AEG/SATO) were two-axle cars built by Grondona, Comi & Co. in 1899/1900. They were later rebuilt by the UITE between 1922 and 1927. [19]

Tram No. 7 after its rebuild by UITE, (c) Public Domain. [33]

Trams No. 46-55 (AEG/SATO) were two-axle cars built by Miani, Silvestri & Co. in 1900. These were rebuilt by Piaggio in 1926. [19]

Trams No. 56-75 (AEG/SATO) were two-axle cars built by Officine Meccaniche in 1901. These were rebuilt by Piaggio in 1926. [19]

Trams No. 76-100 (AEG/SATO) were two-axle cars built by Reggiane Boker in 1907.

Trams No. 79 was built by Reggiane Boker in 1907. [31]

Trams No. 100-110 (SFEF) were two-axle bidirectional cars built by Miani, Silvestri & Co. in 1895. The image immediately below shows one of these trams bearing the number 111. This suggests that the range of numbers taken by these trams was wider. [19]

Tram No. 111 was a two-axle bidirectional car built by Miani, Silvestri & Co. in 1895. It was operated by SFEF. Note that there is no window panel to protect the driver. These were installed after a drivers strike in 1906. This image was therefore taken before 1906. Even later weather protection for the drivers was added in the form of a canopy. Via San Lorenzo is ahead on the left. The tram is on Piazza Umberto 1 (later Piazza Matteotti), © Public Domain. [30]

Trams No. 101-110 were replacement two-axle bidirectional cars built by Bagnara in 1925. [19]

Two trams passing on Corso Torino – trams No. 25 and 197. According to AMT (as reported by Wikipedia.it), tram No. 25 was built by Grondona, Cornish & Co. in 1899 (see above) and tram No. 197 was built in 1897 (see below). [24]

Trams No. 171-200 were two-axle bidirectional cars built by Grondona, Comi & Co. in 1897. [19] Might this class be more numerous? Perhaps 111-200? Given the numbering of these trams, in the year of build quoted a little too early? [19]

Tram No. 157 appears in this relatively early photograph. It appears to be arriving at Piazza Manin having run along Via Asserotti. Its number leaves a question over the reported AMT listing of Tramcar numbering, © Public Domain. [23]
Tram No. 183 close to Piazza Sturla on Via Caprera. Again, its number does not fit with the numbering from the Wikipedia.it (AMT) article, © Public Domain. [26]
Trams No. 210 heading for Nervi is travelling along Via Albaro close to the church of San Francesco. Once again, this tram’s number does not tie in with the Wikipedia.it (AMT) article. [27]

Trams No. 221-250 (UITE) were two-axle bidirectional cars built by Clemente Nobili & Fratelli Böker in 1906. [19]

Tram No. 227 in Piazza Principe with the Miramare Hotel behind, in 1917. Note the horse-drawn omnibus to the right of the tram, © Public Domain. [29]
Tram No. 225 was another of this series of trams, (c) Public Domain. [35]

Trams No. 251-280 (UITE) were two-axle bidirectional cars built by Reggiane Boker in 1907. [19]

Trams No. 281-305 (UITE) were two-axle bidirectional cars built by Reggiane Boker in 1907. [19]

Trams No. 101-120 and 347-386 (UITE)  were two-axle bidirectional cars built by Bagnara San Giorgio/Ansaldo built in 1925 and 1927. [19]

Two trams in Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari, probably in the 1910s, perhaps 1920s The tram furthest from the camera is numbered 159. This does not seem to fit in with the numbering reported as being stated by AMT in the Wikipedia.it article. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group by Sylvia Brisigotti on 23rd October 2024. [25]
Tram No. 362 in Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari. This tram was a two-axle bidirectional car, one of a number built by Bagnara San Giorgio/Ansaldo in the mid-1920s. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group by Sylvia Brisigotti on 10th September 2024, © Public Domain. [28]

Trams No. 363, 364 (SFEF) were two-axle bidirectional cars built by Savigliano in 1893. These vehicles were converted into trailer-cars in 1900. [19]

Trams No. 387 and 388 were prototypes received in 1929/1930 along with Trailer No. 389. ………

UITE 400 Series Trailers

I have not been able to find information about this series of trailer cars.

UITE 600 Series Trams and Trailers

I have not been able to find information about tram cars in this series. However, numbers 621-650 were trailers which were used with the 700 series trams below.

UITE 700 Series Trams

Given the success of the prototypes No. 387 and  No. 388 and the trailer No. 389  of 1929 and 1930, UITE purchased 50 bogie-trams, 25 constructed by Ansaldo (Nos. 751-775) and 25 constructed by Piaggio (Nos. 776-800) and 30 trailers supplied
by Carminati & Toselli (Nos. 621-650). [36]

Trams No. 751-800 were bidirectional bogie-cars built in 1931. These were known as ‘long Casteggini’ type trams. [19]

Tram No. 766, © Unknown. [36]
Trams No. 762, © Unknown. [36]

UITE 800 Series Trams

Trams No. 801-820 (UITE) were bidirectional bogie-cars built by Piaggio in 1932. These were known as ‘short Casteggini’ type trams. [19]

Trams No. 821-850 (UITE) were unidirectional bogie-cars built by Piaggio in 1934. These were known as ‘long Casteggini’ type trams (originally built as trailer-cars). [19]

Tram No. 821 at the tram terminus at Bratte in Bolzaneto. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group by Enrico Pinna on 14th October 2023. [22]

UITE 900 Series Trams

The 900 series electric tramcars were designed  by the Unione Italiana Tramways Elettrici (UITE) and built by the UITE and other companies, also known as ‘Littorine’ or ‘Genova’ type, were a series of bidirectional, metre-gauge tramcars in service on the Genoa tram network .

The vehicles were designed in 1939 and 94 vehicles entered service on the Genovese network in 1939 and 1940. They were in service until 1966. Six (or possibly seven) other vehicles were built to the same specification and sold to Breda and used elsewhere. Five (or perhaps six) were put to use in Belgrade and one in Innsbruck.

One of the 900 series, Tram No. 928, in the centre of Genova, on Via Brigata Bisagno, © Unknown – seen, unattributed, on the http://www.amicidipontecarrega.it website. [11]

Builders were: UITE, Piaggio, Bagnara, Ansaldo, Breda; bogies were from TIBB and CGE workshops. These vehicles were 13.56 metres long, 2.15 metres wide and 3.12 metres high. They had 25 seats and could accommodate a further 85 people standing. They weighed 18.6 tonnes empty. They had 4 No. 45hp  Ansaldo LC 229 electric motors.

In exchange for the units sold to Breda in 1940, UITE received four two-bodied articulated units which went on to form the 1100 series. They were the first articulated trams used in Genova. [15]

UITE 1100 Series Trams

There were four of these articulated units (1101-1104) which were supplied to the UITE by Breda in 1942. These units operated in Genova until 1965/1966 when they were sold to Neuchâtel and continued in service there until 1988. Built by Breda with electrical parts supplied by TIBB, the units were 20.65 metres long and accommodated 33 people seated and up to 142 standing. They weighed 27 tonnes empty. [14]

1100 series Tram No. 1101 standing outside Brignole Railway Station, © AMT (Azienda Municipalizzata Trasporti Genova) from ‘Fotostoria del tramway a Genova’ by Paolo Gassani; Nuova Editrice Genovese. [10]

UITE 1200 Series Trams

These were numbered 1221-1250. They were reconstructions by UITE in 1948-1949 (in an unidirectional, articulated form) of the 221 to 250 series. They were known as ‘Lambrette’ trams. [19]

UITE 1600 Series Trams

These were numbered 1601-1678. They were reconstructions by UITE in 1949-1950 (in an unidirectional, articulated form) of 600 and 400 series cars. The old two-axle cars of the 600 series  were joined to trailers of the two-axle 400 series. The transformations were decided in order to have large-capacity vehicles with significant management savings compared to a complex consisting of a tractor and trailer, which required the presence of two ticket collectors. [13][19]

Tram No. 1653 on its way back to the depot at Sampierdarena. It was an articulated vehicle made from a 600 series tram and a 400 series trailer. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group by Renato Michelina Dote on 18th June 2019, © Unknown. [32]

These units were 16.80 metres long with a capacity of 24 seated and 104 standing passengers. They weighed 18.2 tonnes unladen and were powered by 2 No. 70hp motors. They served on routes in Ponente and the Bisagno and Polcevera valleys. They received several improvements to electrical equipment, resulting in enhanced power and speed, in 1958 and 1960. [13]

UITE 1700 Series Trams

These were numbered 1700-1715 They were reconstructions of pairs of two-axle cars in 1954 and 1955 They were bidirectional units. [19]

These units were obtained by joining two old two-axle carriages with a small suspended central body in between. The resulting configuration, quite common for the time, was nicknamed ‘two rooms and kitchen’ (‘due camere e cucina:) and allowed for large-capacity cars to be had at little expense. The transformation, designed by the engineer Remigio Casteggini of UITE, was carried out on some cars by the UITE workshops, on others by Piaggio of Sestri Ponente. The first six entered service in 1954 , followed by another nine the following year. [12]

Tram No. 1703 was one of 15 in the 1700 series. This image was shared by Giovanni Valente on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 6th April 2022, (c) Unknown. [34]

These units were 20.88 metres long and had capacity for 26 seated passengers and 127 standing. They were 26.5 tonnes unladen and were powered by 4 No. 45hp motors. [12]

The 1700 series units were employed primarily on Line No. 1 (Piazza Banco di San Georgio to Voltri. [12]

Luggage, Freight and Workmen’s Trams and Trailers

These two images are examples of adaptations made to older passenger trams to allow the carriage of goods, © Public Domain. [36]

References

  1. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/12/03/genoas-early-tram-network-part-1-general-introduction-tunnels-the-years-before-world-war-one-and-the-early-western-network
  2. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/12/08/genoas-early-tram-network-part-2-the-western-half-of-the-eastern-network
  3. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/12/14/genoas-early-tram-network-part-3-the-remainder-of-the-eastern-network-before-the-first-world-war
  4. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/12/18/genoas-early-tram-network-part-4-world-war-1-to-world-war-2
  5. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/xf71AuPv18UThcLN, accessed on 12th December 2024.
  6. https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=1680392355366178&set=gm.1397702246995601, accessed on 19th December 2024.
  7. https://www.treniebinari.it/treniebinari/tram/linee-tranviarie-dismesse-liguria.html, accessed on 19th December 2024.
  8. https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10225435757056579&set=gm.7057767330989036&idorvanity=574539035978597, accessed on 19th December 2024.
  9. https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10222892964385274&set=gm.3698637050235431, accessed on 19th December 2024.
  10. https://www.marklinfan.com/f/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=4530, accessed on 20th December 2024.
  11. https://www.amicidipontecarrega.it/2019/05/22/le-grandi-strade-piccole-di-genova-il-falso-mito-di-una-citta-troppo-stretta, accessed on 20th December 2024..
  12. https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tram_UITE_serie_1700, accessed on 20th December 2024.
  13. https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tram_UITE_serie_1600, accessed on 20th December 2024.
  14. https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tram_UITE_serie_1100, accessed on 19th December 2024.
  15. https://it.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tram_UITE_serie_900, accessed on 19th December 2024.
  16. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/AMT_Genova, accessed on 15th November 2024.
  17. Storia [History] (in Italian). AMT Genova; https://www.amt.genova.it/amt/amt-istituzionale/storia, accessed on 15th November 2024.
  18. http://www.uwrbancenter.comune.genova.it/sites/default/files/quaderno_arch_2011_03_21.pdf, accessed on 16th November 2024.
  19. Rete tranviaria di Genova; https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rete_tranviaria_di_Genova, accessed on 26th November 2024.
  20. AMT (ed.); History of public transport in Genoa; Genoa, SAGEP Editrice, 1980.
  21. Paolo Gassani; Photo history of the tramway in Genoa, Genoa, Nuova Editrice Genovese, 1982.
  22. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/4KDeRr6gMdLiv86E, accessed on 20th December 2024.
  23. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/56U5RHNiYy2iTrR6ht, accessed on 20th December 2024
  24. https://www.facebook.com/groups/fotogenovaantica/permalink/6392740554158387/?app=fbl, accessed on 12th December 2024.
  25. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/JagNiVpX1KMfGBb5, accessed on 21st December 2024.
  26. https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=830015374527522&set=pcb.3715897175176085, accessed on 14th December 2024
  27. https://www.facebook.com/groups/fotogenovaantica/permalink/7107415732690862/?app=fbl, accessed on 14th December 2024.
  28. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/gBZTNL8Ex9VsvaKv, accessed on 20th December 2024.
  29. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/N2Cw4M7R4igWZmjy, accessed on 21st December 2024.
  30. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/UmobQGmrwfxs8tZp, accessed on 21st December 2024
  31. https://www.facebook.com/groups/fotogenovaantica/permalink/7150000391765729/?app=fbl, accessed on 21st December 2024.
  32. https://www.facebook.com/groups/fotogenovaantica/permalink/2174302596002225/?app=fbl, accessed on 21st December 2024.
  33. https://genova.repubblica.it/cronaca/2016/01/13/foto/dai_tram_al_metro_120_anni_di_trasporti_pubblici_a_genova-131126729/1/., accessed on 21st December 2024.
  34. https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=2810624945900888&set=a.1385960088367388, accessed on 21st December 2024.
  35. https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=250986243601911&set=gm.4601090983268483, accessed on 21st December 2024.
  36. https://www.marklinfan.com/f/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=4530&whichpage=2, accessed on 21st December 2024

Genoa’s Early Tram Network – Part 4 – World War 1 to World War 2

The first three articles in this series covered the network as it was established by the beginning of the First World War. These articles can be found here, [1] here [2] and here. [3]

This map shows the three companies’ networks, that managed the Genovese tram network immediately prior to the date of unification under UITE – December 1901. The Green lines were UITE (the former French Company). The Red lines were SFEF. The Blue lines were SATO, © Arbalete and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [19]

We have already noted that there were changes to the network above which occurred before WW1, particularly the second line to Piazza Sturla in the East, the additional line to Sampierdarena in the West and the Municipal line to Quezzi in the Northeast.

In this article we look at the network from World War 1 to the beginning of World War 2.

After WW1 and into early WW2

In 1923, driving on the right was imposed on roads throughout the country (until then, individual cities had discretion over the matter).  Genoa complied on 31st August 1924. The change did not cause major upheavals in the tram service as it had always been undertaken by bidirectional carriages with doors on both sides. [19][21: p56]

In the mid 20s the autonomous municipalities between Nervi and Voltri along the coast, up to Pontedecimo in Val Polcevera and up to Prato in Val Bisagno, were annexed to the capital and a ‘Greater Genoa’ was formed. The entire tram network fell within the new municipal area. [19]

During this time UITE remained as a private company but the City acquired a majority of shares. [19][20: p223] and began to direct the development of the company and the network. [19][21: p62]

In 1934, major reform of the network took place. Trams ceased to use Via Roma, Via XX Settembre, and Piazza de Ferrari. The piazza saw major change – the lifting of the ‘tramway ring’ allowed, first, the planting of a large flower bed, and later (in 1936) the construction of a large fountain  designed by Giuseppe Crosa di Vergagni. The trams were diverted through Piazza Dante and Galleria Colombo which was newly opened. [20: p224] At the same time new lines crossing the city were activated, with the aim of better distributing passengers in the central areas. [19][21: p62] The following year the trams also abandoned Corso Italia, in favour of a new route further inland which also included the new Galleria Mameli. [19][21: p125]

The modernization of the network included renewal of the fleet of trams. That renewal commenced in 1927 with the introduction of ‘Casteggini’ (trolley/bogie trams – named after the UITE engineer who designed them). These were followed in 1939 by modern ‘Genoa type’ trams, [20: p657] built first as single units and then, from 1942, in an articulated version. [19][20: p660]

In 1935, the large Littorio depot near Ponte Carrega (Val Bisagno) came into operation. In 1940, workshop facilities were opened at the depot. [20: p237-238]

Italian Wikipedia tells us that after the changes made in 1934, the following list covers the tram routes on the network: [19][21: p125]

1 Banco San Giorgio – Voltri
2 Banco San Giorgio – Pegli
3 Banco San Giorgio – Sestri
4 Banco San Giorgio – Sampierdarena
5 Banco San Giorgio – Sampierdarena – Rivarolo
6 Banco San Giorgio – Sampierdarena – Bolzaneto
7 Banco San Giorgio – Sampierdarena – Pontedecimo
8 Banco San Giorgio – Sampierdarena – Campasso
9 Banco San Giorgio – Galleria Certosa – Rivarolo
10 Banco San Giorgio – Galleria Certosa – Bolzaneto
11 Banco San Giorgio – Galleria Certosa – Pontedecimo
12 Banco San Giorgio – Galleria Certosa – Certosa – Sampierdarena – Banco San Giorgio
13 The reverse of Line 12
14 Banco San Giorgio – Cornigliano
15 Banco San Giorgio – Pra
16 Brignole – Corvetto – Pegli
18 Marassi – Bolzaneto
21 Dinegro – Manin – Staglieno
22 Manin – Corvetto – Piazza Santa Sabina
23 De Ferrari – Marassi – Quezzi
24 Corso Dogali – Manin – Corvetto – Principe – Corso Dogali (circulating clockwise through the hills)
25 The reverse of Line 24  (circulating anti-clockwise through the hills)
26 Dinegro – Principe – via Napoli
27 Corso Dogali – Manin – Corvetto – Tommaseo
28 Principe – Corvetto – Via Atto Vannucci – Banco San Giorgio
30 De Ferrari – Foce
31 Banco San Giorgio – Staglieno – Prato
32 Banco San Giorgio – Molassana – Giro del Fullo

33 De Ferrari – Piazza Verdi – Staglieno
34 Piazza della Vittoria – Staglieno – San Gottardo – Doria
35 Piazza della Vittoria – Staglieno
36 Piazza della Vittoria – Ponte Carrega
37 De Ferrari – Piazza Verdi – San Fruttuoso
38 De Ferrari – Via Barabino – Boccadasse
39 De Ferrari – Sturla – Nervi
40 Banco San Giorgio – De Ferrari – Albaro – Quinto
41 Piazza Cavour – Via Barabino – Corso Italia – Priaruggia
42 De Ferrari – San Francesco d’Albaro – Sturla
43 De Ferrari – San Francesco d’Albaro – Lido
44 Banco San Giorgio – De Ferrari – Borgoratti
45 De Ferrari – San Martino – Sturla
46 De Ferrari – Tommaseo – San Martino
47 De Ferrari – San Francesco d’Albaro – Villa Raggio
48 Piazza Cavour – Piazza della Vittoria – San Fruttuoso
49 De Ferrari – Tommaseo – ‘Ospedale San Martino
50 San Martino – Brignole – Corvetto – Sampierdarena – Campasso
51 Quezzi – Brignole – Principe – Galleria Certosa – Rivarolo
52 San Giuliano – Brignole – Principe – Dinegro
53 Tommaseo – Brignole – Principe – Sampierdarena – Campasso
54 Sturla – Albaro – De Ferrari – Banco San Giorgio – Dinegro
55 Foce – Brignole – Principe – Dinegro
56 Marassi – Brignole – Principe – Dinegro

The lines marked with a red ‘X’ are those which closed in the city centre with the reorganisation of 1934, (c) Paolo Gassani. [8]

After 1934, Piazza Banco di San Georgio became the centre of the altered network (it was referred to originally as Piazza Caricamento). This was facilitated by earlier alterations to the network which included:

Piazza Railbetta, Piazza di San Georgio, Via San Lorenzo and Piazza Umberto 1

These earlier alterations included a very short line, shown on the Baedecker 1916 map of Genova, connecting Piazza Banco di San Georgio and Piazza Raibetta. In addition, a line along Via San Lorenzo and Piazza Umberto 1 made a connection from that short line to Piazza Raffaele de Ferrari which at the time was at the heart of Genova’s tram network. This three-way length of connecting tramways opened up the possibility of the significant revisions to the network which occurred in 1934.  The 1916 Baedeker map is the first I have found which shows these links, early Baedeker maps available online do not show these lines. There is photographic evidence of these lines being in use by 1906.

This extract from the Baedeker map of Genoa of 1916 shows the short additions to the network which directly connected Piazza Caricamento, Piazza Raibetta (along Via ) and Piazza de Ferrari, (c) Public Domain and provided by the stagniweb.it website under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [4]
Via Frate Oliviero seen looking South from Piazza Banco de San Georgio (previously Piazza Caricamento) was the link between the two piazzas, Banco de San Georgio and Raibetta. This image comes from the 1950s and was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group by Pietro Spanedda on 4th December 2022. [23]
Via San Lorenzo, looking East from close to its Western end, © Public Domain. [12]
A similar view looking East along the pedestrianised Via San Lorenzo in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, April 2019]
Via San Lorenzo looking East towards Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari, © Public Domain. [11]
A similar view, looking East on Via San Lorenzo in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, April 2019]

Ospidal Sant Andrea

An additional short line was provided from Piazza Galeazzo Alessi at the top of Via Corsica along Mura Sant Chiara, Mura del Prato, Viale Milazzzo and Via Alessandra Volta, as shown below.

A short length of additional tramway served the are immediately adjacent to Ospedal Sant Andrea above the old city walls, © Public Domain and provided by the stagniweb.it website under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [4]

Corso Italia

Corso Italia was built between 1909 and 1915 [6] and the tram line to Foce was extended along Corso Italia sometime in the early 1920s. The tram line can be seen (dotted) on the map extract below.

Via Corso Italia looking East, © Public Domain. [7]
A similar view from ground-level looking East along Corso Italia in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
A postcard image showing a tram running along Corso Italia while the service was in operation. The photograph looks West along the shore, (c) Public Domain. [5]
A similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
A tram is just visible on the left of this image. To the right of the tram, closer to the centre of the image is Villa Chiossone, © Public Domain. [10]
Villa Chiossone from a similar angle in the 21st century. [My photograph, November 2024]
Further East on Corsa Italia, © Public Domain. [9]
A similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Other links were added such as a line between Piazza Brignole and Piazza Giuseppi Verdi (outside Brignole Station). With the culverting of the Bisagno River in 1930/31, a link along Via Tolemaide from Piazza Verdi to meet the existing tramway which ran Northeast/Southwest on Via Montevideo and continued East towards San Martino, became possible.

Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari, Piazza Dante and routes East

We have already noted that Piazza Raffaele de Ferrari ceased to be the main focus of the network in 1934 and that trams were removed from Via XX Settembre and Via Roma at the time. What remained in the vicinity of Piazza de Ferrari was a single loop line were 11 lines from the East and Valbisagno terminated. The terminus was on Via Petrarca with a return loop through Via Porta Soprana and Via Antonio Meucci to
Piazza Dante and then on to their destinations. The first image below shows the revised arrangements on the South corner of Piazza Raffaele de Ferrari.

Trams which originally entered Piazza Raffaele de Ferrari from the north along Via Roma were diverted from Piazza Corvetto along Via Serra toward Piazza Brignole. More about this further down this article.

After tram lines were removed from Piazza De Ferrari in 1934, the terminus for trams from the East was in Via Fransecso Petrarca. Trams arrived through Piazza Dante( bottom-right on this image) and along Via Dante, turning left into Via Petrarca before returning by Via Porta Soprana, Via Antonio Meucci and Via Dante to Piazza Dante. [Google Maps, December 2024]
This view Northwest across Piazza Dante shows Via Dante heading towards Piazza de Ferrari on the right. Porte Soprana (city gates) are on the left, © Public Domain. [13]

A 600 series tram in Via Meucci on the return loop. The tram is approaching Via Dante where it will turn right to head East out of the centre of Genova, (c) Public Domain. [13]

Trams travelled up and down Via Dante and through Galleria Cristoforo Colombo to serve the East of the city and the coast.

This satellite image shows the tramway running along Via Dante to Galleria Cristoforo Colombo and beyond. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Tram tracks being installed in Via Dante in 1934. This image face Northwest, © Public Domain. [14]
A very similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
This monochrome image from the 1950s/1960s shows a similar view of Piazza Dante. It comes from the collection of Frederico Ferraboschi and was shared on the http://www.stagniweb.it website. It is authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [15]
Galleria Cristiforo Colombo during construction in the 1930s, (c) Public Domain. [22]
The Southeast Portal of Galleria Chrisoforo Colombo opened out onto Piazza del Cavalletto and Via Giuseppe Macaggi, © Public Domain. [24]
The tram route we are following runs Southeast on Via Giuseppe Macaggi. Some trams turned North on Via Brigata Liguria and then Via Fiume to run through Piazza Giuseppe Verdi, and others continued East on Via Armardo Diaz. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Looking North along Via Brigata Liguria, © Public Domain. [25]
Looking South across Brignole Station in the 1930s.. Via Fiume and, beyond it, Via Brigata Liguria are on the right. Piazza Giuseppe Verdi is in front of the station. Trams from Via Fiume turned right to run across the face of the station building joining trams running from Piazza Brignole along a newly built link between Piazza Brignole and Piazza Verdi, © Public Domain. [26]

Via Edmondo de Amicis

When trams were diverted away from Piazza De Ferrari, those which used to travel down Via Roma were diverted along Via Serra and Piazza Brignole. A new length of tramway was built along Via Edmondo de Amicis to link Piazza Brignole with Piazza Verdi and Brignole Railway Station.

The revised route from Piazza Corvette to Piaza Verdi – a new length of tramway was built along Via Edmondo de Amicis to link Piazza Brignole with Piazza Verdi and Brignole Railway Station. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Piazza Giuseppe Verdi looking West. Hotel Verdi is in the centre of the image, with Via Edmondo de Amicis heading away from the camera on the right, © Public Domain. [27]
Avery similar view in the 21stcentury. Hotel Verdi dominates the photograph with Via Edmondo Amicis on the right and running away from the camera. [Google Streetview, July 2015]
A Genovese policeman directing traffic at the West end of Piazza Verdi as a tram approaches down Via Edmondo de Amicis, © Public Domain. [28]
A similar view (without the policeman) in the 21st century with a bus in place of a tram! [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Piazza Giuseppe Verdi

The station forecourt of Brignole Railway Station and the North side of Piazza Giuseppe Verdi became a significant hub within the new network  inaugurated in 1934.

Looking East across the face of Brignole Railway Station in the 1960s with the tram station in the centre of the view. This image was shared by Gianfranco Curatolo on the C’era Una Volta Genova Facebook group on 20th August 2016. [29]
Piazza Giuseppe Verdi and Brignole Railway Station in the 21st century. [Google Maps, December 2024]

East from Piazza Verdi (Via Tolemaide)

Major work was undertaken in the 1930s along the length of the River Bisagno from the railway to the sea shore. That full length of the river was converted and a broad boulevard was created.

The area around the station and the River Bisagno as shown on the Baedeker map of 1916, © Public Domain and provided by the stagniweb.it website under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [4]
The area East of Brignole Railway Station in 1943, the green lines on this map extract are tramways. Via Tolemaide now makes a direct connection to Piazza Verde but this map indicates that during WW2 the link along Via Tolemaide had not been installed, © Public Domain (US War Office, 1943) and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [30]
Looking East along Via Tolemaide in the 1950s, a tram heading East has just passed the camera. The tunnel under the railway at this location (Via Archimede) is still in use in the 21st century. The dramatic Signal Box has gone! This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 3rd January 2024 by Silvia Brisigotti. [31]
Via Tolemaide looking East in the 21st century. The road is now classed as highway SS1. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
This view looks West along Via Tolemaide in 1957, the rails on Via Tolemaide are being lifted after services along the route were curtailed. This image was shared on the C’era Una Volta Genova Facebook Group on 8th February 2020 by Alessandro Megna. [32]
A similar location looking West on Via Tolemaide (SS1) in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Piazza Verdi (Brignole Railway Station), Viale Brigata Partigiane/Viale Brigata Bisagno, Via Barabino, Galleria Mameli, Via Carlo e Nello Rosselli and further East

The construction of Galleria Principe di Piemonte (later Galleria Mameli) allowed a further route East from the city centre to be exploited.

This is a drawing carried by Genova Rivista Municipale No. 10, October 1936. It shows the South Portal of Galleria Mameli (then known as Galleria Principe di Piemonte). The tunnel was constructed in the 1930s. The image was shared on the C’era Una Volta Genova Facebook Group by Mario Forni on 5th October 2020. [33]
Construction of Galleria Mameli took place in the early 1930s, © Public Domain. [34]
The interior of Galleria Principe di Piemonte (later Galleria Mameli) in 1936, © Public Domain. [35]
East of Galleria Mameli trams followed Via Carloe Nello Rosselli, Via Piero Gobetti, Via Renso Righetti and Via Oreste de Gaspari. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Via Carlo e Nelle Rosselli, looking South in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Via Piero Gobetti looking East in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Via Renzo Righetti, looking East in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2021]
Via Oreste de Gaspari, looking Southeast in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
After Via Oreste de Gaspari, the line turner North along Via Felice Cavallotti and then made a junction with the tramlines running West-East on Via Caprera and on the Piazza Sturla. [Google Maps, December 2024]
The junction between Via Oreste deGaspari and Via Felice Cavallotti, seen from Via Oreste de Gaspari in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The Junction between Via Felice Cavallotti and Via Caprere, looking North from Via Felice Cavallotti in the 21st century. [Google Streetviw, August 2024]

This map shows the route we have just followed. In later years the route was used by Line No. 16, (c) Paolo Gassani. [8]

References

  1. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/12/03/genoas-early-tram-network-part-1-general-introduction-tunnels-the-years-before-world-war-one-and-the-early-western-network.
  2. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/12/08/genoas-early-tram-network-part-2-the-western-half-of-the-eastern-network
  3. https://rogerfarnworth.com/2024/12/14/genoas-early-tram-network-part-3-the-remainder-of-the-eastern-network-before-the-first-world-war
  4. https://www.stagniweb.it/mappe/GE1916.jpg, accessed on 16th December 2024.
  5. https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=2049286151810128&set=gm.1668899133209243, accessed on 16th December 2024.
  6. https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corso_Italia_(Genova), accessed on 16th December 2024.
  7. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/71MjBp5D22S7ibme, accessed on 16th December 2024.
  8. Paolo Gassani; Fotostoria del tramway a Genova; Nuova Editrice Genoves; accessed via https://www.marklinfan.com/f/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=4530&whichpage=2, on 16th December 2024.
  9. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/53eQsSsDqVQihPtB, accessed on 16th December 2024.
  10. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/5HCMHKXdKRJQy5JG, accessed on 16th December 2024.
  11. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/aDJ5a49FpFsVZrT5, accessed on 16th December 2024.
  12. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/5b2Si6VYvDKM3CWT, accessed on 16th December 2024.
  13. https://www.marklinfan.com/f/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=4530&whichpage=1, accessed on 17th December 2024.
  14. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/WEFm8bEAFcWph8Dk, accessed on 17th December 2024.
  15. https://www.stagniweb.it/foto6.asp?File=tram_ge&InizioI=1&RigheI=50&Col=5, accessed on 17th December 2024.
  16. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/AMT_Genova, accessed on 15th November 2024.
  17. Storia [History] (in Italian). AMT Genova; https://www.amt.genova.it/amt/amt-istituzionale/storia, accessed on 15th November 2024.
  18. http://www.uwrbancenter.comune.genova.it/sites/default/files/quaderno_arch_2011_03_21.pdf, accessed on 16th November 2024.
  19. Rete tranviaria di Genova; https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rete_tranviaria_di_Genova, accessed on 26th November 2024.
  20. AMT (ed.); History of public transport in Genoa; Genoa, SAGEP Editrice, 1980.
  21. Paolo Gassani; Photo history of the tramway in Genoa , Genoa, Nuova Editrice Genovese, 1982.
  22. https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=10232797184498995&set=pcb.7130967057002396, accessed on 17th December 2024.
  23. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/JybARrWm7GmtDD9W, accessed on 17th December 2024.
  24. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/AayVX3X524jLgmi7, accessed on 17th December 2024.
  25. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/pJjBuUeF81f3LL3i, accessed on 17th December 2024.
  26. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/BsjLWDmoNQw4QjWb, accessed on 17th December 2024.
  27. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/fVjRbNsa8RPk2SE1, accessed on 17th December 2024.
  28. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/Crw7Lje3ZcHMr4KX accessed on 17th December 2024.
  29. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/4GTuSwY8RrCxGQJh, accessed on 18th December 2024.
  30. https://www.stagniweb.it/foto6.asp?File=mappe_ge&righe=1&inizio=5&InizioI=1&RigheI=50&Col=4, accessed on 18th December 2024.
  31. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/JmLna6oRqU8HmRbg, accessed on 18th December 2024.
  32. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/s3G2sL6e8hFGfeCX, accessed on 18th December 2024.
  33. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/dkNJ4yB1F1nkHLjD, accessed on 18th December 2024.
  34. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/GwXxfKHcemQQxj9T, accessed on 18th December 2024.
  35. https://www.facebook.com/share/p/Q34Q5GXXoamj1XhX, accessed on 18th December 2024.

Genoa’s Early Tram Network – Part 3 – The Remainder of the Eastern Network before the First World War.

A summary of what was covered in the first two articles

In the previous articles in this short series we looked at the history of trams in Genoa (Genova) – both horse trams and electric trams. In the first article, we covered the story as far as the beginning of the First World War. That article can be found here. [1]

In that article we looked at the tunnels which the city created in order to facilitate access to different parts of the tram network.

That article also covered the Western Network (which is marked in green on the map below).

In the second article we looked at a large part of the Eastern Tram Network. That article can be found here. [2]

We still have to look at the remainder of the network and the history of the network through to its final closure in the mid-1960s.

This map shows the three companies’ lines immediately prior to the date of unification under UITE. The Green lines were UITE (the former French Company). The Red lines were SFEF. The Blue lines were SATO, © Arbalete and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [19]

In this article we look at the services provided on the route from Piazza Corvetto to Prato (via Piazza Manin and Staglieno) which appears in red on the map above and the blue lines which ran out of Piazza Raffeale di Ferrari along Via XX Settembre to Staglieno, Foce, Thommaseo and Nervi. Firstly, looking as those provided before the First World War.

The Years Before World War One – The Eastern Network

Before the start of World War 1, the Eastern network provided these services: [19]

I. Eastern Network:

21 De Ferrari – Manin – Staglieno
22 De Ferrari – Manin
23 De Ferrari – Manin – Castelletto
24 De Ferrari – Manin – Castelletto – San Nicholo
25 Circuit in the hilly suburbs
26 Piazza Principe – Corso Ugo Bassi
27 De Ferrari – Zecca – Principe
28 Caricamento – De Ferrari – Galliera ‘Ospital
29 De Ferrari – Carignano
30 Circular Raibetta – Brignole – Corvetto – Raibetta
31 De Ferrari – Staglieno – Molassana – Prato
32 De Ferrari – Staglieno – Molassana
33 De Ferrari – Pila – Staglieno
34 Staglieno – Iassa
35 Pila – Staglieno
36 Pila – Staglieno – Molassana
37 De Ferrari – San Fruttuoso
38 De Ferrari – Foce
39 De Ferrari – San Francesco – Sturla – Priaruggia – Quinto – Nervi
40 De Ferrari – San Francesco – Sturla – Priaruggia – Quinto
41 De Ferrari – San Francesco – Sturla – Priaruggia
42 De Ferrari – San Francesco – Sturla
43 De Ferrari – Villa Raggio – Lido
44 De Ferrari – Tommaseo – San Martino – Borgoratti
45 De Ferrari – Tommaseo – San Martino – Sturla
46 De Ferrari – Tommaseo – San Martino
47 De Ferrari – Tommaseo
48 Raibetta – Pila

II. Municipal line:
De Ferrari – Quezzi

The Eastern network focussed on Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari. We looked at images from that piazza in the first article [1] about the trams of Genoa (Genova). At one time, Piazza de Ferrari was full of ‘circular tramlines’ and it was congested through much of the day.

Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari was the busy hub for the Eastern network, © Public Domain. [7]

Tram lines left Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari along Via Roma, to the Northeast and along Via XX Settembre. We covered most of those which radiated from the Northeast end of Via Roma (Piazza Corvetto) in the second article. [2]

This Article: The Rest of the Eastern Network

The line running from Piazza Corvetto to Prato will be covered in this article, along with those which ran out of Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari along Via XX Settembre.

Piazza Corvetto to Prato

Looking Northeast across Piazza Corvetto from close to Via Roma, circa 1900-1910. Via Asserotti leave the piazza at the mid point of the image. A tram can be seen leaving Via Asserotti in this image,, © Public Domain. [15]
A similar view from ground level in the 20th century, again Via Asserotti leaves the piazza at the centre of this image, [Google Streetview, August 2024]

As we have already noted in the second article in this short series, at Piazza Corvetto lines diverged to Piazza Carignano, Brignole, Manin and Acquaverde and Principe. The line to Prato ran Northeast from Piazza Corvetto through Piazza Manin.

Trams ran between Piazza Corvetto and Piazza Manin along Via Assarotti. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Looking Northeast along Via Asserotti in the 1940s. Traffic is now driving on the right. Genova had vehicles driving on the left until 1923 when the national government imposed a common practice across the country, (c) Public Domain. [5]
Later roadworks at the mouth of Via Asserotti on Piazza Corvetto. Behind the tram is Via Asserotti and to the right, Via S.S Giacomo e Filippo, (c) Public Domain. [3]
A postcard view from the 1970s along Via Asserotti from Piazza Corvetto. This is an extract from an image shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Paolo Nuzzo on 12th July 2019. [4]
Looking Southwest along Via Asserotti towards Piazza Corvetto, (c) Public Domain. [6]
A similar view Southwest along Via Asserotti in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Piazza Manin, looking East towards the city walls. Via Asserotti is behind the camera to the right, (c) J. Neer, Public Domain. [8]
A similar view in the 2st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Trams ran through the city walls under Ponte di Via alla Stazione per Casella. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking West toward Piazza Manin from outside the city walls. (c) Public Domain. [10]
An earlier view looking West with a tram heading towards the camera, (c) Public Domain. [11]

Just East of Piazza Manin, trams passed through the old city walls & turned North following the contours of the side of the Bisagno Valley. This extract from the Baedeker 1906 map of Genova shows the route of the tramway as it heads North. The openstreetmap.org extract shows that the route is along Via Leonardo Montaldo. [13][14]

Trams ran North along Via Leonardo Montaldo. The road was built, initially through undeveloped land, to accommodate the tram service.

Piazza Manin is about 100 metres off to the left of this satellite image. Trams ran out from Piazza Manin to hed North up Via Leonardo Montaldo. [Google Maps, December 2024]
A tram heads away from Piazza Manin up Via Leonardo Montaldo from its southern end. It has just turned left at Largo Gaetano Giardino after passing under the city walls, © Public Domain. [26]
Via Leonardo Montaldo heading away to the North from Largo Gaetano Giardino. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Via Leonardo Montaldo follows the contours as it heads North, roughly parallel to Via Bobbio (SS45). [Google Maps, December 2024]
An early South facing view of a newly built Via Leonardo Montaldo, (c) Public Domian. [22]
Major changes have occurred in the area around Via Leonardo Montaldo. A relatively rural area in the early part of the 20th century is now well-developed. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking North along Via Leonardo Montaldo, © Public Domain. [24]
The view North from a similar location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking North up the valley of the Bisagno with Via Leonardo Montaldo (not Via Canevari) on the left, © Public Domain. [9]
The view North from a similar location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Via Leonardo Montaldo joins Via Bobbio in Staglieno. [Google Maps, December 2024]
This panorama of the Bisagno Valley sows Via Leonardo Montaldo curving round towards the river in the middle distance. [28]
This closer view shows Via Leonardo Montaldo (on the left) curving round towards the river in the middle distance. [29]
Via Montaldo in the mid-20th century. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Christiano Burzi on 18th October 2016. [25]
The 21st century view looking North from a similar location. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The final run down the hill to the valley floor in Staglieno. The building on the right is da Passano School, (c) Public Domain. [27]
A very similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
A very early view of the UITE depot at the junction of Via Leonardo Montaldo and Via Bobbio in Staglieno, © Public Domain. [23]
The junction of Via Leonardo Montaldo with Via Bobbio in Staglieno. The buildings in the centre of the photograph belong to UITE, (c) Public Domain. [12]
The same view in the 21st century. Via Bobbio is on the left, Via Leonardo Montaldo is on the right. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Trams from the centre of Genoa arrived at the junction shown above, both along Via Bobbio and Via Montaldo and then continued North and East up the valley of the Bisagno River, passing the Cemetery on the way.

Looking North along the right bank of the Bisagno River along Via Bobbio. Not too far ahead Via Bobbio becomes Via Piacenza. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Staglieno Cemetery sits to the Northeast. Via Piacenza is on the right of this photo, the river just off the picture to the right. To the left of the prominent cemetery walls is Piazzale Giovanni Battista Resasco. The cemetery gates can be seen at the far end of the piazzale. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
1895: A tram at the end of Piazzale Resasco at the gates of Staglieno Cemetery, (c) Public Domain. [35]
The length of Via Piacenza approaching the gasworks at Gavette, (c) Public Domain. [34]
A tram passing the entrance to the gasworks. The line which runs from the camera into the works has been covered in another article on this website, © Public Domain. [43]

The line which served the Gavette works ran up the East side of the River Bisagno, crossing the river on its approach to the works. It was primarily used for bringing coal to the works in the days when it produced town gas. The article about that railway can be found here. [44]

A panorama of the Gavette gasworks . Trams ran along the road (Via Piacenza) between the works and the river. [c] Public Domain. [39]
The gasworks site is in the bottom-left of this extract from Google Maps satellite imagery. The tram line continued North along Via Piacenza on the West side of the River Bisagno. The main road (SS45) can be seen on the East side of the river. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Looking upstream along the right bank of the Bisagno river in San Bartolomeo. I have not been able to locate this view on Google Maps/Streetview, (c) Public Domain. [38]
Looking Southwest along Via Piacenza . The River Bisagno is off the left of the image, (c) Public Domain. [37]
The 21st century view, Southwest along Via Piacenza, from approximately the same location. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Via Piacenza in San Goffardo looking back towards Stagieno, (c) Public Domain. [36]
It is difficult to be sure, but this is approximately the same location on Via Piacenza in San Goffardo. The church is behind the camera to the left. There has been a lot of development since the monochrome photograph above was taken. What seems like gardens to the left of the road in the image above have disappeared under more recent developments/buildings. Via Emilio is now between Via Piacenza and the river. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
This next extract from the satellite imagery shows Via Piacenza on the North side of the river as it heads away from San Goffredo and through Molassana. Trams continued to follow the right bank of the river through Molassana and on towards Struppa. [Google Maps, December 2024]
This final length of the tramway runs West to East through Doria to Prato. [Google Maps, December 2024]
A panoramic view from the Southwest of the hospital buildings in Doria (in the left and middle foreground) and the highway running through Prato (to the right side of the image) in Struppa, © Public Domain. [31]
The same buildings in the 21st century – Palazzo Della Salute, ASL3 Genovese  – seen from across the River Bisagno from approximately the same direction as the postcard image above[Google Streetview, August 2024]
The same buildings with a tram stopped outside in 1966. The notes with this photo say that the tram is sitting outside the Casa di Riposo. Line No. 12 was the last tramline to close, running until 27th December 1966, © Luciano Rosselli (La Valbisagno). [30]
Taken from the middle of the road in the 21st century. The tram stop outside of the hospital is now a bus stop! [Google Streetview, August 2024]

The terminus of the tramway is a little further East from the hospital/health buildings. These next few images take us to the end of the line in Prato.

Struppa – Prato – looking West on Via Nazionale (in the 21st century, Via Struppa), © Public Domain. [32]
Looking West again, at the same location on Via Struppa. [Google Streetview, July 2024]
In 1909 a tram sits at the terminus in Prato next to the recently completed tram company building, © Public Domain. [33]
A similar post card view, © Public Domain. [41]
Looking West along Via Struppa in Prato. The large tramway building that stood at the tramway terminus is still in use in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, July 2023]

Having arrived in Prato we have now covered all the ‘green lines’ and the ‘red lines’ on the network plan provided close to the start of this article. We still have to look at most of the ‘blue lines’. …..

We have previously looked at the blue line around the coast from Raibetta and that from Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari to Pila. The next line to look at is that from Pila North to Staglieno. We then complete looking at the routes by looking at the lines on the East side of the Bisagno valley, © Arbalete and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0. [19]

Pila to Staglieno

Trams following the route North alongside the River Bisagno started and ended their journeys at Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari and travelled along Via XX Settembre and Via Luigi Cadorna to the location of Ponte Pila. What was once a bridge over the Bisagno River is now part of the culverted length of the river.

Ponte Pila bridging the River Bisagno, © Public Domain. [45]
Looking East across Ponte Pila, © Public Domain. [42]
Looking West across what was Ponte Pila, from Corso Buenos Aires towards Via Luigi Cadorna. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking East from the location of Ponte Pila along Corso Buenos Aires which was the route followed by all tram services to the East of the River Bisagno. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking North in the 21st century from the location of Ponte Pila. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

In the 21st century, the road North from this location is Viale Emanuele Filiberto Duca d’ Aosta (SS1). Facing North from Ponte Pila the large Piazza Giuseppe Verdi was to the left of the road. This remains as a large garden area. Further ahead on the left is Brignole Railway Station.

Ponte Pila looking Northwest. Via Luigi Cadorna is ahead across the bridge on the left. Via Canevari runs North on the far side of the river, between the river and the public gardens which can be seen in front of the large building on the right half of the image, © Public Domain. [46]
Looking North up Via Canevari with the River Bisagno on the right. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group by Asinus Natator on 7th February 2022, (c) Public Domain. [47]

The next two images are difficult to location on the modern landscape as so much has change in the are around the River Bisagno. Most probably the building shown are on the line of the dual carriageway which sits over the culverted river.

Via Canevari in the 1920s. The prominent buildings behind the tram appear in the image above, © Public Domain. [54]
Via Canevari runs North and Via  Giovanni Tommaso Invrea runs East across the River Bisagno in the 1930s, © Public Domain. [49]
A view from the North of construction work on the underpass which takes Via Canevari under the railway tracks at Brignole Railway Station in 1940, © Public Domain. [53]
The same underpass seen from the North in the 21st century, now with the Metro Station above the road. [Google Streetview, June 2022]
The junction of Via Canevari and Corso Monte Grappa to the North of the Brignole Railway Station, © Public Domain. [52]
A similar 21st century view. [Google Streetview, March 2023]
Looking downstream on the River Bisagno with Via Canevari in the centre of the picture. The Bakery is behind the camera. The main tramway route to Stagieno leaves the image bottom-right. The tramline crossing the river on Ponte Castelfidardo is not shown on the tram map of the network in 1901 above. [57]

The junction shown in the image above appears left as a satellite image [Google Maps, December 2024] and below as a Streetview image [Google Streetview, April 2023]

Via Canevari in the 1920s, © Collezione Vito Elio Petrucci, Public Domain. [51]
A similar 21st century view. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
This is the municipal bakery in 1921. e year 1921. Via Canevari runs North to the left of the bakery. The building is now a Police Stationand Via Moresco. . Now is the Local Police station.
The smoking chimney is the one of the Genoa Electric Offices (OEG), which produced electricity for the city of Genoa and its trams. It used coal as fuel. The image was included in the Municipal bulletin in 1921, (c) Public Domain. [55]
The old bakery is, in the 21st century, a police station. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The large electricity generation station for the tramway network sat alongside Via Canevari, between Via Canevari and the river. [48]
This extract from Google’s satellite imagery shows Via Canevari running one street back from the waterfront. The blue line highlights the tramway route to Staglieno. The bakery building (now a police station) is bottom-left. The electricity buildings stretch diagonally Northeast across the image from the bakery. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Further North and looking North on Via Canevari, (c) Public Domain. [56]
A similar 21st century view. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

The satellite image shows the remaining length of the route (in blue) as far as Staglieno where it joins the route from Via Lombardo Montaldo (in red). Two views typical of this length in the 21st century are shown below.

Ponte Castelfidardo to Piazza Terralba

We saw a picture of a tram on Ponte Castelfidardo above, on a section of tramway not recorded on the map of pre-1902 tramways of Genova, but Line No. 37 is recorded as running to the area of San Fruttuosa which is the area to the East of the River Bisagno through which this tram ran so was inaugurated between the turn of the century and the start of WW1. We will also see further below that a municipally owned line crossed the bridge and ran out to Quezzi. This line was also put in service before WW1.

This North-facing view of 1910 shows a tram on Ponte Castelfidardo with substantial municipal buildings on the East bank of the River Bisagno behind, © Public Domain. [62]
A later view of Ponte Castelfidardo seen from the Southeast, © Public Domain. [63]

To the East of Ponte Castelfidardo trams entered Piazza Manzoni.. Piazza Manzoni led East into Piazza Giusti. The industrial railway from Terralba to Gavette crossed Piazza Giusti. Information about that line can be found here. [64] The photograph below shows a train of covered wagons, probably from the fruit and vegetable market on Corso Sardegna, heading into the goods yard at Terralba. In the picture is the tramway crossing the line of the railway.

A train of covered wagons, probably from the fruit and vegetable market on Corso Sardegna, heads into the goods yard at Terralba. In the picture is a tramway crossing the line of the railway. By the time of this photo, the tramway appears disused as cars are parked across it. [65]

The route of this line beyond Piazza Giusti which circulated through Piazza Terralba. This is an extract from the 1956 tram map provided by Italian Wkipedia, © Arbalete and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [19]

The route can easily be made out on the modern satellite imagery from Google Maps. [Google Maps, December 2024]
An early 20th century photograph (facing East) of Via Paolo Giacometti.. The building in the distance was removed when the road was extended, © Public Domain. [66]
Via Paolo Giacometti facing East in the 21st century. The buildings at the far end of the street face out onto Piazza Giovanni Martinez. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
An early photograph of Piazza Martinez with railway sidings in place, © Public Domain. [79]
Piazza Martinez seen from the Southeast. Rail tracks can still be seen crossing the piazza on the diagonal from the bottom-left of this image, remnants of the standard-gauge sidings in the image above. © Public Domain. [67]
A similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
By 1937, the year of this photograph, the tram tracks had been removed from Piazza Giovanni Martinez. This view looks South towards the FS standard-gauge railway lines. Trams running out from the city centre passed across the far side o, © Public Domain. [68]
Looking West across Piazza Terralba in 1940, © Public Domain. [78]
Piazza Terralba, © Public Domain. [80]

Lines East of the River Bisagno – Corso Buenos Aires

Corso Buenos Aires looking West, © Public Domain. [59]
Corso Buenos Aires looking West. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking East along Corso Buenos Aires, © Public Domain. [61]
Corso Buenos Aires looking East. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The view from Corso Buenos Aires into Piazza Thommaseo in 1922, © Public Domain. [58]
A similar view from Corso Buenos Aires into Piazza Thommaseo in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
This photograph shows how the city of Genoa went about regrading streets to meet their aspirations as a modern, cosmopolitan city. This is Corso Buenos Aires in 1896. It was being lowered to connect it with the road axis that ran through to Via XX Settembre. As a result, the basements became shops and the shops above apartments. On the right you can still see a door, now located on the first floor. Also of interest is the use of steam power and rails to remove excavated m© Public Domain. [60]
An early view West from Piazza Thommaseo along Corso Buenos Aires, © Public Domain. [69]
A view West across Piazza Thommaseo towards Corso Buenos Aires. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Corso Buenos Aires to Foce and beyond

Partway along Corso Buenos Aires a branch tramway ran South down Corso Torino. This was pre-1902 Line No. 38.

The line South to Foce along Corso Torino, which terminated in Piazza del Popolo. This extract comes for the pre-1902 plan of the tramways of Genova provided by Italian Wikipedia. It does no shows developments which occurred after 1902 and before WW1, © Arbalete and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [19]

Facing North on Corso Torino, two trams pass, © Public Domain. [71]
Looking North on Corso Torino in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
It seems as though this photo was taken after 1923 when the national government enforced driving on the right. A tram heading South on Corso Torino close to the route terminus  which involved a loop in streets close to Piazza del Popolo (now Via Antonio Cecchi), which also host a local market, which was off to the right of the photograph, © Public Domain. [70]
A very similar view looking North on Corso Torino in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Piazza del Popolo hosted a local market and was the effective terminus of the tram line to Foce. The red line marks the tram route which looped round the streets on the South side of the piazza. This is an extract from the Baedeker map of 1927, © Public Domain. [72]

Piazza del Popolo seen from the Southeast. [73]
Via Antonio Cecchi (previously Piazza del Popolo) in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, March 2023]

After 1901 and before WW1 a significant extension was made to the route to Foce which took trams South of Piazza del Popolo to the coast and along Corso Italia. That line is illustrated (dotted) on the map extract from the Markilnfan.com Forum below.

This map extract comes form a slightly larger one on the Marklin.com Forum. That new line connected in the East with a later line which ran along Via Barabino and through Galleria Marneli. Phots of the construction work on Corso Italia show it being built immediately after WW1, so it is not strictly relevant to the period we are looking at. [111]

Piazza Thommaseo to Nervi

There were two possible routes to Nervi. That shown blue on the image below was one of these.

The line to Nervi frpm Piazza Thommaseo, © Arbalete and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [19]

A second route can be seen on the map of tramlines in 1956 below. It is not clear when the alternative route began offering a service. We will look at this route later when we have followed the more northerly route as far as Piazza Sturla.

A later tramway map showing more of the route to Nervi. Note that on this later map an alternative route to that via San Martino marked as the terminus of Line 50 in 1956, was the route of Lines 51,52,53 in 1956, The two routes met at Piazza Sturla which is marked as the terminus of Lines 42 and 45 in 1956, © Arbalete and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [19]

The more northerly route left Piazza Thommaseo along Via Montevideo.

Looking Northeast across Piazza Thommaseo and along Via Montevideo in the 1920s, © Public Domain.  [74]
A similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2023]
At the Northeast end of Via Montevideo (off to the left of the picture), this mid-20th century view looks East on Via Tolemaide, © Public Domain. [75]
A similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking West along Corso Giulio Cesare (now Via Aldo Gastaldi) early in the 20th century, © Public Domain. [76]
Again looking West along Corso Giulio Cesare (now Via Aldo Gastaldi) in the mid-20th century, © Public Domain. [77]
Via Aldo Gastaldi (SS1) is highlighted in yellow on this satellite image. Trams left Via Aldo Gastaldi at the left of this image, travelling along Via San Marino which can be seen on the South side of the SS1. At the bottom-right of this image the road carrying the tramway becomes Via Sturla. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Looking East along what is now Via Aldo Gastaldi. Via San Martino bears off to the right. An earlier picture at this location can be seen below, © Public Domain. [94]
The tram in this East facing image from 1929 is travelling on Via San Martino. Construction work on the SS1 is underway. That road will open in 1933. Via Aldo Gastaldi was first known as Via Nuova San Martino, then as Corso Giulio Cesare and, after WW2, it was named after the partisan Aldo Gastald, © Public Domain. [82]
Looking East at the same location in the 21st century. On the left is the SS1 . Via San Martino runs up the centre of this image. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking West along Via San Marino, © Public Domain. [95]
The samw vie, looking West, as in the monochrome image above, in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The tram route along Via Sturla (c) unknown but most probably Public Domain. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antic Facebook Group by Luciano Lully Lulli on 31st March 2020. [92]
Via Sturla, San Martino, (c) Public Domain. [93]
Via Sturla, San Martino, 1956. This image was shared on the C’era Una Volta Genova Facebook Group by Maurizio Maggiali on 22nd November 2020. It it taken at the same location as the monochrome imgae immediately above. [81]
The same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Via Sturla winds its way Southeast through th Genoa’s suburbs. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Much closer to the coast now trams leave Via Sturla to run along Via Dei Mille. [Google Maps, December 2024]
In this photo, the line from San Martino is close to Piazza Sturla where it merged
with the shorter variant coming from Via Albaro (see below). The tram is heading for Quarto, Priaruggia, Quinto and Nervi. The image is later than 1915 as the new Sturla railway station is present, (c) Public Doamin. [102]
A similar location looking North on Via Sturla in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
This extract from a map of the East of Genova copnurbation shows the length of the tramway running along Via Sturla, Via dei Mille and Via V. Maggio, (c) unknown but most probably Public Domain. This image was shared on the Fotto Genova Antic Facebook Group by Luciano Lully Lulli on 2nd May 2023. [18]
Piazza Sturla with Via dei Mille running away from the camera. Vis Sturla enters the image on the left, (c) Public Domain. [96]
Via Sturla looking Northwest from adjacent to Via dei Mille, (c) Public Domain. [97]
Lookin Northwest, Piazza Sturla in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Before heading on towards Nervi along Via dei Mille we need to look back at the alternative route to Piazza Sturla. Trams using this route left Piazza Thommaseo. It is not entirely clear when trams began serving this route. An early, probably pre-WW1 image, shows a tram on Via Albaro near the church of San Francesco.

This satellite image shows Piazza Thommaseo on the left. The blue line shows the tram route as far as the Church of San Francesco. The image below shows a tram using the route between Genova (Genoa) and Nervi. [Google Maps, December 2024]
A tram heading for Nervi is travelling along Via Albaro close to the church of San Francesco, (c) Public Domain. [85]
The same location in the 21st century, also looking East. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Trams continued Southeast along Via Frederico Ricci and Via Paolo Boselli. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Continuing, East-southeast trams ran along Via Pisa and Via Caprera to Piazza Sturla. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Before the first world war, a tram heads for the city centre along Via Caprera over the old viaduct, (c) Public Domain. [84]
The same view towards the city centre in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Two different routes to the West of Piazza Sturla have been covered. We now go on from Piazza Sturla to Nervi, setting off along Via dei Mille.

Via dei Mille becomes Via V. Maggio. [Google Maps, December 2024]
A view West on Via dei Mille towards Piazza Sturla, (c) Public Domain. [91]
The same view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking Northwest from Via V. Maggio along Via dei Mille, (c) Public Domain. [98]
A more modern postcard image looking Northwest from Via V. Maggio along Via dei Mille, (c) Unknown. This image was shared by Diego Ardenghi on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 20th January 2024. [99]
Via V. Maggio wanders along beside the Mediterranean. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Looking East on Via V. Maggio, (c) Public Domain. [90]
A similar location looking East on Via V. Maggio in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Via V. Maggio looking West, (c) Public Domain. [100]
Via V. Maggio looking West, (c) Public Domain. [101]
A similar location on Via V. Maggio to the two monochrome images above. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Via V. Maggio continues East along the coast. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Quarto dei Mille looking East from Via V. Maggio to Via Quarto, (c) Public Domain. [50]
The same location in the 21st century. Via V. Maggio is about to lead into Via Quarto
Via V. Maggio gives way to Via Quarto and then Via Quinto as trams run East. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Via Qunito gives way to Via Angelo Gianelli. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Via Proveinciale, Quinto, (now Via Angelo Gianelli, (c) Public Domain. [105]
The same location, looking East on Via Angelo Gianelli in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Trams ran along Via Angelo Gianelli across the full width of this satellite image. [Google Maps, December 2024]
The final length of the tramway took it along Via Guglielmo Oberdan to Piazza Antonio Pittaluga (once Piazza Virrorio Emanuele). [Google Maps, December 2024]
Tram tracks on Via Guglielmo Oberdan in the 1950s, (c) Public Domain. With the SSi running through this part of Nervi, it is very difficult to find this location on Google Streetview. The arch bridge in the distance should be a helpful indicator but, as you will see below, the built environment is very different. I have also found it impossible to match the arch bridge and the steep hill side visible in this photograph. [86]
Possibly the same arch bridge as on that image above. If so, the immediate built environment has changed dramatically. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking West on Via Guglielmo Oberdan, (c) Public Domain. [107]
The same location, looking West on Via Guglielmo Oberdan in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, June 2021]
Trams in Nervi – those on the left are heading towards the camera on Via Guglielmo Oberdan. The tram seen side-on is just turning out of Viale Goffredo Franchini after running round the loop from the terminus, © Public Domain. [83]
Looking West along Via Guglielmo Oberdan from the same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, June 2021]
The terminus loop to allow trams to be turned. This replaced a simple terminus in Piazza Vittorio Emanuele (now Piazza Antonio Pittaluga). [Google Maps, December 2024]

The tram terminus in Nervi was in Piazza Antonio Pittaluga (once Piazza Vittorio Emanuele) Early in the life of the network the terminus was in the piazza, later it was in Viale Goffredo Franchini on the North side of the piazza.

Piazza Vittorio Emanuele (later Piazza Antonio Pitta luga), Nervi, (c) Public Domain. [104]
The tram terminus in what is now Piazza Antonio Pittaluga, Nervi, (c) Public Domain. [106]
Piazza Antonio Pittaluga, Nervi, The terminus has, by the time of this photograph, been moved into Viale Goffredo Franchini on the North side of the piazza. (c) Public Domain. [88]
Piazza Antonio Pittaluga, Nerve. Although busses have replaced trams by the time of this 1960s photograph, the tram tracks remain in place. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group by Gianfranco Dell’Oro Bussetti on 14th November 2019, (c) Unknown Photographer. [103]
The tram terminus at Nervi in the mid-20th century. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group by Giovanna Levaggi on 13th May 2022, (c) Unknown Photographer. [87]
The same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, May 2022]

The Line to Quezzi

Partially in anticipation of taking control of the whole tram network before WW1, the municipality constructed its own line to Quezzi which used existing tram tracks as far as Ponte Castelfidardo. The transfer of the network to the municipality did not happen and this line, while remaining in the ownership of the city authorities was operated on their behalf by the tram company.

The municipally owned route to Quezzi – Ponte Castelfidardo is in the bottom left of this extract from the network map of 1956, © Arbalete and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [19]
The line to Quezzi followed the left (East) bank of the River Bisagno North from Ponte Castelfidardo along Corso Galliera before heading Northeast along Via Monticelli. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Via Monticelli facing Southwest, (c) Public Domain. [89]
The same location on Via Monticelli in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The route continued to the Northeast along Via Ferreggiano. [Google Maps, December 2024]
The remaining length of the tramway. [Google Maps, December 2024]
A panorama of Quezzi in circa. 1935, with a tram close to the end of the line, (c) Public Domain. [108]
Piazza Foreggiano, Quezzi – the end of the line, (c) Public Domain. [109]
Another postcard view of Piazza Foreggiano. [110]
Quezzi – the end of the line as seen in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, September 2008]

Summary

The first three articles about the trams of Genoa cover the network up until the First World War. Future articles will go on to look at the later history of the network and the rolling stock used.

References

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Genoa’s Early Tram Network – Part 2 – The Western half of the Eastern Network

A Summary of what was covered in the First Article

In the previous article in this short series we looked at the history of trams in Genoa (Genova) – both horse trams and electric trams. We covered the story as far as the beginning of the First World War. That article can be found here. [1]

In that article we looked at the tunnels which the city created in order to facilitate access to different parts of the tram network.

That article also covered the Western Network (which is marked in green on the map below). We still have to look at the remainder of the network and the history of the network through to its final closure in the mid-1960s.

This map shows the three companies’ lines immediately prior to the date of unification under UITE. The Green lines were UITE (the former French Company). The Red lines were SFEF. The Blue lines were SATO, © Arbalete and authorisedd for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0. [19]

As well as looking in detail at the Western network, we noted the services provided on the whole network before the First World War. Details of the lines which formed the Western network can be found in the earlier article – here. [1]

In this article we look at the service provided on another large portion of the remainder of the network in the period up to the First World War.

The Years Before World War One – The Eastern Network

Before the start of World War 1, the Eastern network provided these services: [19]

I. Eastern Network:

21 De Ferrari – Manin – Staglieno
22 De Ferrari – Manin
23 De Ferrari – Manin – Castelletto
24 De Ferrari – Manin – Castelletto – San Nicholo
25 Circuit in the hilly suburbs
26 Piazza Principe – Corso Ugo Bassi
27 De Ferrari – Zecca – Principe
28 Caricamento – De Ferrari – Galliera ‘Ospital
29 De Ferrari – Carignano
30 Circular Raibetta – Brignole – Corvetto – Raibetta
31 De Ferrari – Staglieno – Molassana – Prato
32 De Ferrari – Staglieno – Molassana
33 De Ferrari – Pila – Staglieno
34 Staglieno – Iassa
35 Pila – Staglieno
36 Pila – Staglieno – Molassana
37 De Ferrari – San Fruttuoso
38 De Ferrari – Foce
39 De Ferrari – San Francesco – Sturla – Priaruggia – Quinto – Nervi
40 De Ferrari – San Francesco – Sturla – Priaruggia – Quinto
41 De Ferrari – San Francesco – Sturla – Priaruggia
42 De Ferrari – San Francesco – Sturla
43 De Ferrari – Villa Raggio – Lido
44 De Ferrari – Tommaseo – San Martino – Borgoratti
45 De Ferrari – Tommaseo – San Martino – Sturla
46 De Ferrari – Tommaseo – San Martino
47 De Ferrari – Tommaseo
48 Raibetta – Pila

III. Municipal line:
A. De Ferrari – Quezzi

Initially the East and West networks touched only at a location close to Principe Railway Station. Later, after a link was made between Piazza Caricamento and Piazza Raibetta (only a short length of rails) there was a coastal line which linked Piazza Caricamento to the Eastern lines through Raibetta.

The Eastern network focussed on Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari. We looked at images from that piazza in the first article about the trams of Genoa (Genova). At one time, Piazza de Ferrari was full of ‘circular tramlines’ and it was congested through much of the day.

Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari was the busy hub for the Eastern network, © Public Domain. [7]

Tram lines left Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari along Via Roma, to the Northeast and along Via XX Settembre.

The lines along Via Roma led to Piazza Corvetto where lines diverged to Carignano, Brignole, Manin and Acquaverde and Principe. A further line looped through the hills North of the city centre from Acquaverde to Manon, and a line ran North from Manin up the Val Bisagno to Staglieno and Prato. We will lookat these line in this article, those which ran out of Piazza de Raffeale Ferrari along Via XX Settembre will be for a further article.

Via Roma and Via Carlo Felice left the North side of Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari, © Public Domain. [8]
The same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, July 2015]
Looking Northeast from the Southwest end of Via Roma (only a few metres North of the last monochrome photograph, early in the 20th century, © Public Domain. [6]
Via Roma, © Public Domain. [6]
The same location as the two monochrome images above in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, November 2010]
Just a few metres further Northeast, Shop Canopies and Trams in Via Roma, © Public Domain. [5]
A ground level view in the 21st century from approximately the same location. [Google Streetview, November 2010]
Via Roma in the early 20th century. This image is much more difficult to locate than others because of its closer focus on the people rather than the built environment. It seems to be taken facing Northeast and was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 2nd December 2024 by Luisa Torre, (c) Public Domain. [13]
Looking South West along Via Roma from outside Palazzo Doria Spinola – just Southwest of Piazza Corvetto, © Public Domain. [4]
The same length of Via Roma in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking Northeast across Piazza Corvetto from close to Via Roma, circa 1900-1910, © Public Domain. [15]
A similar view from ground level in the 20th century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Piazza Corvetto, 1940, © Public Domain. [14]
Another ground level view which approximates to the monochrome image immediately above.

As we have already noted, at Piazza Corvetto lines diverged to Piazza Carignano, Brignole, Manin and Acquaverde and Principe.

Line No. 29 – Piazza Corvetto to Carignano

The line to Carignano left the piazza in a South-southwest direction. The roads used are currently named Via XII Ottobre and Viale IV Novembre, Corso Andrea Podesta (which bridges Via XX Settembre), Via Corsica, Via Galeazzo Alessi.

This extract from the Baedeker Map of Genova from 1906 shows the route of Tram No. 29 – from Piazza de Ferrari to Piazza Corvetto, then South on the East side of Ospidale di Pammatone, along Corso Andrea Podesta (which bridges Via XX Settembre), then in a loop including Via Corsica, Via Nino Bixio, Piazza Carignano and Via Galeazzo Alessi, (c) Public Domain. [40]
The route of Line No. 29 is shown dotted on this extract from Google’s satellite imagery. [Google Maps, December 2024]
This image shows a tram heading out of Piazza Corvetto in the Carignano direction down the present Via XII Ottobre. The image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Alessandro Pellerano on 23rd March 2021, (c) Public Domain. [22]
A similar view looking towards Piazza Corvetto along Via XII Ottobre in the 21st century. [Googl;e Streetview, August 2024]
If this image is prior to 1923, traffic in Genova would have been on the left. This tram would then be travelling away from the camera leaving Viale IV Novembre to run along a short length on Via XII Ottobre to Piazza Corvetto. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group by Silvia Brisigotti on 31st May 2024, (c) Public Domain. [26]
A similar view towards Piazza Corvetto from Via IV Novembre. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking South along Corso Andrea Podesta with Abbazio di Santo Stefano peeping out behind the first building on the right. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 15th February 2020 by Enrico Pinna, (c) Public Domain. [33]
The same view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking North along Corso Andrea Podesta. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 14th March 2019 by Enrico Pinna, (c) Public Domain. [31]
A similar view facing North on Corso Andrea Podesta across the bridge over Via XX Settembre.on the left of the photograph is Abbazio di Santo Stefano. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking East along Via XX Settembre with Abbazio di Santo Stefano on the left and the bridge carrying Corso Andrea Podesta ahead. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Corso Andrea Podesta, 1906. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 26th July 2022 by Renata Fergola, (c) Public Domain. [30]
A similar view in the 21st century. The three buildings on the right of the monochrome image above dominate this photo. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking North along Corso Andrea Podesta from a point a few hundred metres to the South of the bridge over Via XX Settembre. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 7th July 2024 by Zenzero Secondo from the Collection of Stefano Finauri, (c) Public Domain. [29]
A similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
At the South end of Corso Andrea Podesta, looking North. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 26th July 2024 by Pietro Spanedda, (c) Public Domain. [27]
This view seems to be as close as it is possible to get on Google Streetview to the colourised postcard image above. The steps which are prominent in the image above can be seen through the balustrade to the right of this image. [Google Streetview, 2019]
Via Corsica, 1916. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group on 23rd November 2019 by Pietro Cassani, (c) Public Domain. [34]
Via Corsica in the 21st century – the trees evident in the monochrome image above have matured significantly since the early 20th century. As a result it is difficult to determine the modern equivalent of the older view. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

A loop ran round Via Galeazzo, Piazza Carignano and Via Corsica as shown below

Piazza Carignano in the early years of the 20th century looking along Via Galeazzo Alesi. The tram in the picture appears to have travelled to Piazza Carignano along Via Galeazzo Alesi. It will turn to its left along the side of Piazza Carignano before leaving the piazza along Via Nino Bixio. The loop may also have been travelled in the reverse direction, if so, this tram is leaving Piazza Carignanao down Via Galeazzo Alesi. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Franco Bonadonna on 18th October 2022, (c) Public Domain. [25]
Tha same view in the 21st century. [Googl;e Streetview, August 2024]
This picture shows the tram tracks running along the side of Piazza Carignano from Via Galeazzo Alesi and turning down Via Nino Bixio. This image was shared on the Foto Genove Antica Facebook Group on 30th April 2024 by Pietro Spanedda, (c) Public Domain. [23]
This view of Via Nino Bixio seen from Via Corsica shows a tram running away from the camera along Via Nino Bixio having turned right from Via Corsica. Prior to 1923 Genova traffic travelled on the left. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Roberto Cito on 9th September 2023, (c) Public Domain. [24]
A similar view in the 21st century of Via Nino Bixio from Via Corsica. [Google Streetview, September 2020]

Line 30  – Piazza della Raibetta to Piazza Brignole via Piazza Corevetto

Italian Wikipedia describes this route as a ‘circular’ (Circolare) – we will need to consider how this route differs from an ‘out-and-back’ service (such as Line 29 between Piazza de Ferrari and Piazza Carignano).

Piazza della Raibetta was the terminus of a coastal tram route. Initially, it was only served by Line No. 30.

Piazza della Raibetta. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Tram lines visible in the road surface of Piazza della Raibetta. This image was shared on the C’era Una Volta Genova by Alessandro Lombardo on 2nd April 2018, © Public Domain. [35]
Piazza della Raibetta in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, 2019]
Assuming that this network map is correct, the most likely route of Line 30 – the blue line round the coast and up the first length of Val Bisagno, left along Via XX Settembre to Piazza de Ferrari, along Via Roma to Piazza Corvetto and then along Via Serra to Piazza Brignole. Trams would, under these assumptions, return to Piazza Raibetta by the same route, © Arbalete and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [19]

These three extracts from the Baedeker 1906 map of Genoa show the route of Line No. 30.

Again, assuming the map by Arbalete is correct, the line ran South from Piazza Raibetta along (probably) Via Filippo Turati and then through Piazza Cavour onto Sottopasso di Carcimento. The line continued around the South side of the city along Corso Maurizio Quadro and Corso Aurelio Saffi (previously Corso Principe Oddone) to the mouth of the River Bisagno where it turned inland, following the Val Bisagno as far as Via Luigi Cardorna where trams turned left following that road to the West which continued into Via XX Settembre. Then into Piazza de Ferrari, Via Roma, Piazza Corvetto, Via Serra and finally Piazza Brignole, (c) Public Domain. [40]

Line No. 30 from Piazza Raibetta along (probably) Via Filippo Turati and then through Piazza Cavour onto Sottopasso di Carcimento. The line then continued around the South side of the city along Corso Maurizio Quadro and, at the bottom of this satellite image, Corso Aurelio Saffi. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Trams followed Corso Aurelio Saffi (previously Corso Principe Oddone) to the mouth of the River Bisagno where they turned inland, following the Val Bisagno as far as Via Luigi Cardorna where trams turned left following that road to the West which continued into Via XX Settembre. [Google Maps, December 2024]
From Via XX Settembre trams entered Piazza de Ferrari ran along Via Roma, through Piazza Corvetto onto Via Serra and into Piazza Brignole. [Google Maps, December 2024]

There is an alternative to this route. This would have trams returning from Brignole to Ponte Pila by a more direct route and so completing a ‘circular’ as suggested by the route listings above. The 1906 Baedeker below shows a tram route which would permit this option.

A possible alternative route of Line 30, running South from Piazza Brignole along Via Galata, then East along Via Colombo, North along Via Ederra (now Via Fiume), Southeast across the front of Brignole Railway Station (across the North side of Piazza Guiseppe Verdi and Southwest alongside the River Bisagno on Via Canevari, before returning to Piazza Raibetta along Corso Aurelio Saffi. If this is the correct route it was probably travelled by trams in both directions, © Public Domain. [40]
The alternative route superimposed as a blue line on Google Maps satellite imagery. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Looking Southeast, trams on Via Mauritzio Quadro/Aurelio Saffi, (c) Public Domain. [39]
Via Corso Principe Oddone, later Via Aurelio Saffi, (c) Public Domain. [46]
A similar location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The coastal road running Southeast. The building which is being constructed with scaffolding around it is, I believe, the Genova Fire Station, (c) Public Domain. [46]
A very similar view in the 21st century. Note the two arches on the left of each image. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Corso Principe Oddone  looking Northwest, early in 20th century. Road names were changed with the removal of the monarchy. This length of Corso Principe Oddone became Corso Maurizio Quadro, © Public Domain. [38]
A very similar view in the 21st century, the ornate building is long-gone! [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The fire station on Corso Principe Oddone, again looking Northwest, this length became Corso Maurizio Quadro or possibly Corso Aurelio Saffi. The point at which the name change occurred is not clear. The building which features in the monochrome image above can be seen just beyond the fire station in this image. The fire station sat on this site from 1906 until it was demolished in the 1990s. [39]
A very short distance Southeast along Corso Aurelio Saffi, this view looks North across what was once the site of Genova’s Fire Station. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
By 1916, the names of roads dedicated to royalty had been changed. This view looks East-southeast along the coast road, from Corso Maurizio Quadro towards Corso Aurelio Saffi, © Public Domain. [41]
Looking East at approximately the same location as the monochrome image above. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

These next few photographs of the coast road (Circonvallazione a Mare) focus on a dramatic Villa which overhung the road – Villa Figari (also known as Villa Mylius).

Villa Figari, Corso Principe Oddone (later Via Aurelio Saffi, (c) Public Domain. [41]
Villa Figari on Via Corso Aurelio Saffi, (c) Public Domain. [42]
A similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Villa Figari on Via Corso Principe Oddone, later Via Aurelio Saffi, (c) Public Domain. [43]
Another similar 21st century view. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
A tram on the curve on Corso Aurelio Saffi with the port buildings behind, (c) Public Domain. [38]
A similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Corso Aurelio Saffi ran/runs Southeast alongside the Mediterranean (previously Corso Principe Oddone). This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Antonio Di Lorenzi on 2nd March 2018, (c) Public Domain. [28]
Via Corso Aurelio Saffi (Previously Corso Principe Oddone) in circa. 1930. Villa Figari can be seen on the left side of the image. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Elio Berneri on 20th April 2020, (c) Public Domain. [36]
Via Corso Aurelio Saffi. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Fulvia Enzina Benotti on 12th February 2018, (c) Public Domain. [44]
Corso Aurelio Saffi begins to head inland alongside the River Bisagno, (c) Public Domain. [47]
The curve on Corso Aurelio Saffi in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, Au8gust 2024]
Corso Aurelio Saffi and Ponte Bezzecca. Trams continued to travel North as far as Ponte Pila, (c) Public Domain. It is nigh impossible to replicateb this view in the 21st century. Not only has the river been culverted but the majotiy of buildings have been replaced. [37]
Looking East across the approximate position of Ponte Bezzecca in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
A postcard from the late 1940s or early 1950s. Via Ferruccio once ran from the Pila Bridge to the sea. In the 21st century, the avenue is now called Brigata Bisagno, © Collection of A. Pellerano, Public Domain. This image was shared on the C’era Una Volta Genova Facebook Group by Alessandro Pellerano on  29th May 2021. [89]
A 1913 view West from Pont Pila along Via Luigi Cadorna, (c) Public Domain. [48]
Looking West across the line of Ponte Pila in the 21st century. Via Luigi Cardona is directly ahead. In the far distance is Via XX Settembre. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking East along Via XX Settembre under the bridge carrying Corso Andrea Podesta, (c) Public Domain. [51]
A similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
Via XX Settembre looking West relatively close to Piazza de Ferrari, (c) Public Domain. [49]
Approximately the same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, April 2023]

Via Settembre feeds into Piazza de Ferrari and trams passed through Ferrari onto Via Roma and then on to Piazza Corvetto. Pictures of this length of the route can be found in the part of this article (above) covering Line No. 29.

From Piazza Corvetto the trams ran along Via Serra to Plaza Brignole.

The view East from Piazza Corvetto along Via Serra towards Piazza Brignole. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
A view across the railway tracks at Brignole station, looking West through Piazza Brignole and along Via Serra, (c) Public Domain. [50]
Looking West from Piazza Brignole along Via Serra. This image was shared by Gino Ratto on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group on 14th July 2020, (c) Public Domain. [55]
The view along Via Serra from Piazza Brignole in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Piazza Brignole to the Northwest of the Railway Station. This image was shared by Corallo Giorgio on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group on 9th November 2016, (c) Public Domain. [61]
Piazza Brignole in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Just to the West of Piazza Brignole, a tram line ran along Via Galata, South from Via Serra to Via Colombo, along Via Colombo to Via Ederra (now Via Fiume), then North on Via Ederra before turning Southeast across the front of Brignole Railway Station (across the North side of Piazza Guiseppe Verdi and then Southwest alongside the River Bisagno on Via Canevari.

Trams ran South on Via Galata. [Google Streetview, August 24]
Trams ran East on Via Colombo. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
Looking North on Via Fiume (once Via Edeera) which trams followed towards Brignole Station which sits beyond the trees to the right of this image. [Google Streetview, August 2020]
The curve round to the front of Brignle Railway Station, (c) Public Domain. [60]
A similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking South down the line of the right bank of the River Bisagno (now culverted). The street is Via Canevari. Trams ran South alongside the river on Via Canevari.
Looking North up Via Canevari with the River Bisagno on the right. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group by Asinus Natator on 7th February 2022, (c) Public Domain. [52]
Looking North from a similar position in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

From the location of Ponte Pila trams followed the route alongside the River Bisagno and then along Corso Aurelio Saffi back to Piazza Raibetta.

Piazza Corvetto to Piazza del Principe

Two tunnels made it possible for trams to run between Piazza Corvetto and Piazza Principe. The route ran via, what are now Galleria Nino Bixio and Galleria Giuseppe Garibaldi, through Largo della Zecca, along Via Paolo Emilio Bensa, through Piazza della Nunziata, along Via Balbi, through Piazza Acquaverde and then along the South side of Principe Railway Station along Via Andrea Doria to Piazza del Principe.

The tram route we are looking at now runs West-northwest out of Piazza Corvetto through two tunnels and through Piazza Acquaverde before reaching Piazza del Principe. A relatively straight route except for the dog-leg close to Piazza Acquaverde. [19]

The majority of the route appears on this extract from the Baedeker 1906 map of Genova, (c)m Public Domain. [40]
This extract from Baedeker’s 1906 map covers the remainder of the tram route, (c) Public Domain. [40]
An early postcard (1895-1897) view showing the first tunnel that linked between Piazza Corvetto and Piazza del Portello. This is the portal closest to Piazza Corvetto. It was referred to as either Galleria Corvetto or Galleria Portello. Later it was known as.Galleria Regina Elena and even later, Nino Bixio. Circulation was alternate along a single line, © Public Domain. [53]
Piazza Portello, an early view of what once widened would become Galleria Giuseppe Garibaldi, © Public Domain. [59]
Piazza del Portello, looking West from the West Portal of Galleria Nino Bixio towards Galleria Giuseppe Garibaldi. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Piazza del Portello, looking East from the East Portal of Galleria Giuseppe Garibaldi towards Galleria Nino Bixio. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

The two Galleria (Nino Bixio and Giuseppe Garibaldi) are covered in the first of this short series which can be found here. [1]

At the far end of the second tunnel the trams ran through Largo della Zecca onto Via Paolo Emilio Bensa.

The view East from Piazza della Nunziata towards Largo della Zecca along Via Paolo Emilio Bensa, © Public Domain. [58]
A similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, 2009]
An early tram on Piazza della Nunziata, © Public Domain. [57]
Via Paolo Emilio is behind the camera. The photograph looks across Piazza della Nunziata and along Via Balbi, © Public Domain. [3]
A similar view to the one above with a tram closer to the camera, © Public Domain. [56]
A 21st century view from Piazza della Nunziata along Via Balbi. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking Northwest along Via Balbi in 1917, with tram tracks in the road surface. The building at the centre of the next image appears in the distance. © Public Domain. [2]
A similar view in the 1950s, © Public Domain. [65]
A similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Via Balbi again, looking towards Piazza Acquaverde. The building was demolished in 1929. The Hotel di Londres sat at the mouth of Via Balbi on Piazza Acquaverde, © Public Domain. [62]
The location of Hotel di Londres in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Hotel di Londres seen from Piazza Acquaverde, © Public. [63]
Looking back East along Via Balbi from l’Hotel di Londres, © Public Domain. [64]
Piazza Acquaverde seen from the roof of the Principe Railway Station, © Public Domain. [66]
With Via Balbi ahead on the left this photograph shows Hotel Colombia, seen from Piazza Acquaverde, © Public Domain. [67]

The sequence of photographs below shows the driver’s eye view from a tram heading from Via Balbi towards Via Andrea Doria.

Principe Railway Station seen from Piazza Acquaverde close to Via Balbi, © Public Domain. [68]
Another view across Piazza Acquaverde towards the buildings of Principe Railway Station. The arch behind the tram leads onto Via Andrea Doria, © Public Domain. [69]
A similar view of Principe Railway Station in 21//the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking South into Via Andrea Doria from Piazza Acquaverde at around the turn of the 20th century. The arched entrance to Via Andrea Doria was removed in 1931 to enhance traffic flows, © Public Domain. [70]
A 21st century view at the same location. [Google Streetview, August 2924]
Looking North out of Via Andrea Doria onto Piazza Acquaverde around the turn of the 20th century, © Public Domain. [71]
This extract from a photograph which looked South from higher ground to the North shows Principe Railway Station and Via Andrea Doria after the removal of the arch, © Public Domain. [72]
The view from Via Andrea Doria across Piazza Principe towards Hotel Miramar at the centre-top of the image. [Google Streetview, 2019]
An extract from a photograph of Piazza Principe. This photograph looks East along Via Andrea Doria towards its bend into Piazza Acquaverde, © Public Domain. [73]
Looking East across Piazza Principe, © Public Domain. [74]
Looking East across Piazza Principe in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, 2019]

Piazza Acquaverde to Piazza Manin through the Hills

At Piazza Acquaverde a line diverged from that heading to Piazza Principe. It immediately began to climb into the suburbs close to the city centre.

Line No. 25 was the line through the hills, © Arbalete and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [19]

The full length of Line No. 25 appears diagrammatically above. It is shown on the two extracts from the Baedeker map of Genova of 1906 below.

These two extracts from Baedeker’s map of 1906 show Line No. 25 through the hills, © Public Domain. [40]

Trams on Line No. 25 turned to the Northwest at the East end of Piazza Acquaverde. A short climb led to the lower entrance to Galleria Sant’Ugo. That tunnel is covered in the earlier post in this short series, here. [1]

Galleria Sant’Ugo was a horseshoe shaped tunnel which lifted trams to pavement level in Piazza Pedro Ferriera. Leaving the tunnel trams ran Northeast along Via Sant’Ugo.

Piazza Pedro Ferriera in the 21st century. The upper entrance to Galleria Sant’Ugo can be seen on the left. Via Sant’Ugo heads away from the camera on the right. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking Northeast on Via Sant’Ugo. [ Google Streetview August 2025]
Looking Northwest on Via Sant’Ugo in the 1930s, © Public Domain. [75]
The same hairpin bend in the 21st century. The semi-circular stone facade is just off the left of this photo. Beyond the bend the road name changes to Via Almeria. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The hairpin bend Corso (Via) Ugo Bassi is ahead of the camera [77]

Via Almeria ran West to another hairpin bend and another change in road name – Corso Ugo Bassi.

A tram approaching the hairpin bend into Corso Ugo Bassi, © Public Domain. [77]
Via Almeria is on the right, Corso Bassi is on the left of this 21st century image. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking back to the hairpin bend on Corso Ugo Bassi, (c) Public Domain. [78]
The same view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
Corso Firenze, looking East from the top of the switchback climb which culminated in the run up Corso Ugo Bassi, © Public Domain. [76]
The same view in the 2st century. [Goopgl;e Streetview, April 2023]
Looking North along Corso Firenze, © Public Domain. [77]
A similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
Another view North along the same lenght of Corso Firenxe. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
These two photographs show Corso Firenze turning right then left before it reaches a hairpin bend around wooded park land. [Both, Google Streetview, April 2023]
These two view show Corso Firenze facing South after turning through the hairpin bend. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
Corso Firenze turns sharply to the left to run in an easterly direction. [Google Streetview, July 2022]

Corso Firenze continues East then Northeast. It then turns sharply to the right, heading Southwest. The next monochrome image looks North from the end of that southwesterly length of the road.

Corso Firenze looking North, © Public Domain. [79]
A similar view of Corso Firenze, (c) Public Domain. [88]
Corso Firenze, looking North in the 21st century. A very similar view to the monochrome image above.

Corso Firenze gives out onto Piazza Goffredo Villa where the tram route ran Northwest-Southeast for a short distance before heading Northeast on Corso Niccolo Paganini.

Looking North on Corso Firenze close to Spianata Castellatto, © Public Domain. []
A similar view looking North on Corso Firenze in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, 2019]
The entrance to Piazza Goffredo Villa from Corso Firenze. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
Looking Southeast through Spianata Castellatto which became Piazza Goffredo Villa, © Public Domain. []
Looking Southeast through the centre of Piazza Goffredo Villa in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
Looking North-northeast along Corso Niccolo Paganini from close to Piazza Goffredo Villa in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
Looking North-northeast along the first length of Corso Niccolo Paganini, © Public Domain. [80]
Corso Niccolo Paganini, (c) Public Domain. [85]
The same view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

A hairpin bend takes Corso Niccolo Paganini over Ponte Caffaro and after returning South the old tram route turned East on Corso Magenta.

Ponte Caffaro carries Corso Niccolo Paganini across Via Caffaro. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
Looking South down the eastern arm of Corso Niccolo Paganini, Via Caffaro runs below and to the right of the photograph. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
Looking North up the eastern arm of Corso Niccolo Paganini, © Public Domain. [81]
The same view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
Trams turned left from Corso Niccolo Paganini into Corso Magenta. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
I believe that this is the first length of Corso Magenta looking East toward another hairpin bend. [83]
The smae length of Corsa Magenta, looking East. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
After the hairpin bend, trams on Corso Magenta ran generally in a southerly direction. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
They then turned left to travel East across the Northside of the Giardini Combattenti Alleati. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
Trams then turned Northeast into Corso Solferino which drifted down while running generally in an Easterly direction. {Google Streetview, April 2023]
Corso Solferino again. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
And Corso Solferino again. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
Trams left Corso Solferino, bearing left ontoCorso Carlo Armellini. [Google Streetview, April 2023]

Trams ran the full length of Corso Magenta and onto Corso Solferino which in turn led to Corso Carlo Armellini. Passing the Manin/Contardo Lift on their left, trams entered Piazza Manin.

Looking East into Piazza Manin from Corso Carlo Armellini. [Google Streetview, April 2023]

Piazza Manin seen from the East looking off The Ponte di Via della Crocetta, (c) Public Domain. [82]

Piazza Manin, (c) Public Domain. [84]
A simila view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, April 2023]
Piazza Manin, (c) Public Domain. [86]
Piazza Manin, looking East, (c) Public Domain. [87]
A view looking East from Piazza Manin in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Piazza Corvetto to Piazza Manin, Staglieno and Prato in Val Biasagno.

This article has covered the Western half of the Eastern tram network. We will cover the length of line from Piazza Corvetto to Plato (via Paizza Manin and Staglieno) along with the lines which ran East along Via XX Settembre to Val Bisagno and then diverged to serve Staglieno, Raibetta (which we have already looked at), Foce, Thommaseo and Nervi in another article.

We will also cover the history of the Genoa Network from the end of the first World War in that next article and, either in that article of a further article, the rolling stock used on the network.

References

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Genoa’s Early Tram Network – Part 1 – General Introduction, Tunnels, The Years before World War One, and the Early Western Network.

Introduction and Early History

We begin this article with a look at maps of the Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari and its immediate environs over the years around the turn of the 20th century. The Piazza became one of two focal points for tramways in the city (the other was Caricamento).

I found the series of maps interesting and they provoked a desire to find out more about the network of horse-drawn and later electric trams and tramways of Genoa. ….

This map of 1886 shows the Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari a little to the left of the centre. Via Carlo Felice runs away from the Piazza to the North-northeast, Via Roma to the Northeast. The map extract is taken from the Italy Handbook for Travellers of 1886 produced by Karl Baedeker, © Public Domain. [10]
This map of 1906 is taken from Karl Baedeker’s Italy Handbook for Travellers. It shows an enlarged Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari, © Public Domain. [11]
This version of the map was produced for the 1913 Baedeker guide. This has tramways shown and the Piazza is beginning to take a shape that is more recognisable in the 21st century, © Public Domain. [12]

Italian Wikipedia informs us that: “The first public transport in Genoa was provided by a horse bus service linking the city centre and Sampierdarena, that started in 1873. In 1878, the French company Compagnia Generale Francese de Tramways (CGFT, French General Company of Tramways) began to build a horse tram system.” [16][17]

A map of the horse-drawn tramways operated by the French company Compagnia Generale Francese de Tramways, © Arbalete and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [19]

Towards the end of the century, the new urban plan led to the construction of new roads with wider carriageways, principal among these were:

  • Via Assarotti connecting Piazza Corvetto to Piazza Manin;
  • Via XX Settembre, built between 1892 and 1899, widening Strada Giulia and connecting the Palazzo Ducale (Piazza de Ferrari) with Porta Pila and the banks of the River Bisagno (once the eastern boundary of the city);
  • Corso Buenos Aires, once outside the city walls, was lowered to the level of Ponte Pila and the new Via XX Settembre, to form a single artery that would connect the centre with the Albaro district;
  • Corso Torino, perpendicular to Corso Buenos Aires.

After this work was done, the city began to look more modern and the widened streets made room for tramways in the centre and East of the city. The municipal administration began to plan new lines, both towards the eastern suburbs and in the central districts of the city. [19]

The city welcomed competition and set up a series of concessions which were given to different groups: the French Company kept the Western concession; Val Bisagno and the hilly areas to two Swiss businessman (Bucher & Durrer); and the east of the city was granted to a group of local businessmen. [19][20: p66]

The two parties, other than the French, formed companies:  Bucher created the Società di Ferrovie Elettriche e Funicolari (SFEF) in 1891. [20: p85] The Genoese entrepreneurs founded the Società Anonima Tramways Orientali (SATO) in 1894. [20: p120] The two companies took on the two concessions which envisaged electric traction on metre-gauge lines to accommodate running on the narrow winding streets of the city centre. [19]

By 1894, SFEF had achieved no more than a single short electric tram line between Piazza Manin and Piazza Corvetto, whilst SATO had not progressed beyond the planning stage. The CGFT system had extended through the city and the Val Polcevera, but was still horse operated.” [16][17]

In 1894, the German company Allgemeine Elektrizitäts Gesellschaft (AEG) … bought both the SFEF and SATO companies. The following year AEG created the company Officine Electrical Genovesi (OEG), … which took over the city’s existing electricity supply company, and the Società Unione Italiana Tramways Elettrici (UITE), … which purchased the CGFT’s concession. By the end of 1895, AEG had a monopoly of both electricity supply and public transport provision in the city.” [16][17] Under AEG’s “ownership, SFEF and SATO developed a tram network of more than 53 km (33 mi) reaching Nervi and Prato, whilst UITE electrified their lines to Voltri and Pontedecimo.” [16][17]

As we have already noted, the first electric traction line connected Piazza Corvetto to Piazza Manin, running along Via Assarotti. [20: p92] It was activated by SFEF on 14th May 1893 [20: p96] The single-track line was 800 metres long and ran on a constant gradient of 7% [20: p95]; the tickets cost 10 cents. The electrification (600 V DC) was via an overhead cable and was carried out by AEG of Berlin, which, as we have already seen, later acquired a significant shareholding in the company. [19][20: p86-87]

In subsequent years the SFEF network expanded rapidly; in 1895-96 the Monte line to the North of the city centre entered into service, including the Sant’Ugo spiral tunnel; in 1896 the line from Piazza Principe to Piazza Brignole was born. It included two tunnels in the Castelletto area. [21: p20] , In 1897, the Val Bisagno line up to Prato began operation. [19][21: p26]

The first SATO line entered into service on 26th July 1897, connecting Piazza Raibetta to Staglieno through the Circonvallazione a Mare, [20: p122] followed two years later by the long coastal line to Nervi. [20: p127] In 1900 the eastern trams reached the central Piazza de Ferrari, travelling along the new Via XX Settembre which was formed through widening of the old Via Giulia. [19][21: p53]

The two networks, SFEF and SATO, were technically compatible and the two companies, both controlled by AEG, soon unified the two networks. [20: p142]

Finally in December 1901, AEG merged SFEF and SATO into an enlarged UITE.” [16][17]

An early postcard image showing a tram at work on Corsa Andrea Podesta, © Public Domain. [19]
This map shows the three companies’ lines immediately prior to the date of unification under UITE. The Green lines were UITE (the former French Company). The Red lines were SFEF. The Blue lines were SATO, © Arbalete and authorisedd for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0. [19]

The enlarged UITE found itself managing 70 km of network, divided between the 30 km of the ‘Western network’: (formerly the French Company) and the 40 km of the ‘Eastern network’ (formerly SFEF and SATO). [20: p170-171] The unification of the network led to an increase in overall traffic, symbolised by the creation of the vast ring terminus in Piazza de Ferrari in 1906. [20: p129]

This seems the right time to look again at the ‘ring terminus’ in Piazza de Raffeale Ferrari. ….

Trams on Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari Genoa (Genova), © Public Domain. [1]
A similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, 2015]
Trams on Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari, Palazzo Ducale is on the left of the photograph, © Public Domain. [7]
A ground-level view from a similar location.  [Google Streetview, 2009]
Another view of Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari and of Palazzo Ducale, © Public Domain. [8]
A similar view of Palazzo Scale from ground-level across the Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari. [Google Streetview, 2015]
Also on Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari, trams gather again! But when is this? The building to the right in the image below is not present in this image, yet is present in the image of the Piazza earlier in this sequence of images, © Public Domain.
From a similar direction as the image above. The building on the left is very much the same as the building on the left in the monochrome image above. Was that monochrome photo taken prior to the building on the right being built, or was the building destroyed during the First World War and then rebuilt at a later date? [Google Streetview, 2016]
The Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari in the 21st century. North of the piazza, at the top-right of this image two streets run out of the piazza. Via Roma curves away to the Northeast and what was Via Carlo Felice (now Via XXV Aprile) heads North-northeast. [Google Maps, November 2024]
Piazza Raffeale de Ferrari, Via Roma (to the right of the building on the right side of this image), and Via Carlo Felice (now Via XXV Aprile), © Public Domain. [7]
The same location in the 21st century. Via Roma is on the right side of the building at the centre of this image. Via XXV Aprile (once Via Carlo Felice) is on its left. [Google Streetview, July 2015]

In 1908, after three years of construction work, Galleria Certosa (Certosa Tunnel) was put into use. It facilitated tram journeys to and from the Polcevera valley, avoiding the crossing of San Pier d’Arena. [19][21: p38] The tunnel connected Piazza Dinegro, in the port area, to the Rivarolo district in Val Polcevera. It was 1.76 km long. [22]

In 1934, Galleria Certosa was used every day by five lines: Tram No. 9 (San Giorgio-Rivarolo), tram No. 10 (San Giorgio-Bolzaneto), tram No. 11 (San Giorgio-Pontedecimo) and the two circular lines between San Giorgio and Sampierdarena. [22]

Tram No 78 at the southern entrance to Galleria Certosa, © Public Domain. [22]
In the mid-20th century, Tram No 836 providing the No.10 service exits the South Portal of the tunnel. This image was shared by Paolo Siri on the Sei di Certosa Se … Facebook Group on 2nd February 2014. [23]
The South Portal (seen in the monochrome image above) is no longer in use, © Arbalete and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0) [22]
Galleria Certosa was a lengthy tunnel. It is shown here superimposed on a modern map of Genoa, © Arbalete and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0) [22]
A view looking towards Galleria Certosa from some distance to the Northwest through the site of what became Brin Metro Station. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 28th September 2020 by Pietro Spanedda, © Public Domain. [37]
Tram service No. 9 (Tram No. 831(?)) is about to enter the North portal of the tunnel. This image comes from the mid-20th century. [24]
The North Portal of Galleria Certosa. Much of the tunnel is now used by the Metro. Brin Metro Station is immediately behind the camera, © Arbalete and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0) [22]

Tram Tunnels (Galleria)

Having noted the construction of Galleria Certosa in the early years of the 20th century (above), it is worth looking at some other tunnels which were built to facilitate the movement of trams.

Galleria Vittorio Emanuele III (renamed Galleria Giuseppe Garibaldi on 27th November 1943)

There seems to be quite a story to the life of this tunnel! The first two photographs show the first tunnel. They focus on the portal in Piazza Della Zeccan.

Piazza della Zecca with trams approaching and leaving a single track tunnel on the line of what will be Galleria Giuseppe Garibaldi. Piazza della Zecca has still not reached its fullest extent and the tunnel portal still has to be constructed, © Public Domain. [70]
Piazza della Zecca in a more complete form but still with a single track tunnel. [71]

These next two photographs show the tunnel as it was first widened in the form which preceded the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele III which had a much smaller bore.

Two views of Piazza Portello with trams exiting and entering the Galleries which preceded Galleria Vittorio Emanuele III, © Public Domain. [38][39]
An engraving of the proposed Galleria Vittorio Emanuele III, © Public Domain. [26]
The Southeast end of Galleria Vittorio Emanuele III during construction with trams using the narrow older tunnel which preceded the larger bore seen on other photographs below, © Public Domain. [26]
Galleria Vittorio Emanuele III later during construction work the full size bore is now complete but the decorative portal still has to be built, © Public Domain. [26]
A postcard view of the Southeast Portal of Galleria Vittorio Emanuele III (later Giuseppe Garibaldi), © Public Domain. [26]
The Southeast Portal of Galleria Giuseppe Garibaldi in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The Northwest Portal of Galleria Vittorio Emanuele III (later Giuseppe Garibaldi) soon after construction, © Public Domain. [25]
A 21st century view of the Northwest portal of Galleria Giuseppe Garibaldi. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Galleria Sant’Ugo

A tram at the lower Portal of Galleria Sant’Ugo, © Public Domain. [27]
The route of Galleria Sant’Ugo appears on city centre maps North of Principe Railway Station. Its lower entrance was on Salita Della Provvidenza. Its upper entrance only a very short distance away to the Northeast but at a higher level in Piazza Ferreira. [27]
Galleria Sant’Ugo left the surface at the North end of Salita Della Provvidenza. [Google Maps, November 2024]
The lower entrance to Galleria Sant’Ugo in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, December 2020]
The Upper Portal of Galleria Sant’Ugo in Piazza Ferreira, © Public Domain. [28]
The upper (marked by the purple flag) and lower entrances of Galleria Sant’Ugo were geographically very close together! [Google Maps, November 2024]
The upper entrance to Galleria Sant’Ugo in Piazza Ferreira. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Galleria Chrisoforo Colombo

Named after Christopher Columbus, whose house was nearby, the gallery was opened to the public in the 1930s and was hailed as the city’s gateway to the sea. It connected Piazza de Ferrari and Piazza della Vittoria.

The Northwest Portal of Galleria Chrisoforo Colombo in its early years, © Public Domain. [28]
The Northwest Portal of Galleria Chrisoforo Colombo in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The Southeast Portal of Galleria Chrisoforo Colombo in its early years, © Public Domain. [29]
The Southeast Portal of Galleria Chrisoforo Colombo in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The blue flag points to the line of the Galleria Chrisoforo Colombo.
A closer view of the location.

Galleria Regina Elena (today Nino Bixio)

The West Portal of Galleria Regina Elena (now Nino Bixio), © Public Domain. [30]
The West Portal of Galleria Nino Bixio in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The East Portal of Galleria Regina Elena (now Nino Bixio), © Public Domain. [30]
The East Portal of Galleria Nino Bixio in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The location of Galleria Nino Bixio. [Google Maps, November 2024]

Galleria Dei Tram Via Milano

Now long gone, there was a tram tunnel on Via Milano to the Southwest of the city centre. It took the tramway (and roadway) under San Benigno Hill. It was.built in 1878 by the Compagnia Generale Francese dei Tramways for its horse-drawn trams. Its Southwest portal was in Largo Laterna. Its Northeast portal is shown in the first image below.

The Northeast portal of the Galleria on Via Milano before its demolition when the San Benigno Hill was raised to the ground. The three images below show the Southwest end of the tunnel. This image was shared by Silvia Brisigotti on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 3rd February 2024, © Public Domain. [34]
A similar location on Via Milano in the 21st century. There are no features to tie the two images together! [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Three different images showing the Southwest portal of the Galleria Via Milano and its immediate environment. The third of the images illustrates its proximity to Genoa’s (Genova’s) Lighthouse on Largo Laterna. These images were shared by Silvia Brisigotti on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 16th January 2024, © Public Domain. [35]
A similar location on Via Milano in the 21st century. The lighthouse can be seen on the right of this photograph. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Until Galleria Certosa was constructed all tram services for the Western suburbs of the city had to pass through this tunnel.

Galleria Goffredo Mameli

This tunnel curved through the Eastern parts of the city from Via Piave to Via Carlo Barabino at the bottom of Piazza Palermo.

Galleria Goffredo Mameli. [Google Maps, November 2024]
In Piazza Palermo, UITE No. 937 exits Galleria Goffredo Mameli in service on the Line 15, De Ferrari – Galleria Mameli – Nervi Service in the later years of the network’s life, © Public Domain. [36]
Looking East at the bottom of Piazza Palermo towards the West Portal of Galleria Goffredo Mameli. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The South Portal of Galleria Goffredo Mameli, © Public Domain. [40]
The South Portal of Galleria Goffredo Mameli. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

The Years Before World War One

In the early years of the 20th century, the municipal administration began to consider the idea of taking control of the tram service. In anticipation of this, in 1913, it built its own line from Marassi to Quezzi, known as Municipal Line A, it was operated by UITE on behalf of the Municipality. [19][21: p44]

Before the start of World War 1, the tram network provided these services: [19]

I. Western Network:

1 Caricamento – San Pier d’Arena (Sampierdarena in other sources) – Sestri – Pegli – Voltri
2 Caricamento – San Pier d’Arena – Sestri – Pegli
3 Caricamento – San Pier d’Arena – Sestri
4 Caricamento – San Pier d’Arena
5 Caricamento – San Pier d’Arena – Rivarolo
6 Caricamento – San Pier d’Arena – Rivarolo – Bolzaneto
7 Caricamento – San Pier d’Arena – Rivarolo – Bolzaneto – Pontedecimo
8 Caricamento – Galleria Certosa – Certosa
9 Caricamento – Galleria Certosa – Certosa – Rivarolo
10 Caricamento – Galleria Certosa – Certosa – Rivarolo – Bolzaneto
11 Caricamento – Galleria Certosa – Certosa – Rivarolo – Bolzaneto – Pontedecimo

II. Eastern Network:

21 De Ferrari – Manin – Staglieno
22 De Ferrari – Manin
23 De Ferrari – Manin – Castelletto
24 De Ferrari – Manin – Castelletto – San Nicholo
25 Circuit in the hilly suburbs
26 Piazza Principe – Corso Ugo Bassi
27 De Ferrari – Zecca – Principe
28 Caricamento – De Ferrari – Galliera ‘Ospital
29 De Ferrari – Carignano
30 Circular Raibetta – Brignole – Corvetto – Raibetta
31 De Ferrari – Staglieno – Molassana – Prato
32 De Ferrari – Staglieno – Molassana
33 De Ferrari – Pila – Staglieno
34 Staglieno – Iassa
35 Pila – Staglieno
36 Pila – Staglieno – Molassana
37 De Ferrari – San Fruttuoso
38 De Ferrari – Foce
39 De Ferrari – San Francesco – Sturla – Priaruggia – Quinto – Nervi
40 De Ferrari – San Francesco – Sturla – Priaruggia – Quinto
41 De Ferrari – San Francesco – Sturla – Priaruggia
42 De Ferrari – San Francesco – Sturla
43 De Ferrari – Villa Raggio – Lido
44 De Ferrari – Tommaseo – San Martino – Borgoratti
45 De Ferrari – Tommaseo – San Martino – Sturla
46 De Ferrari – Tommaseo – San Martino
47 De Ferrari – Tommaseo
48 Raibetta – Pila

III. Municipal line:

A De Ferrari – Quezzi

The Western Network, particularly before World War One

Lines 1 to 11 constituted the Western Network. All of these lines had their city centre terminus at Piazza Caricamento. The Piazza is shown on the adjacent 1916 map.

The map shows part of the Port area of Genoa (Genova) in 1916 with a significant series of standard-gauge railway sidings in evidence (black lines) and some red lines which indicate the metre-gauge tram routes. Piazza Caricamento is close to the water halfway down the map extract. [31]

A typical photograph of a freight movement on the standard-gauge railway serving the port. The building behind the locomotive front onto Piazza Caricamento., © Public Domain and shared by Enrico Pinna on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group on 22nd January 2023. [33]

The postcard images below show trams operating in Piazza Caricamento at different times over the life of the tram network in the 20th century.

Piazza Caricamento, (postcard dated 1908), © Public Domain. [31]
Piazza Caricamento (postcard dated 1910), © Public Domain. [31]
Piazza Caricamento, (postcard dated 1936), © Public Domain. [31]
Piazza Caricamento, later than the previous view, © Public Domain. [31]
Piazza Caricamento in October 1942 sowing war damage to properties on the East side of the Piazza, © Public Domain. [32]

There were three main routes out of Piazza Caricamento, one of which followed the coast round to meet the lines on the East of the city. The other two shared the bulk of the services leaving the piazza. One of these two routes ran West through San Pier d’Arena (Sampierdarena), the other ran through Galleria Certosa.

The only tramway route serving the western suburbs before the construction of Galleria Certosa is shown here in black between Pizza Caricamento, Principe and San Pier d’Arena (Sampierdarena), © Arbalete and authorisedd for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [19]
The distribution of tramway routes in the West of the city after Galleria Certosa was put into use, © Arbalete and licenced for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 2.0). [19]

The route to San Pier d’Arena (Sampierdarena) closely follows the coast and ran through the Galleria on Via Milano before the San Benigno Hill was raised to the ground.

The 1916 map shows the first length of the tramway Northwest of Piazza Caricamento (red line) which served both the two routes mentioned above. It ran on the south side of Principe Railway Station across the top of the Port. [31]
A crowded Pizza Acquaverde, located in front of the Principe Station, dominated by the statue of Christopher Columbus. Among buses and trolleybuses there is a tram waiting at the station. Another tram (a 900) is on the route from Piazza Caricamento towards Sampierdarena. This image probably comes from the late 1950s or early 1960s, © Public Domain. [36]
The redline marking the tramway runs down the West side of the Port on this next extract from the 1916 – Via Milano, later Via Bruno Buozzi. [31]
An early postcard image showing the curve from Via San Benedetto into Via Milano.[42]
The same location, also prior to the widening of Via Milano and the renaming of the fist length ahead as Via Bruno Buozzi. [41]
The same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, 2010]
Via Milano (eventually Via Bruno Buozzi) with tram tracks on the seaward side. A promenade separates the FS sidings from the carriageway and trams, © Public Domain. [47]
A view Northeast along Via Milano before the widening of the highway and its renaming as Via Bruno Buozzi. [49]
A later view of Via Milano/Via Bruno Buozzi with tramway tracks in the centre of the widened carriageway, © Public Domain. [46]
Somewhat later in the 20th century and taken a little further to the West, this postcard image shows the same centre-of-carriageway tracks the section of Via Milano seen here was renamed Via Bruno Buozzi. [45]
Via Bruno Buozzi in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
This extract from the same 1916 map shows the line of the Galleria which carried the tramway West towards San Pier d’Arena (Sampierdarena). [31]
The view back towards the centre of Genoa from the point where the tramway turned to run through the Galleria under San Benigno Hill, © Public Domain. [48]
It is difficult, given the modern layout of this area of Genoa, to be definitive about the location of the monochrome image immediately above. This image is taken from a very similar position. The skyline at the rear of this image is a very good match for that in the image above.  [Google Streetview, May 2014]
The tramway turned to the right to enter the tunnel under San Benigno Hill. The tunnel portal was beyond the end of the masonry wall behind the steeply inclined accessed road onto the hill. There is no practical modern equivalent to this view, © Public Domain.  [44]

Pictures of the Galleria can be seen earlier in this article.

West of the Galleria, the original tramway ran along what is now Via Giacomo Buranello (what was Via Vittorio Emanuele) to Sampierdarena. This route appears to the North of the SS1 on the satellite image below.

In this extract from Google’s satellite imagery Sampierdarena is marked top left. The modern SS1 runs along the line of what was Via Milano. Careful inspection of this image shows the railway sidings which remain on the South side of the SS1.
Via Vittorio Emanuele (later Via Giacomo Buranello) looking West, (c) Public Domain. [93]
The same view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking West, Sampierdarena, Piazza Vittorio Veneto. A tram is arriving in the Piazza from the West. It has travelled along Via Cornigliano, © Public Domain. [50]
A view of Piazza Vittorio Veneto from a similar bearing, but this time at ground level in 21st century
  Via Cornigliano leaves the Piazza to the left rear. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Before looking at line further West from Sampierdarena we need to note a line which was added to the network before WW1.

A second tramway was built which ran alongside the railway sidings on what is now the SS1, it was then Via Milano, towards Sampierdarena. The route is illustrated by the mid-20th century view below.

Trams on Via Milano/Via Sampierdarena – in this image, the tracks of the Genoese port can be seen, populated by a range of FS goods wagons. Two 900 UITE units are passing each other on tram tracks which occupy the centre of Via Milano, © Public Domain. [36]
Looking East along the SS1 during some major roadworks. The railway sidings are just off to the right side of the photograph. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

That route along Via Sampierdarena (Via Milano and Via Colombo) and then Via Pacinotti is illustrated at the bottom of the map below. After running along the centre of Via Sampierdarena, trams turned inland, heading Northwest to join the earlier route, West of Piazza Vittorio Veneto on Via Pacinotti.

A map provided by the Marklinfan.com Forum which shows the new coastal tram route mentioned above. [92]

The Western Network’s Coastal Line(s)

At Sampierdarena the original lines of the Western network separated. Some lines continuing along the coast and others turning inland. The lines diverged at the West end of Piazza Vittorio Veneto. The coastal line ran along what is today Via Frederico Avio, then turned onto what is now Via Antonio Pacinotti, before turning West on what is now Via Raffaele Pieragostini, crossing the River Polcevera at Ponte di Cornigliano, running along Via Giovanni Ansaldo before joining Via Cornigliano at Piazza Andrea Massena.

This image shows the tramway at what is now the junction between Via Frederico Avio (entering bottom right) and Via Antonio Pacinotti (which heads away from the camera). At the time this was Via Garibaldi. (c) Public Domain. [61]
The same location in the 21st century. The vacant lot is the location of the building on the right of the monochrome image above. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
This mid-20th century postcard view shows trams following Via Cornigliano West of Piazza Massena, © Public Domain. [50]
Piazza Massena at the East end of Via Cornigliano as it appears in the 21st century. The tramway followed Via Cornigliano round to the left ahead. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Another view of Piazza Massena in Cornigliano. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Gianfranco Dell’Oro Bussetti on 8th March 2017, (c) Public Domain. [2]
A similar view of Piazza Massena in 2024. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking West along Via Cornigliano to the West of San Pier d’Arena (Sampierdarena), © Public Domain. [36]
The same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The route West followed the yellow road on this extract from Google Maps satellite imagery. A modern flyover takes the present SS1 over the railway. The original route of the tramway follo
Two images which show the metre-gauge tramway crossing the standard-gauge railway, © Public Domain. [4]
The tramway/road underpass built in the 1930s. A significant amount of excavation was required to take trams under the railway, © Public Domain.[5]
Looking West along the line of the Tramway towards the underpass in the 21st century
Looking back Northeast towards the underpass in the 21st century.[Google Streetview, Aug 2024]
Tram No. 999, the last of the UITE series, is in transit on the Pegli seafront, in service on Line No. 1, Caricamento to Voltri. Miramare Castle is on the sea front. The Castle is in use as a hotel in the 21st century, © Public Domain. [50]
Lungomare di Pegli (SS1) and Miramare Castle in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
This photograph was taken from Miramare Castle. A 900 series tram is heading West and a tram is approaching from the West.  [50]
A similar view, taken from a point a little further to the West, in 21st century
Looking East at Pegli 1925. [58]
At ground level in the 21st century. Looking East from a similar location on the SS1( Via Pegli). [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The terminus of some tram routes at Pegli!, (c) Public Domain. [91]
The same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

Beyond Pegli, only Line No. 1 travelled on to Voltri. These next few photographs were taken in Voltri.

An early view West towards Voltri along Via Voltri. [52]
The same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The tramway outside Voltri Railway Station, © Public Domain. [60]
The same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking East along Via Dom Giovanni Verita towards Genova, © Public Domain. [51]
The same location in 21st century. The station building can be seen on the right of the image. [Google Streetview, August 2024
Back in the day, Via Dom Giovanni Verita was Corsa Garibaldi. This view looks East along the road towards the railway station. The buildings in the distance match those in the two images above., © Public Domain. [43]
Looking West on Via Dom Giovanni Verita, the station building is just beyond the red lorry cab. The three roofs of the furthest buildings are the same as those in the three images above. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking West across the bridge on Don Giovanni Verita, Voltri, early in the 20th century, © Public Domain. [54]
The same location, looking West. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking West along Via Carlo Camozzini, Voltri in the mid-20th century, © Public Domain. [57]
Looking West from a very similar location on Via Carlo Camozzini. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

The tram depot was in Voltri close to the mouth of the River Cerusa (below).

The bridge in this image spans the mouth of the Cerusa River. The photograph looks East towards Genoa. The building just beyond the river on a platform above the beach is the Tram Depot. There are clearly tram tracks running towards the camera which suggests that the line’s terminus was to the West of the Cerusa River. [56]
The same view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
The tram depot in Voltri seen from the Northeast. The bridge over the River Cerusa is off to the right o, © Public Domain. [55]

We have followed the Western Network as far as we can along the coast. We now need to look at the line(s) of the Western network which ran up the valley of the River Polcevera from Sampierdarena.

To do this we need to return to Piazza Vittorio Veneto in Sampierdarena.

The Western Network and Val Polcevera (the Valley of the River Polcevera)

The lines to the North left Piazza Vittorio Veneto at its Western end, passing immediately through an underpass under the FS Standard Gauge railway.

In the 19th century the route was known as ‘Via Vittorio Emanuele’. In the early years of the 20th century the road was renamed ‘Via Umberto 1’. In 1935, the city gave the road the name ‘Via Milite Ignoto’ (the Unknown Soldier). This decision appears to have been short-live as very soon the road was divided into two lengths, the more southerly length becoming ‘Via Martiri Fascisti’, the remaining length, ‘Via delle Corporazioni’. After the end of Word War Two renaming again occurred. In 1945 the names which continue to be used in the 21st century were chosen – ‘Via Paolo Reti’ and ‘Via Walter Fillak ‘. Fillak and Reti were partisans in WW2. [59][66]

A view from above … This is Piazza (Via) Vittorio Emanuele seen from the West. The tram tracks can be seen heading away through the underpass in the foreground. [75]

The route of this part of the old tramway network begins at this rail underpass (where the street is now named, ‘Piazza Nicolo Montano’, having once been Via Nino Bixio), [65] before running along Via Paolo Reti and then Via Walter Fillak. Just beyond the underpass the railway station access left the road on the left. The first old postcard views below show this location.

Two pixelated, low definition images showing the bottom end of what was Via Umberto 1. One the left in both images is the incline leading to the Sampierdarena Railway Station forecourt. [59]
A tram sits at a stop at Piazza Montano. This image was shared on the Foto Genova Antica Facebook Group by Annamaria Patti on 22nd May 2022. [3]
Three further postcard views, of better quality, of the bottom end of Via Umberto 1, (c) Public Domain. [59][62][63]
The view to the Northeast from the rail underpass in 2024. The station approach is on the left. The old tramway curved round to the left below the station approach’s retaining wall. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Just a little further along the old tram route. The retaining wall on the left supports the station approach road. The tramway ran on along what is now Via Paolo Reti. For some distance the road was flanked by a retaining wall supporting the FS standard-gauge railway. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

The adjacent Google satellite image shows roads over which the old tramway ran. In the bottom right is Piazza Nicolo Montano. It is also possible to make out the station approach ramp which has a number of cars parked on it. In the immediate vicinity of the passenger railway station, railway buildings can be seen separating Via Paolo Reti from the railway but very soon the road and the railway run side-by-side with the railway perhaps 2 to 3 metres above the road. Via Eustachio Degola passes under the railway just to the North of the station buildings. Towards the top of the satellite image, Via Paolo Reti can be seen turning away from the railway wall. [Google Maps, December 2024]

Via Paolo Reti (the former Via Umberto 1) turns away from the railway wall which is now much lower than it was near the station buildings. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Via Umberto 1, looking North from the bend visible in the photograph above where the road leaves the side of the railway, (c) Public Domain. [68]
Via Paolo Reti (once Via Umberto 1) at the same location as the monochrome image above. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

The monochrome image below purports to show Piazza San Marino. As far as I can work out the piazza was historically, ‘Piazza Vittorio Emanuele III’ and later renamed for another partisan from World War 2 – ‘Piazza Ricardo Masnata’.

A relatively low quality image of Piazza San Marino and Via Umberto 1. The piazza later became Piazza Ricardo Masnata. This view looks North with a tram visible on the left, (c) Public Domain. [64]
Piazza Ricardo Masnata, looking North. There is little to link this image from 2024 with the monochrome image above, other than the alignment of the roads and the shape of the piazza. However, at the centre of this image is a lower building which also appears in the monochrome image. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Via Umberto 1 looking North from what became Piazza Ricardo Masnata, (c) Public Domain. [67]
The same location in the 21st century. [G
Via Umberto 1, now Via Walter Fillak with a tram heading towards Genoa. [69]
The same location on Via Walter Fillak in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

The line from Sampierdarena ran towards Certosa where, once Galleria Certosa was completed, it met the line through the tunnel.

A satellite view of Certosa. Trams approached the centre of Certosa from the South-southwest on Via Walter Fillak, from the Southeast on Via Beedetto Brin and from the Northnorthwest on Via Germano Jori. [Google Maps, December 2024]
Galleria Certosa can be seen in the right background of this image. The tram is turning towards the underpass beneath the FS standard-gauge railway, © Public Domain. [72]
A similar view in the 21st century. The Metro station at Brin is at the high level. [Google Streetview, October 2020]
A tram has just passed under the railway (on Via Benedetto Brin) and is approaching the junction with Via Germano Jori (then Umberto 1) and Via Teresio Mario Canepari, © Collection of Stefano Finauri, Public Domain. [73]
A very similar view in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
A mid-20th century postcard view, looking North from junction between Via Germano Jori and Via Teresio Mario Canepari. A tram is heading South along Via Germano Jori, © Public Domain. []
The same view in the 21st century, at the junction of Via Germano Jori, Via Teresio Mario Canepari and Via Benedetto Brin. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Piazza Errico Petrella looking South, Via Germaon Jori is on the left, Via Certosa on the right. A tram can be seen in the distance at the junction of Via Germano Jori with Via Benedetto Brin and Via Walter Fillak. [74]
Looking South from Piazza Errico Petrella with Via Germano Jori ahead and Via Certosa behind the white canopies to the right. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
A tram on Via Umberto 1 in Certosa. It is difficult to locate this photograph in the 21st century as much of the built environment has changed but it is most likely a view North from Piazza Errico Petrella, © Public Domain. [53]
This is a possible location for the monochrome image above. This view looks North from Piazza Errico Petrella, the street geometry is similar, but the buildings do not match. In Certosa, northbound and southbound traffic is separated. This is Via Germano Jori. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking South from the bridge over the River Torbella. The building on the right is the
Biblioteca Civica – Cervetto Rivarolo. Trams ran over this bridge and along Via Germano Jori which is the right fork in the road ahead. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Looking North from the bridge over the Torbella river which separated Certosa from Rivarolo (Superior). This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Luca Dasso on 17th December 2020, (c) Public Domain. [76]
A tram at the same location in the early 20th century. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Robert Cito on 19th October 2023, (c) Public Domain. [78]
A similar view North from the bridge over the River Torbella in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
This is a 1905 photograph looking North on Via Gioachino Rossini close to its junction with Via alla Stazione di Rivarolo (on the left). This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Luca Dasso on 24th July 2018, (c) Public Domain. [81]
Continuing North through Rivarolo on what was still in the early years of the 20th century, Via Umberto 1. Tram No. 6 is heading for Bolzaneto. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Robert Cito on 18th October 2023. It is again difficult to accurately locate this image. A bridge similar to that shown on this photo remains but the landscape around it seems much altered, (c) Public Domain. [77]
This extract from a file based on openstreetmap.org shows the remaining length of the tramway, from Rivarolo through Bolzaneto and San Quirico to Pontedecimo, (c) Arbalete, and authorised for reuse under a Creative Commons Licence (CC BY-SA 3.0). [19]

The tramway followed Via Celesia through Rivarolo (Superior). Rivarolo and Via Celesia can be seen at the bottom of this extract from openstreetmap.org. [79]

This image from the early 20th century looks North along Via Celesia. Space on the street was clearly at a premium! [80]
Via Celesia in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

North of Via Celesia, the tramway ran along Via Rivarolo.

This postcard shows the junction at the North end of Via Celesia, circa. 1920s. Via Rivarolo is ahead. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Mario Vanni on 18th August 2019, (c) Public Domain. [82]
The smae location in the 21st century. [Google Streeetview, August 2024]
This next extract from openstreetmap.org shows Via Rivarolo entering bottom-left. Trams ran on into Teglia on Via Teglia and continued on to Bolzaneto (in the top-right of this extract) along Via Constantino Reta. [79]
This postcard view looks South along what is now Via Teglia (then Via Regina Margherita. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Elio Berneri on 19th October 2020, (c) Public Domain. [83]
A very similar view at the same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
Car 906 in service on line 7 Caricamento – Pontedecimo, one of the longest of the UITE, is seen here running in Bolzaneto. The photograph was taken facing North. In the background you can see another Tramcar, as well as a third on the track in the opposite direction, (c) Public Domain. [84]
A similar North facing view in Bolzaneto in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
A tram waits at Piazza del Municipio in Bolzaneto. This image was shared by Mario Vanni on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group on 8th July 2021, (c) Public Domain. [85]
A very similat view of the same location in the 21st century. The road on which the bus is standing is now known as Via Pasquale Pastorino. [Google Streetview, August 2024]
A few hundred metres to the Northeast is the area known as ‘Bratte’. A tram waits in the mid-20th century to set off for Caricamento. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Roberto Della Rocca on 12th December 2020. [86]
A similar view at the same location in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, August 2024]

North of Bratte, Trams crossed the River Secca, a tributary of the Polcevera, following Via Ferriere Bruzzo and then continued North alongside the River Polcevera on Via San Quirico.

Tram No 79 leads a trailer car South on Via San Quirico in the first decades of the 20th century. It seems as though Ponte Tullio Barbieri can be seen behind the tram. This image was shared by Sergio De Nicolai on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group on 21st October 2018. [88]
A similar location on Via San Quirico in the 21st century. [Google Streetview, July 2022]

Trams passed under the FS Standard-gauge lines close to Ponte Tullio Barbieri. [Google Streetview, June 2022]
Trams ran on through the centre on San Quirico on Via San Quirico.
Before returning to the side of the river, passing under the railway again. [Google Streetview, July 2022]

The next length of the journey is the last. Trams terminated at Pontedecimo. [79]

A tram and trailercar on Lungo Polcevera in Pontedecimo close to Pontedecimo Railway Station, This image was taken looking South along the river bank and was shared by Giorgio Gioli on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group on 4th November 2020. [89]
This view looks South along the bank of the River Polcevera at a location similar to that in the image above. [Googler Streetview, January 2021]
The central piazza in Pontedecimo. The terminus of the tram service. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Roberto Cito on 29th October 2023. [87]
Trams terminated in Pontedecimo. [Google Streetview, July 2022]
The tram depot at Pontedecimo. This image was shared on the C’era una volta Genova Facebook Group by Alessandro Lombardo on 30th October 2019. [90]

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