Strymon-Kulata_railway

Strymon-Kulata railway

Strymon-Kulata railway

Railway crossing through Bulgaria and Greece


The Strymon-Kulata railway is a 17.5-kilometre-long (10.9 mi) railway line that connects the village of Strymon in Greece with Kulata in Bulgaria. The line unites three villages on opposite sides of the border, Strymon and Promachonas in Serres, Greece, and Kulata in Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria, and is entrance/exit to the Greek rail network from Bulgaria.[3]

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History

Infrastructure

the line consists of a single line of normal width (1,435mm) with a total length of 14.5 km, made of old superstructure materials (S33B rails and S33 metal sleepers). The line is marked, with a maximum speed of 100 km/h (62 mph) and a maximum axle load of 20.0tn. On the line of Strymon - Promachonas there are 2 tunnels and 5 bridges, while the transport of passengers through 2 Stations is served.[3]

Course

The southern terminus of the Strymon–Kulata railway is Strymon on a spur from the Thessaloniki–Alexandroupoli line. At Strymon, the line connects with a northbound line along Strymon River Valley to Promachonas, The line consists of a railway of approximately 17.5-kilometre-long (10.9 mi), of which 16.1-kilometre-long (10.0 mi) are located within Greece, with the remaining 1.4-kilometre-long (0.87 mi) located in Bulgaria.The Line then joins with the Bulgarian network at Kulata. At Kulata the line extends to Sofia, via Bulgariavia.[3]

Main stations

The main stations on the Thessaloniki–Bitola railway are:

Services

The Strymon - Koulata Railway Line is an international Regional railway line between Greece and Bulgaria.

  • Thessaloniki-Sofia Express Thessaloniki–Sofia[4]
  • Regional services Kulata–Strymon[4]

(Until further notice, this train is substituted for a 14-kilometre-long (8.7 mi) Rail Replacement Bus Service between Kulata on the Bulgarian side of the Greek border & Strymon on the Greek side is in operation, from where a train continues to Thessaloniki.)

See also


References

  1. "Home". gaiaose.com.
  2. "TrainOSE - 2013 schedules" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-01-19.

Further reading


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