Samoborček

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Samoborček
Locale Croatia, Slovenia
Dates of operation January 14, 1901December 31, 1979
Track gauge 760 mm (2 ft 5⅞ in)
Headquarters Zagreb
A Samoborček Silver arrow train in move (pictured in 1970)
A Samoborček Silver arrow train in move (pictured in 1970)
Monument in Samobor
Monument in Samobor

Samoborček pronounced /ˈsɑːmobortʃɛk/ is name of historic Croatian narrow gauge railway operating from 1901 until 1979, linking Zagreb and Samobor with extension to Bregana.[1] [2]

Contents

[edit] History

Initially, Samoborček was projected as cargo train, to connect Samobor companies with growing Zagreb industry and market because the only connection was horse omnibus.[1] Railway was public company until end of second war, when it was nationalized and became "Gradska željeznica Zagreb-Samobor" ("Zagreb-Samobor City Railway")[2]. Eventually, the railway was neglected in favor of truck and bus traffic and interrupted operation in 1979.[1] All infrastructure was abandoned and dismantled.

[edit] Rail track

Samoborček had single 760 mm narrow-gauge track. Initial length was 19 km (12 miles), from Zagreb to Samobor via Podsused. In '50s the track was extended for extra miles to Bregana and military overhaul workshops in Slovenia.[1]

[edit] Rolling stock

Until '50s there were various steam engine driven compositions. Average speed was 15 to 20 km/h (10 - 12 mph). From '50s until end of operation DMU aluminum compositions, officially called DEV and nicknamed "Srebrna strijela" ("Silver arrow") took over, with max speed of 50 km/h (30 mph).[1][2]

[edit] Remains

Although all tracks were removed, a large part of other railway infrastructure (embankments, bridges) survives today, usually without function. Most of railway stations and embankments survived, mostly they were converted into shops, restaurants and warehouses. One of steam driven compositions is at display at location in Samobor.

[edit] Future development

A new link has been announced and is due to be built in 2008-2012. This link will be standard gauge and tie in with normal Croatian Railways operations, with max speed of 120 km/h (75 mph).[3]

[edit] Popular culture

Tko pjeva zlo ne misli (English title: He Who Sings Means No Harm), a 1970 Croatian comedy film, featured the pre-WW II Samoborček.

[edit] References

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