Bernina Railway

Rhaetian Railway in the Albula / Bernina Landscapes *

The Bernina Express with the Bernina Range in background.
Country Italy and Switzerland
Type Cultural
Criteria ii, iv
Reference 1276
Region ** Europe and North America
Inscription history
Inscription 2008 (32nd Session)
* Name as inscribed on World Heritage List
** Region as classified by UNESCO

The Bernina Railway is a single track metre gauge railway line forming part of the Rhaetian Railway (RhB). It links the spa resort of St. Moritz, in the Canton of Graubünden, Switzerland, with the town of Tirano, in the Province of Sondrio, Italy, via the Bernina Pass. It also ranks as the highest adhesion railway in the Alps, and - with inclines of up to 7% - as one of the steepest adhesion railways in the world.

On 7 July 2008, the Bernina Railway and the Albula Railway, which also forms part of the RhB, were recorded in the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites, under the name Rhaetian Railway in the Albula / Bernina Landscapes. The whole site is regarded as a cross border joint Swiss-Italian heritage area.

The most famous trains operating on the Bernina Railway are known as the Bernina Express.

Contents

History

In the year following the completion of the Albula Railway in 1904, the Bernina-Bahngesellschaft (BB) was established, with the objective of opening a railway line between St Moritz and Tirano, via the Bernina Pass. After obtaining a concession for such a line in 1906, the BB opened it from 1908 onwards, in several sections: on 1 July 1908 between Pontresina and Morteratasch, and between Tirano and Poschiavo; on 18 August of the same year between Pontresina and Celerina; and on 1 July 1909 between Celerina and St Moritz, and between Morteratsch and Bernina Suot. It was only on 5 July 1910 that the whole line could be opened, upon completion of the most difficult section, between Bernina Suot and Poschiavo. From the beginning, the line was electrically operated with DC current, although in 1935 the voltage was increased from 750 V to 1000 V.

Bernina Railway

Winter scene near the top of the Bernina Pass.
Overview
Type Heavy rail
System Rhaetian Railway
Status Open
Locale Engadin / Poschiavo,
Graubünden, Switzerland
Valtellina,
Province of Sondrio, Italy
Termini St. Moritz, Switzerland
Tirano, Italy
Stations 22
Services Bernina Pass
Website Rhaetian Railway
Operation
Opened 1 July 1908 / 5 July 1910
Owner Rhaetian Railway
Operator(s) Rhaetian Railway
Depot(s) Poschiavo
Technical
Line length 60.69 km (37.71 mi)
No. of tracks single track
Track gauge 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 38 in)
Minimum radius 45 m (148 ft)
Electrification Overhead catenary,
1,000 V DC
Highest elevation 2,253 m (7,392 ft)
above sea level
Maximum incline 7%
Route map
Legend
0.000 km St. Moritz 1,775 m above Sea
Albula Railway to Thusis
Inn Viadukt 64 m
Charnadüra II 689 m
2.028 km Celerina Staz 1,716 m above Sea
3.509 km Punt Muragl Staz 1,728.2 m above Sea
Railway line from Samedan
5.788 km Pontresina 1,774 m above Sea
7.257 km Surovas 1,822 m above Sea
12.165 km Morteratsch 1,896 m above Sea
Montebello Curve
15.716 km Bernina Suot 2,046 m above Sea
16.800 km Bernina Diavolezza 2,082 m above Sea
17.866 km Bernina Lagalb 2,099 m above Sea
Lower Berninabach Bridge 37 m
Upper Berninabach Bridge 31 m
Profile error +357 m (Alp Bondo track laying)
Arlas-Galerie 175 m
22.324 km Ospizio Bernina 2,253 m above Sea
Scala Gallery 140 m
Profile error −216 m (Scala track laying)
Sassal Mason Gallery I 16 m
Scala 192 m
Sassal Mason Gallery II 348 m
Drago 54 m
Sassal Mason Gallery III 20 m
Grüm Gallery 264 m
27.086 km Alp Grüm 2,091 m above Sea
Upper Palü Gallery 239 m
Palü 254 m
Lower Palü Gallery 347 m
Stablini 289 m, incl galleries 334 m
29.505 km Stablini Crossing loop 1,934 m above Sea
Upper Pila Gallery 213 m
Val Pila 227 m
Lower Pila Gallery 125 m
Gallery at Pila Viaduct 88 m
33.074 km Cavaglia 1,692 m above Sea
Puntalto 46 m, incl gallery 56 m
Val Varuna I 149 m
38.179 km Cadera 1,383 m above Sea
Val Varuna II 147 m
ex Cavagliasco I-Tunnel (32 m, abandoned 1968)
Balbalera 122 m
Cavagliasco 20 m
42.020 km Privilasco 1,119 m above Sea
43.618 km Poschiavo 1,014 m above Sea
Depot und workshop
45.300 km Li Curt 998 m above Sea
47.066 km Le Prese (incrocio) Crossing loop 973 m above Sea
47.957 km Le Prese 965 m above Sea
50.786 km Miralago 965 m above Sea
53.875 km Brusio 780 m above Sea
Brusio spiral viaduct 116 m
56.162 km Campascio 637 m above Sea
57.336 km Turnoff to freight yard
57.649 km Campocologno 553 m above Sea
58.14x km International border Switzerland-Italy 530 m above Sea
60.688 km Tirano RhB 429 m above Sea
Connection with standard gauge to Milan

Originally, the Bernina Railway was intended for use only in summer, but in 1913/14 the BB commenced winter operations as well. This development was associated with major weather related problems, necessitating further erection of avalanche barriers.

In the first years of its existence, the BB was always on the verge of bankruptcy. The costs of construction expenditure on the line to 1915 amounted to around 15 million Swiss francs. Even the introduction of a restaurant car in 1928, and packages for tourists, could not save the little railway from ruin. Due to its difficult financial situation, it was taken over by the Rhaetian Railway in the middle of World War II in 1943.

The RhB modernised the line fundamentally, also for military reasons, and completely renewed the section at the top of the pass. Previously, the line formation on the north ramp of the Bernina Pass had been laid out in curves giving passengers spectacular views, but also lying in the path of avalanche courses. The new parts of the line cut off those curves, the catenary and the flat bottomed rails of the old formation were removed, but the substructure is still visible in the high mountains.

Since the mid 1980s, the Rhaetian Railway has been marketing the natural and technical attractions of the Bernina Railway specifically to tourists. Thus, the section from Pontresina to Tirano forms part of the route of the Bernina Express. In October 2011, Google photographed the Bernina Railway for Google Street View.[1]

Description of the railway

St Moritz is the terminus of both the Albula Railway and the Bernina Railway. As the two railways are powered by different electrification systems, they meet at the same station, but operate on separate lines from separate platforms. The Bernina Railway leaves St Moritz station in an easterly direction, and crosses the Inn River on a 64 m (210 ft) long viaduct. It then passes through the 689 m (2,260 ft) long Charnadüra-Tunnel II, the longest tunnel on the entire route. The next station, Celerina Staz, is, at 1,716 m (5,630 ft) above sea level, the lowest point on the north side of the Bernina Pass. From there until Ospizio Bernina, the line will now climb almost continuously. After returning to the banks of the Inn, the line reaches the small station Punt Muragl Staz. At this point is the valley station of the funicular to Muottas Muragl, opened in 1907.

The next station in Pontresina represents, together with St Moritz station, a curiosity in the network of the RhB: two completely different electrification systems meet here. The 11 kV AC powered trains, which enter the station on the line from Samedan, use tracks 1 to 3, while the 1,000 V DC powered Bernina trains use tracks 3 to 7. Track 3 has a catenary that can be switched from alternating current to direct current, and a special signal to display to train crews the type of current being used. By means of track 3, the trains using the core network (from Samedan) and the Bernina line trains can use the same line, despite their differing electrification systems. On track 3 is also the exchange of locomotives for the famous Bernina Express, which operates between Chur or Davos Platz and Tirano.

The line now turns to the south east. After crossing the Rosegbach, passing through the Surovas station (which was previously called "Sans Souci" (Carefree)), and crossing the Berninabach, it finally reaches Morteratsch station, about 2 km (1.2 mi) below the Morteratsch Glacier. Past the other end of the station is the world famous Montebello Curve, where the line meets the road over the pass. The line and the road will now accompany each other as far as Ospizio Bernina. At the recently modernised Bernina Suot passing loop, the tree line has already been reached. The next stations are Diavolezza and Bernina Lagalb; both are departure points of cableways.

The next section is probably the most interesting on the north side of the pass. Here, the route is very winding, and moves from one side of the valley to the other. First, the Berninabach is crossed, using the 37 m (121 ft) long Lower Berninabach Bridge, and then the line crosses the Arlasbach, a tributory of the Berninabach. On the Upper Berninabach Bridge, the line moves back to the eastern side of the valley. Southwest of here, the Piz Bernina and the Piz Palü rise majestically. Next follows the 175 m (574 ft) long Arlas Gallery, which provides protection against snow drifts. On the southwestern side are the small lakes known as Lej Pitschen and Lej Nair. Directly behind them towers the 15 m (49 ft) high and 283 m (928 ft) long Lago Bianco dam, which also marks the watershed between the Danube and the Po.

The railway now runs along the eastern bank of the lake, and, near Ospizio Bernina, reaches its highest point, at 2,253 m (7,392 ft) above sea level. The Bernina Railway is thereby (mountainside railways excluded) the highest railway line in the Alps, operating as a public railway with year round traffic. As the section from here to Poschiavo is particularly badly affected by drifting snow, countless engineering structures have been erected from the southern dam wall onwards: the 140 m (460 ft) long Scala Gallery, the 192 m (630 ft) long Scala Tunnel, the Sassal Mason Gallery, even longer at 348 m (1,142 ft), and the 54 m (177 ft) long Drago Tunnel.

After the Grüm Gallery, the attractive Alp Grüm station is reached. It not only is located at the tree line, but also marks the last station before the Italian linguistic border. From here onwards, the line clambers, with a gradient of up to 7%, and via multiple s-bends, downwards into the Poschiavo valley. That this occurs without the assistance of a rack railway system makes the Bernina Railway one of the steepest adhesion railways in the world.

Immediately behind the Alp Grüm station, the line winds in a tight 180° bend, and passes below Alp Grüm through the Upper Palü Gallery. In a further 180° bend, it heads through the Palü Tunnel and subsequently through the Lower Palü Gallery. A further four half circle loops follow, until the line reaches the Cavaglia station. Since about 2000, there has also been a new automatic passing loop, Stablini, between Alp Grüm and Cavaglia. It bisects a portion of the line that was previously prone to traffic delays. In zigzag fashion, the line continues from Cavaglia further down into the valley via Cadera to Privilasco. From there, the line leaves the tight bends behind, and, still at its maximum gradient, reaches the Poschiavo Valley. In Poschiavo it finally meets up once again with the Bernina Pass road.

At the request of the Poschiavo community, the station at Poschiavo was built just outside the village boundaries. It has a railway depot and workshop, in which a few historic railcars of the Bernina Railway are also stored. The remaining section of line of approximately 17 km (11 mi) to Tirano are laid partially still as a mountain railway, but also partially in the manner of a tramway system. After the stopping point Li Curt, erected only in 1977, the line reaches the village of Le Prese, the stopping point of which is located in the middle of the street. Between Le Prese and Miralago the line passes along the banks of the Poschiavo Lake, thus remaining at the lake's altitude of 965 m (3,166 ft) above sea level.

Below Brusio, the railway has, as its last highlight, the Brusio spiral viaduct, which serves only to adjust the altitude of the line. The spiral viaduct is followed by the stopping point for the village of Campascio, which still belongs to Brusio. Beyond the border station of Campocologno, which is unusually large due to its customs facilities, the line finally reaches Italy, and, after crossing the main square of Tirano, its terminal station. Here, the Bernina Railway meets the standard gauge station and line of the Italian state rail infrastructure company Rete Ferroviaria Italiana (RFI), which links Tirano through Valtellina to Milan.

Rolling stock and traffic

Today, the following classes of railcar and locomotive are used in scheduled commercial services on the Bernina Railway: four ABe 4/4I, nine ABe 4/4II, six ABe 4/4III und two Gem 4/4.

This fleet, consisting predominantly of railcars, also carries freight traffic. Some freight cars are added to passenger trains until the maximum towing capacity of such trains of 140 tonnes is reached. For reasons of safety, due to the presence of dangerous goods, other freight cars are operated in pure freight trains. Despite being set up originally only for tourist traffic, the Bernina Railway now also assists trade with Italy by carrying not inconsiderable quantities of freight, consisting mostly of heating oil, fuels and timber. Additionally, the regional shopping businesses of the Poschiavo valley are served partly by rail.

The timetable is tightly designed, with year round services of one passenger train per hour in each direction. The flagship services are the now fully panorama car equipped Bernina Express and the Trenino Rosso travelling in the opposite direction.

In winter, a steam snow blower is regularly in service. Its operation is also a tourist attraction that draws in railway enthusiasts from all over the world.

In connection with the danger of avalanches on the Bernina Railway, the Rhaetian Railway has developed an unusual procedure for the removal of these high alpine hazards. In late winter, when the risk of avalanche is greatest, artillery is fired at the points of origin of avalanches, to bring some control to their occurrence.

This article was translated from the German language version as at November 2009. It is now out of date, and needs updating to mention the Allegra units.

References

  1. ^ Google Street View on Bernina Railway, Netzwelt, October 19th, 2011 (german)

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