Portal:Trains/Did you know/November 2010

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November 2010

JR East E351 series Super Azusa limited express on the Chūō Main Line between Takao and Sagamiko in 2001
  • ...that despite the huge urban areas of Tokyo and Nagoya at either end of the Chūō Main Line in Japan, its central portion is very lightly traveled and the ShiojiriNakatsugawa corridor is only served by twice-hourly local and hourly limited express trains?
Route map of rail lines through and near Châtelet – Les Halles station
  • ...that a portion of the proposed CEVA rail connection in Geneva, the Eaux-Vives – Annemasse line, remains an isolated shuttle served by SNCF trains, although the line is legally the 'Geneva State Railway' (Chemin de Fer de l'Etat de Genève)?
Meadow River Lumber Company Shay #1 on static display at Steamtown, Bellows Falls, VT, ca. 1974
The present end of the Bakerloo line at Elephant & Castle in 2008
  • ...that although Asakusa Station in Tokyo is the most "central" terminal of the Tobu Railway's Isesaki Line, it is connected to the next major terminal, Kita-Senju Station, by a length of track with sharp curves, beginning with the first stretch leaving the station, where trains have to turn 90 degrees to the right at a maximum speed of 15 km/h (9.3 mph) to cross the Sumida River?
Arts et Métiers station (line 3), decorated in Ouï-Dire style in 2007
  • ...that from the original plain white tilework and art nouveau entrances, the architecture of the Paris Métro and station decoration has evolved with successive waves of building and renovation, but after experiments with diverse colour schemes, furniture and lighting, since 1999 the programme Renouveau du Métro has seen a reversion to the original design principles of the network?
King Carol I Bridge circa 1902
  • ...that when the 4,087.95-metre (13,410 ft) long Anghel Saligny Bridge connecting Feteşti and Cernavodă across the Danube in present day Romania, was built, a railway bridge that was initially named the King Carol I Bridge in 1895, it was the longest bridge in Europe and the third longest in the world?
Alashankou station, platform and tracks in 2006
A drawing of CP 229 as it appeared in service
Class 83, no. E3035, preserved by the AC Locomotive Group and on display at Doncaster Works open day in 2003
A triple-headed steam locomotive powered train operated by 3801 Limited at the Hunter Valley Steamfest in 2009
  • ...that the 105.7 km (65.7 mi) long Ōfunato Line, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East), is nicknamed "Dragon Rail" because the spur line is thought to resemble the thin tail of a Chinese dragon and as a statement of the speed of the train over the considerable distance?
ÖBB class 4011 092 "Linz" and a DB class 4011 run through Seekirchen am Wallersee, Austria, as joint train run ICE 260+ICE 560 and will soon reach Salzburgin in 2009
  • ...that three Class 411 units from the first batch of 32 originally ordered by Deutsche Bahn have been sold to Austria's ÖBB as class 4011, and among the modifications for service in Austria were the conversion to LED matrix headlights and the addition of clamps for ski transportation?
David Levy Yulee circa 1860
The former York station building and trainshed in 2009