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Turin Metropolitan Railway Service

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Turin Metropolitan Railway Service
SFM
Overview
LocalePiedmont Metropolitan City of Turin
Transit typeCommuter rail
Number of lines8
Number of stations93
Websitehttp://www.sfmtorino.it/
Operation
Began operation9 December 2012 (2012-12-09)
Operator(s)GTT, Trenitalia
Infrastructure manager(s)GTT, RFI
Technical
System length455 km (283 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
System map

The Turin Metropolitan Railway Service (Italian: Servizio Ferroviario Metropolitano), simply known as SFM, is a commuter rail system serving the metropolitan area of Turin, Italy. The system comprises 8 lines operated by Gruppo Torinese Trasporti and Trenitalia, serving 93 stations.

The core of the system is the passante ferroviario, a tunnel running 8 km through the city from north to south at a maximum depth of 18 meters. The tunnel allows passengers to travel from Torino Stura station to Torino Lingotto station in 15 minutes.[1]

Network[edit]

Line Terminals Year opened Last extension Length Stations Operator
Line SFM1
Line SFM1
RivaroloChieri 2012 2013 75 kilometres (47 mi) 19 GTT
Line SFM2
Line SFM2
ChivassoPinerolo 2012 62 kilometres (39 mi) 15 Trenitalia
Line SFM3
Line SFM3
Bardonecchia/SusaTorino Porta Nuova 2012 95 kilometres (59 mi) 19 Trenitalia
Line SFM4
Line SFM4
Cirié – Alba 2012 2024 60 kilometres (37 mi) 17 Trenitalia
Line SFM6
Line SFM6
Torino SturaAsti 2013 65 kilometres (40 mi) 14 Trenitalia
Line SFM7
Line SFM7
Cirié – Fossano 2013 2024 75 kilometres (47 mi) 12 Trenitalia
Line SFMA
Line SFMA
Ceres - Cirié 2024 45 kilometres (28 mi) 21 GTT
CavallermaggioreBra 2013 2020

(line suppressed)

13 kilometres (8.1 mi) 3 Trenitalia

History[edit]

  • 1999: the project was born from a proposal by the Piedmont Region to make the best use of the railway infrastructure works being carried out in the city (the "railway bypass").[2]
  • 2006: the Turin Metropolitan Mobility Agency resumes planning after the future SFM lines have been transferred to the management of the Agency itself. [2]
  • 4 December 2012: the service is officially presented at the Mole Antonelliana in the presence of the President and Councillor for Transport of the Piedmont Region, the Mayor of Turin representing the 60 municipalities reached by the SFM and the top management of Ferrovie dello Stato and GTT. [3]
  • 9 December 2012: activation with five metropolitan railway lines, 1, 2, 3, 4, A, following the modernization of the Turin Passante Ferroviario (quadrupling of the tracks, burying and construction of intermediate stops). The service is based on a daily traffic of 256 trains per day through 75 stations. [4][5]
  • February 1, 2013: the official portal of the service is born.[6]
  • June 9, 2013: the SFM 7 (Turin-Fossano) and SFM B (Cavallermaggiore-Bra-Alba) lines are established . The service now covers 85 stations and 326 trains. [2]
  • 19 August 2013: the tender notice for the construction of the Rebaudengo - Grosseto interconnection project was published for a total amount of 180 million Euro.
  • October 14, 2013: the New Integrated Single-Journey Ticket is born. A single travel ticket in the U - A - B areas (respectively €2, €2.50, €3) to use all means of transport: SFM - Metro - Tram - Bus
  • December 15, 2013: SFM 6 (Turin-Asti) is born. The service changes to 8 lines on 93 stations, 358 trains and 500 km.
  • February 12, 2014: agreements signed for the financing of the infrastructure works necessary for the activation of the SFM5 Orbassano - Torino Stura for a total amount of 18.5 million Euro. [7]
  • 10 September 2017: the SFM 3 line is extended to the French station of Modane , with 14 pairs of trains to and from Turin.
  • On March 13, 2020, the SFM B line was eliminated, switching to 'SFR', the line is suspended until further notice. From September 14, 2020, it will be replaced by 6 pairs of buses from Monday to Saturday.
  • On 25 August 2020, the railway section between the Torino Dora GTT and Madonna di Campagna stations was decommissioned for the completion of the works on the tunnel under Corso Grosseto, which will serve as an underground connection to the Torino-Ceres railway (SFM A line), which has been isolated since 2009, after the surface railway was buried.
  • On 1 January 2021, the Canavesana railway, part of the SFM1 line, will be managed by Trenitalia, which will initially operate the Minuetto and Pop trains on the line. The arrival of the Vivalto and Rock trains is also expected later.
  • On January 19, 2024, the extensions of the SFM lines 4 and 7 to Cirié were inaugurated at the same time as the reopening of the Turin-Ceres railway, which is now interconnected with the passante ferroviario.

Infrastructure[edit]

The major intervention required by SFM is the construction of the railway underpass, which replaced the historic line on the same surface route, and was activated in December 2012.[8] The reconnection between the SFM A line and the railway underpass is planned, having been cut off at Turin Dora Station by the lowering of the track level of the TO-MI railway by 14 m.[9] In addition to this infrastructure, two new stations will be built along the new connecting route under Corso Grosseto and the current stations will be redeveloped.

A technological intervention is planned in the bypass to allow a 4-minute spacing between trains. [10]

Tickets[edit]

Tickets for SFM are integrated with the GTT urban service , meaning you can use any public transport (bus, tram, metro and railways) within the urban area of ​​Turin for the entire validity of the ticket. There are 3 types of tickets available that can be purchased at all authorised GTT retailers, newsagents and tobacconists:

Integrated A (cost €3.50) urban area and first belt. Valid for 100 minutes on the GTT urban and suburban network, on the metro (1 journey only) and on the Trenitalia and GTT railway lines. Integrated B (cost €4.00) urban area, first and second belt. Valid for 120 minutes on the GTT urban and suburban network, on the metro (1 journey only), on the Trenitalia and GTT railway lines and on the extra-urban bus lines managed by Extra.To. Both tickets are now sold only in chip-on-paper format , replacing the old magnetic stripe format.

Network Evolution[edit]


Mappa animata dell'evoluzione della rete


Future Projects[edit]

The map of future system that sees the birth of the new line 5 and, with the tunnel in Corso Grosseto, the extension of line 4 to Ceres and the extension of line 2 towards Torre Pellice at the end of all upgrade works
Line Terminals Estimated Completion Project Type Status
Line SFM6
Line SFM6
Asti - Turin Airport October 1, 2024 Extension Works in Progress
SFM5 Torino Stura - Orbassano 2025 New line[11][12] Works in Progress
Line SFM3
Line SFM3
Bardonecchia - Turin Airport 2027 Extension Works in Progress
SFM8 Chivasso - Turin Lingotto 2027 New Line In Progress
Line SFM7
Line SFM7
Cirié - Ceres - Extension Works in Progress

Rolling stock[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ http://www.sfmtorino.it/le-linee-sfm/ Le 8 linee SFM Torino - Da Lingotto a Stura in soli 15 minuti
  2. ^ a b c "Pag. 4". Archived from the original on 15 October 2013. Retrieved 9 June 2013.
  3. ^ "Copia archiviata". Archived from the original on 30 Sep 2018. Retrieved 9 December 2012.
  4. ^ La Stampa - Partono i primi treni metropolitani Torino e la cintura mai così vicine
  5. ^ "CityRailways - Home". Archived from the original on 20 Jan 2013. Retrieved 11 Dec 2012.
  6. ^ www.sfmtorino.it
  7. ^ "Firmato l'Accordo di programma per la linea SFM5". sfmtorino.it. 12 Feb 2014. Retrieved 1 May 2015.
  8. ^ RFI. Circolare territoriale TO 16/2012. p. 2.
  9. ^ "Pag. 8". Archived from the original on 15 Oct 2013. Retrieved 9 Jun 2013.
  10. ^ "Pag. 9". Archived from the original on 15 Oct 2013. Retrieved 9 Jun 2013.
  11. ^ unknown (May 22, 2016). "Al via i lavori per la Linea 5 del SFM". Tunnel Euralpin Lyon Turin. TELT sas. Retrieved January 12, 2018.
  12. ^ http://www.telt-sas.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/MAPPA-SM5.jpg Proposed map of line sfm5

External links[edit]

Media related to Turin metropolitan railway service at Wikimedia Commons