Rimini railway station

Railway station in Rimini, Italy

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Other informationClassificationGoldHistoryOpened4 October 1861; 162 years ago (1861-10-04)Rebuilt1914, late 1940sLocation
Rimini is located in Emilia-Romagna
Rimini
Rimini
Location in Emilia-Romagna
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Rimini is located in Northern Italy
Rimini
Rimini
Location in Northern Italy
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Rimini is located in Italy
Rimini
Rimini
Location in Italy
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Rimini railway station (Italian: Stazione di Rimini) is the main station serving the city and comune of Rimini, in the region of Emilia-Romagna, northern Italy. Opened in 1861, it forms part of the Bologna–Ancona railway, and is also a terminus of the Ferrara–Rimini railway [it].

The station is currently managed by Rete Ferroviaria Italiana (RFI). However, the commercial area of the passenger building is managed by Centostazioni. Train services are operated by Trenitalia. Each of these companies is a subsidiary of Ferrovie dello Stato (FS), Italy's state-owned rail company.

History

The station was constructed by the Società Generale delle Strade Ferrate Romane in 1860–61. On 4 October 1861, it was inaugurated in the presence of the then-Prince Umberto of Savoy, together with the rest of the Forlì–Rimini section of the Bologna–Ancona railway.[1] On 17 November 1861, Rimini was transformed from a temporary terminal station into a through station, when the final section of that railway, from Rimini to Ancona, came into operation.[1]

The original station building was rather simple. It was located not far from the seaside, on the edge of the city, and was flanked by a locomotive depot and repair workshop.

On 1 July 1865, the Bologna–Ancona railway, including the station, came under the control of the Società per le Strade Ferrate Meridionali. On 10 January 1889, the station became a junction for the newly completed branch line to Ravenna and Ferrara.[1] This development, coupled with growth in passenger traffic, created the need for an expansion of the station and its facilities, and the construction of other outbuildings.

Soon enough, a further increase in traffic made it essential to move the passenger building to the south of the locomotive depot and workshop, where there was enough space for a new station yard with wider platforms. The new station building, designed by Ulisse Dini, was opened on 1 November 1914.

Between 1915 and 1917, following the entry of Italy into World War I, the station was bombarded by the Austro-Hungarian Navy. In 1932, it became a terminus of the short narrow gauge international line to San Marino, which ended at the apron of the station, adjacent to platform 1. In late 1938, in conjunction with electrification of the line to Ancona, important works were carried out to upgrade the station's facilities.

During World War II, the station and its surrounds were repeatedly hit by Allied aerial bombardment. On 26 and 27 November 1943, two bombs struck the Rimini Marina depot, south of the station, but did not detonate.[2] As a result of the bombing, the Rimini–San Marino railway was shortened to a flagman's booth by the Via Flaminia, which was reclassified as a stop, thereby avoiding the city centre.[3][4][5] On the morning of 28 December 1943, 105 B-17 and 21 B-24 bomber planes, supported by P-38 fighter planes, had been ordered to hit Rimini's railway station; the raid partially destroyed the Victor Emmanuel II Theatre.[6]

In the wake of World War II, damaged buildings were repaired. In 1963, new train control equipment was installed. In 1978, the station yard was further expanded to 10 tracks equipped with platforms. Since the start of the 21st century, some tracks and the locomotive shed have been closed, and the goods yard converted into a car park.

Features

The renovated booking hall

The first station building was built in the classical style of the time. Its central section was on two levels, and it had two lateral wings, with adjacent service buildings. At that time, there were more than four platforms.

The current passenger building, completed in 1914, was built with pretensions to elegance and functionality, and is now located amongst the historic buildings in the city. At the time of its completion, the number of tracks used for passenger services grew to seven. In the 1970s, three more platform tracks were added.

Centostazioni has recently been renovating the passenger building with a simultaneous internal reorganization and change of use to the character of a shopping centre.

The larger billboard, April 2023

In August 2021, two billboards were installed at the station, featuring illustrations of Emiliano Ponzi and quotes from Marco Missiroli [it]. The larger (37 metres (121 ft) by 5 metres (16 ft)) billboard contains the phrase: "Yesterday, I dreamed of you and we were in Rimini. I'm already here and waiting for you". The smaller billboard (16 metres (52 ft) by 5 metres (16 ft)) shows two boys kissing.[7]

Services

View of the platforms

As of February 2024, the station is served by regional, fast regional (regionale veloce), InterCity, and high-speed Frecciarossa trains. As is typical on the Italian network, trains scheduled at different times of the day call at different combinations or numbers of stations along similar routes, and often terminate at different stations. Regional trains calling at Rimini typically run to Pesaro, Ancona, Imola, Bologna Centrale or Ravenna, while fast regional trains typically run to Ancona, Bologna Centrale or Piacenza. The InterCity and Frecciarossa trains extend to Lecce and Milano Centrale, or terminate at major stops before those stations, such as Pescara Centrale or Bari Centrale.[8]

There are infrequent or seasonal direct trains to San Pietro in Casale, Ferrara, Suzzarra, Torino Porta Nuova, Venezia Santa Lucia, and Trieste Centrale. There is a daily EuroCity service to München Hautbahnhof, and a seasonal EuroNight service to München.[8] One high-speed Frecciabianca runs to Roma Termini every morning, returning as a non-stop service to Ravenna in the evening;[8] in November 2023,[9] Trenitalia announced that the route would be upgraded to Frecciargento.[9][10]

In 2019, the station had an average weekday passenger entry and exit total of 12,085 in July and 9,669 in November for regional and fast regional trains only.[11]

Interchange

The station provides interchange with local bus routes serving the urban and surrounding areas, including two lines of the Rimini trolleybus system that both run to Riccione: a conventional trolleybus line along public streets and a bus rapid transit line named Metromare that opened in 2019 and runs in a bus-only roadway built next to the railway line.

In popular culture

Intercity (2000), a Romagnol poem by Raffaello Baldini, begins with the narrator in Rimini railway station catching an empty train to Bologna:[12]

In Rimini, nobody has noticed anything
or understood the disorganisation:
damn it, but how could this happen? ...
A train just for me?

— Raffaello Baldini, Intercity (2000)

See also

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Media related to Rimini railway station at Wikimedia Commons

References

  1. ^ a b c Alessandro Tuzza; et al. "Prospetto cronologico dei tratti di ferrovia aperti all'esercizio dal 1839 al 31 dicembre 1926" [Chronological overview of the features of the railways opened between 1839 and 31 December 1926]. www.trenidicarta.it (in Italian). Alessandro Tuzza. Retrieved 7 January 2011.
  2. ^ Macina, Chiara (14 September 2015). "Il Trenino Biancazzurro: la breve vita e la fine" [The Blue and White Train: Its short life and end]. Zoomma (in Italian). Retrieved 3 November 2023.
  3. ^ Macina, Chiara (14 September 2015). "Il Trenino Biancazzurro: la breve vita e la fine" [The Blue and White Train: Its short life and end]. Zoomma (in Italian). Retrieved 3 November 2023.
  4. ^ Piccioni, Elisabetta (April 2011). "Il Viaggio Interrotto: La Ferrovia Elettrica Rimini–San Marino" [The Interrupted Journey: The Rimini–San Marino Electric Railway]. I Martedì (in Italian) (292). Bologna: Centro San Domenico: 18–22.
  5. ^ "...e corre, corre, corre la locomotiva" [...And the locomotive runs, runs, runs.]. San Marino Fixing (in Italian). 17 October 2023. Retrieved 3 November 2023.
  6. ^ "Teatro Galli" [Galli Theatre]. Rimini Bombardata (in Italian). Retrieved 3 January 2024.
  7. ^ "Scenografie urbane per vestire Rimini di meraviglia, tre grandi artisti all'opera: Enrico de Luigi, Emiliano Ponzi, Marco Missiroli per Blooming Rimini" [Urban scenography to dress Rimini with wonder. Three great artists at work: Enrico de Luigi, Emiliano Ponzi, Marco Missiroli for Blooming Rimini]. Comune di Rimini. 6 August 2021. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
  8. ^ a b c "Orario Tutt'Italia Digitale: Edizione Invernale 2023–2024" [Tutt'Italia Digital Timetable: Winter Edition 2023–2024] (PDF). Trenitalia (in Italian). 3 February 2024. Retrieved 19 February 2024.
  9. ^ a b Campione, Davide (15 November 2023). "Il Frecciabianca Roma - Ravenna promosso a Frecciargento" [The Frecciabianca Rome – Ravenna promoted to Frecciargento]. Ferrovie.it (in Italian). Retrieved 19 February 2024.
  10. ^ Pallotta, Lorenzo (13 December 2023). "Ferrovie: Il declino dei brand Frecciargento e Frecciabianca". Ferrovie.Info (in Italian). Retrieved 19 February 2024.
  11. ^ "Passeggeri trasportati: le frequentazioni" [Transported passengers: The frequencies]. Mobilità Regione Emilia-Romagna (in Italian). Retrieved 25 January 2024.
  12. ^ Magnani, Aldo (2008). "Nel labirinto della nevrosi" [In the labyrinth of neurosis] (PDF). Ariminum. May–June 2008 (in Italian). Rimini Rotary Club: 36–37. Retrieved 16 February 2024.

External links

  • Description and pictures of Rimini railway station (in Italian)
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