Harman Patil (Editor)

Avellino railway station

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Platforms
  
3 (5 tracks)

Opened
  
1879

Train operators
  
Trenitalia

Province
  
Province of Avellino

Avellino railway station

Location
  
Via Francesco Tedesco, 646 83100 Avellino AV Avellino, Avellino, Campania Italy

Operated by
  
Rete Ferroviaria Italiana

Line(s)
  
Cancello–Benevento Avellino-Lioni-Rocchetta

Distance
  
82 km (51 mi) from Napoli Centrale

Address
  
83100 Avellino, Province of Avellino, Italy

Similar
  
Benevento railway station, Museo Irpino, Ex Dogana Dei Grani Palace, Mercato San Severino, Museo dei Parati Sacri

Avellino is the main railway station of the Italian city of Avellino, in the region of Campania. It is owned by the Ferrovie dello Stato, the national rail company of Italy, and is classified Silver.

Contents

Geography

Situated in the western suburb of Avellino, 2,5 km far from city centre, the station also serves the town of Atripalda, whose territory borders with it. The end track of the RA02 motorway from Salerno is located 500 m south of the station.

History

The station was opened in 1879, as the northern terminal of the line from Mercato San Severino, extended to Benevento in 1891. The line to Lioni and Rocchetta Sant'Antonio followed in 1895.

Structure and transport

Avellino station has a large two-floor building. It counts five tracks for passenger service and three for goods wagons, with a shed located in front of the main building. North of the station is a brief line serving the industrial park of Pianodardine. Both lines, Cancello–Benevento and Avellino-Rocchetta Sant'Antonio, are not electrified and have a single track.

The station is a hub for regional transport of Campania and is served by regional trains, principally to Benevento and Salerno. Periodically it is also served by some trains to Nocera Inferiore and Napoli Centrale (Naples). Once per day it is linked to Roma Termini (Rome) by an interregional train via Caserta and Cassino. From the end of the 1990s to the first half of the 2000s, Avellino was the terminal of a night express train to Milano Centrale (Milan); that linked it also with the cities of Rome, Florence and Bologna.

The line to Rocchetta Sant'Antonio-Lacedonia was closed on December 2010. An FS-owned bus link, Avellino-Lioni, is the remaining service on this line.

References

Avellino railway station Wikipedia