Has anyone seen any information about the rebuilding of the Athens to Patras line. Previously it only went to Kieto (from Athens) but from the link below it suggests that one can at least get to Diakofto:
No problem. Hope this helps, and yes, does still require a bus ride; it actually looks like it might still be quicker on the bus if you changed modes at Kiato, but that's not got quite the same appeal as rail.Thanks Sprinter150.
Again, it's really no problem. I wish you the best of luck in having a pleasant trip in 2021 - hopefully it will be a bit simpler to plan for then than now!Likewise, thank you Sprinter150
I am in the early planning stages of next year's trip, and your information is very helpful.
Thank you again; here's the Modern Railways article:Modern Railways nicely sums up the opening (August 2020, pg 88), although if you don't have that, here's IRJ's take on it. https://www.railjournal.com/infrast...line-in-greece-opens-following-safety-checks/
NEW LINE EXTENDED ON PELOPONNESE
The new standard gauge line from Kiato to Aigio on the north coast of the Peloponnese peninsular (sic) opened on 22 June with six train pairs operated by Trainose DMUs. The new line, approximately 68km long, has been built for future 200km/h electric operation but has not yet been electrified. It has opened at least two years after the original plan, with the coronavirus pandemic compounding earlier delay. As the line from Athens to Kiato (which has been open as standard gauge since 2007) has been electrified at 25kV AC, services to and from Athens / Athens Airport are operated using EMUs, which means passengers have to change trains in Kiato.
The 72km double track section between Kiato and Rododafni, most of which is now open, includes 14 tunnels and four intermediate stations. The new station at Aigio, some distance outside the town, has been built on a massive scale with seven tracks, five serving platforms! The new line has been equipped with ETCS Level 1 and telecoms systems by Thales. The budget for the Kiato - Rododafni section was €273 million, €69 million of which is assigned to future electrification.
The line will be extended another 30km fram Rododafni to Patras, although exact timescales are unclear, as are those for electrification of the new line; some local reports suggest this will all be undertaken in the next two years. In the meantime, Trainose is running replacement buses from Patras which, despite the new railway opening, operate all the way to the 25kV line at Kiato.
The new line replaces the former metre-gauge line that connected Athens with Patras as part of a network that served much of the Peloponnese peninsula. This line has been lifted along the northern coast and in places, such as in the town of Diakopto, the new line uses the old alignment, although elsewhere much of the new line is built on new alignments further inland from the old one. In Diakopto connections can be made to Greece’s only rack-operated railway to Kalavrita.
The former Peloponnese metre-gauge network was completely shut by former state operator OSE in late 2010 as part of severe cuts caused by the financial crisis which hit Greece very hard; the section from Athens to Corinth had already been shut in 2005 when the standard gauge line opened, replacing it. Small sections of the network have been resurrected, with local services operated on a 10km section in Patras using relatively modern Stadler-built GTW DMUs; local politicians have called for more of the former network to reopen.
Either a run down into Kalamata and change, or an interminable wait at Zevgolatio Junction. Kiparissia on the west coast was also a terminus which required reversal.
Wow - as recently as 2014 - do you know how far it went from Kalamata?
Great pics. Thanks for posting. Sic transit etc.The three stations you mention are seen here in October 2014 AFTER the lines had been mothballed & regular services withdrawn. Illustrated are special trains hired as part of a rail holiday by British company PTG Tours.
My account of the October 2014 PTG return train from Corinth to Patras:
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A metre gauge adventure in Greece
My interest in the extensive metre-gauge network around the Peloponnese Peninsula in Greece had been aroused during a summer-time visit in 1979, when I had travelled a few sections of the remarkabl…railwayworld.net