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Sulitjelma Line

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sulitjelma Line
The former station at Sjønstå

Maffei locomotive No 4366 named TYR, 1950
Overview
Native nameSulitjelmabanen
StatusAbandoned
OwnerNorwegian State Railways
Termini
  • Finneid
  • Fagerli
Stations11
Service
TypeRailway
SystemNorwegian railway
Operator(s)Norwegian State Railways
History
Opened1892
Closed1972
Technical
Line length35.8 km (22.2 mi)
Number of tracksSingle
CharacterFreight and passenger
Track gauge1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
ElectrificationNo
Route map

0 km
Finneid Station
1956
Grønnlifjell Tunnel
(2811 m)
9.10 km
Solvik Station
1956
Hårskolten Tunnel
(2425 m)
Sjønståfjell Tunnel
(2827 m)
15.8 km
Ågifjellet Station
1956
16.4 km
Tveråmo Station
1923
Stokkviknakken Tunnel
1962 (568 m)
21.2 km
Sjønstådalen Station
1892
Fossen Station
1892
Hellarmo (Old) Station
1893
26.1 km
Hellarmo (New) Station
1915
30.1 km
Rupsi Station
1915
33.4 km
Sulitjelma Station
1915
34.4 km
Langvatnet (Charlotta) Station
1950
35.7 km
Lomi Station
1915

The Sulitjelma Line (Norwegian: Sulitjelmabanen) was a railway line that ran between Finneid in the town of Fauske to the village of Sulitjelma near the border with Sweden.[1] The railway line was entirely inside the municipality of Fauske in Nordland county, Norway. The line was built in 1891, over time it was lengthened until 1958 when it was connected to the Nordland Line (having a different rail gauge) and the sea port at Finneid. It existed as a branch of the Nordland Line from 1958 until 1972 when the line was closed and removed. The railway line followed the path of the present-day Norwegian County Road 830.[2]

History

Construction of the line started in May 1891 when the mining company in Sulitjelma decided to build a railway between Sjønstå and Fossen. Sjønstå is located on the shore of the lake Øvrevatnet, close to sea level. The track was immediately extended along the Sjønstå River to Hellarmo the following year. Hellarmo is a small village area that sits on the western edge of the lake Langvatnet higher up the valley, about 13 kilometres (8.1 mi) from Sjønstå. It was the first railway line to be built in Northern Norway. The mining products were transported by barges on the lakes. This was not possible when ice covered the lakes, so in the winter the mining products were stored.

The mine in Sulitjelma was expanded into the mountains at Fagerli in 1912, and at the same time the gauge was increased from 750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in) to 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in). The line also was extended all the way to the mine in Sulitjelma. The official opening of the renovated and extended line was on 15 July 1915.

The track between Sandnes and Fagerli (in the village of Sulitjelma) was removed in 1950. In 1953, work began on extending the line from Sjønstå on the lake Øvrevatnet all the way to Finneid on the coast of the Skjerstad Fjord in the town of Fauske. The new extension would connect the line to the main Nordland Line in Fauske. Three tunnels, Grønnlifjell Tunnel, Hårskolten Tunnel and Sjønståfjell Tunnel, each with a length of 2,400 to 2,800 metres (7,900 to 9,200 ft) were built. The reason was that the lake barge transport had difficulties in the winter. Operation of the line all the way to Finneid started in December 1956. Another new tunnel through the small Stokkviknakken mountain was opened on 30 November 1962. After this, the railway had a total length of 35.8 kilometres (22.2 mi).

The line closed on 22 July 1972 and it was rebuilt, including the tunnels, as Norwegian County Road 830. This work was completed in 1975.

Stations

  • Finneid
  • Solvik
  • Sjønstå
  • Ågifjellet
  • Tveråmo
  • Fossen
  • Hellarmo
  • Sulitjelma
  • Langvatnet
  • Sandnes (Lomi)
  • Fagerli (until 1950)

See also

References

  1. ^ For a history of the line see Bjerke, Thor, "Sulitjelmabanen" (1983, Norsk Jernbaneklubb)(ISBN 82-90286-14-7).
  2. ^ Store norske leksikon. "Sulitjelmabanen" (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2012-04-03.
This page was last edited on 11 September 2023, at 21:02
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