Linha de Cascais

The Cascais Line (Portuguese: Linha de Cascais) is a Portuguese railway line which connects the municipalities of Lisbon, Oeiras, and Cascais. The line starts in Lisbon, at Cais do Sodré and ends in Cascais. On the Lisbon urban trains' diagram it is shown in yellow . The first section, from Cascais to Pedrouços, was opened in 1889. The line was completed in 1895.[2] It was the first heavy rail line to be electrified in Portugal, in 1926,[2] and the last to be integrated into CP, in 1977.[3] In July, 2020, CP announced that the line is slated to be converted from 1500 V DC electrification, to 25 V AC, to match the rest of the network.[4] Signalling will also be upgraded and new trains acquired.

Linha de Cascais
Overview
StatusOperational
OwnerInfraestruturas de Portugal
TerminiCais do Sodré
Cascais
Connecting linesCintura line
Service
Operator(s)Comboios de Portugal
Technical
Line length25.4 km (15.8 mi)
Track gauge1,668 mm (5 ft 5+2132 in) Iberian gauge
Electrification1500 V DC Overhead line Conversion planned to 25kv AC
SignallingETCS Level 2 Planned (active by 2023)
Route map
Linha de Cascais
.000 L. Norte
Sta. Apolónia
(cancelled proj.)
Sul e Sueste
(cancelled proj.)
00,000 Cais do Sodré
00,947 Santos
× Av. Infante Santo
02,668 Alcântara-Mar
× Alcântara overpass
00.000 L. Cintura
00.000 L. Cintura Braço de Prata
03,170 R. Lisconte
03,170 R. Lisconte Port of Lisbon
03,000 Junqueira
(dem.)
04,861 Belém
05,000 Bom Sucesso
(dem.)
Fábrica do Gás[1]
× access Av. Índia; Torre de Belém
06,800 Pedrouços
(dem.)
× access Av. Índia
(old route)
Pedrouços
(orig. 1889, closed)
× IC17
(old route)
07,805 Algés
07,805 Algés
07,800 Algés
(old station)
(old route)
08,000 Dafundo
(dem.)
Jamor Bridge× Jamor River
09,793 Cruz Quebrada
10,700 R. Estádio
Estádio Nacional (closed)
00.000 R. Lusalite
(closed)
× EN6
11,763 Caxias
× Barcarena River
13,206 Paço de Arcos
× R. Costa Pinto
15,571 Santo Amaro
× R. José Diogo da Silva
Oeiras Bridge × Lage River
× R. Hq. Paiva Couceiro
16,207 Oeiras
16,200 Oeiras Foundry
× EN6-7
Carcavelos depot
17,805 Carcavelos
17,805 Carcavelos
19,513 Parede
× Av. das Rosas
21,062 S. Pedro do Estoril
22,517 S. João do Estoril
× Av. Florinda Leal
× R. João António Gaspar
× EN6
× R. de Olivença
C.S.A.
(cancelled pj.) → Sintra
23,668 Estoril
23,668 Estoril
24,356 Monte Estoril
24,356 Monte Estoril
25,450 Cascais
25,450 Cascais
C.S.A.
(cancelled pj.) → Boca do Inferno
Commuter rail and ferry services
in the Lisbon metropolitan area
Azambuja (CP)
Linha do Norte
Linha de Cintura

Doca de AlcântaraBraço de Prata
Cascais (CP)
Fertagus
Linha do Sul
Sado (CP & Soflusa)
Linha do Alentejo

BarreiroPraias do Sado
Linha de Sintra (CP)
Linha de Sintra
Linha do Oeste

Azambuja
Praias do Sado-A
Espadanal da Azambuja
Praça do Quebedo
Vila Nova da Rainha
Setúbal
Carregado
Palmela-A
Castanheira do Ribatejo
Venda do Alcaide
Vila Franca de Xira
Pinhal Novo
Alhandra
Penteado
Alverca
Moita
Póvoa
Alhos Vedros
Santa Iria
Baixa da Banheira
Bobadela
Lavradio
Sacavém
Barreiro-A
Moscavide
Barreiro
Oriente
Soflusa
Braço de Prata
Terreiro do Paço
Santa Apolónia
Penalva
Marvila
Coina
Fogueteiro
Roma-Areeiro
Foros de Amora
Entrecampos
Corroios
Sete Rios
Pragal
Campolide
Benfica
Rossio
Santa Cruz-Damaia
Cais do Sodré
Reboleira
Santos
Amadora
Alcântara-
Terra
Alcântara-
Mar
Queluz-Belas
Belém
Monte Abraão
Algés
Massamá-Barcarena
Cruz Quebrada
Agualva-Cacém
Caxias
Paço de Arcos
Mira Sintra-Meleças
Santo Amaro
Rio de Mouro
Oeiras
Mercês
Carcavelos
Algueirão-Mem Martins
Parede
Portela de Sintra
São Pedro do Estoril
Sintra
São João do Estoril
Estoril
Cascais
Monte Estoril

Source: CP: Official website; Fertagus: Official website
station names according to source

See also

References

  1. http://bound-ap.com/newsletter14_files/p14%284%29.jpg
  2. Torres, Carlos Manitto (16 January 1958). "A evolução das linhas portuguesas e o seu significado ferroviário" (PDF). Gazeta dos Caminhos de Ferro (in Portuguese). Retrieved 28 December 2018.
  3. MARTINS et al., 1996:51
  4. 2020-07-23T08:00:00. "AC conversion planned in Cascais line upgrade". Railway Gazette International. Retrieved 2021-07-27.

Sources

  • Martins, João; Brion, Madalena; Sousa, Miguel (1996). O Caminho de Ferro Revisitado (in Portuguese). Lisbon: Caminhos de Ferro Portugueses.
  • "2019 Network Statement" (PDF). 7 December 2018. Retrieved 20 January 2019. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.