Mirandola railway station is a railway stop along the Verona-Bologna railway serving the city of Mirandola, in the province of Modena, in Emilia-Romagna, Italy. The station serves also the municipalities of Medolla, Cavezzo, San Possidonio, and Finale Emilia. Located in the village of Cividale, about 3 km from the town centre of Mirandola, th station is connected by a SETA shuttle bus.[2]
Mirandola | |||||
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General information | |||||
Location | Viale Antonio Gramsci, 322 41037 Mirandola (MO) Mirandola, Modena, Emilia-Romagna Italy | ||||
Coordinates | 44°53′30″N 11°06′41″E / 44.8917°N 11.1115°E | ||||
Operated by | Rete Ferroviaria Italiana | ||||
Line(s) | Verona Bologna | ||||
Distance | 50 km (31 mi) from Bologna Centrale | ||||
Train operators | Trenitalia Ferrovie Emilia Romagna | ||||
Connections | suburban shuttlebus | ||||
Other information | |||||
Classification | Bronze[1] | ||||
History | |||||
Opened | 20 January 1902 | ||||
Passengers | |||||
2007 | 290 | ||||
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History
editThe original railway station was built in 1901-1902 by the Società Italiana per le Strade Ferrate Meridionali, reusing the bricks of the town hall of Mirandola, which was under restoration at the time.
The station was inaugurated and opened to passengers on 20 January 1902, together with the Bologna-Verona railway, between the stations of San Felice sul Panaro and Poggio Rusco.[3][4]
A horse-drawn tramway was built in 1904, connecting the station with the terminus at the Teatro Nuovo in Mirandola's main square until 1924.[4]
On 3 May 1938, the Mirandola station, like all the others along the route, was lavishly decorated to greet the passage of Adolf Hitler on his way to Rome.
Located at kilometre 49+324 of the Verona-Bologna railway, until 2006 the station was equipped with a passenger building (which still exists, although the waiting room has been reduced), three tracks intended for passenger traffic (of which the second was properly laid out), three tracks intended as freight yards (unused for many years), and one track for parking trains.
In recent years, Mirandola station has not had a station master, and traffic on the system was managed remotely by the San Felice sul Panaro station manager.
In autumn 2006, at the same time as the works to double the railway line, the station was deprived of tracks 3 and 4, in place of which the current doubled track and its platforms were placed, activated two years later together with an electrical substation (located to the south of the passenger building). Later, the old tracks 1 and 2 were also removed and replaced by grass.
It was downgraded to a railway stop on 26 October 2008, at the same time as the track was doubled between San Felice sul Panaro and Poggio Rusco section.[5][6]
In the summer of 2009, the disused freight yard was dismantled and converted to a car park with 241 parking spaces (opened in late autumn). The redevelopment work was completed the following spring with the creation of covered paths to the car park, toilets (later closed), a waiting room and information displays. Other areas of the building were used as the civic hall of the Cividale fractional committee and the headquarters of the voluntary ecological guards.
Train services
editBologna metropolitan railway service: Line S3 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Mirandola is a stop for regional and fast regional trains to Bologna Centrale (southbound), and Poggio Rusco, Verona Porta Nuova, Bolzano and Brennero (northbound). The Bologna-Poggio Rusco service is operated by Ferrovie Emilia Romagna, while the others are managed by Trenitalia.
In the past, the Trieste Centrale-Lecce express train (cancelled in 2005) and the Brenner Express connecting Munich to Rome Termini, later limited to Florence SMN (cancelled in 2008) also stopped at Mirandola station.
In 2007, the facility had an average daily traffic of around 290 people.[7]
The station is served by the following services as of December 2020:
Domestic
- Regional Train (Trenitalia Regional) Brennero/Brenner-Bologna centrale: Brennero/Brenner - Vipiteno/Sterzing - Fortezza/Franzensfeste - Bressanone/Brixen - Chiusa/Klausen - Bolzano/Bozen - Ora/Aura - Salorno/Salurn - Mezzocorona/Kronmetz - Trento/Trient - Rovereto/Rofreit - Ala/Ahl-am-Etsch - Verona Porta Nuova - Nogara - Poggio Rusco - Ostiglia - Bologna centrale
- Regional Train (Trenitalia Regional) Verona Porta Nuova-Bologna centrale: Verona Porta Nuova - Nogara - Poggio Rusco - Ostiglia - Bologna centrale
- Regional Train (Ferrovie Emilia Romagna Regional) Poggio Rusco-Bologna centrale
Preceding station | Trenitalia | Following station | ||
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toward Brennero | Treno regionale | toward Bologna centrale |
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toward Verona Porta Nuova | Treno regionale | toward Bologna centrale |
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Preceding station | Ferrovie Emilia Romagna | Following station | ||
Terminus | Treno regionale | toward Bologna centrale |
Industrial risk
editMirandola station is located in an area of high industrial risk under the "Seveso Directive", due to the presence of the nearby company Plein Air International, which produces gas cylinders and camping cartridges containing LPG gas. In the event of an accident or an alarm, travellers should move away and reach the collection points located in the southern part of the station platforms (in the direction of Bologna), without using the subway due to the risk of asphyxia:[8] LPG in its gaseous state has a higher density than air and in the event of accidental spillage tends to concentrate, stagnating on the ground and in cavities, causing very dangerous situations of accumulation, with the risk of fire or asphyxiation.
Other stations in Mirandola
editUntil 1964, Mirandola was also served by another railway station, the terminus of the Modena-Mirandola railway run by the Società Emiliana di Ferrovie Tranvie ed Automobili (SEFTA). The Mirandola SEFTA station (which still exists and has been converted into a bus station) is located in the centre of the town. In the 1930s, work began on the construction of a link between the two stations, in view of the construction of the Rolo-Mirandola railway, that was never activated.[9]
References
edit- ^ List of Italian stations and categories Archived 2015-09-14 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Prontobus - Mirandola". SETA.
- ^ "Prospetto cronologico dei tratti di ferrovia aperti all'esercizio dal 1839 al 31 dicembre 1926". Trenidicarta.it.
- ^ a b Vanni Chierici (2016-06-23). "Mirandola - La ferrovia". Archived from the original on 2017-02-02. Retrieved 2017-01-26.
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(help) - ^ RFI S.p.A. "Circolare Compartimentale Bologna - CC 24/2008": 6.
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(help) - ^ "Impianti FS". I Treni (310): 7. December 2008.
- ^ "Dati statistici di Rete Ferroviaria Italiana, 2008" (PDF).
- ^ "Piano di emergenza esterno stabilimento a rischio di incidente rilevante: Stabilimento Plein Air International srl (Comune di Mirandola)". Provincia di Modena. 2015. Archived from the original on 2017-02-02. Retrieved 2017-01-26.
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(help) - ^ Fabio Casini (June 2016). "Le tre stazioni di Mirandola" (12). Comune di Mirandola: 19. Archived from the original on 2017-02-02. Retrieved 2017-01-26.
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