Railway_stations_in_Eritrea

List of railway stations in Eritrea

List of railway stations in Eritrea

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This article is a list of the railway stations in Eritrea.
The Eritrean Railway originally ran from Massawa, a port on the Red Sea, via the capital Asmara to Agordat. The line can be divided into three sections (Massawa-Asmara; Asmara-Keren; Keren-Agordat). Additionally there was until WW2 a potash line, that was used also for civilian service.

Eritrean Railways at their greatest extension before WWII

Massawa to Asmara

The route was built between 1887 and 1910 by the Italians, who made the two main stations (Asmara and Massawa) with typical structures of railway stations in small Italian cities.

As of 2008, this is the only section open.

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Asmara to Keren

Keren railway station – now used as a bus station and market

This section (with the stations) was built between 1911 and 1923. The railway generally followed the Anseba River and one of its tributaries through the mountains between Zazzega and Halib Mentel.

Halib Mentel Station
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Keren to Agordat

Agordat station, built in Arabesque style

This section was built between 1924 and 1929.

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Beyond Agordat

Beyond Agordat, the rails were laid as far as Bishia, another 31 kilometres (19 mi), with plans to extend to Ellit and Teseney,[3] linking with the railway network in Sudan. However this section was never completed.[4]

There would have been a break-of-gauge at the connection between Sudan and Eritrea.

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Potash railway

A 42 kilometres (26 mi) line carrying potash was built to serve the following locations:[5]

  • Badda
  • Adaito

The 600 mm (1 ft 11+58 in) gauge line was active from 1905: a 600-mm track gauge line was built by the Italians inside the port of Mersa Fatuma[6] and from it into the hinterland until Kululi near the Ethiopian border. This was the main source of potash in Eritrea and had to cease operations because of the Great Depression of 1929.[7]

See also


References

  1. Railways Administration in Eritrea. Imperial Ethiopian Government. 16 November 1965.
  2. "The Eritrean Railway". Retrieved 24 March 2009.
  3. "Building the line". Retrieved 24 March 2009.
  4. Neil Robinson. World Rail Atlas and Historical Summary.North, East and Central Africa. London, 2009 (p.35-39). ISBN 978-954-92184-3-5

Media related to Train stations in Eritrea at Wikimedia Commons


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