Ad
related to: interactive swiss rail map switzerland towns and lakesbyway.travel has been visited by 10K+ users in the past month
Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Locomotive used by the Swiss Northern Railway (1868 photograph) The construction and operation of Swiss railways during the 19th century was carried out by private railways. The first internal line (known as the Spanisch Brötli Bahn) was a 16 km (9.9 mi) line opened from Zürich to Baden in 1847, operated by the Swiss Northern Railway. By 1860 ...
The Swiss railway network The Swiss road network. Switzerland has a dense network of roads and railways. The Swiss public transport network has a total length of 24,500 kilometres and has more than 2600 stations and stops. The crossing of the Alps is an important route for European transportation, as the Alps separate Northern Europe from ...
Lake Zurich left-bank railway line; Lake Zürich right-bank railway line; Landquart–Davos Platz railway line; Landquart–Thusis railway line; Langenthal–Huttwil railway; Langenthal–Melchnau railway line; Langenthal–Oensingen railway line; Lausanne–Bern railway; Lausanne–Geneva railway; Lausanne–Bercher line; List of mountain ...
The Lake Line [4] (German: Seelinie), as it is referred to by the SBB in English, is the Swiss railway line running from Rorschach via Romanshorn, Konstanz (Germany), Kreuzlingen, Steckborn, Stein am Rhein and Diessenhofen to Schaffhausen. The scenic route follows the southern border of Lake Constance (Bodensee) and the High Rhine (Hochrhein).
The Schynige Platte Railway This is a list of heritage railways in Switzerland . For convenience, the list includes any pre-World War II railway in the large sense of the term (either adhesion railway , rack railway or funicular ) currently operated with at least several original or historical carriages.
The Seetal railway line (German: Seetalbahn) is a 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 + 1 ⁄ 2 in) (standard-gauge) railway of the Swiss Federal Railways between Lenzburg and Lucerne in Switzerland. The line was opened in 1883 by the Lake Valley of Switzerland Railway Company , which was owned by British investors, and subsequently owned by the Schweizerische ...
The Lake Zurich left bank railway line (German: Linksufrige Zürichseebahn), is a railway line in Switzerland. As its name suggests, it runs down the left, or west, bank of Lake Zurich, connecting Zurich to Ziegelbrücke and Näfels. [2] The left-bank railway opened in 1875 and forms part of the Zurich–Chur main line.
Horgen railway station is a railway station in Switzerland, situated on the banks of Lake Zürich in the town of Horgen. The station is located on the Lake Zürich left bank railway line and is served by lines S2 and S8 of the Zürich S-Bahn. [2] [3] [4]
Ad
related to: interactive swiss rail map switzerland towns and lakesbyway.travel has been visited by 10K+ users in the past month