Latina railway station

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Latina
LocationPiazzale Lelia Caetani, Latina Scalo
04013 Latina LT
Latina, Latina, Lazio
Italy
Coordinates41°32′17.12″N 12°56′45.8″E / 41.5380889°N 12.946056°E / 41.5380889; 12.946056Coordinates: 41°32′17.12″N 12°56′45.8″E / 41.5380889°N 12.946056°E / 41.5380889; 12.946056
Operated byRete Ferroviaria Italiana
Line(s)Rome-Latina-Formia-Naples
Distance61.018 km (37.915 mi)
from Roma Termini
Platforms2 (3 tracks)
Train operatorsTrenitalia
Connections
  • Urban and suburban buses
Other information
ClassificationSilver
History
Opened17 July 1922; 99 years ago (1922-07-17)
Location
Latina is located in Lazio
Latina
Latina
Location in Lazio

Latina is the main railway station of the Italian city of Latina, in the region of Lazio. It is owned by the Ferrovie dello Stato, the national rail company of Italy, and is an important train station of its region.

Geography[]

The station is located in Latina Scalo,[1] a suburb in the northern part of Latina. It is the most distant station from the city centre of an Italian seat of province: due to this, 9 km, local and regional authorities have presented several projects to build a rail, or a light rail, from it to an eventual "Latina Città" (i.e. Latina City) station.[2][3]

History[]

The station was inaugurated on July 17, 1922, at the opening of the new direct line from Rome to Naples, via Formia. In the early years of service, when the city of Latina didn't exist, it was a simple train stop serving some little villages close to the swamps composing the environment of the Pontine Marshes. In 1932, during fascism and after the foundation of the actual city, the new station of Littoria (original name of Latina, named after the fascio littorio) was enlarged and a new building projected by the architect Angiolo Mazzoni. During this period some diesel multiple unit (DMU) trains were inaugurated in a regional Rome to Littoria service, colloquially named Littorine (plural) and Littorina (singular) after the city. In Italy this colloquial name survives; it is generally used to identify the DMU trains.[4] After the renaming of the city in 1946 also the station took the actual name.

Train services[]

The station is served by the following services (incomplete):

  • Intercity services Rome - Naples - Salerno - Lamezia Terme - Messina - Palermo
  • Intercity services Rome - Naples - Salerno - Lamezia Terme - Messina - Siracusa
  • Intercity services Rome - Naples - Salerno - Lamezia Terme - Reggio di Calabria
  • Intercity services Rome - Naples - Salerno - Taranto
  • Intercity services Turin - Genoa - La Spezia - Pisa - Livorno - Rome - Naples - Salerno
  • Night train (Intercity Notte) Rome - Naples - Messina - Siracusa
  • Night train (Intercity Notte) Turin - Genoa - La Spezia - Pisa - Livorno - Rome - Naples - Salerno
  • Regional services (Treno Regionale) Rome - Pomezia - Latina - Formia - Minturno - Naples
Preceding station   Trenitalia   Following station
Terminus
InterCity
Terminus
InterCity
toward Siracusa
Terminus
InterCity
Terminus
InterCity
toward Taranto
InterCity
toward Salerno
Terminus
Intercity Notte
toward Siracusa
Intercity Notte
toward Salerno
toward Roma Termini
Treno regionale
Preceding station   Lazio regional railways   Following station
toward Roma Termini
FR7
toward 

Structure and transport[]

Latina station counts a large one-floor building, located close to the freight shed. It counts 4 tracks for passenger service and 5 terminal tracks, in the northern side, for goods wagons.

The station is electrified and served by regional trains (mainly to Rome, Naples, Formia, and Terracina) and also by the suburban Roman line FR7 part of the Lazio regional railways. Latina has no direct links to some other city stations of its region (as Frosinone, Viterbo, Rieti or Cassino) and is linked to Civitavecchia only with InterCity services.

Located onto one of the principal Italian rail lines, the Rome-Latina-Formia-Naples, it is served for long distance transport by several InterCity and Express trains to Rome, Turin, Milan, Naples, Venice, Palermo, Syracuse, Reggio Calabria and Bolzano, linking it also with Genoa, Bologna, Florence, Pisa, Verona, Catania, Messina and other cities. Periodically is served by a EuroCity from Naples to Munich but, as it happens for Formia and Aversa, it is not served by any EuroStar high-speed train.

See also[]

Notes and references[]

  1. ^ "Scalo" is an old form for "Stazione", an Italian word meaning station
  2. ^ (in Italian) Article on Latina24ore.it about a light rail to
  3. ^ (in Italian) Document[permanent dead link] about the proposal of a Translohr for Latina
  4. ^ (in Italian) See also it:Littorina

External links[]

Media related to Latina railway station at Wikimedia Commons

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