Ramal de Sines

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Ramal de Sines
Old Sines Railway Station.jpg
Overview
StatusClosed
Termini
Technical
Line length11.4 km (7.1 mi)
Track gauge1,668 mm (5 ft 5+2132 in) Iberian gauge
Route map
Legend
000.000 L. Sul
000.000 L. Alentejo → (cancelled pj.)
L. Sul
129,631
000.000 L. Sul
000.000 L. Sul Tunes
131,025
143,607
(formerly Abela-São Domingos; dem.)
151,121
158,504
(dem.)
S. C. substation
160,770
L. Aljezur
(cancelled pj.) → L. Alg.
165,856
165,300 L. Sul
(proj. 2009)[1]
168,100 N. L. Sines
(proj. 1970, canc.)
000,000/168,530 Ramal de Sines
000.0000,000/168,113 Bif. de Sines (R. Sines)
000.000
000.000  
000.000 Repsol
000.000  
Repsol
000,700/169,230
011,400/179,930
011,400/179,930
170,047
169,230 R. Raquete
170,047
170,669 Petrogal-Asfaltos
170,669 R. Petrogal-Asfaltos
Oil refinery Galp
174,713 EDP-Cinzas
174,713 R. EDP-Cinzas
thermal power station EDP
177,905 Terminal XXI / PSA
177,905 R. Terminal XXI
Terminal XXI / PSA
180,170
180,170  
(station)
000.000 -coal
000.000 Coal terminal
000.000 Port of Sines

Ramal de Sines is a closed railway branch line which connected the stations of , on the Linha de Sines, and , in Portugal. It was opened 14 September 1936.[2][3]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Three variants on IGeoE M888 maps
  2. ^ Torres, Carlos Manitto (1 February 1958). "A evolução das linhas portuguesas e o seu significado ferroviário" (PDF). Gazeta dos Caminhos de Ferro. Retrieved 3 February 2019.
  3. ^ Martins et al., p. 257

Sources[]

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