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Old December 2nd, 2011, 06:34 PM   #421
imaginas
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Raillway Station "Paradisia" at Peloponisos.Is a station of a metric line (SPAP) in Arcadia.The line is new after the renovation with cost 80.000.000 euros,but no run trains in this becouse the Greek Goverments decided to stop all the trains in Peloponisos except the part Korinthos-Kiato by the new narrow gauge line.

The metric gauge line is the most beautifull train route in Greece...





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Old December 4th, 2011, 07:08 PM   #422
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The Station of Chalkis.A small town 80km away from Athens.A destination for daily trip with train.

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Old December 14th, 2011, 02:32 PM   #423
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This is all so sad. I have such fond memories of circling the Peloponnese by train (including one night on the sleeper from Kalamata to Athens in 1992).

Once they're gone, trains rarely come back. Greek trains were such a nice way to travel. I never even minded waiting for late trains. The stations were pleasant places to linger and drink wine. And on the trains you could open the windows and buy things at stations along the way. Yes, it was like a trip back in time. Was that so wrong? A beautiful, romantic (and inexpensive) trip through an amazing country.

A friend once asked me, "why don't you take the bus like a normal person?" That always struck me as strange. I never could figure out why I would would want to pay more to sit on a horrible bus for 3 hours (and end up at a bus station) when I could enjoy 5 pleasant hours on a train.

Killing the train is really tragic considering so much money was recently pumped into Greek trains. I mean, they upgraded the tracks in the Peloponnese and then stopped all trains?! What was so wrong with the old system? It worked well enough. And the "new" rolling stock was never as nice to ride on. It was simply "modern." And now there's no train at all? Not even to Patras?!

But here's my question maybe somebody could answer. Had massive EU money never been invested in the trains over the past decade or so, do you think they'd still be running? I know OSE never turned a profit, but could they have continued to limp along like they had for all those years? It wasn't like Greece was ever rich, and somehow OSE survived. Did the massive investment kill OSE by making it so much more expensive to maintain and operate?
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Old December 14th, 2011, 02:35 PM   #424
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Good,very good...
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Old December 14th, 2011, 07:26 PM   #425
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Quote:
Originally Posted by moskos View Post
Once they're gone, trains rarely come back. Greek trains were such a nice way to travel. I never even minded waiting for late trains. The stations were pleasant places to linger and drink wine. And on the trains you could open the windows and buy things at stations along the way. Yes, it was like a trip back in time. Was that so wrong? A beautiful, romantic (and inexpensive) trip through an amazing country.
Buying things from the window is the epithet of a Third-World scenario. It is demoralizing and humiliating. Moreover, a train system cannot sustain itself with "people who don't even mind waiting for late trains". That is not how a transportation system should work, unless one is talking of touristic railways (or roads or cable cars or else), but then the economics of it should be different.

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I never could figure out why I would would want to pay more to sit on a horrible bus for 3 hours (and end up at a bus station) when I could enjoy 5 pleasant hours on a train.
For most people, time is money and buses had aircon well before any trains.


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Killing the train is really tragic considering so much money was recently pumped into Greek trains.
It is a budget decision, nothing more, nothing less.

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I mean, they upgraded the tracks in the Peloponnese and then stopped all trains?! What was so wrong with the old system? It worked well enough. And the "new" rolling stock was never as nice to ride on. It was simply "modern." And now there's no train at all?
One can't analyze the problem ignoring the 'bigger picture', in the sense of the tectonic paradigm shift on Greek public finances. They were spending too much, for too long, and concealed the fact! So when the reckoning came, drastic measures had to be taken. Out of fiscal desperation, many public services were drastically cut. Complaining about trains? Museums nationwide got closed, especially those out of Athens and other big cities - and that in a place with a rich history.

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But here's my question maybe somebody could answer. Had massive EU money never been invested in the trains over the past decade or so, do you think they'd still be running? I know OSE never turned a profit, but could they have continued to limp along like they had for all those years? It wasn't like Greece was ever rich, and somehow OSE survived. Did the massive investment kill OSE by making it so much more expensive to maintain and operate?
Part of it was just a matter of increased safety standards. OSE couldn't keep being operate like it were 1975 anymore, because there are new demands on safety, signaling, standards... But I guess the fiscal crises would have killed the railways regardless.
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Old December 14th, 2011, 10:26 PM   #426
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Wow. Thanks for nothing. I wonder if anybody else could actually answer my question rather than go on an anti-train rant.

And the freeways they built at the same time? They're still being funded and kept up. So I guess it's not all just about things paying for themselves but about priorities.

In terms of standards, I actually think OSE was operating like it was 1870 (cables to pull switches and manned crossings), not 1970. But best I can tell trains ran OK back then.

And seriously, my point isn't that trains should run late. But planes run late and so do cars (or are there no traffic jams in Greece?). My point was that if I'm going to be stuck somewhere trying to get somewhere else, there's no better place to be waste a few hours than a train station in the Peloponnese, smelling orange blossoms, listening to the cicadas, and drinking a half-liter bottle of retsina.

My other point was that the trains *did* run before a massive influx of money from the EU. Now they don't. So a bunch of money was spent (a lot of money!) to fix stations and tracks and now there are no trains? That certainly seems like the worse case scenario. The question I asked was had there been no influx of money, would the trains still be running (like them or not)?
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Old December 14th, 2011, 11:00 PM   #427
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In terms of standards, I actually think OSE was operating like it was 1870 (cables to pull switches and manned crossings), not 1970. But best I can tell trains ran OK back then.
But expectations and standards change in every area of industrial systems. Acceptable standards of safety for aircraft in 1935 would, today, be deemed suicidal and unacceptable. Certain standards for food production in 1960 today would be deemed criminally negligent.

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My point was that if I'm going to be stuck somewhere trying to get somewhere else, there's no better place to be waste a few hours than a train station in the Peloponnese, smelling orange blossoms, listening to the cicadas, and drinking a half-liter bottle of retsina.
Who cares about drinking? People want to go from point A to point B. This lax attitude is part of the problems of Southern Europe: people don't worry enough, and they take imperfections too easy, and use them as excuses to enjoy life instead of working more to fix them. But that is off-topic.

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My other point was that the trains *did* run before a massive influx of money from the EU. Now they don't. So a bunch of money was spent (a lot of money!) to fix stations and tracks and now there are no trains? That certainly seems like the worse case scenario. The question I asked was had there been no influx of money, would the trains still be running (like them or not)?
If no money had be put there, the line would have been more promptly closed! It used to run on the red, it is likely that the operational costs of the vehicles couldn't be recouped via fares, not before, nor now. The line wasn't closed because it was modernized: it was closed because an extremely serious financial crisis hit the country.
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Old November 18th, 2012, 12:07 AM   #428
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Here is a video about Tempi tunnels:

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Old December 11th, 2012, 10:26 AM   #429
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Kallidromo railway tunnel

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Old March 1st, 2013, 02:07 PM   #430
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Official Opening of Ikonio New Train Line - Special Train at Dafni Bridges.(28/02/2013)

"The new line from Thriasio to Ikonio Port has been completed. It is 17 km long and passes from many bridges over Pikilon Mnt at Western Athens. It is only for freight use in order to transfer containers from Piraeus port to Thriasio and Northern Greece and Balcans. This is a special train running only for the Opening reception at Ikonio. The minister of Transports and the minister of Marine as well as representatives of OSE and Cosco."





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Old March 2nd, 2013, 01:59 AM   #431
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When will it be closed?
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Old March 2nd, 2013, 09:25 AM   #432
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Congrats on this small sign of light in the otherwise sad story of Greek rail investments. Some questions for those in the know: why will there be no passenger service on the line? Is this not still the larger Athens area where some commuters could profit from the line?
And what is the status of the missing new sections on the Athens-Thessaloniki line? Has all construction ceased there (that's what it looked like when I passed there last summer). And what about Kiato-Patras? Anything happening there or is there also grass growing on those tracks?
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Old March 2nd, 2013, 12:47 PM   #433
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Quote:
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At 2:10, rails don't look to be laid as they should. Also why the line is not electrified?
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