Laryan narrow-gauge railway
Overview
LocaleLeningrad Oblast, Russia
TerminiKrasava
Service
TypeNarrow-gauge railway
Operator(s)LLC «Tikhvin-TORF»
History
Opened1939
Technical
Line length8 kilometres (5.0 mi)
Track gauge750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)
Route map

59°33′17″N 33°35′07″E / 59.55463°N 33.58525°E / 59.55463; 33.58525 The Laryan narrow-gauge railway (Russian: Ларьян узкоколейная железная дорога, Lar'yan uzkokoleynaya zheleznaya doroga») is located in Leningrad Oblast, Russia. The peat railway was opened in 1939, and has a total length of 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) and is operational as of 2017. The track gauge is 750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in) and operates year-round.[1] Limited Liability Company «Tikhvin-Torf» was established on the 16 of November in 2000 and is the successor of Peat enterprise Laryan. The main activity of the LLC «Tikhvin-TORF» company production of milled peat, semimanufactures of sod peat for household needs, peat semimanufac tures for agriculture. Deliveries of peat are made by rail for the heat-only boiler station of the village Krasava.[2]

Current status

The Peat enterprise Laryan was established in 1930s in the village Krasava, Leningrad Oblast. The Laryan peat narrow-gauge railway's first line was constructed in 1939, in the area of Tikhvinsky District, Leningrad Oblast from the village Krasava to the swamp peat fields. The peat railway was built for hauling milling peat and workers and operates year-round. The total length of the narrow-gauge railway at the peak of its development exceeded 36 kilometres (22 mi), of which 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) is currently operational. The railway operates freight services for the heat-only boiler station of the village Krasava. The railway operates scheduled freight services from Krasava, used for peat extraction tasks such as the transportation of milling peat and workers.[3] In 2014, repairs are being made to the track.[4]

Rolling stock

Locomotives

  • TU6A – № 3134, 3227
  • ESU2A – № 623
  • Draisine – TD-5u "Pioneer" transportation local residents

Railway cars

Work trains

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.