Foligno railway station is situated at Piazzale Unità d'Italia, at the eastern end of the city centre.
History
The station was opened on 4 January 1866, upon the inauguration of the Orte–Foligno section of the Rome–Ancona railway.[1] A few months later, on 29 April 1866, that line was extended from Foligno to Falconara Marittima.[1] Then, on 21 July 1866, Foligno became a junction station, when the Foligno–Collestrada section of the Foligno–Terontola railway was opened.[1]
The station has since been expanded and rebuilt several times because of destruction caused by earthquakes and bombing raids.
The current passenger building was built as a project of Paolo Perilli, to replace the building destroyed during World War II. It was opened in 1949.
Features
The passenger building is a large multi level structure with many passenger services, including a shipping department, railway police station, bar, restaurant, newsagent, tobacconist, ATMs, car and bicycle rental, infirmary and a Roman Catholic chapel.
The station has six tracks reserved for passengers and equipped with platforms outfitted with canopies. The platforms are numbered from 1 to 5, and 1 north, which is a bay platform constructed originally to serve the Foligno–Terontola line. The platforms are also linked with each other by two passenger lifts and subways leading to Piazzale Unità d'Italia and its interchange facilities.
Another six tracks are used as a goods yard or for carriage storage. In this part of the station yard are also a locomotive shed, an old water column and an electrical substation.
Train services
The station has about 2.3 million passenger movements each year.[2]
Approximately 100 trains call at the station daily (about 25 train pairs on each line). These trains range from regional services to InterCity and Eurostar trains.
Regional services on the Foligno–Terontola railway are operated by Ferrovia Centrale Umbra, which sub-contracts on behalf of Trenitalia. All other train services are operated by Trenitalia itself.
^"Flussi Annui nelle 103 Stazioni" [Annual flows at the 103 stations]. Centostazioni website (in Italian). Centostazioni. Archived from the original on 9 February 2010. Retrieved 4 December 2010.