A
narrow gauge railway (or
narrow gauge
railroad) is a
railway that has a
track gauge narrower than the of
standard gauge railways. Most
existing narrow gauge railways have gauges of or less.
Overview
Since narrow gauge railways are usually built with smaller radius
curves and smaller
structure gauges,
they can be substantially cheaper to build, equip, and operate than
standard gauge or broad gauge railways, particularly in mountainous
terrain. The lower costs of narrow gauge railways mean they are
often built to serve industries and communities where the traffic
potential would not justify the costs of building a standard or
broad gauge line. Narrow gauge railways also have specialized use
in
mines and other environments where a very
small structure gauge makes a very small
loading gauge necessary. On the other hand,
standard gauge or broad gauge railways generally have a greater
haulage capacity and allow greater speeds than narrow gauge
systems.
Historically, many narrow gauge railways were built as part of
specific industrial enterprises and were primarily
industrial railways rather than general
carriers. Some common uses for these industrial narrow gauge
railways were
mining,
logging,
construction,
tunnelling,
quarrying,
and the conveying of
agricultural
products. Extensive narrow gauge networks were constructed in
many parts of the world for these purposes.
Significant sugarcane railways still operate in Cuba
, Fiji
, Java
, the Philippines
and in Queensland
in Australia.
Narrow gauge railway equipment remains in common use for the
construction of
tunnels.
The other significant reason for narrow gauge railways to be
constructed was to take advantage of reduced construction costs in
mountainous or difficult terrain. Mountainous logging operations in
the 1800s often used narrow gauge railways to transport logs from
mill sites to market.
The national railway systems of countries
such as Indonesia
, Japan
and New Zealand
are primarily or solely narrow gauge.
Trench railways of the
World War I western front demonstrate a brief
military application of this advantage.
Non-industrial narrow
gauge mountain railways are or were common in the Rocky Mountains of the United States
and the Pacific
Cordillera of Canada
, in Mexico
, Switzerland
, the former Yugoslavia,
Greece
, India
, and
Costa
Rica
. Another country with a notable national
railway built to narrow gauge is
South
Africa where the "
Cape gauge" of is
the most common gauge.
In India
, the narrow
gauge system is slowly being converted to broad gauge, although
some of India's most famous railways, the Darjeeling
Himalayan Railway
and Kalka-Shimla
Railway are both narrow gauge. All (
metre gauge) railways are being converted to
(
broad gauge) under the
Unigauge project.
History of narrow gauge railways

Woodcut from De re metallica showing
narrow gauge railway in mine, 1556
The
earliest recorded railway is shown in the De re metallica of 1556, which shows a mine
in the Czech
Republic
with a
railway of approximately gauge. During the 16th century
railways were mainly restricted to hand-pushed narrow gauge lines
in mines throughout Europe. During the 17th century mine railways
were extended to provide transportation above ground. These lines
were
industrial, connecting mines
with nearby transportation points, usually canals or other
waterways. These railways were usually built to the same narrow
gauge as the mine railways from which they developed.
Extensive narrow gauge
railway
systems served the front-line trenches of both sides in
World War I. After the end of the war
the surplus equipment from these created a small boom in narrow
gauge railway building in Europe.
Advantages of narrow gauge
Narrow gauge railways usually cost less to build because they are
usually lighter in
construction, using
smaller
cars and
locomotives (smaller
loading gauge) as well as smaller
bridges, smaller
tunnels
(smaller
structure gauge) and
tighter curves. Narrow gauge is thus often used in
mountainous terrain, where the savings in
civil engineering work can be substantial.
It is also used in sparsely populated areas where the potential
demand is too low for broader gauge railways to be economically
viable. This is the case in most of Australia and Southern Africa,
where extremely old soils can support only population densities too
low for standard gauge to be viable.
There are many narrow gauge
street tramways,
particularly in
Europe where gauge tramways
are common. Narrow gauge allows tighter turning than gauge or
gauge in
restricted city streets . The tighter turning circle make
balloon loops at the end of routes easier,
which in turn allows the use of unidirectional trams with a
driver's cab at one end only, and doors on one side, allowing more
space for passengers .
For
temporary railways that will be removed after short term use, such
as for construction, the logging industry,
the mining industry or large scale
construction projects, especially in confined spaces, such as the
Channel
Tunnel
a narrow gauge railway is substantially cheaper and
easier to install and remove. The use of such railways has
almost vanished due to the capabilities of modern
trucks.
In many countries narrow gauge railways were built as "feeder" or
"branch" lines to feed traffic to more important standard gauge
lines, due to their lower construction costs. The choice was often
not between a narrow gauge railway and a standard gauge one, but
between a narrow gauge railway and none at all.
Disadvantages of narrow gauge
Narrow gauge railways cannot interchange equipment such as freight
and passenger cars freely with the
standard gauge or
broad gauge railways they link with, unless they
exchange bogies. That means that
narrow gauge lines have a built-in cost of transshipping people and
freight to the mainline railway system. The cost of transshipment
can be a substantial drain on the finances of a railway because it
involves expensive and time consuming manual labour or substantial
capital expenditure. Some bulk commodities, such as
coal,
ore and
gravel, can be mechanically transshipped, but this
still incurs time penalties and these mechanical devices are often
complex to maintain.
One solution to the problem of transshipment is
bogie exchange between cars. Another solution
to this problem is the
roll-block system.
Although
successfully deployed in some countries such as Germany
and Austria
, this
technique came too late for the majority of narrow gauge
lines. Transfer of
containers is also an option.
The
problem of interchangeability is less serious for regions that have
a large system of narrow gauge lines, such as northern Spain
, and does
not exist in those countries in which a narrow gauge is standard,
eg the Cape gauge in New Zealand
, South Africa and the
Australian island state of Tasmania
or the metre gauge in
Malaysia
and Thailand
. Of course, it exists for railways in those
countries that have a gauge other than the locally predominant
one.
The problem of interchangeability is more serious in North America
because a continent-wide system of freight car interchange
developed. All the standard gauge railways in North America use the
same
standard
couplings and
air brakes,
which means that freight cars can be freely interchanged between
railways from Northern Canada to Southern Mexico. Railways which
need more freight cars can simply borrow them from other railways
during peak periods, while the railways who own the cars receive
payments for them at rates set by common agreement. Peak demand,
particularly for grain shipment, occurs in different parts of North
America at different times, so freight cars are shuffled back and
forth across the continent to wherever they are needed. Motive
power can also be interchanged, which sometimes results in Mexican
locomotives pulling Canadian freight cars and vice versa.
Narrow gauge railways could not participate in this system, which
meant that they usually had to own several times as much
rolling stock as equivalent standard gauge
railways, and they did not receive any cash flow for surplus
equipment during periods of low demand. These problems also existed
for railways with a broader gauge than the regional standard, but
all North American
broad gauge railways
were converted to standard gauge by 1910, (see
Rail gauge in North America).
Since most narrow gauge railways were undercapitalized to begin
with, increased costs and lower revenues eventually resulted in
nearly all North American narrow gauge railways either going
bankrupt or being converted to standard gauge. In many cases,
larger railways subsidized the
conversion of connecting
short-line
railways to standard gauge.
Another problem with narrow gauge railways is that they lacked room
to grow - their cheap construction was bought at the price of being
engineered only for their initial traffic demands. While a standard
or broad gauge railway could more easily be upgraded to handle
heavier, faster traffic, many narrow gauge railways were
impractical to improve. Speeds and loads hauled could not increase,
so traffic density was significantly limited.
Narrow gauge railways can be built to handle increased speed and
loading, but at the price of removing most of the narrow gauge's
cost advantage over standard or broad gauge.
Fastest narrow gauge trains
The reduced stability of narrower gauge means that its trains
cannot run at the same high speeds as on broader gauges , unless
the tracks are aligned with greater precision .
In Japan
and Queensland
, Australia, recent
permanent way improvements have allowed trains on gauge tracks to
run at and higher. Queensland
Rail's
tilt train is presently the
fastest train in Australia and the fastest 1067mm gauge train in
the world, setting the record at 210km/h . A special railcar was
built for the
Otavi
Mining and Railway Company with a design speed of 137
kph.
Compare these speeds with
standard
gauge or
broad gauge trains which
can run at up to . The contrast is most evident in Japan, home of
the
Shinkansen, a network of standard
gauge lines built solely for
high speed
rail built in a country where narrow gauge is the predominant
standard.
Exceptions to the rule
The heavy duty narrow gauge railways in Australia (eg Queensland),
South Africa and New Zealand, show that if the track is built to a
heavy-duty standard, a performance almost as good as a standard
gauge line is possible.
200-car trains operate on the Sishen
-Saldanha
railway in South Africa, and high-speed tilt-trains
in Queensland (see below). Another example of a heavy-duty
narrow gauge line is EFVM in Brazil. gauge, it has
over-100-pound rail and a
loading gauge almost as
large as US non-excess-height lines. It sees locomotives and 200+
car trains. In South Africa and New Zealand, the loading gauge is
similar to the restricted British loading gauge, and in New Zealand
some
British Rail Mark 2
carriages have been rebuilt with new bogies for use by
Tranz Scenic (Wellington-Palmerston North
service),
Tranz Metro
(Wellington-Masterton service) and
Veolia (Auckland suburban
services).
It is possible to build standard and even broad gauge lines cheaply
to
light railway standards with short
radii (tight curves) and steep grades, instead of building narrow
gauge lines. The trains operate at lower speeds and with lower
capacities. This allows through-routeing of rolling stock, and
simplifies later upgrading.
Gauges used
There are many narrow gauges in use or formerly used between gauge
and gauge. They fall into three broad categories:
Medium gauge railways
Railways built on gauges between and are sometimes referred to as
"medium-gauge" railways.
In those parts of the world where the railways were built to
British standards, this meant most commonly a gauge of or the
"
Cape gauge", while those built to
American standards were normally . Railways built to European
metric standards were most commonly of or "
metre gauge" and gauge.
These larger narrow gauges are capable of hauling most traffic with
little difficulty and are thus suitable for large-scale "common
carrier" applications, although their ultimate speed and load
limits are lower than for standard gauge. In many countries, gauges
in this range are the local standard.
Two foot gauge railways
The next natural "grouping" of narrow gauge railways covers the
range from just above to just below , although the majority are
between and . These lightweight lines can be built at a substantial
cost saving over medium or standard gauge railways, but are
generally restricted in their carrying capacity. The majority of
these were built in mountainous areas and most were to carry
mineral traffic from mines to ports or standard gauge raiways.
Many were
industrial lines rather than common carriers, though there were
exceptions such as the extensive lines built in the former Austro-Hungarian Empire, the "Maine
two footer" lines in New
England
, the Otavi Mining and Railway
Company of South Africa, the Chemins de Fer du Calvados of
Normandy, and the Darjeeling
Himalayan Railway
. Trench
railways of
World War I produced the
greatest concentration of two foot gauge railways observed to date.
The most common metric gauges in this group are and .The longest
750 mm rail is the Old Patagonian Express or "La Trochita" with 402
kms of track operates from Jacobacci to Esquel.
Minimum gauge railways
Gauges below were rare, but did exist. In Britain,
Sir Arthur Heywood developed gauge
estate
railway, while in France
Decauville
produced a range of industrial railways running on and tracks, most
commonly in such restricted environments such as
underground mine railways. A number of gauge railways
were built in Britain to serve ammunition depots and other military
facilities, particularly during the
First World War.
Narrow gauge railways less than gauge are known as
minimum gauge railways.
Narrow gauge worldwide
Europe
Austria
The first
railway in Austria
was the narrow gauge line from Gmunden
in the Salzkammergut
to Budweis
, now in the Czech Republic
, this was gauge. Some two dozen lines were
built in gauge
[3519], a few in gauge.
The first was the
Steyrtalbahn
. Others were built by provincial
governments, some lines are still in common carrier use and a
number of others are preservation projects.
The tramway network
in Innsbruck
is also metre gauge; in Linz
the rather
unusual gauge of is in use.
Bulgaria
From the 19th into the early 20th there were many and gauge
railways in Bulgaria, but today, only 245 km remain.
This is
the Septemvri
- Dobrinishte
line, where the highest railway station on the
Balkan peninsula is situated. The line although in a worn
out condition, is still actively used - the trains are pulled by
Henschel locos. One of the old
steam locomotives has been restored recently and is used
occasionally for hauling tourist trains. The extensive Sofia
tramway network is 1009 mm
metre
gauge.

Two old steam locos at Bansko station
on the same line
Belarus
Belarus has one operating gauge
Children's railway, located in Minsk.
Locos - TU2.
Some industrial narrow gauge railways can still be found in Belarus
particularly associated with the peat extraction industry.
Belgium
The
Vicinal or
Buurtspoor were a system of narrow gauge local
railway or
tramways covering the whole country and having a
greater routage than the mainline railway system. They were gauge
and the system included electrified city lines as well as rural
lines using
steam locomotives and
railcars; half of the system was electrified. Many lines carried
freight.
Only the coastal line and two routes near
Charleroi
are still in commercial use, four museums hold
significant collections of former SNCV/NMBS rolling stock, one of
which is the ASVi
museum
in Thuin
.
The
tramway networks in Antwerp
and Ghent
are also
metre gauge.
The
Stoomcentrum Maldegem has
a gauge line laid on the former standard gauge trackbed to
Donk.
Croatia
In
Istria
, narrow
gauge railway line called Parenzana from
Trieste
Italy
- Koper
Slovenia
- to Poreč
Croatia
(dismantled).
Czech Republic
Several lines were built in the nineteenth century. The most
notable lines are Obrataň-Jindřichův Hradec-Nová Bystřice and
Třemešná ve Slezsku-Osoblaha, that are still in operation.
Estonia
Four museums lines and some industrial peat railways remain in
Estonia. The
Lavassaare railway museum houses a large collection of
steam and diesel locomotives with a 2 km long gauge railway.
There is a museum with a gauge, 500 m long line in Avinurme which
houses one
locomotive and a collection of
wagons. An underground museum with a
short electric line is located in Kiviõli in the Northeast-Estonian
industrial area. A former military railway line with a gauge is
located on Naissaar Island in the northern Estonia.
Finland
The vast majority of Finnish narrow gauge railways were owned and
operated by private companies. There are only a few instances where
narrow gauge railways were in direct connection with each other,
and those interchanges did not last for long. The railways never
formed a regional rail traffic network, but were only focused on
maintaining connections between the national broad gauge railway
network and the off-line industries.
One of the longest
common carriers was the Lovisa-Wesijärvi railway (1900–1960) that
operated a 80-kilometre (50-mile) line between Lahti
and
Loviisa
. Other notable ones were the
Hyvinkää–Karkkila railway that operated a 46-kilometre (28-mile)
line, and the Jokioinen railway that operated a 23-kilometre (14
-mile) line until 1974, being the last common carrier narrow gauge
railway.
Other lines were notably shorter. The common gauges were and , with
a few railways built with and gauges.
Narrow gauge tourist and
heritage
lines of and gauge still operate.
France
The
French National Railways used to run a
considerable number of lines, a few of which still operate mostly
in tourist areas, such as the St Gervais-Vallorcine (Alps) and the
"Train
jaune"
in the Pyrenees. The original French scheme
was that every sous-prefecture should be rail connected. Extensive
near gauge lines were also built for the sugar-beet industry in the
north often using
ex-military
equipment after the
First World War.
Decauville was a famous French
manufacturer of industrial narrow gauge railway equipment and
equipped one of the most extensive regional narrow gauge railway,
the
Chemins de Fer du
Calvados.
Corsica
has a narrow gauge network of two lines following
the coast line, that are connected by one line crossing the island
through highly mountaineous terrain. The petit train d'Artouste, a tourist
line in the Pyrenees
, uses gauge.
Germany
A number
of narrow gauge lines survive, largely as a consequence of German
reunification, in the former East Germany
where some of them form part of the public
transport system as active commercial carriers. Most
extensive of those still employing steam traction is the Harz
mountain group of metre-gauge lines, the
Harzer Schmalspurbahnen.
Other
notable lines are the Zittau-Oybin-Jonsdorf line in
Saxony, the Mollibahn and the Rügensche Kleinbahn on the Isle of Rügen
on the Baltic coast and the Radebeul-Radeburg line, Weisseritztalbahn in the suburbs of
Dresden. Although most rely on the tourist trade, in some
areas they provide significant employment as steam traction is
particularly labour intensive.
In the
Western part of Germany, Selfkantbahn (close to Heinsberg
near Aachen
) and
Brohltalbahn (Linz
/Rhine) are
the best known ones, offering services in summer
weekends.
See also Narrow
gauge railways in Saxony
Greece
The Peloponnese narrow gauge network length is about 914 km.
Of this, gauge is used for 892 km. This is the network that
connects major cities in the Peloponnese. The remaining 22 km
form the Diakofton-Kalavryta rack railway, which uses gauge. The
Peloponnese network has suffered various setbacks, ranging from the
abandonment of entire lines (such as the Pyrgos-Katakolon railway)
to inefficient management on part of the public Greek railway
operator,
OSE, which
resulted in poor quality of services and rolling stock). Currently
major restoration works are carried out, which have resulted in
parts of the line having been closed. Additionally, the
reactivation of certain lines that were closed down during the
latter half of the 20th century is planned, mainly the
Pyrgos-Katakolon line and in parts of western Greece (around
Agrinion and Messologgi).Another small railway that uses narrow
gauge is the Mt. Pelion railway, originally from Volos to Milies.
Currently parts of the line are operational during the summer,
mainly for excursions.
There was also a metre gauge network in Thessaly. This has now been
replaced with single track standard gauge lines from Volos to
Larissa and Palaiofarsalos to Kalampaka. However, the old narrow
gauge tracks remain in place between Velestino and Palaiofarsalos
via Aerino, so that occasional special excursion trains use
them.
A metric line network existed in Attica, operated by Attica
Railways and later by SPAP. The line ran from the center of Athens
to
Kifissia with a
branch from Heraklion to Lavrion, serving the suburbs and towns of
the region as well as Dionysos marble quarries and Lavrion mines.
The line to Kifissia closed in 1938 and was reopened as standard
gauge in the 1950s, operated by
ISAP. The line
to Lavrion closed in 1957 due to political pressures from the road
transport lobby. Sections of the Lavrion line still survive and
there are plans to reopen the southern part (Koropi-Lavrion) as an
electrified standard gauge suburban line.
Development of open lignite mines for electricity production led to
the construction of industrial railway networks in Ptolemais,
Western Macedonia ( industrial gauge, electrified) and Aliveri,
Evoia Island ( ). These networks are no longer active, as the
lignite mines they served are exhausted.
The railway in Diakofto-Kalavryta and the in Volos-Milies (the
current operational line is Lechonia-Milies, since the part
Volos-Lechonia was abandoned) are heritage railways. The network of
Peloponnese, however, is a busy passenger line, although there are
no longer freight trains. A major project has started to construct
new lines in the busiest parts of Peloponnese and to rebuild the
century old tracks in the remaining. The branch lines from
Asprohoma to Messini and from Pyrgos to Katakolo were re-openned
for passenger services in September and April 2007 respectively and
the Corinth to Argos, Nafplio and Tripolis line was reopenned in
August 2009.
- It is the only extensive and authoritative source for the
history of Greek railways.
- Contains brief history, simple line maps ans extensive list of
rolling stock until 1997.

ALCo locomotive of Hellenic State
Railways at Corinth Old Railway Station
Hungary
The former Kingdom boasted a narrow gauge network thousands of
kilometres in length, most of it using gauge and constructed
between 1870 and 1920. Landlords, mines, agricultural and forest
estates established their own branch lines which, as they united
into regional networks, increasingly played a role in regional
passenger traffic. Following the
Treaty of Trianon some railways were cut
by the new border, many remained on the territory of Romania,
Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia. Due to a lack of intact roads,
following World War II in many places narrow-gauge railway was the
only reasonable way to get around. In 1968 the Communist government
started to implement a policy to dismantle the narrow-gauge network
in favour of road traffic. Freight haulage on the few remaining
lines continued to decline until 1990 from when a patchwork of
railways was gradually taken over by associations and forest
managements for tourist purposes.
State Railways operate narrow-gauge
railways at Nyíregyháza
and Kecskemét
that continue to play a role in regional
transport. Children aged 10 to 14 provide services at the
Budapest
Children's Railway.
Zsuzsi Scenic Railway Debrecen
Ireland
Several
narrow gauge systems once existed in Ireland
. In County Donegal
an extensive network existed, with two companies
operating from Derry
– the
Londonderry & Lough Swilly Railway (L&LSR) and the
County Donegal Railways (CDRJC).
Well
known was the West Clare Railway
– in County
Clare
, which saw diesel locomotion before closure.
The Cavan
& Leitrim Railway (C&LR) operated in what is
now the border area of County Cavan
and County Leitrim
. Some smaller narrow gauge routes also
existed in County Antrim and also
County
Cork
– notably the Cork Blackrock & Passage
Railway.
Apart from small
heritage venues,
the Irish narrow gauge today only survives in the
bogs of the Midlands as part of
Bord na Móna's extensive industrial
network for transporting harvested peat to distribution centres or
power plants.
See also: History of rail transport
in Ireland

Guinness brewery locomotive
Italy

Tourist line Macomer-Bosa, in
Sardinia
Narrow gauge railways in Italy are (or were) mainly build with
gauge, with some gauge lines and with a few other gauges.
In
Istria
, narrow
gauge railway line called Parenzana was
built from Trieste
- Capodistria now Koper
Slovenia
- to Parenzo now Poreč
Croatia
(dismantled).The Trieste
-Opicina
is a tramway with a funicular.
In
Sardinia, a network of narrow gauge
lines (950 mm) was built, to complement the standard-gauge
main network which covered the main cities and ports. The lines
were:
Of the lines which are still present, only
still carry regular passenger services, operated by
Ferrovie della Sardegna (Railways of
Sardinia).
The others only operate a scenic tourist service
known as Trenino verde (small green train)
In
Sicily, the Ferrovia Circumetnea ( gauge) runs
around the Mount
Etna
. Other narrow gauge lines of
Ferrovie dello Stato operated, but are
now closed.
The last of which was the Castelvetrano
-Porto
Empedocle
, closed
in 1985.
In
Trento only the narrow gauge
lines from Trento
to
Malè
and
Marilleva are still operating by Trentino Trasporti.
In
Bolzano-Bozen (Alto
Adige/South Tyrol) there are two gauge lines: the Rittnerbahn, or
Ferrovia del Renon, a very nice rural tramway and the Laas-Lasa
feight private railway to marble cave, that use a funicular too.
There are two tourist mines using gauge trains.
Between
Naples
and
Sorrento
, around the base of Mt. Vesuvius
, the Circumvesuviana railway operates frequent
services on tracks.
In the Puglia and Basilicata regions there are some lines
connecting Bari, Potenza, Matera and Avigliano. These are owned by
Ferrovie Apulo Lucane.
In Calabria there are the Catanzaro Lido-Catanzaro-Cosenza line,
with a branch to Camigliatello Silano, and two lines from Gioia
Tauro. All are owned by Ferrovie della Calabria.
The Genova-Casella is a line.

Railcar on the Ferrovia del
Renon
Isle of Man
Both main
railways in the Isle of
Man
are of gauge. The Isle of Man Steam Railway to the
southwest is operated largely as a tourist attraction but the
Manx
Electric Railway
to the northeast is a commercially operated railway
system though its operation is closer to that of a tramway than a
railway. The Snaefell Mountain Railway
, climbs the island's main peak and has a gauge of ;
it is the sole operating Fell Incline Railway System in
the world.

The Isle of Man Steam Railway
Latvia
There are one public, one museum and some industrial peat
railways.
A public
narrow gauge railway of around 30 km long joins the towns of
Gulbene
and Aluksne
(two trains per day). More:
http://www.banitis.lv.
There is
a museum railway in Ventspils
. The gauge is and the length is a 2 km
circle. The locomotives are former "Brigadelok" steam locomotives.
From 1918
until the early 1960s they ran a regular service from Ventspils
along the coast to Mazirbe
and further down to Talsi
and
Stende
.
The peat companies mainly use , but there also exist and gauge
railways.
Lithuania
158.8 km of narrow gauge lines remain, although only
68.4 km of them (serving five stations) are regularly used,
employing 12 locomotives. They are included in the Registry of
Immovable Cultural Heritage Sites of Lithuania. More about this
line: http://www.siaurukas.eu/ . There also still exist many peat
factories, which have private narrow gauge railways for
transportation peat from field to factory.
Norway
In Norway, a number of main lines were in the 19th century built
with narrow gauge, , to save cost in a sparsely populated
mountainous country. This included Norway's first own long-distance
line,
Rørosbanen, connecting Oslo
and Trondheim, 1877. Some secondary railways also had this gauge.
These railways have been rebuilt to standard gauge or closed down.
Some private railways had and one had . A few railways partly still
are operated as museum railways, specifically
Thamshavnbanen,
Urskog-Hølandsbanen and
Setesdalsbanen.
The tramway in
Trondheim
, Gråkallbanen is
also narrow gauge.
Poland
There are
hundreds of kilometres of , , 785 mm, and narrow gauge lines
in Poland
. The metre gauge lines are mostly found in
the northwest part of the country in Pomerania, while lines are
found only in the
Upper Silesia
region. is the most commonly used narrow gauge; it is used, for
example, in the
Rogów
Narrow Gauge Railway (Rogowska Kolej Wąskotorowa). Some narrow
gauge lines in Poland still operate as common carriers (for example
the lines operated by SKPL, the Association of Local Railway
Haulage)
[3520], while others survive as tourist attractions.
One of
the finest of the latter is the narrow gauge railway (Żnińska
Kolej Powiatowa) running from Żnin
via
Wenecja
(Polish Venice) and famous Biskupin
to Gąsawa
in the Pałuki
region. Railway traditions of Pałuki date back to July 1894
when the first two lines were opened.
In the past, there have also been , and lines.
A recreational line
4.2 km long still operates in the Amusement-Recreation Park in
Chorzów
, Upper Silesia.
A similar
line, Kolejka Parkowa
Maltanka, operates in Poznań
. Some of Poland's narrow gauge railways are
maintained by volunteers; one organization dedicated to preserving
narrow gauge railways is the FPKW, the Polish Narrow Gauge Railways
Foundation
[3521].
Portugal
Portugal
had hundreds of km of gauge railways, including:
Linha do Porto à Póvoa e Famalicão - Closed. Some of the old
trackbed is now used by the Oporto's Metropolitan railcars. Linha
de Guimarães - Closed between Guimarães and Fafe, converted into a
bike way. The rest is now broad gauge. Linha do Tâmega. Linha do
Corgo. Linha do Tua. Linha do Sabor.
Linha do Vouga (closed in Sernada do
Vouga
- Viseu
, working in
Aveiro - Sernada do Vouga -
Albergaria-a-Velha
- Oliveira de
Azeméis - Espinho). Linha do
Dão.
Four passenger services are known to still be in operation.
The Tamega Line runs between
Livração and
Amarante in the
District of
Oporto and runs near the
River Tâmega.
The Corgo
line runs from Regua
, on the Douro
River to
Vila Real. The line previously
ran to Chaves
and the track is still in situ in 2008.
There is a small Railway Museum at Chaves.
The Tua
Line runs north from Tua to Bragança
and previously ran to Mirandela. This line is the least used and
may close soon but was still operating in spring 2008. The line was
closed temporarily on 10 April 2008 after a landslide which cause
the derailment of a light inspection vehicle near Santa Luzia
station, and it's unknown when the line will reopen.
Finally a
line still runs from Oporto to Lisbon main line at Espinho to Sernada do Vouga
and back to the same main line at Aveiro, Linha do
Vouga. This line has a museum at Macinhata
do Vouga
whilst the main workshops are at Sernada do
Vouga. This line may also shut at any time.
Romania
Romanian narrow-gauge tracks usually use a gauge, though there were
also some gauge locomotives manufactured at Reşita.
Several old
narrow-gauge railways in Romania
are being renovated for tourist purposes: the one
in the Vaser Valley (Maramureş
County
) is now well known, the line from Abrud to Campeni
is sporadically operating and other renovation projects have made
tentative steps and may commence regular operations in the near
future, such as the Sibiu-Agnita railway, which has been declared
as a historical monument and is now starting to be restored by
volunteers. More information can be found under "
mocăniţă", the term by which such
railways are often called in
Romanian.

Vasar Valley Mocăniţă
Mariuţa
Russia
In
Russia
, narrow gauge is most often or .
gauge is
found only in the southern part of Sakhalin
, where railways were built by the Japanese.
A complete
list of Russian and other ex-Soviet Narrow Gauge
railways.
Slovakia
Bratislava municipal transport system uses
gauge for trams, while Košice
transport system uses standard gauge .
Railways, however use standard gauge making Bratislava tram and
railways networks incompatible with each other.
There is a discussion
regarding transforming Bratislava
's tram gauge to standard gauge to allow trams to
use the railways tracks to increase transportation capabilities of
Bratislava's public
transportation system. The most notable tourist lines in
operation are the gauge Čiernohronská železnica
and Oravsko-kysucká lesná železnica -
Vychylovka
.Another notable narrow gauge tracks include:
the Štrbské Pleso
- Štrba rack railway and the Tatra Electric Railway (both gauge)
in the Tatra
mountains
and the gauge railway from Trenčianska Teplá
to Trenčianske Teplice
.
Slovenia

A steam locomotive of the
Parenzana
The
narrow gauge railway line was build in the valley of Dravinja,
connecting Poljčane
- Slovenske Konjice
- Zreče
(dismantled 1962).
In Istria
, narrow
gauge railway line called Parenzana
connected Trieste
(Italy
) - Koper
, Izola
(Slovenia
) - Poreč
(Croatia
) (dismantled).
Serbia
The
narrow gauge railway line in Mokra Gora
on the northern slopes of mountain Zlatibor
in Serbia
climbs a 300 metre ascent using an unusual loop
in the form of the figure 8 – the popular
"Šargan Eight".
Spain
In
Spain
there is an extensive system of gauge railways, in
the north of the country, operated by FEVE
(Ferrocarriles Españoles de Vía Estrecha, Spanish narrow gauge
railways) and EuskoTren (Eusko Trenbideak,
Basque Railways). At the centre of this system is a metre
gauge line which runs for 650 km (400 miles) along the entire
length of Spain's north coast. FEVE and EuskoTren form the longest
narrow gauge network in Europe.Also near Madrid, on the mountain
range of Guadarrama runs a mountain train through a short but
extremely sinuous track, operated by
Renfe.
Separate
metre gauge railways are operated by the FGC
(Ferrocarrils de la Generalitat de Catalunya, Catalan regional
government railways) from Barcelona
to Manresa
and Igualada
, the FGV (Ferrocarrils
de la Generalitat Valenciana, Valencian regional government
railways) around the city of Valencia
, as well as along the Costa Blanca
from Alicante
to Denia
, and the
SFM (Serveis
Ferroviaris de Mallorca) on the island of Majorca
. Also on the island of Majorca, the
FS (Ferrocarril de Sóller)
operates a gauge electrified railway and connecting
tramway.
Also the Euskotran
in Bilbao
, which is not a "light rail", is unusual in new tramway and light
rail systems opened in the last twenty-five years in having adopted
metre gauge. EuskoTran is part of
EuskoTren, the Basque regional government
rail company. This company also owns several bus lines.
Metro Bilbao started in 1995 on
EuskoTren track and has a metre gauge.

Electric unit 3500, operated by FEVE,
arriving to the Muros de Nalón station, on the way to Oviedo
Sweden
Sweden
once had some fairly extensive narrow gauge
networks, but most narrow gauge railways are now closed.
Some were
converted to standard gauge (the latest one the line between
Berga
and
Kalmar
in the 1970s) and some remains as heritage
railways. The most common narrow gauge, (3 Swedish feet),
existed only in Sweden. A smaller gauge network existed, and gauge
was used mostly by smaller, industrial railways.
The only
commercial narrow gauge railway left is the Roslagsbanan suburban railway in north-eastern
Stockholm
(891 mm gauge). A branch line, the
Långängsbanan, was built and run for some years as an
isolated
standard gauge tramway in
anticipation of a planned conversion of the main line to raise its
capacity, but those plans came to naught and the branch was rebuilt
to narrow gauge; it is now closed.
The
longest other remaining narrow gauge railway is the 891 mm
line between Åseda
, Hultsfred
and Västervik
. 70 km between Hultsfred and Västervik
as well as the shorter sections between Virserum-Hjortöström and
Åseda-Hultanäs are served by tourist trains in the summer,
including 4 km of
dual gauge
track.
Sweden also had the unique gauge
Köping-Uttersberg-Riddarhyttan
Railway. Still other but lesser used gauges in the country were
, and .

The Roslagsbanan railway,
Stockholm
Switzerland
Switzerland boasts an extensive network of
metre gauge railways, many of which interchange
traffic (most prominent is the
Rhaetian
Railway). They are concentrated in the more heavily
mountainous areas. The
Jungfraubahn terminates at the highest station
in Europe.
Dual gauge (combined metre-
and
standard gauge trackway) also exists in many areas. Also,
nearly all street
tramways in Switzerland were
and still are also metre gauge.
United Kingdom
The
United
Kingdom
once had a large number of narrow gauge railways
which were mostly isolated from each other. The first
locomotive-hauled railway in the world was the narrow gauge
Penydarren
Tramway
in south Wales
.
Most of the lines were originally built to haul minerals or
agricultural products over short distances, though many also
carried passengers. The longest passenger line was the combined
Welsh Highland and Ffestiniog railways at 36
miles/57.9 km.
Only a few of these lines survive as commercial
common carriers. The great majority of the
remaining narrow gauge lines operate purely as tourist attractions,
and a number of new narrow gauge tourist lines have been built in
recent years. The sole passenger-carrying exception is the
Glasgow Subway, an underground
metro line that operates on a gauge.
The
Talyllyn
Railway
holds the distinction of being the first railway in
the world of any gauge to be run entirely by volunteers. In
addition a few private
industrial
narrow gauge railways remain, mainly serving the coal and peat
extraction industries.
Amongst
the most well-known narrow gauge lines in Britain are the Ffestiniog
- now the oldest independent railway company in the
world - the Corris
, the Vale of
Rheidol, and the Welshpool & Llanfair
in Wales, and the Lynton
& Barnstaple
and the Romney,
Hythe and Dymchurch
, in England. Unique amongst British railways is the
rack-and-pinion Snowdon Mountain Railway
which climbs to just below the summit of Wales'
highest peak.
North America
Canada
Although many railways of central and eastern Canada were initially
built to a
broad gauge, there were
several railways, especially on Canada's Atlantic coast, which were
built as individual narrow gauge lines.
The first public passenger carrying narrow gauge railways in North
America were in Ontario, the
Toronto Grey and Bruce
Railway and the
Toronto and Nipissing Railway,
opening in the summer of 1871. These Ontario lines were over 300
miles (480 km) in length, and both were built with the
objective of connecting with a future Pacific railway.
The New Brunswick Railway and the Lake Champlain
and St. Lawrence Junction Railway of Quebec
were built to the same gauge. All were
acquired and converted to standard gauge in 1881 and eventually
became part of the
Canadian
Pacific Railway.
Construction of the Prince Edward Island Railway
began in 1871 and was completed by the Canadian government in 1874
as a condition for Prince Edward Island
joining the Canadian Confederation.
Construction on the Newfoundland Railway
took place between 1881 and 1898.
It
became part of the Canadian
National Railways (CNR) when Newfoundland
became part of Canada in 1949.
The
White Pass and Yukon
Railroad which was completed in 1900 at the end of the
Klondike gold rush is Canada's last
remaining narrow gauge carrier. It no longer carries freight, but
is the busiest tourist railroad in North America.
Its tracks connect
to no other railroad but do connect to the cruise ship docks at
Skagway,
Alaska
, which provide it with most of its
passengers
Mexico
Various narrow gauge lines operated around Mexico City. A famous
one operated in Morelos State. There were dozens of private narrow
gauge lines built to service the mining district, and some common
carriers including the
Córdoba and Huatusco
Railroad,
Cazadero
and San Pablo Railroad,
Hornos
Railroad, and
Tacubaya
Railroad.
The
Yucatán
Peninsula
region of Mexico
has a network of narrow gauge lines, established
before the region was linked by rail to the rest of Mexico in the
1950s. Only the main line connecting Mérida
to central Mexico has been widened to standard
gauge.
United States
Many narrow gauge railways were built in the United States.
The most
extensive and well known systems were the gauge lines through the
Rocky Mountain states of Colorado
and New
Mexico
. For a while the majority of the railway
mileage in these states was narrow gauge.
In
Maine
, a network of gauge lines served the rural economy
between the 1870s and 1940s.Across the US, industrial narrow gauge
railways were used, perhaps the best known being the gauge logging
lines of the western states of Oregon
and California
. In Pennsylvania
, the gauge coal-hauling East
Broad Top Railroad
is the oldest surviving 3 foot gauge in the
United
States
hauling excursion trains during the summer
months.
Today a few lines survive as
heritage
railways and tourist attractions.
USG Corporation operates an industrial gauge
line at Plaster City, California
and narrow gauge railways are still used for
some tunneling and mining work. Tweetsie Railroad in western North
Carolina still operates today as a family tourist attraction.

Shay logging locomotive in
California

A steam locomotive of the C&TS
RR
Central America
Costa Rica
See also
Railways
in Costa Rica
Costa Rican railways are gauge and mostly gauge.
El Salvador
El Salvador ran gauge steam trains into the 1970s. How much of this
survived a civil war, earthquakeand hurricane is unknown.
See also
Guatemala
Haiti
Haiti
has had two different gauges on its railways. 130 km of rural
line between Port-au-Prince
, Saint-Marc
, and Verrettes
(1905–about 1960s) used gauge.
Tramlines in Port-au-Prince
(1878–1888 and 1896–1932), which was the first
known track in Haiti
, and a total of 80 km of rural line west
to Léogâne
and east to Manneville (1896–1950s(?)) used
gauge.Totalling over 100 km of track, the plantation
railways in the north and north-east most likely used .There were
at least four separate isolated lines.The story of the
demise of one
Haitian
railroad is that it was sold and physically picked up, and
shipped to Asia during the
Papa Doc period
(approx. 1957–1971).
Other gauges may have been used on the
plantation tracks in the north and north-east of Haiti
. The CIA fact book suggests that in the
1990s there were only 40 km of abandoned track
left(?).
History
of Haitian railways.
Panama
Mule
Locos haul ships through the locks in the Panama Canal
(Gauge???)
See also
South America
Metre and gauge lines are found in South America. Some of the
-gauge lines cross international borders, though not as efficiently
as they might.
Argentina
, Bolivia
, Brazil
and Chile
have gauge lines. Colombia
and Peru
have gauge
lines.
Argentina
railways are found in the northern half of the country. The Old Patagonian Express (La Trochita) is a 402 km-long narrow gauge railway in the Andean foothills of Patagonia, now running as two portions of its original length. However, all the track is preserved. The Southern Fuegian Railway (End of the World Train) on a track is considered the southernmost operating railway in the world. The Rainforest Ecological Train is a environmentally-friendly train that runs through the forest inside Iguazú National Park
in the north of the province of Misiones
of Argentina
and there is also a coal railway, Red de Ferrocarril Industrial de Rio Turbio, that operates between Rio Turbio and Rio Gallegos on track gauge.
Bolivia
All railways in Bolivia are gauge.
Brazil
See
Rail transport in
Brazil
In Brazil, almost all the lines are gauge, with the exception of a
few lines in the states of São Paulo, Minas Gerais, Rio de Janeiro
and Mato Grosso. Vale (ex-CVRD) also has a line with gauge lines
once operated in Minas Gerais, centered around the city of São João
del-Rey. This network at one time had over 770 km of railway
in operation, but only about 13 km remain in operation as a
steam powered
tourist railway.
Other small narrow gauge lines include the Rio de Janeiro streetcar
(Bonde de Santa Teresa), with approximately 13 km of gauge,
and a very short industial railway near Bertioga built to gauge. A
number of industrial (a gauge Portland Cement line near São Paulo,
for example) and agricultural (rubber plantations, sugar
plantations, logging) railways also existed in Brazil in a number
of narrow gauges, but few of those survive today.

Anhumas station of the
Campinas-SP
Chile
Metre gauge railways are found in the
northern half of the country. The
Ferrocarril de Antofagasta
a Bolivia was originally built to gauge, as were a number of
mining and nitrate railways.
Colombia
Most of the railways in Colombia are gauge.
Ecuador
The
railways in Ecuador
are cape gauge.
This is a famous route, the one that zig zags past the chilling
canyon of the Devil's Nose. Floods, landslides and government
neglect have put this operation in doubt, but they are working to
restore the railway. The recently elected president
Rafael Correa declared the state of emergency
of the national railway. He has secured funding for a master plan
to restore it to its previous glory. In the first phase of this
plan, the Ecuadorian government will invest over US $283 million to
completely repair the country's existing railway system and
infrastructure, such as bridges, walls and stations. The government
will also purchase new locomotives. A second phase seek the
building of new railway lines to connect the country with Brazil
and Venezuela. Currently two
Baldwin
locomotives are ready to work, depending on track and traffic.
There are also a number of diesel railbuses and some
Alsthom diesel locomotives available.
The
railway from Guayaquil to Quito
featured in the 1983 BBC
television series Great Little
Railways.
Peru
The Cuzco-Quillibama line in Peru is gauge. The other narrow gauge
line (Huancayo-Huancavelica) will be converted to standard
gauge.

The Cusco-Machu Picchu railway
Uruguay
There were four big narrow gauge lines in Uruguay: Puerto del Sauce
(now Juan Lacaze)-Terminal: , (1901-1959), Piriapolis-Pan de
Azucar: (1903-1958), km 393-Arrozal 33: and km 110-Cantera
Burgueño: . All were dismantled. There were also several quarry
lines of gauge, among them the famous INDARE sand line. Around 300
m of that sand line is preserved and also a lot of steam
locomotives. One of those is in working order. Also, a new narrow
gauge line, of around 1 km, with two diesel locomotives from
the former km 110-Cantera Burgueño line, was constructed in a park
on the town of Santiago Vazquez, in the West of Montevideo.
Asia
Bangladesh
, India
, Pakistan
and Sri
Lanka
inherited a diversity of rail gauges, some of
which was . Indian Railways
has adopted
Project
unigauge, which seeks to systematically convert most
of its narrower gauge railways to .
Southeast Asia
The
railways of Southeast Asia, including
Vietnam
, Cambodia
, Laos
, Thailand
, Myanmar
and Malaysia
are predominantly gauge. The proposed ASEAN
Railway would be a standard-gauge or dual-gauge, using both metre
and standard gauge regional railway networks, linking Singapore
at the southern tip of the Malay Peninsula,
through the Association of Southeast
Asian Nations region Malaysia
, Thailand
, Laos
and
Vietnam
to the standard-gauge railway network of the
People's
Republic of China
. Indonesia
's railways are predominantly .
China
Some of
the railway network of the People's Republic of China
is gauge.
Many narrow gauge railways existed in China. Metre gauge railways
were popular in China in several regions before 1949.
The gauge Kunming-Hekou Railway (previously
known as Sino-Vietnamese
Railway) was built by French colonists between Vietnam
and China. In
Manchuria, lumber industries built narrow gauge
railways into the forests, mostly of gauge.
Hong Kong

Preserved Kowloon-Canton Railway
locomotive
In
Hong
Kong
the Kowloon-Canton Railway was partially
laid to and gauge during its construction in 1910 but was very soon
converted to standard gauge. The
Sha Tau Kok Railway was gauge for much
of its existence. The famous
Hong
Kong Tramways are gauge, and the territory's metro, the
MTR, runs on 1432 mm gauge except for the
standard gauge
KCR network it
operates under a lease.
India
India
has a
substantial network of narrow gauge railways. The majority
of these are gauge or
Metre gauge,
totalling approximately 17,000 km of track. There are some
gauge railways, and a few that use gauge; these are known as
"narrow gauge" (as opposed to "
metre
gauge") lines in India.
In 1999
the gauge Darjeeling Himalayan Railway
was officially designated as a UNESCO
World Heritage
Site. It runs from Siliguri to Darjeeling in the state
of West Bengal. As of 2008, out of the 63,326.69 km of railway
lines in the country, 10,621.38 km were metre-gauge lines, and
2885.87 km narrow-gauge, and the rest 49,819.44 km were broad-gauge
lines .

The Darjeeling Himalyan Railway

The Kalka Shimla Railway
Indonesia
Indonesia had large numbers of narrow gauge railways supporting
industry, mainly sugar cane plantations in Java. , sugar cane
production in Java has been declining and the railways are now
largely closed or used for tourism.
Most of the current active railways in Indonesia use the
Cape gauge .
Japan
Except for the high-speed
Shinkansen
lines and
JR East Ou
Main Line and
Tazawako Line, all
of
Japan Railways Group's
network is narrow gauge, built at . Some companies, such as
Kintetsu,
Keisei Electric Railway,
Keihin Electric Express
Railway,
Hankyu Railway,
Toei Asakusa Line,
Tokyo Metro's
Ginza Line and
Marunouchi line, use standard
gauge.
Tokyo's
Keio Electric Railway
network and the
Toei Shinjuku
metro line, which operate through services, use an exceptional
gauge. This gauge is also used on the
Tokyo and
Hakodate tramways.
There are some dual gauge lines which allow Shinkansen trains to
travel on narrow gauge branches. Japan adopted as a standard narrow
gauge for minor, forestry and industrial lines. However, most of
these narrow gauge lines were abandoned and currently only four
lines remain in operation.

Modern Japan Railways freight
locomotive
Malaysia
Malaysia
's oldest railway systems are solely gauge, a
standard that has been adopted since the British colonial
government laid down the first railway lines in 1885.
Keretapi Tanah Melayu, the main
railway operator in Peninsular Malaysia
, uses metre gauge for the main west and east
coast intercity lines, as well as railway lines spanning Singapore
, from the Johor-Singapore Causeway
to the Tanjong Pagar railway
station
. Existing metre gauge lines are also
used for
KTM Komuter, the country's
commuter rail service, which links
Kuala Lumpur with neighbouring suburbs.
However, standard
gauge is used by the newer light rail
operators in Kuala
Lumpur
city (Putra LRT,
Star LRT) as well as the privately operated
Express Rail Link to the
airport.
In
Sabah
, the North
Borneo Railway ("Keretapi Negeri Sabah") runs a metre gauge
line from Kota
Kinabalu
up to
Tenom in the Crocker Ranges, via Beaufort. Steam trains are also used in this route.

A KTMB train
Philippines
Except
for the Light Rail
Transit (LRT) and Metro Rail Transit (MRT)
systems in Metro
Manila
, which have both been constructed to the
international standard gauge, the
Philippine National
Railways ("PNR") uses the "Cape
Gauge" of . The PNR currently opertes only one line:
from Manila
to the southern Luzon city of Legaspi
. Until the 1980s a more extensive
network existed going as far north as San Fernando in La Union
province.
There are plans to restore the La Union
line and to build new lines connecting Manila to Batangas
and the international airport.
There are also a number of industrial narrow gauge steam railways
operating in the sugar cane industry.
These are
concentrated on the islands of Negros
and Panay
. The Visayas
region is the main center for the sugar cane
lines; some of the mills, such as La
Carlotta Milling in Negros, run charter trains for
tourists.Abandoned lines exists on the islands of
Cebu
,
abandoned in the 1950s or 1960s, Mindanao
, and Panay
, closed in the 1990s. There are plans to
restore the Panay Rail line which connects Roxas City
with Iloilo
.
Taiwan
Taiwan
started to build up railway in the Qing dynasty
using gauge. The Japanese colonial government, which ruled
from 1895 to 1945, continued using . The system is now under
Taiwan Railway
Administration.
The new Taipei Rapid Transit System and
the metro system under construction in Kaohsiung
use standard
gauge. The
Taiwan High
Speed Rail (HSR) which started operation in January 2007 also
uses standard gauge. An isolated gauge line on the east coast was
regauged to when the line was interconnected. The Alishan forest
railway is narrow gauge .
Except
for the high speed railway
and the metro systems in Taipei and Kaohsiung, all of Taiwan
's railway network is narrow gauge, built at
. The isolated east coast railways that used gauge were
converted to when the lines were linked to the west coast
system.
A narrow gauge
Alishan Forest
Railway stretches 72 km and connects the city of Chiayi to
the mountain resort of Alishan. The line serves mainly as a tourist
attraction and offers breathtaking mountain views.
On September 7, 2006, Taiwanese government declared a plan to
update to the standard gauge system.
[3522] It's not the first time that this plan was
proposed. In fact, some of the facilities have allowed for standard
gauge conversion such as the underground tunnels constructed since
the late 1980s. Many experts criticize the proposal as
prohibitively expensive if not impossible as all locomotives,
passenger and freight cars must be converted to standard
gauge.

Taiwan narrow gauge service
Middle East
Until 1932 a narrow gauge train ran from Cairo through Palestine,
Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, Persia (later Iran) and Iraq. The tracks
and stations are mostly tourist sites, with some sections
refurbished and run as a tourist attraction. The train was
notorious for being slow, and failing to go uphill
Thailand
While the Northern Line was originally build as standard gauge, the
line was regauged after 1919 and the
State Railway of Thailand now
operates entirely on gauge, including international through
services to Malaysia. However, standard gauge is used by the
Bangkok Skytrain and the
Bangkok Metro and the new
Bangkok airport link due to be open in
August 2009.

Thailand Railway metre gauge
locomotive
Africa
Narrow gauge railways are common in Africa, where great distances,
challenging terrain and low funding have made the narrow gauges
attractive. Many nations, particularly in southern Africa,
including the extensive South African Railway network (
Spoornet), use a gauge. Metre gauge is also common,
as in the case of the
Uganda Railway.
There
used to be extensive and gauge networks in countries such as
Morocco
, Congo
, Angola
, Namibia
and South Africa,
but these have mostly been dismantled.
Because Africa is divided into many countries, railways built by
different governments tend not to link up with each other, each
country's lines connecting its outlands with its own port.
Incompatible gauges are therefore not obvious.
For example, a link
from Nigeria
to Cameroon
would join to .
The
railways of South Africa and many other
African countries, including Angola
, Botswana
, Congo
, Ghana
, Mozambique
, Namibia
, Nigeria
, Zambia
and Zimbabwe
, use gauge, sometimes referred to as
Cape gauge.
Kenya
, Uganda and others use
gauge lines. In
Tanzania former East
African Railways lines are metre gauge while the
Tazara line is
Eritrea
Further north, the
Eritrean Railway
is in the midst of resurrecting its narrow gauge railway, a relic
of its former Italian colonial days that was abandoned and heavily
damaged during
Eritrea's
war of independence.
Neighbouring railways (should they ever
connect) are in Sudan
and in Ethiopia
.
Cameroon
During the
First World War when
Cameroon was a German possession, a network of gauge
Feldbahn railways were built. These eventually
extended to around 150 km of track serving rubber and palm oil
plantations.
The gauge is now in use.
Morocco
Morocco had from 1912 - 1935 one of the largest gauge network in
Africa with total lengthof more than 1700 kilometres. After the
treaty of Algeciras where the representatives of GreatPowers agreed
not to build any standard gauge railway in Morocco until the
standard gauge
Tangier - Fez Railway
being completed, the French had begun to built military gaugelines
in their part of Morocco
French
Morocco.
South Africa
Originally standard gauge, the railways of the then
Cape Colony changed to narrow gauge , sometimes
known as
Cape gauge, for
cost-cutting reasons. However, with the development of a strong
economy, with heavy export coal and iron ore traffic, and
electrification of most main lines, South Africa, like Queensland,
operates several narrow gauge trains that outdo most standard gauge
and all broad gauge trains. In fact, in 1989 the Sishen-Saldanha
line set a world record by carrying the biggest train in history,
7.2 km long containing 660 wagons pulled by 15 locomotives and
weighing 71,232 tonnes.
However, the proposed Gautrain railway between Johannesburg
and Pretoria
will operate on standard gauge, and will thus
not be capable of using any of the country's existing rail
network.
The
Avontuur Railway operates between
Port
Elizabeth
and Avontuur in South
Africa. It is the longest gauge route in the world at a
length of 285 km. It is operated by the South African railway
company
Spoornet. The line is commonly
known as the
Apple Express[3523].
Oceania
Australia
Queensland
, Tasmania
, Western Australia
and parts of South Australia
adopted gauge to cover greater distances at
lower costs. Most industrial railways are built to gauge.
Three different rail gauges are currently in wide use in
Australia, and there is little prospect of full
standardisation.
Before 1901, each of the six British colonies was responsible for
rail transport infrastructure.
Queensland
, Western Australia
, and Tasmania
constructed for narrow gauge railways.
The
other colonies built either standard gauge or broad gauge railways,
maintaining only limited narrow gauge rail lines, except for
South
Australia
, which built both narrow and broad
gauge. As a result of this legacy, Australian railways are a
mix of all three gauges.
In 1865, the
Queensland Railways was
the first mainline narrow gauge railway in the world . Its tracks
would eventually extend to around 9000 km. Queensland Rail
operates the
QR Tilt Train, with a
maximum speed of 165 km/h. This train currently holds the
Australian Railway Speed Record of 210.7 km/h. Queensland also
has extensive sugar cane tramways of gauge.
Following the success of the narrow gauge in Queensland, several
narrow gauge lines were built in South East Australia. From the
1920s onwards several of these were converted to broad gauge.
Inspired by the success of the narrow gauge in Queensland, Western
Australia adopted the same gauge.
Until closure in 1958 Perth
had the only narrow gauge tramway network of
any considerable extent in mainland Australia.
The Northern Territory adopted narrow gauge when it was still part
of South Australia, and a North-South transcontinental line was
planned from Adelaide to Darwin in the 1870s. In the event this
line was never completed, and due to flood damage and lack of
traffic, the narrow gauge line was closed.
Four
common carrier lines in
Victoria
were built to the narrow gauge standard, to
serve local farming and forestry communities. Sections of two lines
(Belgrave to Gembrook and Thomson to Walhalla) have been restored
as tourist railways.

Puffing Billy train at Lakeside
station
New Zealand
See also: Rail
transport in New ZealandNew Zealand
adopted narrow gauge (cape gauge) due to the need to cross mountainous
terrain in the country's interior. This terrain has
necessitated a number of complicated engineering feats, notably the
Raurimu
Spiral
. There are 1787 bridges and 150 tunnels
in less than 4,000 km of track. Around 500 km of this
track is
electrified,
on the North Island Main Trunk, between Palmerston North and
Hamilton.
Much like Australia, there was initially no uniformity in track
gauges in New Zealand. This was because the construction of
railways was undertaken by the various
provinces of New Zealand rather
than the central government.
The Canterbury Provincial
Railways opened New Zealand's first railway in 1863 and used a
broad gauge of , while Southland
built the Bluff and
Kingston Branch to ,
and short segments of railway were also constructed in the Auckland
and Northland Regions
. Eventually, under the public works
schemes of Premier
Julius Vogel, the
railways of New Zealand were made to adhere to a gauge. The first
gauge railway in New Zealand was the
Dunedin and Port Chalmers Railway,
which opened on 1 January 1873. Today, the network connects most
major New Zealand cities, and is around 4,000 km in length.
See also
References
-
http://www.corporate.qr.com.au/Images/QR_Annual_Report_tcm15-2468.pdf
- P.J.G. Ransom. Narrow Gauge Steam - Its origins and
worldwide development, Oxford Publishing Co., 1996, ISBN
0-86093-533-7
- P. Whitehouse, J. Snell. Narrow Gauge Railways of the
British Isles, David &
Charles, 1994, ISBN C-7153-0196-9
- Railroads of Colorado: Your Guide to Colorado's
Historic Trains and Railway Sites, Claude Wiatrowski,
Voyageur Press, 2002, hardcover, 160 pages, ISBN 0-89658-591-3
- Keith Chester. "East European Narrow Gauge" 1995
- "Narrow Gauge Through the Bush - Ontario's Toronto Grey and
Bruce and Toronto and Nipissing Railways"; Rod Clarke; pub.
Beaumont and Clarke, with the Credit Valley Railway Company,
Streetsville, Ontario, 2007. ISBN 978-0-9784406-0-2
- "The Narrow Gauge For Us - The Story of the Toronto and
Nipissing Railway"; Charles Cooper; pub. The Boston Mills Press;
Erin, Ontario, 1982.
- "Narrow Gauge Railways of Canada"; Omer Lavallee; pub.
Railfair, Montreal, 1972.
- "Narrow Gauge Railways of Canada"; Omer Lavallee, expanded and
revised by Ronald S Ritchie; pub. Fitzhenry and Whiteside, Markham,
Ontario, 2005.
- "The Toronto Grey and Bruce Railway 1863-1884; Thomas F
McIlwraith; pub. Upper Canada Railway Society, Toronto, 1963.
- "Steam Trains to the Bruce"; Ralph Beaumont; pub. The Boston
Mills Press; Cheltenham, Ontario, 1977
- "Running Late on the Bruce"; Ralph Beaumont & James Filby;
pub The Boston Mills Press, Cheltenham, Ontario, 1980