Muscat Daily

Longest train

Like clockwork - world's longest passenger train winds through Swiss Alps

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The world's longest passenger train - an assembly of 100 connected coaches measuring nearly two kilometres - wound through breath-taking scenery in the Swiss Alps

on Saturday.

The Rhaetian Railway (RHB) announced that it had beat the world record for the longest passenger train, at an event marking the 175th anniversar­y of Switzerlan­d's famous railway system.

The 1,910m train, composed of 25 separable multiple-unit trains, or 100 coaches, travelled through the Alps in the eastern Swiss canton of Graubunden.

"For me, this is just Swiss perfection," RHB chief Renato Fasciati told the Blick daily's live

feed of the event, as the long, red train snaked slowly through the mountainou­s landscape.

While there are freight trains that are longer, with some measuring over three kilometres, Saturday's event featured, by far, the longest passenger train ever run.

“It was several hundred metres longer than a train that held the unofficial previous record, in Belgium in the 1990s,” an RHB spokesman told AFP.

With dazzling sunshine reflecting off its shiny, silver roof and with a digital destinatio­n sign on the front reading 'Alpine Cruise', the train carried 150 passengers.

World heritage

It took the spectacula­r, spiralling Albula/bernina route, listed as a UNESCO World Heritage site,

covering the nearly 25km from Preda to Alvaneu in less than 45 minutes.

Some 3,000 people who had snapped up coveted tickets, watched the trip on a giant screen set up near Bergun, at the halfway-point in the historic journey.

Others lined the mountain roads and paths, cheering as the giant train slowly snaked between autumn-coloured trees.

It wound through 22 helical tunnels and crossing 48 bridges along the way, including the

majestic Landwasser Viaduct, towering 65m over the ravine below.

Swiss media broadcast aerial footage showing the train at several levels simultaneo­usly, with its snout exiting one tunnel as carriages further back were sliding through others.

The road up to the various look-out points was closed off to traffic, but many hiked or biked up the mountainsi­de seeking out the best view.

As the train made its way down one mountainsi­de, a flock of people on bikes tried to follow alongside it on a parallel path.

Holding up the Guinness World Record diploma, Fasciati told reporters that there had

been significan­t challenges to ensure such a long

The 1,910m train was composed of 25 separable multiple-unit trains or 100 coaches. It wound through 22 helical tunnels and crossing 48 bridges

train could travel safely.

The seven train drivers and 21 technician­s onboard had to make sure that all 25 trains do the

same, accelerati­ng and breaking at the same time, and were all guided by the first driver, he said.

Few countries have a rail network as dense as Switzerlan­d, which is famous for its punctual trains.

The wealthy Alpine country had seen the departure of its first train service on August 9, 1847, linking Zurich with Baden, 23km to the

northwest - a trip which took 33 minutes.

AFP

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 ?? ?? A 1910-metre-long train with 100 cars passes by in Bergun on October 29, 2022, during a record attempt by the Rhaetian Railway (RHB) of the world's longest passenger train, to mark the Swiss railway operator's 175th anniversar­y
A 1910-metre-long train with 100 cars passes by in Bergun on October 29, 2022, during a record attempt by the Rhaetian Railway (RHB) of the world's longest passenger train, to mark the Swiss railway operator's 175th anniversar­y

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