*** Welcome to piglix ***

Buenos Aires Central Railway

Buenos Aires Central Railway
Estación Chacarita Tramway Rural (Lacroze - Tramway Rural).png
Chacarita station, 1880s.
Overview
Native name Ferrocarril Central de Buenos Aires
Type Inter-city
Status Defunct company; some rail lines active
Locale Buenos Aires, Santa Fe
Termini Chacarita
4 de Febrero (Santa Fe)
Zárate, Buenos Aires
Operation
Opened 1888
Closed 1948; 69 years ago (1948)
Owner Government of Argentina
Technical
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Route map
Central ba railw map.jpg

The Buenos Aires Central Railway (FCCBA) (in Spanish: Ferrocarril Central Buenos Aires) was an Argentine railway company which built and operated a 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge railway line from Buenos Aires to the city of 4 de Febrero in Santa Fe.

On 2 October 1884 entrepreneur Federico Lacroze was granted a concession to build a 47 km horse-drawn railway from the Chacarita station of Buenos Aires (later demolished and replaced by Federico Lacroze terminus) to Pilar. On 6 April 1888 the line was opened by the "Tramway Rural" company and was extended by 53 km to Zárate on 27 July of the same year. From 1891 the company was allowed to operate trains using steam locomotives.

The BACR also crossed Santa Fe Province with the purpose of reaching Villa María in Córdoba, but due to World War I the company could not import the material to extend the line.

The railway then built another line from Fátima to Salto, reaching San Andrés de Giles on 24 May 1889, Heavy on 17 December 1892, Carmen de Areco on 15 March 1894 and finally Salto on 1 December 1896. On 26 August 1897 the company changed its name by Provincial decree to "Ferrocarril Rural de la Provincia de Buenos Aires" and on 11 October 1906 it changed again to "Ferrocarril Central de Buenos Aires". The line was extended from Salto to Rojas on 15 March 1909 and reached its destination, 4 de Febrero, on 29 July 1915.


...
Wikipedia

...