Olbia
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View of the passenger building.
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Location | Via Giacomo Pala 07026 Olbia OT Olbia, Olbia-Tempio, Sardinia Italy |
Coordinates | 40°55′29″N 09°29′55″E / 40.92472°N 9.49861°ECoordinates: 40°55′29″N 09°29′55″E / 40.92472°N 9.49861°E |
Operated by | Rete Ferroviaria Italiana |
Line(s) | Cagliari–Golfo Aranci |
Distance | 283.826 km (176.361 mi) from Cagliari |
Train operators | Trenitalia |
Connections |
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Other information | |
Classification | Silver |
History | |
Opened | 15 March 1881 |
Location | |
Olbia railway station (Italian: Stazione di Olbia) serves the town and comune of Olbia, in the northeast of the island and region of Sardinia, Italy. Opened in 1881, it forms part of the Cagliari–Golfo Aranci railway, the main railway line in Sardinia.
Between 1883 and 2000, the station was also the junction of a short branch line to Olbia's ferry pier, at Isola Bianca.
The station is currently managed by Rete Ferroviaria Italiana (RFI). Train services to and from the station are operated by Trenitalia. Each of these companies is a subsidiary of Ferrovie dello Stato (FS), Italy's state-owned rail company.
Olbia railway station is situated in Via Giacomo Pala, at the northwestern edge of the old town.
The station was opened on 15 March 1881 as the main station of Terranova Pausania, which was then the name of present-day Olbia. Its opening coincided with the inauguration of the Monti–Terranova Pausania section of the Cagliari–Golfo Aranci railway.
Terranova Pausania was intended to be the penultimate station on the line, which, on 1 May of that year, arrived at the designated terminus of Terranova Isola Bianca, in front of the docks of the town's port. However, in the meantime it had been decided to move the docking of ships passengers to nearby Golfo Aranci, and so the line was extended by constructing a new trunk route from Terranova Pausania.
The extension was opened in 1883. The opening of this route created a bifurcation of the line a short distance from the station. To the west, the new main line continued to Rudalza, another stop within the municipality, and Golfo Aranci, while to the east, the established line, now a branch, headed to Isola Bianca.
A few decades later, the port of Olbia once again became the ferry port. A new rail link from Terranova Pausania station to the new Isola Bianca pier was opened on 28 January 1920, just weeks after responsibility for management of the station had passed to the FS.
The station, which took its present name of Olbia in 1939, continued to be the terminus of most trains in the years to come, including the Freccia Sarda, the Cagliari-Olbia express that for decades linked its termini with the regional capital of Gallura.