BookRags.com Literature Guides Literature
Guides
Criticism & Essays Criticism &
Essays
Questions & Answers Questions &
Answers
Lesson Plans Lesson
Plans
My Bibliography Periodic Table U.S. Presidents Shakespeare Sonnet Shake-Up
Research Anything:        
History | Encyclopedias | Films | News | Create a Bibliography | More... Login | Register | Help

Gråkallbanen

Print-Friendly
About 4 pages (1,330 words)

Bookmark and Share Questions on this topic? Just ask!
Gråkallbanen
One of the Gråkallbanen trams at the St. Olavs Gate terminus
Info
Type Tramway
System Trondheim Tramway
Terminals St. Olavs Gate
Lian
No. of stations 21
Operation
Opened 1924
Owner Municipality of Trondheim
Operator(s) Gråkallbanen AS
Technical
Line length 8.8 km
No. of tracks 1 (2 in the city streets)
Gauge 1,000 mm (3 ft 3⅜ in)
Electrification Overhead DC
Gråkallbanen
STRrg xABZlg
to city centre
BHF STR
St. Olavs Gate (1924)
HST STR
Dronningens gate
STRlf ABZlg
Tordenskjolds gate
leer HST
Hospitalkirka
leer HST
Kalvskinnet
STRrg xABZrf
HST exSTR
Skansen
HST exSTR
Ila (1924)
ABZrd exSTR
turning track
eABZlf exSTRrf
Ilevollen loop
eGRENZE leer
streetcar to here
onwards as suburban rail
HST leer
Bergsligata (1924)
BUE leer
Nyveibakken
HST leer
Nyveibakken (1924)
HST leer
Bygrensen (1924)
BUE leer
Belvedere
HST leer
Belvedere (1998)
BUE leer
Thaulowbakken
HST leer
Breidablikk (1924)
BRÜCKE1 leer
Breidablikkveien (ca. 20 m)
HST leer
Nordre Hoem (1924)
BRÜCKE1 leer
Bøckmans veg (ca. 90 m)
HST leer
Søndre Hoem
HST leer
Rognheim (1924)
ABZlf STRlg
BHF STR
Munkvoll (1924)
ABZlf STRrf
turning loop
BUE leer
Selsbakkvegen
ABZdf leer
side track to depot
BRÜCKE1 leer
Byåsveien (ca. 50 m)
HST leer
Ferstad (1933)
BUE leer
Ferstadbakken
BHF leer
Ugla (1925)
BRÜCKE1 leer
Gamle Oslovei (ca. 12 m)
eABZrf leer
HST leer
Kyvannet (1933)
BUE leer
Sigrid Johansens veg
HST leer
Vestmarka (1933)
HST leer
Herlofsonløypa (1933)
BUE leer
Uglavegen
ABZlf STRlg
BHF STR
Lian (1933)
ABZlf STRrf
turning loop
ENDEe leer

Gråkallbanen is a tram line located in Trondheim, Norway. It is the only tram line remaining in the city, following the termination of the rest of the tram line system in the city in 1988. The line is operated as Line 1 since the 1974. Before this the line was private. The line is the northern-most tramway line in the world. It runs from the street St. Olav's Gate, through the districts of Byåsen and to Lian Station, a distance of 8.8 km. It serves as a transportation to the large recreation area of Bymarka. The line was constructed in 1924, and is unusual in that it uses 2.6 metre wide cars on metre gauge, and that its upper section is single track. Located at Munkvoll Station is Trondheim Tramway Museum.

Contents

Service

The operating company Gråkallbanen AS has six trams, of which four are needed for daily operation on the line and two are in reserve. The trams operate on fixed 15 minute headway with a reduced 30 minute headway in the evenings and in the weekend. Heritage trams are operated irregularly, usually only on holidays, from the museum to the city.

History

Though there had been a municipally owned tram company in Trondheim, Trondhjems Elektricitetsværk og Sporvei, since 1901, the first steps to building a tramway in Byåsen were taken in 1916 when A/S Graakalbanen was founded to build a tramway from the city centre via Byåsen to the mountain Gråkallen. The first stretch to be opened was from St. Olav's Street to Munkvoll on July 18, 1924, after construction work lasting seven years. The line was extended to Ugla on May 30, 1925 and in 1933 to the present terminus at Lian. The financing of the first two stretches of the line was done through the company purchasing land from along the line and selling it for housing with a profit. The last stretch was financed through a separate company, A/S Ugla-Lian, that built the line and got 5 øre per rider on the line, but had no operating responsibility. The peak of Gråkallbanen was during World War II when the line had 2 million passenger annually, since the trams where the only transport systems that were operational during the war. After the war new investments were made, including loops in the city (1946) and at Lian (1947), double track from Breidablikk to Nordre Hoem (1948) and a new depot and workshop at Munkvoll in 1953. A/S Grakalbanen was bought by the city in 1966 and in 1974 merged with Trondheim Sporvei and Trondheim Bilruter to form Trondheim Trafikkselskap.[1]

Closing and reopening

During the 1980s there was a lot of political debate about the future of the tram in Trondheim, and in 1983 the city council decided to close down Elgeseter Line, and keep only one line between Lian and Lade. At the same time 11 new trams were ordered and a new depot built at Munkvoll, costing in access of NOK 100 million. But in 1988 the city council changed their minds and closed the tramway in Trondheim. The tracks between St. Olav's Street and Lademoen were removed, but the tracks at Lade were kept, as were the tracks between St. Olav's Street and Lian. The latter was because enthusiasts had plans of operating veteran trams as a heritage railway. But fate had other plans for Gråkallbanen. The Trondheim tramway is one of only two in the world, along with the Cairo Tramway, to use the combination of meter gauge and 2.6 metre wide cars. This made it practically impossible to sell the trams and finance the 20 new Scania buses that Trondheim Trafikkselskap needed to operate the bus route to Lian and Lade. In the end the 11 trams were not sold and instead a company owned by 1400 enthusiasts, Gråkallbanen AS, was created to operate the tram route on the only remaining line, that started in 1990. In 2004 Veolia Transports division in Norway, Veolia Transport Norway, bought the company and have announced they will invest another NOK 10,7 million, after the purchase in improved infrastructure on Gråkallbanen.

Stations

Plans

Gråkallbanen is working on a number of plans as of 2006. These include an extension of the line to the harbor area via Olav Trygvasons street and Trondheim Central Station. A short stretch from St. Olavs gate to nearby Prinsenkrysset, regarded as part of this plan, was given the green light in 2006, the building supposed to start in 2009, when the Nordre Avlastningsvei is due to open and supposedly relieve the city centre from car traffic.

References

  1. ^ Gråkallbanen AS. Graakalbanen – 80 år siden åpningen (Norwegian).

External links

Trondheim Tramway
Lines Elgeseterlinjen | Gråkallbanen | Ilalinjen | Ladelinjen | Singsakerlinjen
Operators Trondhjems Elektricitetsværk og Sporvei (1901-1921) | Trondheim Sporvei (1921-1974) | A/S Graakalbanen (1924-1971) | Trondheim Trafikkselskap (1974-1988) | Gråkallbanen AS (1990-)
Stations Dalsenget | Dronningens gate | Ila | Lian | Munkegata | Munkvoll | St. Olavs Gate | Trondheim S | Ugla | Voldsminde
Trondheim Tramway | Trondheim Tramway Museum

View More Summaries on Gråkallbanen
 
Ask any question on Gråkallbanen and get it answered FAST!
Answer questions in BookRags Q&A and earn points toward
discounted or even FREE Study Guides and other BookRags products!
Learn more about BookRags Q&A
Copyrights
Gråkallbanen from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

Article Navigation
Join BookRagslearn moreJoin BookRags




About BookRags | Customer Service | Report an Error | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy