Belgian railway line 54

Last updated
Belgian railway line 54
Overview
StatusOperational
LocaleBelgium
Termini Sint-Niklaas railway station
Terneuzen railway station
Mechelen railway station
Service
Operator(s) National Railway Company of Belgium
History
Opened1870-1871
ClosedDe Klinge - Axel (1968)
Sint-Niklaas - De Klinge (1975)
Technical
Line length66.7 km (41 mi)
Number of tracks single track
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification 3 kV DC
Operating speed120 km/h (75 mph)
Route map

Spoorlijn54.png

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Line from Leuven
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0.0
Line to Schellebelle
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Brussels–Scheldt Maritime Canal
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8.3 Willebroek
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BSicon ABZg+r.svg
Line from Antwerpen-Zuid
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13.6 Puurs
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17.5 Bornem
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River Scheldt
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21.0 Temse
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BSicon ABZg+r.svg
Line from Antwerpen-Berchem
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13.6 Sint-Niklaas
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Track
interrupted
BSicon HST.svg
Axelse Vlakte
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BSicon CONTfq.svg
Line from Gent-Sint-Pieters
BSicon HST.svg
Terneuzen Zuid
BSicon HST.svg
66.7 Terneuzen

The Belgian railway line 54 is a Belgian-Dutch railway line that runs from Mechelen to Terneuzen which has a total length of about 67 kilometers. Only the part between Mechelen and Sint-Niklaas is being used. [1]

Contents

History

This railway line was built and used by a private rail company that was founded in 1861, Société Anonyme du Chemin de Fer International de Malines à Terneuzen. The goal of this north-south connection was to increase profit from the coal coming from Charleroi. On the other hand, it was built to stimulate international transport throughout Belgium. The railway played a very important economic and social role in the mobility of the provinces of East Flanders and Antwerp, in particual the regions of Waasland and Klein-Brabant. The headquarters of the railway company was located in Sint-Niklaas. Temse, Bornem, Puurs and Willebroek partially financed the construction of the railway. In the Netherlands, the railway line mainly served the port of Terneuzen in an effort to increase the sales of agriculture products coming from Zeelandic Flanders.

Along the trajectory of the railway, three bridges needed to be built: in Willebroek, Temse and Sluiskil. The bridge in Temse, which was the hardest one, was designed by the French engineer Gustave Eiffel, who would later build the Eiffel Tower. It's the widest bridge crossing the Scheldt (343 meters or 0.21 miles). The bridge was completed in 1870. In the same year, the first passenger service between Mechelen and Temse started being used. During World War I, the bridge was heavily damaged but remained in service. The bridge was repaired in 1924. The railway company had an enormous success during the 1920s. The economic crisis in the 1930s caused a turnaround, which was only aggravated by World War II. In May 1940, the bridge was blown up out of strategic reasons by Belgian and French military engineers. The Second World War meant the end for the railway company. In 1948, the management of the line was transferred to the National Railway Company of Belgium for the Belgian part and to the Dutch Railways in the Netherlands. The railway company was officially disbanded in 1951. [2]

Possible closure

In September 2021, some documents from Infrabel leaked into the press, stating that Infrabel is considering closing the line, together with three other railway lines. [3] This consideration would be a response to the savings the federal government would want to impose on the company. Because the company got a lot of backlash, Infrabel decided not to close the line. [4] [5]

Current situation

The railway consists of a single track, which is electrified between Mechelen and Sint-Niklaas. It is possible to cross other trains in every station along the line, except for the one in Bornem.

On October 6, 1951, all passenger services between Hulst and Terneuzen were disbanded and on May 18, 1952 between Sint-Niklaas and Hulst. The freight traffic was disbanded in October 1975 between Sint-Niklaas and De Klinge. Today, there is a hiking and bicycle path out of asphalt between Sint-Niklaas and Hulst where the tracks used to be. This path is part of the Belgian and Dutch numbered-node cycle network. [6] The Dutch part of the railway still exists as a non-electrified (mostly) single-track railway from the city of Terneuzen through the industrial area of Sluiskil and ends in the business area of Axel.

Train services

The National Railway Company of Belgium serves the line with local trains and rush hour trains. During the week, the local trains run from Sint-Niklaas to Leuven via Mechelen and during the weekend, the service is limited to Mechelen. There are also rush hour services between Sint-Niklaas and Mechelen and between Sint-Niklaas and Leuven.

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References

  1. "Belgische spoorlijnen". users.telenet.be. Retrieved 2021-12-03.
  2. "Expo spoorweg Mechelen-Terneuzen in Gemeentemuseum (1861-1951)". 2015-04-02. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 2021-12-03.
  3. Sports+, DH Les (2021-09-14). "Infrabel envisage de supprimer cinq lignes ferroviaires : "Il n'y aura pas de fermeture de ligne sous cette législature", répond le ministre Gilkinet". DH Les Sports + (in French). Retrieved 2021-12-03.
  4. NWS, VRT (2021-10-01). "Bezorgdheid blijft over mogelijke afschaffing spoorlijn Mechelen-Sint-Niklaas: "Voor sommigen essentieel om op werk of school te geraken"". vrtnws.be (in Dutch). Retrieved 2021-12-03.
  5. "Spoorlijnen Sint-Niklaas - Mechelen en Lokeren - Dendermonde blijven". TVOOST - Regionaal nieuws uit Oost-Vlaanderen (in Dutch). Retrieved 2021-12-03.
  6. "Lijn 54 - Fietssporen". sites.google.com. Retrieved 2021-12-03.