Avellino trolleybus system | |||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Operation | |||||||||||||||||
Locale | Avellino, Italy | ||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||
|
The Avellino trolleybus system (Italian : Rete filoviaria di Avellino) forms part of the public transport network of the city of Avellino and the province of Avellino, in the region of Campania. Trolleybuses originally served the city from 1947 to 1973, [1] [3] on a route that also extended outside the city to the neighbouring towns of Atripalda and (from 1956) Mercogliano, and then the system closed. However, in the 2000s work to build a new trolleybus system got under way and new vehicles were purchased for it in 2007, and were delivered in 2014. The project experienced several delays after the start of construction in 2009, but most issues had been resolved by 2020 and construction was largely completed by 2021. Throughout its planning and construction, it was inaccurately referred to as the "metropolitana leggera" (light metro, or light rail), when in fact it was never planned to be a rail line, and always planned to be a trolleybus line. [4] [5] The last round of testing took place in December 2022 and January 2023, and the new trolleybus system opened for service on 3 April 2023.
The first trolleybus line in Avellino opened for service on 16 September 1947, a 9-kilometre-long (5.6 mi) (round trip) route connecting the city centre with the railway station and the directly adjacent town of Atripalda. It was constructed by the Compagnia Generale di Elettricità (General Electric Power Company) but managed by the Società Filoviaria Irpina. [1] In 1956, [6] the route was extended from the city centre to the neighbouring town of Mercogliano, making it an interurban route and increasing the entire system's length of overhead wiring to 13.44 kilometres (8.35 miles) (including two alternative routings between Avellino and Atripalda). [1] There were then two routes, with route 1 running through to Mercogliano and route 2 ending at Viale Italia west of the city centre in Avellino. The two routes followed different routings on their easternmost sections, between the railway station and Atripalda. [1] The end-to-end length of route 1, Atripalda–Avellino–Mercogliano, was around 10.7 km (6.6 mi) in length, [7] and the section of route 2 that was not also included in route 1 was around 2.5 km (1.6 mi) long.
By 1959, the company was already operating at a loss, and in 1971 it was placed in receivership. The trolleybus system closed on 1 November 1973, [1] [8] initially caused by a major breakdown of the substation but made permanent when, in June 1974, the Commissione Amministratrice del Consorzio Trasporti Irpini (Administrative Commission of the Irpini Transport Consortium, established in May 1973) gave permission for the permanent replacement of trolleybuses by motorbuses. [6] : 57
The all-time fleet of the original system consisted of the following trolleybuses: [1]
At the end of service, only Nos. 02, 03, 05, and 08 were serviceable. [6] : 57
In the late 1990s, local officials began considering bringing trolleybus operation back to Avellino. In December 2003, the national government's Committee for Economic Planning gave its approval to a plan to build an "11 km" (5.5 km each direction) trolleybus line between the railway station and Valle. [9]
In 2007, an order was placed with Van Hool for eleven A330T trolleybuses for the planned new system. [10] On 4 February 2008, the contract for construction of the line was signed. [4] Locally, the planned line was inaccurately named the "metropolitana leggera" (light metro, or light rail), when in fact it was never planned to be a rail line. [4] That inaccurate name, or the shorter version "metro leggera", continued to be in use throughout the project's subsequent construction. [5]
Construction work began in April 2009, at which time the system was projected to open in 2010. [11] The eleven trolleybuses were completed by fall 2010, but were being stored at the Van Hool factory, not shipped, because construction of the infrastructure in Avellino was still not complete. [12] The first trolleybus was received in Avellino in April 2014 [13] and all others had arrived by the end of the year. [14]
However, construction work on the new system encountered delays and was suspended for some lengthy periods, including from 2011 [15] to spring 2013 [16] and progress was also only limited during 2015. The first test trip by a trolleybus powered from the overhead trolley wires took place in June 2016, [17] but by August 2017 still only about half of the 5.5-kilometre-long (3.4 mi) route had been equipped with overhead wires. [18] Construction was mostly completed by October 2018, but Trolleybus Magazine reported that "the opening of the system continues to be deferred because of disagreements between the Campania Region, the local bus company AIR Avellino, and the city council concerning the financing of the final completion of the system, including staff training, and the funding of the operation of the system once it has opened." [19] By 2020, most of those issues had been resolved.
By 2021, construction had finally been completed, but testing did not resume and the system still did not open. In November, national transport officials advised the city and regional governments that they would be required to return €20 million of European Union funding if the trolleybus system did not open by July 2022. [20] [21] In February, the city hired ANM, the operator of the Naples trolleybus system, to consult on the remaining preparations needed to open the system. [22]
Longstanding plans to create new bus-only lanes along the route (through removal of parking) only began to be implemented in June 2022, and vehicle testing finally resumed in July 2022. [5] Subsequently, predicted opening dates for the start of passenger service continued to go unmet. At the end of November, an agreement was signed transferring the fleet of trolleybuses, which are owned by the City of Avellino, to operator AIR Campania on a free-loan basis, and the final pre-opening operation – simulated service (without passengers) – for six days was scheduled to begin on 5 December 2022, with opening of the new system to the public predicted for 12 December. [23] However, while the pre-opening operation did begin on 5 December, using four trolleybuses, the system did not open on 12 December as had been planned. The newspaper Il Mattino reported on 12 December that no new opening date had been set, and that the introduction of passenger service now might not occur before Christmas. [24] It was then announced that testing had been suspended and would resume in January 2023. [25] The national regulatory authority ANSFISA (the National Agency for the Safety of Railways and Road and Highway Infrastructure) had yet to give its final approval to open the system. That approval was granted in March, and the opening date was announced for 3 April. [26] [27]
The new trolleybus system opened on 3 April 2023, and service runs half-hourly, Mondays to Saturdays from 7:30 am until only 4:55 pm [28] [29] (or approximately 7:00 am to 5:40 pm according to the full timetable). [30] The route has a round-trip length of 11 km (6.8 mi) and an end-to-end length of 5.5 km (3.4 mi) [16] and has 15 stops. [28]
However, all trolleybus service was suspended starting on 7 July, barely three months after the opening of the system, because of road works in the city centre. [2]
The current route connects the railway station with Via Fraternita della Misericordia, in the western part of the town. It is 5.5 km (3.4 mi) long, of which about 3 km is along separate streets in opposite directions. [16] Around 1.3 kilometres (0.81 mi) of the eastbound route is not equipped with overhead wiring, and the trolleybuses cover that section using their diesel engines. [16]
The fleet of the current system comprises eleven two-axle, 12-metre (40 ft) vehicles, with auxiliary diesel engines [10] enabling them to operate away from the overhead wires to a limited extent:
Avellino is a town and comune, capital of the province of Avellino in the Campania region of southern Italy. It is situated in a plain surrounded by mountains 47 kilometres (29 mi) east of Naples and is an important hub on the road from Salerno to Benevento.
The Boston-area trolleybus system formed part of the public transportation network serving Greater Boston in the U.S. state of Massachusetts. It opened on April 11, 1936, with a large network operating for the next quarter-century. Measured by fleet size, the Boston-area system was the second-largest trolleybus system in the United States at its peak, with only the Chicago system having more trolleybuses than Boston's 463. After 1963, the only remaining portion was a four-route cluster operating from the Harvard bus tunnel at Harvard station, running through Cambridge, Belmont, and Watertown. The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority took over the routes in 1964.
Servicio de Transportes Eléctricos de la Ciudad de México (STE) is a public transport agency responsible for the operation of all trolleybus and light rail services in Mexico City. As its name implies, its routes use only electrically powered vehicles. It was created on 31 December 1946 and is owned by the Mexico City government. STE is overseen by a broader local governmental authority, Secretaria de Movilidad de la Ciudad de México (SEMOVI)(Secretariat of Mobility of Mexico City), formerly (SETRAVI) which also regulates the city's other public transport authorities, including Sistema de Transporte Colectivo, Red de Transporte de Pasajeros del Distrito Federal and Metrobús, as well as other forms of transportation in the district. STE's passenger vehicle fleet consists exclusively of trolleybuses, light rail, and aerial lift vehicles, and in 2007 its network carried 88 million passengers, of which 67 million were on trolleybus services and 21 million on light rail.
The Mexico City trolleybus system serves Mexico City, the capital city of Mexico, and is operated by Servicio de Transportes Eléctricos.
Trolleybuses in Naples provide a portion of the public transport service in the city and comune of Naples, in the region of Campania, southern Italy. From 1964 to 2015, two independent trolleybus systems were in operation, both publicly owned, but only that of Azienda Napoletana Mobilità (ANM) remains in operation. The ANM system opened in 1940, whereas the smaller trolleybus network of Compagnia Trasporti Pubblici di Napoli (CTP) opened in 1964.
The Milan trolleybus system is part of the public transport network of Milan, Italy. In operation since 1933, the system presently comprises four routes.
The Rome trolleybus system forms part of the public transport network of the city and comune of Rome, Italy. In operation since 2005, the current system comprises three routes.
The Parma trolleybus system forms part of the public transport network of the city and comune of Parma, in the region of Emilia-Romagna, northern Italy. In operation since 1953, the system presently comprises four urban routes.
The Sanremo trolleybus system or San Remo trolleybus system, also known as the Italian Riviera trolleybus, is focused on the town and comune of Sanremo, in the region of Liguria, northwestern Italy.
The Ancona trolleybus system forms part of the public transport network of the city and comune of Ancona, in the Marche region, central Italy. In operation since 1949, the system presently comprises only one urban route.
The Chieti trolleybus system forms part of the public transport network of the city and comune of Chieti, in the region of Abruzzo, central Italy. In operation since 2009, the system comprises one urban route.
The Salzburg trolleybus system forms part of the public transport network serving Salzburg, capital of the federal state of Salzburg in Austria. Opened on 1 October 1940, it replaced the Salzburg tramway network.
The Seattle trolleybus system forms part of the public transportation network in the city of Seattle, Washington, operated by King County Metro. Originally opened on April 28, 1940, the network consists of 15 routes, with 174 trolleybuses operating on 68 miles (109 km) of two-way parallel overhead lines. As of the second quarter of 2024, the system carries riders on an average of 39,900 trips per weekday, comprising about 18 percent of King County Metro's total daily ridership.
The Coimbra trolleybus system formed part of the public transport network in the city of Coimbra, Portugal. Opened in 1947, it supplemented, and then eventually replaced, the Coimbra tramway network. Service was suspended in March 2021 because of road construction, and officials stated that the suspension was temporary, but in late 2022 the mayor indicated that any resumption of trolleybus service would not occur until after completion of construction of a new Bus Rapid Transit line, around late 2024. However, in July 2024, the city council voted not to resume service – to make the suspension a permanent closure – albeit with a proposal floated for a future tourist trolleybus operation along the banks of the Mondego River, without further detail given.
The Rimini trolleybus system forms part of the public transport network of the Province of Rimini, in the region of Emilia-Romagna, Italy.
The Lecce trolleybus system forms part of the public transport network of the city and comune of Lecce, in the Apulia region, southern Italy.
The Fiat 2401 Cansa is an Italian trolleybus produced by Fiat.
Media related to Trolleybus transport in Avellino at Wikimedia Commons