Roma Termini Railway Station
Roma Termini Railway Station | |
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Roma Termini
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Data | |
Design | Terminus |
Platform tracks | 32 |
IBNR | 8300263 |
opening | 1867 |
Architectural data | |
architect | Angiolo Mazzoni Leo Calini Massimo Castellazzi Vasco Fadigati Eugenio Montuori Achille Pintonello Annibale Vitellozzi |
location | |
City / municipality | Rome |
Metropolitan city | Metropolitan city of Rome |
region | Lazio |
Country | Italy |
Coordinates | 41 ° 54'2 " N , 12 ° 30'6" E |
Railway lines | |
List of train stations in Italy |
The Roma Termini railway station is the main train station in Rome . It is a terminus station in the Esquilino district with long-distance transport links. Access to the tracks is not possible without a ticket.
history
The station was built by Salvatore Bianchi in 1867-1874 on the Esquiline hill . It was named after the Botte di Termini , an ancient cistern of the Diocletian's baths , the remains of which were demolished in 1876. From 1938 a complete new construction of the station according to plans by Angiolo Mazzoni began. In World War II, the work was interrupted. According to Mazzoni's plans, the massive lateral buildings had been completed by then in the classifying style of fascist razionalismo .
The main reception building ("Dinosauro"), on the other hand, was only built after the war with a completely different architectural concept (architects: Leo Calini, Massimo Castellazzi, Vasco Fadigati, Eugenio Montuori, Achille Pintonello, Annibale Vitellozzi, 1948–1951).
Extensive modernization measures were carried out for the Holy Year 2000; in addition to a renovation of the existing building structure in line with monument regulations, u. a. a new underground shopping center, the so-called Forum Termini , is being built. On December 23, 2006, the station was dedicated to the late Pope John Paul II .
The reinforced concrete lobby in the style of the New Building is 128 m long and 32 m wide. To the left of the main entrance are the remains of the Servian city wall from the 4th century BC. Chr.
The station is operated by a subsidiary of FS , GrandiStazioni SpA , which controls the 13 largest Italian stations. In long-distance traffic it is very easy to reach with EuroCity / InterCitys as well as with the trains of the Italian Pendolino / Eurostar high-speed network ; connected are among others the big cities of Milan , Naples and Turin . In transport it is via the metro station Termini to the metro -lines A and B of the metro system of Rome connected, and the Leonardo Express to Rome Fiumicino Airport wrong here. In the long term, the modernized Roma Tiburtina train station will develop into the most important train station in the greater Rome area.
In 2006 the station was opened in a ceremony in honor of the late Pope "Stazione Giovanni Paolo II." named.
At the end of the south wing of the station is the Roma Laziali station .
line | course |
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Main route: Roma Termini - Capannelle - Ciampino - Roma – Fracati: main route - Ciampino - Frascati |
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Civitavecchia - Santa Marinella - Santa Severa - Marina di Cerveteri - Ladispoli-Cerveteri - Tower in Pietra-Palidoro - Maccarese-Fregene - Roma Aurelia - Roma San Pietro - Roma Trastevere - Roma Ostiense - Roma Tuscolana - Roma Termini | |
Roma Termini - Capannelle - Ciampino - Tor Vergata - Colle Mattia - Colonna Galleria - Zagarolo - Labico - Valmontone - Colleferro-Segni-Paliano - Anagni-Fiuggi - Sgurgola - Morolo - Ferentino-Supino - Frosinone - Ceccano - Castro-Pofi-Vallecorsa - Ceprano-Falvaterra - Isoletta-San Giovanni Incarico - Roccasecca - Piedimonte-Villa Santa Lucia-Aquino - Cassino | |
Roma Termini - Torricola - Pomezia-Santa Palomba - Campoleone - Cisterna di Latina - Latina - Sezze Romano - Priverno-Fossanova - Monte San Biagio - Fondi-Sperlonga - Itri - Formia-Gaeta | |
Roma Termini - Torricola - Pomezia-Santa Palomba - Campoleone - Aprilia - Campo di Carne - Padiglione - Lido di Lavinio - Villa Claudia - Marechiaro - Anzio Colonia - Anzio - Nettuno |
literature
- Heinz-Joachim Fischer : Rome. Two and a half millennia of history, art and culture of the Eternal City. DuMont Buchverlag, Cologne 2001, ISBN 3-7701-5607-2 , p. 288.
- Anton Henze : Art Guide Rome. Philipp Reclam, Stuttgart 1994, ISBN 3-15-010402-5 , p. 306.
- Irene Nierhaus : Transfer - The Stazione Termini and their repair , in: Architektur aktuell, June 2000, No. 242, pp. 88–95.
- Luigi Monzo: Croci e fasci - Italian church building in the time of fascism, 1919–1945. Two volumes. Karlsruhe 2017 (dissertation, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, 2017), pp. 909–911. (Designs for a station church in the original design by Angiolo Mazzoni)
Movie
- Rome, Termini Fiction 1953, directed by Vittorio De Sica
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Claudius Ziehr, Blog from Rome, Termini Station, accessed on March 29, 2020
- ↑ http://www.kath.net/news/15581 viewed on March 27, 2020