As it rolls across Italy’s central regions, a vintage diesel locomotive towing carriages from the 1930s and 1950s crosses the forests of the Majella National park and the Abruzzo highlands, giving tourists on board a glimpse of hidden hamlets.
Across its distance of just over 100 kilometres (62 miles), the so-called Italian ‘Transiberiana’ (Trans-Siberian) rail line, also known as the Park Railway, slips into gorges, snakes into 58 tunnels and braves huge viaducts.
It is the first of some 1,000 kilometres of line to have re-opened under a project by Fondazione FS, part of state-controlled national rail company Ferrovie dello Stato (FS).
The ‘Timeless Tracks’ project takes tourists to forgotten parts of Italy, offering an alternative to the fast-paced mass tourism of the major cities.
“These are tracks that have lived through different eras; they have carried soldiers to the front, cows to pasture… they were mistakenly considered unproductive during the 1960s and 70s but are now once again of value,” says Luigi Cantamessa, who heads Fondazione FS.
Inspired by train travel in Switzerland, the project now carries 45,000 tourists a year across its 13 lines. Fondazione FS expects to open two new ones by 2026, both in the southern region of Sicily.
Read more on Italy travel:
“What were considered to be the dry branches of Italy’s train network have now proved to be the green shoots,” Cantamessa adds.
“People are used to cities and places, like Florence, that everyone knows… but then there are other areas that need to be discovered. (This) is the right kind of tourism that does not spoil the authenticity of places,” says Norma Pagiotti, a 28-year-old from Florence travelling on the train with two friends.
With arrival numbers above pre-pandemic levels, popular European travel destinations including Venice have introduced measures aimed at managing visitor numbers amid rising concerns about overcrowding.
“The train reminds me of my youth – I feel a bit nostalgic for the things of the past, which were simpler, now everything is fast, short-lived,” says Caterina Quaranta, from Taranto in southern Italy, sitting on the wooden seats of the train.
The trips attract Italians and foreigners, a lot of families and…
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at The Independent Travel…