Iltiosbahn

Iltiosbahn is a funicular railway in the Canton of St. Gallen, Switzerland. It leads from Unterwasser at 911 m to Iltios at 1339 m,[2] from where an aerial cableway continues to Chäserrugg (2262 m), a peak of the Churfirsten range above Lake Walen. The line has a length of 1195 m with a maximum incline of 27% and a difference of elevation of 428 m.[2]

Iltiosbahn
Car at the passing loop with Unterwasser in the background (2020)
Overview
Other name(s)Standseilbahn Unterwasser–Iltios; Drahtseilbahn Unterwasser-Iltios
StatusIn operation
OwnerToggenburg Bergbahnen AG (since 2008)
LocaleCanton of St. Gallen, Switzerland
Termini
  • "Unterwasser (Iltiosbahn)" at Frühweidstrasse 8
  • "Iltios"
Stations2
Service
TypeFunicular
Route number2767 [1]
Operator(s)Toggenburg Bergbahnen AG (short: TBB)
Rolling stock2
History
Opened26 July 1934 (1934-07-26)
Concession1933
Enhancements2005
Technical
Line length1,195 metres (3,921 ft)
Number of tracks1 with passing loop
Electrificationfrom opening
Highest elevation1,339 m (4,393 ft)
Maximum incline27%

The funicular is owned and operated by Toggenburg Bergbahnen AG.[3]

The railway was built in 1934,[4] the aerial lift 1972.[2]

References

  1. "2767 Unterwasser - Iltios (Chäserrugg)" (PDF), Fahrplanfelder.ch, Tableaux-horaires.ch (in German), 2022, 2767
  2. Federal Office for Spatial Development ARE, Federal Office of Transport BAV, Federal Department of Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications UVEK, ed. (January 2001), Touristische Transportanlagen der Schweiz, TTA–Statistik, 6. Auflage 1999; Installations de transport touristiques en Suisse, Statistique ITT, 6e édition 1999 (in German and French) (6 ed.), Bern, p. 88, 812.001 d/f 1.01 800, 61.049 Unterwasser–Iltios{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  3. Portrait, Toggenburg Bergbahnen AG
  4. Mathys, Ernst (1942), Hundert Jahre Schweizerbahnen, historisch und technisch dargestellt, 1841-1941; Les chemins de fer suisses au cours d'un siècle, aperçu historique et technique, 1841-1941 (in German and French), Bern, pp. 32, 68, 89, 226, 256


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