Lianovergion railway station

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LocationAlexandria 590 32
Imathia
Greece
Coordinates40°37′49″N 22°30′16″E / 40.630194°N 22.504404°E / 40.630194; 22.504404
Owned byGAIAOSE[1]
Operated byHellenic Train
Thessaloniki Regional Railway
Λιανοβέργι
Lianovergi
General information
LocationAlexandria 590 32
Imathia
Greece
Coordinates40°37′49″N 22°30′16″E / 40.630194°N 22.504404°E / 40.630194; 22.504404
Owned byGAIAOSE[1]
Operated byHellenic Train
LineThessaloniki–Bitola railway[2]
Platforms1 side platform
Tracks1
Construction
Structure typeat-grade
ParkingNo
Bicycle facilitiesNo
Accessible
Other information
StatusUnstaffed
Websitehttp://www.ose.gr/en/
History
Opened1970?
ElectrifiedNo
Services
Preceding station Thessaloniki Regional Railway Regional Rail Following station
Alexandreia
towards Florina
Line T2 Platy
towards Thessaloniki
Location
Lianovergion is located in Greece
Lianovergion
Lianovergion
Location within Greece

Lianovergion railway station (Greek: Σιδηροδρομικός σταθμός Λιανοβέργι, romanized: Sidirodromikos Stathmos Lianovergion) is a currently closed railway station in Lianovergi, Greece. It was opened by the OSE. Located just south of the centre of the settlement, the station is not much more than a request halt, on the Thessaloniki–Bitola railway, and is severed by the Thessaloniki Regional Railway (formerly the Suburban Railway).

On 1 January 1971, the station and most of the Greek rail infrastructure were transferred to the Hellenic Railways Organisation S.A., a state-owned corporation. Freight traffic declined sharply when the state-imposed monopoly of OSE for the transport of agricultural products and fertilisers ended in the early 1990s. Many small stations of the network with little passenger traffic were closed down.

In 2001 the infrastructure element of OSE was created, known as GAIAOSE; it would henceforth be responsible for the maintenance of stations, bridges and other elements of the network, as well as the leasing and the sale of railway assists.[3] In 2003, OSE launched "Proastiakos SA", as a subsidiary to serve the operation of the suburban network in the urban complex of Athens during the 2004 Olympic Games. In 2005, TrainOSE was created as a brand within OSE to concentrate on rail services and passenger interface.

Since 2007, the station is served by the Thessaloniki Regional Railway. In 2008, all Proastiakos were transferred from OSE to TrainOSE. In 2009, with the Greek debt crisis unfolding OSE's Management was forced to reduce services across the network. Timetables were cutback and routes closed as the government-run entity attempted to reduce overheads. In 2017 OSE's passenger transport sector was privatised as TrainOSE, currently a wholly owned subsidiary of Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane[4] infrastructure, including stations, remained under the control of OSE.

The station is owned by GAIAOSE, which since 3 October 2001 owns most railway stations in Greece: the company was also in charge of rolling stock from December 2014 until October 2025, when Greek Railways (the owner of the Thessaloniki–Bitola railway) took over that responsibility.[1][5]

Facilities

The station is equipped solely with a waiting room on the single platform.

Services

As of 12 May 2025, Line 2 of the Thessaloniki Regional Railway calls at this station:[6] service is currently limited compared to October 2012,[7] with three trains per day to Thessaloniki, two trains per day to Florina (via Edessa), and one train per day to Edessa.[8]

Accidents and incidents

Station layout

References

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