Line S4 (Milan suburban railway service)
Suburban rail service in Milan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The S4 is a commuter rail route forming part of the Milan suburban railway service (Italian: Servizio ferroviario suburbano di Milano), which converges on the city of Milan, Italy.[1]
| Camnago Lentate–Milano Cadorna | |||
|---|---|---|---|
An S4 train at Milan Affori. | |||
| Overview | |||
| Status | Operational | ||
| Locale | Milan, Italy | ||
| Termini | |||
| Stations | 13 | ||
| Website | Trenord | ||
| Service | |||
| Type | Commuter rail | ||
| System | Milan suburban railway service | ||
| Route number | S4 | ||
| Operator(s) | Trenord | ||
| History | |||
| Opened | 2004 | ||
| Technical | |||
| Line length | 23 km (14 mi) | ||
| Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) | ||
| Electrification | 3,000 V DC | ||
| |||
The route runs over the infrastructure of the Milan–Asso railway. Like all other Milan suburban railway service routes, it is operated by Trenord.
Route
Line S4, a radial route, runs from Camnago-Lentate, in a southerly direction via the Milan–Asso railway, to Milano Cadorna, the railway's urban terminus.[2] The travel takes 42 minutes.[3]
History
Stations
The stations on the S4 are as follows (stations with blue background are in the municipality of Milan):[6]
| Station | Opened | Interchange | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Camnago-Lentate | 1849 | ||
| Seveso | 1879 | ||
| Cesano Maderno | 2011 | ||
| Bovisio Masciago-Mombello | 1879 | ||
| Varedo | 1879 | ||
| Palazzolo Milanese | 1879 | ||
| Paderno Dugnano | 1879 | ||
| Cormano-Cusano | 2015 | ||
| Milano Bruzzano | 2014 | ||
| Milano Affori | 2011 | ||
| Milano Bovisa | 1879 | ||
| Milano Domodossola | 2003 | ||
| Milano Cadorna | 1879 |
Scheduling
As of 2012[update], S4 trains ran every half-hour between 06:00 and 21:00 daily. After 21:00, the connection between Seveso and Milano Cadorna was provided by S2 trains between Seveso and Milano Porta Vittoria, connecting at Milano Bovisa-Politecnico with S3 services to or from Milano Cadorna.[6]
