Line S9 (Milan suburban railway service)

Saronno–Albairate-Vermezzo
S9

An S9 train at Milano Lambrate.

An S9 train at Milano Lambrate.
Overview
Type Commuter rail
System Milan suburban railway service
Status Operational
Locale Milan, Italy
Termini Saronno
Albairate-Vermezzo
Stations 15
Website Trenord (Italian)
Operation
Opened 2004
Technical
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Electrification 3,000 V DC
Route number S9
Route map
Map of line S9.

The S9 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]

The route runs over the infrastructure of the Novara–Seregno, Milan–Chiasso, Milan belt, Milan southern belt and Mortara–Milan railways. Like all but one of the other Milan suburban railway service routes, it is operated by Trenord.

Route

Line S9, a cross-city route, heads initially in an southeasterly direction from Saronno towards Cesano Maderno, Seregno, Monza and Milano Greco Pirelli, then runs via the Milan belt line and southern belt line around the eastern and southern sides of the Milan city centre, before finally heading southwest, to Albairate-Vermezzo.[2]

History

The S9 commenced operation on 24 December 2004, and initially linked Seregno with Milano San Cristoforo. Unlike the other lines in the suburban railway service, which offered services at half-hourly intervals, the S9 ran at a frequency of only one train per hour, in a narrower time band (from 07:00 to 20:00).[3]

Thanks to the activation of the S9, local passenger trains returned to the southern belt line after an absence of 10 years. Another peculiarity of the line was that it was the only one in the suburban railway service not to run along the Passante railway.

Initially, the S9 was managed by TiLo, a company formed ad hoc by Trenitalia and the Swiss Federal Railways. In March 2008, Trenitalia became the sole operator. Upon the timetable change on 13 December 2009, train services on the line became half-hourly throughout the day.[4]

In May 2009, following the merger of the Trenitalia's Regional Passenger Division with LeNORD, management of the line was taken over by the merged entity, Trenord.

On 12 June 2011, the line was extended from Milano San Cristoforo to Albairate-Vermezzo.

On 9 December 2012 the line was extended from Seregno to Saronno.

Stations

The stations on the S9 are as follows (the stations with a coloured background are within the municipality of Milan):[5]

Station Opened Interchange Note
Saronno 1879
Saronno Sud 1991
Ceriano Laghetto-Solaro 2012
Ceriano Laghetto-Groane 2012
Cesano Maderno-Groane 2013
Cesano Maderno 2011
Seveso-Baruccana 2012
Seregno 1849
Desio 1849
Lissone-Muggiò 1882
Monza 1840
Sesto San Giovanni 1969
Milano Greco Pirelli 1914
Milano Lambrate 1931
Milano Porta Romana 1931 Lodi T.I.B.B. 100 m/yds
Milano Romolo 2006
Milano San Cristoforo
Corsico 2009
Cesano Boscone 2009
Trezzano sul Naviglio 1987
Gaggiano 1870
Albairate-Vermezzo 2009

Scheduling

As of 2012, S9 trains run every 30 minutes between 06:30 and 21:00 from Monday to Saturday. On holidays, S9 operates hourly from 08:00 to 21:00, but only between Milano Lambrate and Albairate-Vermezzo.[5]

See also

References

  1. "S come Suburbano" [S for Suburban]. Direzione Generale Infrastrutture e Mobilità website (in Italian). RegioneLombardia. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  2. "Linee" [Lines] (PDF). Direzione Generale Infrastrutture e Mobilità website (in Italian). RegioneLombardia. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
  3. Canale, Andrea (March 2005). "...finalmente Passante!" [...finally, Passante!]. I Treni (in Italian) (268): 18.
  4. "Linee S in crescita" [S lines grow]. I Treni (322): 8. January 2010.
  5. 1 2 "Linea S9 Seregno - Milano S. Cristoforo - Albairate". Direzione Generale Infrastrutture e Mobilità website (in Italian). RegioneLombardia. Retrieved 20 November 2012.
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This article is based upon a translation of the Italian language version as at November 2012.

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