Introduction
America
• Mount Washington Cog Railway, New Hampshire, USA – dating from
1868, this was the world’s first mountain-climbing cog railway
(rack-and-pinion railway)
• Rocky Mountaineer, Canada – connects Calgary and Vancouver,
offering spectacular views of the Canadian Rockies
• Grand Alaska Railroad, Alaska, USA – Meanders through the beauty
of Alaska, past dramatic icebergs, glaciers and snow-capped
mountains, from Fairbanks to Anchorage.
• Expreso del Sur, Bolivia – Crosses the “white desert” of Bolivia
from Oruro to Villazon.
• Guayaquil & Quito Railway, Ecuador – Running through Ecuador’s
Andes, this train travels through cloud forests, tropical coastal
landscapes, vertiginous mountains and passes the “Avenue of
Volcanoes” before descending to sea level.
• Aguas Calientes, Peru – Named for the “discoverer” of Machu
Picchu, the “Hiram Bingham” is the luxury service on the
Cuzco-Macchu route, with Pullman-style passenger cars and dining
facilities..
• La Trochita/Old Patagonia Express, Argentina – Described by Paul
Theroux as “the railway almost at the end of the world”, this
narrow-gauge steam locomotive runs for 300 miles from the foothills
of the Andes to the Atlantic coast.
• Serra Verde Express, Brazil – Runs through deepest rainforest in
southeast Brazil
• Copper Canyon railway/El Chepe, Mexico – Running from Chihuahua
to Los
Mochis, the famous El Chepe train runs through the Copper Canyon’s
many gorges.
Europe
• Flåm Railway, Norway – Considered to be Norway's most scenic
railway, the Flåm line descends from a junction with the
Oslo-Bergen railway to Flåm, at the inner end of Aurlandsfjord,
descending 863 metres (2848ft) in just over 20km (12.5 miles), past
waterfalls, gorges and dramatic mountain vistas.
• Orient Express – Glamorous and rich in history, this old-world
luxury long- distance passenger train was created in 1883 to carry
passengers from Paris to Istanbul.
• Snowdon Mountain Railway, Wales – Since 1896, trains have
trundled up and down the highest mountain in England and Wales
(1085m/3560ft) on this rack- and-pinion worked railway.
• West Highland Line, Scotland – known as Rathad Iarainn nan Eilean
(gaelic for “Iron Road to the Isles”), the line links the ports of
Mallaig and Oban in the Scottish Highlands to Glasgow in Central
Scotland
• Cinque Terre Express, between Levanto and La Spezia, Italy
• Central Rhine Railway between Bingen and Koblenz, Germany –
meanders along the west bank of the River Rhine, showcasing the
calm water and vineyard-laden slopes of the valleys
• Schönbrunn Metro Station, Vienna – Vienna has one of the most
highly integrated and efficient urban transport systems in the
world. This is the station for Schönbrunn Palace, built as part of
a suburban railway scheme in 1898, and since 1964 a stopping-point
on Metro line U4.
• Zermatt-Gornergrat Railway, Switzerland – Breathtaking views of
the Matterhorn are had from the train on the 33-minute journey
between Zermatt and the Gornergrat terminus at 3089m (10,134
ft).
• Belgrade, Serbia to Bar, Montenegro – travelling from the Serbian
capital to the seaside town, the mountains and canyons of southwest
Serbia and the north of Montenegro provide a jaw-dropping
backdrop
• Novosibirsk-Glavny Station, Siberia, Russia – Novosibirsk is the
largest station on the Trans-Siberian Railway. Opened at the
foundation of the city in 1894, the present buildings date from
1939 and were renovated in 1999.
• Trans-Siberian Railway, Russia to China – With a length of 9,289
kilometres (5,772 miles), from Moscow to Vladivostok, it is the
longest railway line in the world. There are connecting branch
lines into Mongolia, China and North Korea
Africa
• Marrakech Express, Morocco – overnight journey from Tangier to
Marrakech
• Tangier to Casablanca – first high-speed line in Morocco and
Africa
• Nairobi to Mombasa, Kenya – new Chinese-built standard-gauge
railway has reduced the journey time from a putative 16–24 hours by
the old narrow-gauge line to just over four hours by the Intercity
Train
• Bulawayo to Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe – travels through
spectacular game country and national parks to one of the great
wonders of the African continent
• Cairo to Luxor, Egypt – a train that hugs closely to the Nile
river, running past great temples, pyramids and the fertile Nile
Valley
• Umgeni Steam Railway, South Africa – The Durban to
Pietermaritzburg line was built in the 1880s; it runs through a 53
metres (174 ft) long tunnel at Drummond built in 1878, which is
probably the oldest tunnel in use today in South Africa
• Dakar Station, Senegal – The railway between Dakar and St Louis
was the first in French West Africa, opened in 1885.
Asia
• Jungle Train, Malaysia – The 300-mile (480km) Jungle Train was
built by the British to harvest Malaysia’s tin, rubber and tea. It
still weaves through defunct mines, rubber estates and vast tea
plantations.
• Darjeeling Himalayan Railway, West Bengal, India – The entire
88km (55-mile) railway, completed in 1881, is a UNESCO World
Heritage Site.
• Kyoto to Tokyo, Japan – Passengers on the Shinkansen "bullet
train" heading for Nagoya and Kyoto from Tokyo prefer to have
right-hand seats to see Mount Fuji as the train speeds past at
320km/h (200mph).
• Beijing to Shanghai, China – The world’s fastest passenger train
completes the 819 mile (1,318km) trip in four and a half hours.
• ‘Train Street’, Hanoi, Vietnam – Known to visitors as 'Train
Street', this thoroughfare in Hanoi's Old Quarter sees a
long-distance train squeeze past twice daily, a popular venue for
tourists. It is the train from Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City, running
1600km (990 miles) on the metre-gauge track between the two
cities.
• Eastern & Oriental Express – running from Singapore to Bangkok,
this luxury train passes through rubber plantations, rainforest,
and tropical beaches in connecting the city state with the Thai
capital
• Alishan Forest Railway, Chiai County, Taiwan – Running for 86 km
(53 miles) in Taiwan's mountainous centre, this 762mm (2ft 6in)
gauge line was opened in 1912 as a logging railway, bringing
hardwood timber down to the coast.
• Trans-Australian Railway, Nullarbor Plain – This line has the
world's longest straight section of railway, 478km (299 miles)
across desert and scrubland.
Photographic guide to the most romantic and amazing experiences of travelling by rail
David Ross specialises in maritime, engineering and railway history and he has written and contributed to numerous books on these subjects. His most recent books are Abandoned Industrial Places, Rail Journeys, Bridges, Coast, Lighthouses, Ships Visual Encyclopedia, Submarines, Great Warships and The World’s Greatest Battleships.
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