Canfranc Railway Station, Spain, August 2016

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HughieD

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Not been out and about to the extent of being able to write a report for some time now but back with a set of reports from my French hols. This is the first and it’s a biggie. Located just over the border from France, it’s my first ever report from Spain. Had read about this place on the web and when it turned out to be an hour-and-a-half’s drive from where we were staying it was a no-brainer. The place in question is one of the most amazing places I’ve explored. Until 2006 it was a free-for-all but since then it has been fenced-off and re-roofed. Now more money has become available and the place is now slowly getting restored. The only way in is via a private small group tour. We pre-booked on to the tour and saw all the work they were doing on the booking hall. We wandered off to the more derelict bits of the station when we got the chance. In some ways the tour was a bit disappointing. Far more interesting were the extensive other buildings which were just abandoned and free to access so we just wandered round. These are going to go in a separate report next as there is too much to fit in one report.

Here’s the history bit:

Canfranc International Railway is a former international railway station in the village of Canfranc in the Spanish Pyrenees, at one end of the Somport railway tunnel. It was the border station for the Pau–Canfranc railway which went under the Pyrenees. It opened in 1928 and the main building was 240 metres long with has 300 windows and 156 doors. The origins of the line go back to a decade before then the construction of the Somport railway tunnel (no slouch at 7,875 meters in length) was inaugurated in July 1912. After delays in its construction due to World War I, it was finally completed in 1915.

The Spanish project engineer Ramírez de Dampierre began construction of the station in 1923. It was formally opened five years later on 18th July, 1928, in the presence of King Alfonso XIII of Spain and French president Republic Gaston Doumergue making it the largest train station in Europe. The size of the station necessitated the transfer of all transiting passengers, baggage and freight between Spanish and French trains due to the incompatibly of the French rail standard gauge with the Spanish gauge thus preventing through-traffic. Aside from the impressive passenger hall there were a luxurious international hotel, custom offices, an infirmary, bars and restaurants, as well as SNCF and RENFE offices. The greater site also included a large engine depot, two sheds for the trans-shipment of freight between French and Spanish trains and a variety of other outbuildings. The line was never profitable thanks to the 1929's Great Depression, a large fire in 1931 and 1936's Spanish civil war. During World War II the Spanish authorities came to an agreement with the Nazi German Wehrmacht authorities that passenger train services should continue. The Resistance would even dynamite some of the railway bridges on the French side in 1944. Non-military traffic returned in 1948. However the station's purpose ended in 1970 when a derailment demolished a bridge on the French side. The brakes of a loaded freight train failed, destroying a bridge before coming to rest in a mountain stream without killing anyone. The SNCF were under financial pressure and decided not to rebuild the bridge resulting in the cross-border line closing abruptly. Despite this, RENFE continued to run a handful of trains a day including two to Zaragoza. Additionally in 1985, the abundant space below the earth, lead to Spanish physicists opening the Canfranc Underground Astroparticle Laboratory, with an entrance beneath the station and movable labs setup on the old railway tunnels.

On with the pix!

The site the greets the visitor:
29073017945_489f48f572_b.jpgimg6306 by HughieDW, on Flickr

29070938555_496e9bf700_b.jpgimg6288 by HughieDW, on Flickr


There’s a fort on the hill too (more on that in a later report):

28967618272_7cdb54ca1f_b.jpgimg6307 by HughieDW, on Flickr

The booking hall is being painstakingly restored:

28965393182_e8e2c035fa_b.jpgimg6291 by HughieDW, on Flickr

28786600400_84e8f34de3_b.jpgimg6310 by HughieDW, on Flickr

This bit has been restored:

28452008914_d27e43bb23_b.jpgimg6311 by HughieDW, on Flickr

This bit hasn’t:

28451931674_9a16ec68ec_b.jpgimg6314 by HughieDW, on Flickr

The impressive wooden ticket booths:

28454931923_4be2f423dd_b.jpgimg6322 by HughieDW, on Flickr

And the marble-faced fuse box:

29072838095_8204ab9d35_b.jpgimg6312 by HughieDW, on Flickr

Out back is a vandalised railway carrage:

29072708985_4f421fab98_b.jpgimg6315 by HughieDW, on Flickr

28454759523_8683106713_b.jpgimg6325 by HughieDW, on Flickr

Forget the internals – it’s the externals that make this place:

28451709594_7eacfa3fd0_b.jpgimg6323 by HughieDW, on Flickr

28969333072_5694873bd7_b.jpgimg6340 by HughieDW, on Flickr

And the impossibly long canopy’s iron-work:

28996572041_1f5e0964dc_b.jpgimg6335 by HughieDW, on Flickr

28965354072_e1bed972c7_b.jpgimg6292 by HughieDW, on Flickr

28456877933_790d803ee4_b.jpgimg6341 by HughieDW, on Flickr

29041792886_8352309f66_b.jpgimg6346 by HughieDW, on Flickr

29038205446_1bbc6109be_b.jpgimg6305 by HughieDW, on Flickr

The contrast between the restored and the derelict is a fascinating vertical juxtaposition:

28965049772_dac83ed7f7_b.jpgimg6303 by HughieDW, on Flickr

This little building on the end is also quite interesting:

29037782666_ab8829f9e6_b.jpgimg6302 by HughieDW, on Flickr

28969386422_fc6437f84e_b.jpgimg6352 by HughieDW, on Flickr

28449930694_7719f85097_b.jpgimg6290 by HughieDW, on Flickr

28994133571_37fe49d970_b.jpgimg6304 by HughieDW, on Flickr

And this little shed too:

29070803705_366ac287c1_b.jpgimg6293 by HughieDW, on Flickr

29074500645_97f22f522a_b.jpgimg6349 by HughieDW, on Flickr

These goods platforms are equally photogenic:

28449760844_89d951b7f8_b.jpgimg6295 by HughieDW, on Flickr

29070693405_686d084486_b.jpgimg6297 by HughieDW, on Flickr

28965173522_52f29e684a_b.jpgimg6299 by HughieDW, on Flickr

More on where these tracks lead to in the next report…

28784325700_f529db6b8a_b.jpgimg6300 by HughieDW, on Flickr

Thanks for looking!
 
Well done Hughie, this is one of my favourite railway stations in the continent. I was there about ten years ago and been meaning to revisit soon. You can just stand there in awe on the former platform, this station has so much character and, as you state I see that its being restored. The little shed you saw at the end of the station housed the two station pilot engines, if a train arrived at the station the locomotive got detached and the carriages would be shunted into the yard by the pilot engine. Thanks for posting this one - oh BTW there's more than you've captured.
 
That's a fantastic place hughie and a great set . love that old rusty train.would love to see and photograph that
 
The little shed you saw at the end of the station housed the two station pilot engines

Presuming the 'little shed' in question is the wooden structure in front of the bloody great engine shed. The small wooden shed houses the water pressure boost pump for the depot as pressure was pretty poor at times. Nice set here, bit different from when I was there in 1962.
 
Presuming the 'little shed' in question is the wooden structure in front of the bloody great engine shed. The small wooden shed houses the water pressure boost pump for the depot as pressure was pretty poor at times. Nice set here, bit different from when I was there in 1962.

Nope, not that little shed, the two road engine shed I was referring to.
 
Great report there Hughie, I was only looking at this the other week as I will be in Spain next year. It may be a little far, but seeing your report I think I may have to just fit it in. Thanks for sharing.
 
Great report there Hughie, I was only looking at this the other week as I will be in Spain next year. It may be a little far, but seeing your report I think I may have to just fit it in. Thanks for sharing.

Well worth the drive. Access to the non station bits are a cert, just book yourself a tour of the station itself in advance.
 
All I can say to that is "WOW"! The 1st picture is just amazing, you don't even notice the mountain in the background :)
 

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