Province of Buenos Aires Railway

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Province of Buenos Aires Railway
200px
Ex estacion Avellaneda FCGMB.jpg
Avellaneda was terminus of the line,
then becoming a railway museum.
Overview
Native name Ferrocarril Provincial de Buenos Aires
Type Inter-city
Status Defunct company; rail line inactive
Locale Buenos Aires Province
Operation
Opened 1912
Closed 1977; 47 years ago (1977)
Owner Government of Buenos Aires Province
Operator(s) Ferrocarril Belgrano (1948-77)
Technical
Line length Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value).
Track gauge 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 38 in)
Route map
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The Province of Buenos Aires Railway (in Spanish: Ferrocarril Provincial de Buenos Aires - FCPBA) was a state-owned company that operated a 902 km 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 38 in) metre gauge railway network in the Province of Buenos Aires in Argentina. Founded in 1907 as the "Ferrocarril Provincial del Puerto de La Plata al Meridiano V", the company changed its name to FCPBA in 1924, in 1951 it was taken into state ownership and in 1953 it was absorbed by the state-owned Belgrano Railway. The FCPBA should not confused with the similarly named French–owned Compañía General (CGBA) which also operated in the Province.

History

File:La plata fcpba.jpg
La Plata station in 2009.
File:Gorina.jpg
The well preserved Gorina building in 2009.
File:Gob monteverde.jpg
Gobernador Monteverde, one of the stops in Avellaneda-La Plata line.
File:ProyectomapaFCPBA.PNG
Some of the lines projected (but not carried out) for the Ferrocarril Provincial.
File:Estacion Ariel (FCPBA).jpg
Ariel station, part of the branch to Olavarría.
File:Gambier.jpg
Gambier station in 2010.
File:Abandoned railway bridge in Argentina.JPG
A cross between the FCPBA (over the bridge) and the Great Southern Railway.

Project

By the end of 19th Century, railway lines in Buenos Aires Province were managed by two British companies, BA Great Southern and Argentine Great Western. Both companies had the monopoly of the market, apart from fixing the rates. Therefore, the Government of Buenos Aires thought of an railway transport which could work as an efficient alternative to the British-owned ones.

In 1897, the "Law of Agriculture and Economy Railway lines" was promulgated. This Law allowed any person to build (under some legal and technical requirements) 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) gauge railway lines. Governor of Buenos Aires Province, Marcelino Ugarte, encouraged the construction of a regional railway line to compete against the dominant British companies. He considered that the appearance of a more economic railroad transport would make British companies to decrease the rates to keep their position in the market.

A provincial decree promulgated in September 1904 decided the construction of a railway line from Barracas al Sud to Carhué. This line was given to Buenos Aires Midland Railway in 1906. In March 1905 the other concession were given to French-owned Compañía General de Ferrocarriles en la Provincia de Buenos Aires. Both lines would be competing against Ferrocarril Provincial.

The lines to be built were determined as following:

The main offeror for the project was "Societe Anonime Franco-Argentine de travaux publics", a Franco-Belgian society headed by Otto Bemberg. The society was formed by Bemberg & Cia, Louis Dreyfus and Emili Erlanger & Cia, and Dirks & Dates.

Construction

In August 1907 authorisation was given for the construction of the line, originally named "Ferrocarril Provincial del Puerto de La Plata al Meridiano V". Construction began in La Plata in June 1909 and the sections of the line were progressively opened as follows:

Line Opened Km
La Plata to Saladillo Norte 12 Mar 1912 206
Saladillo Norte to Blas Durañona 1 Aug 1912 36
Blas Durañona to 9 de Julio 7 Feb 1913 66
9 de Julio to Km 440 21 May 1913 n/i
Km 440 (13 km) to Mira Pampa 7 Jan 1914 113

This completed a 553 km line with 31 stations and on 31 August 1916 the provincial Government took over the operation of the railway. The first service run on March 17, 1912, crossing desert and infertile areas. The only important town was 9 de Julio (that was already served by the Western Railway). As time passed, new towns were established such as Loma Verde, Etcheverry, Gobernador Udaondo, Carlos Beguerie, Hirsh, Fortín Olavarría, Roosvelt and Mira Pampa. Nevertheless, the railway did not obtain profits due to floodings or poor harvests.

The original project was partially fulfilled so only the western branch was built. In 1913 other Law authorized the Government to build 4,000 km in Buenos Aires Province as an expansion of the main line. The branches to be built were the following:

Projected lines
La Plata - Avellaneda and Mercado Central
Carlos Beguerie - Azul
C. Beguerie - Roque Pérez - Navarro - Mercedes - S.A. Giles - S.A. Areco - Zárate
Azul - Bahía Blanca
Azul - Mar del Plata
Azul - B. Juárez
Dolores - Gral. Conesa - Gral. Madariaga - San Clemente del Tuyú
Brandsen - Dolores - General Conesa - General Lavalle
El Trigo - Las Flores
25 de Mayo - Bragado - Junín
9 de Julio - Lincoln - Vedia
Vedia - Arenales - Rojas - Mitre - Santa Lucía - San Pedro

Exploitation and Expansion

The railway continue its expansion during the next years, reaching more towns in Buenos Aires Province. The cities joined by the train were as follows:[1]

Line Opened Km
C. Beguerie to Azul 20 Jan 1927 68
Pedro Gamen to Pehuajó 10 May 1930 20
Ariel to Olavarría 6 Oct 1930 56
Tte. Cnel. Miñana to Sierra Chica n/i 6,5
Olavarría to Loma Negra 1950's 17
Tte. Cnel. Miñana to Azul 1950's 30

On 14 November 1924 the name of the company was changed to "Ferrocarril Provincial de Buenos Aires" (abbreviated FCPBA).[2]

In the mid-1940s the Provincial Government decided to nationalise the Ferrocarril Depietri that run from San Pedro and Arrecifes. Eduardo Depietri, owner of the line, refused to give his company but the Government revoked the concession on November 1949 alleging breach of contract and the railway was expropriated.

Nevertheless, the San Pedro-Arrecifes service would not run anymore because the FCPBA never showed interests in 68 km of pathways that were far away from its own line. The Ferrocarril Belgrano (whose tracks intersected with the Depietri's railway) nor took interest in taking over the expropriated railway. The abandoned structure was depredated and the remained assets were returned to Depietri's company in 1967. The tracks were dismantled, the lands sold and the rest was sold as scrap.

On 31 December 1951 the company was transferred to state ownership as an independent entity under the control of the Empresa Nacional de Transportes (ENT) and in 1953 was absorbed by Ferrocarril General Manuel Belgrano, one of the six state-owned companies formed after the nationalisation of the entire railway network in 1948.

On 1 January 1954 the Ferrocarril Nacional Provincia de Buenos Aires (FNPBA) was formed by integrating the FCPBA, the CGBA and the Buenos Aires Midland Railway and was incorporated into the Ferrocarril Belgrano on 7 October 1957.

Decline and Closure

The lines between Etcheverry and Mira Pampa and Carlos Beguerie to Azul and Olavarría, together with their respective branch lines, were closed on 28 October 1961 during the Government of Arturo Illia. The line between Olavarría and La Plata was re-opened temporarily for freight traffic only from April 1964 to 1968. The track between Carlos Beguerie and Mira Pampa was removed in October 1974 and the passenger service on the branch from Avellaneda to La Plata was discontinued in July 1977.[3][4]

References

External links