Matterhorn Gotthard Bahn


The Matterhorn Gotthard Bahn is a narrow gauge railway line and a railway company in Switzerland. The track width is. It was created in 2003 through an amalgamation of Furka Oberalp Bahn and BVZ Zermatt-Bahn. The name comes from the Matterhorn and St. Gotthard Pass.
Its network is long and stretches from Disentis in the canton of Graubünden to Zermatt in the canton of Wallis, by way of the Oberalp Pass and Andermatt in the canton of Uri, the Furka Base Tunnel, Brig, and Visp. From Andermatt, a branch line extends to Göschenen, at the northern end of the Gotthard Rail Tunnel.
The network is an adhesion railway but using Abt rack assistance on the steeper inclines.
Between Realp and Oberwald the line formerly crossed the Furka Pass, at a crest elevation of above sea level with a tunnel passing beneath the pass. This compares to a crest elevation of just above sea level in today's Furka Base Tunnel, which is long. The old line, the scenic route, which is very attractive to tourists, is operated by the Dampfbahn Furka-Bergstrecke using veteran steam engines.
There is a connection to the Rhaetian Railway in Disentis and the Glacier Express runs from Zermatt to St. Moritz, using stock from both companies.

Operation

Apart from the Glacier Express, the current schedule sees passenger trains commuting between Brig and Zermatt, Brig and Göschenen, as well as Andermatt and Disentis. MGB also operates two car shuttle trains: between Realp and Oberwald through Furka Base Tunnel, and between Andermatt and Sedrun.
Large-scale freight traffic only takes place between Visp and Zermatt and between Disentis and the NRLA construction site near Sedrun.

Accidents and incidents

The MGB is composed of three companies: the Matterhorn Gotthard AG emerged from a rebranding of BVZ, the Matterhorn Gotthard infrastructure AG is the former FO, and a new stock company Matterhorn Gotthard railway has been established as a management umbrella. The MGB has taken over FO's operations and has turned over BVZ's infrastructure to MGI in exchange. The MGB is majority owned by the BVZ Holding AG, whereas the MGI shares are held by the Swiss federal government and the cantons, MGM is owned by BVZ Holding and the public sector in equal shares.

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