Sežana railway station


Sežana railway station serves the town and municipality of Sežana, in the Slovenian Littoral region of Slovenia.

Location

The station forms part of the important rail link originally built as the South railway, between Vienna, Austria, and Trieste, Italy. It is situated very close to the border between Slovenia and Italy.

History

The station was opened on, as Bahnhof Sežana. At that time, it was located within the Austrian Empire, and its original operator was the Austrian Southern Railway, a privately owned enterprise.
After World War I, and the annexation of Sežana to the Kingdom of Italy, the station was renamed Stazione di Sesana. Responsibility for operating the station passed to the Ferrovie dello Stato.
In 1947, following the end of World War II, the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia took control of Sežana. The station, renamed Železniška postaja Sežana, became the Vienna–Trieste railway's border crossing point between Italy and Yugoslavia, and its operations were reassigned to Yugoslav Railways.
In 1948, the station became a junction station for a branch line to Kreplje, where the branch linked up with the Bohinj Railway and the rest of the Yugoslavian rail network.
Upon the commencement of Slovenian independence in 1991, the Slovenske železnice took over as operator.