Railways of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina

Željeznice Federacije
Bosne i Hercegovine
Railway
Industry Rail Transport
Founded 2001
Headquarters Sarajevo[1], Bosnia and Herzegovina
Key people
Nijaz Puzić [2]
Services Rail Transport, Rail Construction, Services
Website Official website
Train station in Sarajevo
A railway bridge near Tarčin

Željeznice Federacije Bosne i Hercegovine[3] (ŽFBH) is the railway company of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is one of the two rail companies of Bosnia and Herzegovina (the other is the ŽRS, operating in the Republika Srpska). The company operates 608 km of railroad.[4]

Overview

The company, public and owned by the government of the Federation, was founded in 2001 by the fusion of some public enterprises with the company ŽHB (Željeznice Herceg-Bosne[3]). The network is 601 km long, out of which 392 km is electrified and is built in standard gauge.[5] After extensive rehabilitation, more than 85 percent of the network is now classified as D4 in terms of UIC load categories, allowing maximum loads of 22.5 tons per axle, or 8.0 tons per linear meter.

Basic activity:

Public transport of passengers in domestic and international rail traffic, public transport of cargo via domestic and international rail transport and combined transport; maintenance, reconstruction, modernisation, construction of wagon stock and other equipment necessary for offering of transport services; maintenance, remont, modernisation and development of railway infrastructure; organisation and safety of railway transport.[6]

Organizational chart

Rolling stock

Model Type Picture Note
JŽ class 441 Electric locomotive Active
HŽ series 6111 Electric multiple unit (EMU) Active
EMD G16 Diesel Locomotive Active
V 100 (ŽFBH 212) Diesel Locomotive Active
Končar EMV Electric locomotive Not Active
Talgo Passenger coaches Active

See also

References

  1. Headquarter's address of ŽFBH
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Management board of ŽFBH
  3. 1 2 Željeznice stands for "railways"
  4. Track gauge of ŽFBH
  5. CIA World Fact Book, 2009
  6. "About ZFBIH". ZFBIH. Retrieved 8 July 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.