Terminal Chiasso

The Terminal Chiasso is located on the border with Italy. It is an important railway hub between Switzerland and Italy and is directly connected to the international station of Chiasso Smistamento.

 

The terminal offers road-rail transhipment services for the trains bound for northern Switzerland.

 

UIC code of the rail connection point: 85 05309 0

Facts & figures

 

Surface 7,000 m2
Storage surface                    400 m2
Mobile crane1
Max. crane capacity40 t

Type of units

Containers from 20' to 45'

Swap bodies

Semi-trailers

Transhipment track1 x 300 m
Max. capacity 2 train pairs per day

Contact

Terminal Chiasso

Hupac Intermodal SA

Via Passeggiata

CH-6828 Balerna

Tel. +41 79 7789769

terminal.chiasso@hupac.com

 

 

Opening hours


Intermodal shift requires efficient infrastructures

In 2011 Hupac transported approximately 725,000 road shipments by rail.

Chiasso, 31.1.2012 – In 2011 combined transport operator Hupac achieved a 6.6% increase in its transport volume. The sluggish expansion in international railway infrastructures is cause for concern, however.


Transport volume   In the past year, combined transport operator Hupac of Switzerland moved a total of 723,894 road shipments by rail. While two-digit growth rates were achieved in the first semester, business declined sharply in the fall as a result of another economic downturn. The strongest growth was generated by transalpine transports via Austria. A factor contributing substantially to the success of this was the clearance gauge on the Brenner axis, which makes the transport of modern, high-volume semi-trailers with a corner height of 4 meters possible. Non-transalpine transports comprising the Benelux-Austria/Hungary/Romania, Benelux-Poland/Russia and Belgium-France/Spain routes added to the positive result with an increase of 12.6%. Hupac’s core business, transalpine transports through Switzerland, was up modestly by 1.8%. Storms, strikes and line closures due to accidents had a negative impact on the result.

 

Infrastructures - later, fewer, not at all?   Hupac welcomes the pragmatic and realistic approach of the 2011 intermodal shift report of the Swiss Federal Office of Transport and expects that the targeted shift volume will be attained quickly by taking specific measures. However, Hupac noted with concern that the freight traffic route Bellinzona-Luino-Novara, which accommodates 80% of unaccompanied combined transports via Gotthard, is gradually disappearing from the sight of the international infrastructure strategists. Urgently required improvements allowing significant advancements in productivity with a minimum of resources, such as the extension of passing rails, are being shelved. For the construction of a 4-meter corridor, on the other hand, the route via Chiasso is given preference, regardless of the fact that the existing major terminals in Novara and Busto Arsizio-Gallarate are not accessible via this line. According to Hupac’s managing director Bernhard Kunz “this depreciates the investments of the past twenty years on the Luino route.” Establishing equivalent infrastructures for combined transports along the Chiasso route is expected to require considerable investments and very long time. Kunz added: “If freight traffic infrastructures are developed according to the principle ‘later, fewer, not at all’ we will not see any progress in intermodal shift. A 4-meter corridor on the Luino route for the current transport volume has top priority and the Chiasso route has second priority for future transports.”

 

Transport development
Number of road shipments

2011

2010 in %
       
Transalpine via CH 431.923 424.176 1,8
Transalpine via A 53.053 42.792 24,0
Total transalpine 484.976 466.968 3,9
Non-transalpine 238.918 212.098 12,6
Total traffic
723.894 679.066 6,6
Tariffs
Forms
General information

Capacity   

Hupac Group
Viale R. Manzoni 6
CH-6830 Chiasso

Tel. +41 58 8558800

 

Follow us on Linkedin

Discover
Tools
Privacy
Customer Support

© Copyright Hupac Group — Page update: 15.02.2023 — Credits — Sitemap