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Rome Metro Line C

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Line C of the Rome Metro (and its depot/warehouse) represents the largest infrastructure project currently in progress in Italy, and one of the longest construction sites in Europe; the client is Società Roma Metropolitane Srl, the general contractor is the MetroC joint stock consortium, in which Ansaldo STS has a 14% stake.
 
MetroC has commissioned AnsaldoBreda SpA to build the driverless trains for Line C:they will be driven and controlled remotely by a fully automated system, which will ensure all aspects of its safety.This system, known as Driverless, is already in operation in Copenhagen, Singapore, Vancouver, Paris, Lille and Turin, and will also be used in Brescia and Milan’s new Line 5.
 
Driverless is mainly based on an innovative system called ATC (Automatic Train Control) – supplied by Ansaldo STS – and on the thorough integration of metro line systems, which requires complex system engineering during all phases of design and construction.  MetroC has commissioned Ansaldo STS to carry out this engineering activity.
 
Line C will be 25.5 km in length (17.6 km underground, 7.9 km above ground) and will cross the city from the North-West to the South-East, passing under the Tiber river, the historic centre and the Colosseum. It will transport 24,000 passengers per hour in each direction, and will also be integrated into the existing transport system through the interchange stations with metro lines A and B, and with the FR 1 regional railway line.
 
The Line C fleet will consist of 30 new-generation trains, each with six fully air-conditioned carriages. They will travel at a commercial speed of 35 km/h, with a train every 180 seconds during peak hours and along the central section.
 
The 30 stations, including 21 underground, will be built 800 metres apart, according to design functionality and safety criteria.
 
The project will involve 1.3 million hours for the design, at least 22 million hours for construction and around 250,000 hours to make the trains:following the work of designers and planners that began in March 2006, an army of workers, technicians, engineers and architects invisible to passers-by are set to enter the city’s underground building site to create, one step at a time, a real engineering jewel.
 
The first stretch of the line, from Pantano to San Giovanni, is expected to be in operation for 2011.
 
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