Line 1
Frullone San Rocco
Chiaiano Marianella
Piscinola Scampia
Rainbow line (Line 11)11
Colli Aminei
Policlinico
Miano**
Rione Alto
Regina Margherita**
Montedonzelli
Secondigliano**
Medaglie d'Oro
Di Vittorio**
Rainbow line (Line 11)11
Quattro Giornate
Capodichino Aeroporto** Airport interchange
Funicular
Vanvitelli
Poggioreale** Circumvesuviana Trams in Naples
Salvator Rosa
Tribunale**
Materdei
Centro Direzionale** Circumvesuviana
The logo of Line 2 of Naples Metro run by Trenitalia.2
Museo
Garibaldi
The logo of Line 2 of Naples Metro run by Trenitalia.2 Circumvesuviana Trams in Naples
Dante
Duomo
Toledo
Università
Municipio Porto
Trams in Naples Naples Metro Line 66**
(**) Under construction
Planned extension
Santa Maria
Capua Vetere*
Mainline rail interchange
Macerata Campania*
Capo Spartimento*
Teverola ASI*
Teverola Centro*
Aversa Centro Aversa railway station
Aversa Ippodromo
Giugliano Park and ride
Melito**
Mugnano Park and ride
Piscinola Scampia Park and ride
Miano**
Regina Margherita**
Secondigliano**
Di Vittorio**
Naples Metro Line 11 to Garibaldi
(*) Planned     (**) Under construction

Di Vittorio will be a station on Line 1 of the Naples Metro and on Line 11 (also known as the Rainbow Line or the Naples-Aversa Line) of the railway network managed by EAV (formerly MCNE). It is located in the Secondigliano district, between Piazza Giuseppe Di Vittorio (also known as Piazza Capodichino) and Viale Comandante Umberto Maddalena (also known as Doganella).

Description edit

It is the last of the four stations designed by Antonio Nanu and whose construction was entrusted to EAV, to allow the closure of the loop of Line 1 (managed by ANM) and the continuation of Line 11 towards the center of Naples, retracing the route of the old lower Alifana; the other three are Miano, Regina Margherita and Secondigliano.[1]

History edit

Although the station was part of the project started in 2001, the construction of the section saw the gradual opening of the construction sites from west to east, which is why the first construction site to be opened was the one between Piscinola Scampia and Miano, while the construction site Di Vittorio would have been the last in chronological order to be inaugurated. For this reason, also thanks to the blockage of the construction sites which took place on 2 July 2010 at the hands of the Caldoro council and the subsequent release only 7 years later,[2] on 22 April 2017, which took place thanks to the intervention of the De Luca council and EAV,[3] the works only started in 2019 with the demolition of a part of the boundary wall of the Capodichino military airport and the excavation of the station shaft.[4] The completion of the works is expected by the end of 2024,[5] in conjunction with the conclusion of the excavation of the tunnel connecting the Di Vittorio and Capodichino stations and the consequent closure of the ring.

The creation of a cycle-pedestrian path is planned which retraces the route of the former low Alifana from Via Comunale Vecchia di Miano to Doganella, passing on the Calata Capodichino at the point where the old railway bridge was present in the past, demolished due to the deterioration conditions in which it poured and which will be subsequently rebuilt.[6]

Interchanges edit

  •   Bus stop

References edit

  1. ^ "La nuova Alifana. Un progetto infrastrutturale di trasporto su ferro e riqualificazione urbana". www.libreriauniversitaria.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2022-12-06.
  2. ^ robertocalise (2015-02-26). "MetroCampania Nord Est, la linea che non c'è". Con Trasporto di Roberto Calise (in Italian). Retrieved 2022-12-06.
  3. ^ Napoli - Metro Piscinola-Secondigliano, ripartono i lavori (22.04.17), retrieved 2022-12-06 on YouTube
  4. ^ "NAPOLI | Aperto il cantiere della stazione Di Vittorio della linea metro 1". Mobilita.org (in Italian). 2020-06-23. Retrieved 2022-12-06.
  5. ^ "Metropolitana regionale, Eav apre il cantiere della stazione Di Vittorio". Corriere del Mezzogiorno (in Italian). 2020-06-22. Retrieved 2022-12-06.
  6. ^ "Calata Capodichino, abbattuto il vecchio ponte dell'Alifana". Napoli Fanpage (in Italian). 31 March 2019. Retrieved 2022-12-06.

External links edit

40°52′50″N 14°16′27″E / 40.8806°N 14.2743°E / 40.8806; 14.2743