The Ferrovia Torino-Ceres (also known as Torino-Valli di Lanzo) is a commuter railroad in the Metropolitan City of Turin (northern Italy) which is currently managed by the Gruppo Torinese Trasporti (GTT).

Turin–Ceres railway (OPEN NOW, NEEDS UPDATE)
The station of Ceres, built, like all the others in the mountain stretch of the railway, in Swiss style in the late 19th-early 20th century
Overview
LocaleMetropolitan City of Turin,  Italy
Termini
History
Opened1868
Technical
Electrification4,000 V DC
Route map

Torino Porta Susa
Torino Dora
Torino-Madonna di Campagna
Rigola-Stadio
Venaria
Borgaro
Caselle
Caselle Aeroporto
San Maurizio Canavese
Cirié
Nole
Villanova-Grosso
Mathi
Balangero
Lanzo
Germagnano
Funghera
Traves
Losa
Pessinetto
Mezzenile
Ceres

A first stretch of the railway, reaching Venaria Reale, was inaugurated in 1868. In 1869 the rails reached Cirié, for a total of 21.243 km and five stations. In 1916 it arrived to Ceres, for a total length of some 44 km. In 1920 it was electrified at 4,000 V direct current.

The current service starts from Torino Dora station in Turin, although a significant project is in the pipeline for the next years. In order to improve the interchange network among the major railway lines, GTT has established to connect the Turin-Ceres railway to the Turin-Milan railway in the near future. The two railways will link to each other in Torino Rebaudengo Fossata station, still in Turin territory, and the Torino Dora station will be discontinued (at least as part of the Ferrovia Torino-Ceres).

A through station linked to Turin International Airport by escalators opened for the 2006 Winter Olympic Games and represents the first rail connection between Turin and its airport.

See also edit