The PisaâÂÂRome railway (also called the ferrovia TirrenicaâÂÂ"Tyrrhenian Railway") is one of the trunk lines of the Italian railway network. It connects ItalyâÂÂs northwest with its south, running along the Tyrrhenian coast between the Italian regions of Tuscany and Lazio, through the provinces of Livorno, Grosseto, Viterbo and Rome. The line is double track and is fully electrified at 3,000 V DC. Passenger traffic is managed by Trenitalia.
An international branch line connects from the PisaâÂÂRome railway at Roma San Pietro railway station to Vatican City: the 300-metre Vatican railway.
The southernmost section of the line between Rome and Civitavecchia was opened on 24 April 1859 by the SocietàPio Central (Italian for Central Pius Company). In 1862 work started on a line south from Livorno, which initially ran east to Collesalvetti before turning south and joining the path of the current PisaâÂÂRome line at Vada (now 27 km south of Livorno). This route is now known as the Maremmana railway. The line continued south from Vada and was opened to Nunziatella, near Capalbio, on the border with the Papal States on the Chiarone river in 1864. In 1865 the Leopolda railway was taken over by the owner of the RomeâÂÂCivitavecchia railway, now called the Societàper le Strade Ferrate Romane (Roman Railways). It opened the connecting section between Civitavecchia and Capalbio in 1867. In 1910 a direct line was opened along the coast from Vada to the new central station at Livorno. A new route was opened between Rome and Maccarese-Fregene via Aurelia on 25 May 1990.