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What happens to old railroad tracks?

So what happens to all those old train tracks? The physical parts of the old railroad tracks are usually recycled. The metal rails can be removed and sold as scrap metal, which eventually gets recycled into new products. The wooden railroad ties can find new uses as landscaping timbers.



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When the line is abandoned, ownership can revert back to the underlying landowner, usually the adjacent property owner. An adjacent landowner may have a reversionary interest in the land if the railroad right of way was granted to the company as an easement for the purposes of operating the railroad.

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The value of a scrap railroad track varies by material and its condition. Depending on its dimensions and shape, a ton can range from $300 to $750. For example, an R50 track will fetch a price of between $200 and $750, while an R65 way will cost more than twice that.

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In terms of lifespans, the rail is supposed to last 30 years, the engineering structures 100 years most of the time, and the gravel bed 15 years for gravel and 30 years for concrete and steel elements.

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Historic Strasburg takes pride in the fact that its railroad is the oldest continuously operating short-line railroad in America.

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rule of thumb for new track construction is between $1 Million - $2 Million per mile, depending on who is constructing the track. Some rail clients need alot of track space to handle unit trains over a mile long.

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You probably shouldn't, but if it is just laying alongside the right of way all by itself then it is probably not going to be used. That said, stealing railroad track parts is a federal crime, so make sure you don't obviously collect tons of them.

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While modern trains won't litter the tracks with human excrement, the traditional method did just that. This is what was known as a hopper toilet. It could either be a simple hole in the floor (also known as a drop chute toilet) or a full-flush system.

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Never trespass or cross tracks illegally. Railroad tracks are private property, not public trails. It's illegal and dangerous to walk on or near tracks unless you're using a designated crossing.

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A comprehensive list and map of them can be found on abandonedrails.com. They claim there are 1,755 Abandonments. One can sort by state and see various pieces of information about them.

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It's Illegal Trespassing onto railroad property, including tracks, bridges, buildings and signal towers, is illegal. Violators are subject to a citation for trespassing. Union Pacific will seek removal from publication any photograph or video that violates this policy.

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The largest rail company in the world is Deutsche Bahn, with a revenue of $47.72 billion. As of 2021, the global rail industry has a market size of $295.80 billion.

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One of the most frequently asked questions we receive when conducting training on railroading basics is: “Who owns the railroad tracks?” In the United States and Canada, that answer is overwhelmingly the railroads themselves.

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In one study conducted at the BNSF Railway Hobart Railyard in Los Angeles, the California Environmental Protection Agency estimated that residents living near a railyard experienced a higher risk of carcinogen exposure.

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According to Wikipedia there are 149,910 kilometers of rail track in the United States (although many other sources say it is much larger at 226,000 kilometers or 140,000 miles).

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The Middleton Railway is known as the oldest working railway, excluding cable systems. It was built in 1758 in Leeds in West Yorkshire, an upland county in England. Originally, it was constructed from wooden tracks but by 1799 employed iron edge rails.

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