When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Scarborough funiculars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scarborough_funiculars

    Spa Lift. During 1873, the Scarborough South Cliff Tramway Company Limited was created to construct the first funicular railway in the United Kingdom. [1] It had long been recognised that the height difference between the town and its beaches was a geographical hindrance to the burgeoning tourism industry, and the construction of a funicular was viewed as a means of better facilitating, and ...

  3. Central Tramway Company, Scarborough - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Tramway_Company...

    The Central Tramway Company is an electric-powered funicular railway located in the holiday resort of Scarborough, North Yorkshire.The company has the distinction of being the oldest surviving Tramway Company in the UK, [1] as the original corporation still operates the funicular today.

  4. North Bay Railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Bay_Railway

    Scarborough North Bay Railway (SNBR) is a ridable miniature railway (also known as a minimum-gauge railway) in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England. It was built in 1931, [ 2 ] to the gauge of 20 in ( 508 mm ), and runs for approximately 7 ⁄ 8 mile (1.4 km) between Peasholm Park and Scalby Mills in the North Bay area of the town.

  5. Funicular - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Funicular

    The oldest funicular railway operating in Britain dates from 1875 and is in Scarborough, North Yorkshire. [18] In Istanbul, Turkey, the Tünel has been in continuous operation since 1875 and is both the first underground funicular and the second-oldest underground railway. It remained powered by a steam engine up until it was taken for ...

  6. List of funicular railways - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_funicular_railways

    This is a list of funicular railways, organised by place within country and continent. The funiculars range from short urban lines to significant multi-section mountain railways. A funicular railway is distinguished from the similar incline elevator in that it has two vehicles that counterbalance one another rather than independently operated cars.

  7. Scarborough and Whitby Railway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scarborough_and_Whitby_Railway

    The line is now used as a bridleway for cycles, pedestrians and horses, known as the "Scarborough to Whitby Rail Trail", "Scarborough to Whitby Cinder Track", or simply "The Cinder Track". [26] [27] In the 1980s an area of the former line in the Northstead district of Scarborough was briefly used as football and cricket pitches.

  8. Gallows Close goods yard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallows_Close_goods_yard

    Gallows Close is located on the north western edge of Scarborough town centre and is so named as it was the site of a gallows through the Middle Ages and Early modern period. [1] The site was originally intended to be the terminus of the Scarborough and Whitby Railway in the town, but eventually the 260-yard (240 m) Falsgrave Tunnel [ note 1 ...

  9. Funicular curve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Funicular_curve

    Analogies between the hanging chains and standing structures: an arch and the dome of Saint Peter's Basilica in Rome (Giovanni Poleni, 1748). In architecture, the funicular curve (also funicular polygon, funicular shape, from the Latin: fūniculus, "of rope" [1]) is an approach used to design the compression-only structural forms (like masonry arches) using an equivalence between the rope with ...