Stresa Train Station

Stresa station, taxis waiting.

Although not a large city, I think it is indicative of Stresa's status, both as a tourist destination and as a bedroom community of Milan, that it has a very well-equipped train station. Located on via Carducci , it's a short walk up from the lakefront and the majority of the hotels, and if you don't feel like walking, they'll be a taxi waiting for you. Outside, the structure has a bit of a Swiss feel; trains do come and go here from Switzerland after all, less than an hour away to the north.

The main room inside, where there are the ticket windows, is older, marble countered, wood trimmed, and spotless. There are large framed photographs on the walls, sepia toned, historical photos from long ago.


But everything else in the station seems a sharp contrast to the antique nature of this room. The cappuccino bar is large and the cappuccino is good. They offer free seating both inside and out. A TV is mounted high on one wall, usually is showing the news. There is also a full-service restaurant, called The Orient Express, with a curved glass wall serving as a divider in the center of the room. I've noticed at lunchtime this restaurant gets very crowded...

Un cappuccino per favore, prima di partire... A cappuccino please, before leaving.

And then there is the newsstand. This may be, hands down, one of the best-stocked little news shops I've every been in. With magazines, books, and newspapers in several languages, as well as some music, games, postcards and a variety of other items, this is one-stop shopping for any reading materials you may want. They also carry a great selection of tour guides for the region. What I like to do is choose a variety of Italian magazines to bring back to the U.S., to share with other friends learning Italian. In this shop, it's hard to choose which.

The Orient Express restaurant at the station.

In case you are unfamiliar with the intricacies of a small Italian train station, a few pointers. Train schedules are available on the trenitalia site, and also printed on posters in the station. When I'm traveling to Milan at what I think will be a busy time I sometimes purchase my ticket the day before, just to certain that I have one and not to have to wait on a line. When you walk through the station to the tracks, the track directly in front of you is the track heading to Milano. If you are heading north, you'll need to walk down the stairs and under the tracks to the other side. The side of the track that I am standing on is the side heading to Milan.

That ticket I bought the day before is not dated. When I'm ready to board the train I'll punch the ticket into the yellow box to be stamped with the current date, validating it for my trip.

All the information is here, on this wall outside the station near the track. A poster with the schedule, a monitor announcing trains, and the yellow box to self-validate your ticket.


I hope this has been a bit of an introduction to the station, so that you know what it looks like, what to expect when you're here. An older post I wrote details some of the particulars about traveling specifically to Milan from Stresa. (Read it here). And the Trenitalia site, www.ferroviedellostato.it, provides all schedule and fare information and is available in English. Tickets can be purchased online.




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