Nesttun–Os Line

Nesttun–Os Line
Norwegian: Nesttun–Osbanen
Commercial operations
Built byA/S Nesttun-Osbanen
Original gauge750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)
Original electrificationNone
Preserved operations
Length40 m (131 ft)
Preserved gauge750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)
Commercial history
Opened1 June 1894
Closed2 September 1935
Route map
0.0 km
Nesttun Station
(1872)
31.4 m asl
1.5 km
Skjold
(1894)
52.0 m asl
Apelthun
(1905)
4.3 km
Rådal Station
(1894)
42.0 m asl
6.6 km
Stend Station
(1894)
60.0 m asl
7.6 km
Skjold
(1927)
8.6 km
Fana Station
(1894)
53.0 m asl
9.9 km
Hamre Station
(1894)
54.0 m asl
12.7 km
Kismul
(1895)
64.0 m asl
15.1 km
Kalandseid Station
(1894)
75.5 m asl
18.3 km
Søfteland Station
(1894)
56.0 m asl
branch line to Ekhaug Planteskole
branch line to Hetleflåten grustak
23.3 km
Ulven Station
(1894)
43.0 m asl
25.3 km
Kuven
(1894)
25.5 m asl
branch line to Bahus Fabrikker
26.3 km
Osøren Station
(1894)
3.0 m asl

The Nesttun–Os Line (Norwegian: Nesttun–Osbanen) was a narrow gauge railway between Nesttun, now part of Bergen, and the community of Osøyro in Os municipality, Norway. As the first private railway in Norway, it opened 1 June 1894, designed to connect Os to the Voss Line, allowing for passenger and freight transport to Bergen and Voss. Despite a boom caused by World War I, the railway was eventually driven out of business by competition from road transport, which provided faster service. On 2 September 1935, it became the first Norwegian railway to close, and most of the railway was dismantled the following year.

Today, only short stretches of the railway and a few stations survive. Much of the former railway line is used as a bicycle path (rail trail), which makes revival of the Nesttun–Os Railway as a heritage railway very difficult. However, a 40-metre-long (130 ft) railway stretch remains at Stend Station, the only unaltered remaining station, upon which a diesel locomotive and a passenger car are placed. The station building itself has been restored and is used as a museum.