
A rail yard, railway yard, railroad yard (US) or simply yard, is a series of
tracks in a rail network for storing, sorting, or loading and unloading
rail vehicles and
locomotives. Yards have many tracks in parallel for keeping rolling stock or unused locomotives stored off the
main line, so that they do not obstruct the flow of traffic. Cars or wagons are moved around by specially designed yard
switcher
A switcher, shunter, yard pilot, switch engine, yard goat, or shifter is a small railroad locomotive used for manoeuvring railroad cars inside a rail yard in a process known as ''switching'' (US) or ''shunting'' (UK). Switchers are not inten ...
s (US) or shunters, a type of locomotive. Cars or wagons in a yard may be sorted by numerous categories, including
railway company, loaded or unloaded, destination, car type, or whether they need repairs. Yards are normally built where there is a need to store rail vehicles while they are not being loaded or unloaded, or are waiting to be assembled into trains. Large yards may have a
tower to control operations.
Many yards are located at strategic points on a
main line. Main-line yards are often composed of an up yard and a down yard, linked to the associated
direction of travel. There are different types of yards, and different parts within a yard, depending on how they are built.
Freight yards
For
freight cars, the overall yard layout is typically designed around a principal ''switching'' (US term) or ''shunting'' (UK) technique:
* A flat yard has no hump, and relies on locomotives for all car movements.
* A gravity yard is built on a natural slope and relies less on locomotives; generally locomotives will control a consist being sorted from uphill of the cars about to be sorted. They are decoupled and let to accelerate into the classification equipment lower down.
* A hump yard has a constructed hill, over which freight cars are shoved by yard locomotives, and then gravity is used to propel the cars to various sorting tracks;
Sorting yard basics
In the case of all classification or sorting yards, human intelligence plays a primary role in setting a strategy for the ''switching operations''; the fewer times coupling operations need to be made and the less distance traveled, the faster the operation, the better the strategy and the sooner the newly configured consist can be joined to its outbound train.
* Switching yards, staging yards, or shunting yards are typically graded to be flat yards, where switch engines manually shuffle and maneuver cars from (a) train arrival tracks, to (b) to consist breakdown track, to (c) an consist assembly track, thence to (d) departure tracks of the yard.
** A large sub-group of such yards are known as staging yards, which are yards serving an end destination that is also a collection yard starting car groups for departure. These seemingly incompatible tasks are because the operating or road company and its locomotive drops off empties and picks up full cars waiting departure which have been spotted and assembled by local switch engines. The long haul carrier makes the round trip with a minimal turn around time, and the local switch engine transfers empties to the loading yard when the industries output is ready to be shipped.
** This activity is duplicated in a transfer yard, the difference being in the latter many or several businesses and industries are serviced by the local switcher, which is part of the yard equipment, and the industry pays a cargo transfer fee to the railroad or yard operating company. In the staging yard, the locomotive is most likely operated by industry (refinery, chemical company or coal mine personnel); and ownership of the yard in both cases is a matter of business, and could be any imaginable combination. Ownership and operation are quite often a matter of leases and interests
* Hump yards and gravity yards are usually highly automated and designed for the efficient break-down, sorting, and recombining of freight into consists, so they are equipped with mechanical
retarders (external brakes) and
scales that a computer or operator uses along with knowledge of the
gradient of the hump to calculate and control the speed of the cars as they roll downhill to their destination tracks. These modern sorting and classification systems are sophisticated enough to allow a first car to roll to a stop near the end of its classification track, and, by slowing the speed of subsequent cars down the hump, shorten the distance for the following series of cars so they can bump and couple gently, without damaging one another. Since overall throughput speed matters, many have small pneumatic, hydraulic or spring-driven braking retarders (below, right) to adjust and slow speed both before and after yard switch points. Along with car tracking and load tracking to destination technologies such as RFID, long trains can be broken down and reconfigured in transfer yards or operations in remarkable time.
File:Vaganyfek Ferencvaros.JPG, A hump classification type of yard. The camera is positioned near where cars are decoupled and begin to accelerate downhill past a scale
Scale or scales may refer to:
Mathematics
* Scale (descriptive set theory), an object defined on a set of points
* Scale (ratio), the ratio of a linear dimension of a model to the corresponding dimension of the original
* Scale factor, a number ...
. The speed regulation (retarder brakes and speed sensors) devices shown in the foreground adjust the car speed for the ''calculated soft-coupling on arrival'' along the sorting track for the consist it is being routed to join.
File:Dowty-Retarder1.JPG, Smaller local hydraulic "dowty retarders
Sir George Herbert Dowty (27 March 1901 – 2 December 1975) was an English inventor and businessman.
He founded Dowty Aviation in the 1930s producing aircraft components such as hydraulic systems, undercarriage units, and warning devices.
Earl ...
" finesse the speed of a car being sorted as it approaches a switch or the new consists to which it is being joined.
Nomenclature and components

A large freight yard may include the following components:
* Receiving yard, also called an arrival yard, where freight cars or wagons are detached from their locomotives, inspected for mechanical problems, and sent to a classification or marshalling yard.
* Switching yards, switchyards, shunting yards or sorting yardsyards where cars are sorted for various destinations and assembled into blocks have different formal names in different cultural traditions:
**
Classification yard (US and by
Canadian National Railway
The Canadian National Railway Company (french: Compagnie des chemins de fer nationaux du Canada) is a Canadian Class I freight railway headquartered in Montreal, Quebec, which serves Canada and the Midwestern and Southern United States.
CN i ...
in
Canada) or
** Marshalling yard (UK and
Canadian Pacific Railway
The Canadian Pacific Railway (french: Chemin de fer Canadien Pacifique) , also known simply as CPR or Canadian Pacific and formerly as CP Rail (1968–1996), is a Canadian Class I railway incorporated in 1881. The railway is owned by Canadi ...
in
Canada)
* Departure yard, where car blocks are assembled into trains.
* Car repair yard or maintenance yard, for freight cars.
* Engine house (in some yards, a
roundhouse), to fuel and service locomotives.
* Transfer yard, a yard where consists are dropped off or picked up as a group by through service such as a
unit train, but managed locally by local switching service locomotives.
* Unit tracks may be reserved for
unit trains, which carry a block of cars all of the same origin and destination, and so as through traffic do not get sorted in a classification yard. Such consists often stop in a freight yard for other purposes: inspection, engine servicing, being switched into a longer consist, and/or crew changes.
Freight yards may have multiple industries adjacent to them where railroad cars are loaded or unloaded and then stored before they move on to their new destination.
Major freight yards in the US include the
Bailey Yard in
North Platte, Nebraska, operated by
Union Pacific Railroad;
Conway Yard near
Pittsburgh, operated by
Norfolk Southern Railway
The Norfolk Southern Railway is a Class I freight railroad in the United States formed in 1982 with the merger of Norfolk and Western Railway and Southern Railway. With headquarters in Atlanta, the company operates 19,420 route miles (31 ...
; and the
Corwith Yards
Corwith Yards is a rail transport, railroad intermodal freight transport, intermodal freight terminal located at Pershing Road (Chicago), Pershing Road (39th Street) & Kedzie Avenue in the southwest side of Chicago, Illinois, in the neighborhood o ...
(Corwith Intermodal Facility) in
Chicago, operated by
BNSF Railway
BNSF Railway is one of the largest freight railroads in North America. One of seven North American Class I railroads, BNSF has 35,000 employees, of track in 28 states, and nearly 8,000 locomotives. It has three transcontinental routes that ...
.
Major UK goods yards (freight) include those in
Crewe
Crewe () is a railway town and civil parish in the unitary authority of Cheshire East in Cheshire, England. The Crewe built-up area had a total population of 75,556 in 2011, which also covers parts of the adjacent civil parishes of Willaston ...
,
Reading and Bescot, near
Walsall; which are operated by
DB Schenker
DB Schenker is a division of German rail operator Deutsche Bahn that focuses on logistics. The company was acquired by Deutsche Bahn as Schenker-Stinnes in 2002. It comprises divisions for air, land, sea freight, and Contract Logistics.
Histor ...
and
Freightliner.
Coach yards

Coach yards or stabling yards are used for sorting, storing and repairing
passenger cars. These yards are located in metropolitan areas near large
stations
Station may refer to:
Agriculture
* Station (Australian agriculture), a large Australian landholding used for livestock production
* Station (New Zealand agriculture), a large New Zealand farm used for grazing by sheep and cattle
** Cattle statio ...
or terminals. An example of a major US coach yard is
Sunnyside Yard in
New York City, operated by
Amtrak. Those that are principally used for storage, such as the
West Side Yard in New York, are called "layup yards"
[Chicago-L.org]
"42nd Place Terminal."
Accessed 2013-08-30. or "stabling yards." Coach yards are commonly flat yards because passenger coaches are heavier than freight carriages, in the unladen state.
Major UK coach stabling yards include those in
Crewe
Crewe () is a railway town and civil parish in the unitary authority of Cheshire East in Cheshire, England. The Crewe built-up area had a total population of 75,556 in 2011, which also covers parts of the adjacent civil parishes of Willaston ...
and Longsight,
Manchester, which are operated by various regional train companies.
See also
*
Classification yard
*
Goods station
*
List of rail yards
*
List of railway roundhouses
*
Traction maintenance depot
*
Rail transport operations
*
Siding (rail)
References
Further reading
*
*
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Yard
es:Patio de maniobras
it:Stazione di smistamento