In this infrastructural field, Hungary is competing with Switzerland
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Hungary boasts an extensive narrow-gauge rail network, rivalled only by Switzerland and Ireland in terms of population per railway. Since 2017, government-supported projects began to spread extensively in the country.
According to G7’s compilation, Hungary has the 8th most extensive narrow-gauge railway line infrastructure in Europe, an interesting feature of the Hungarian transport system and tourism.
No aggregated data on narrow-gauge railways are kept by international and national statistical offices, so it is no longer easy to say how long they are in each country. G7 used data from the OpenStreetMap database. However, this also means that there is no common research methodology for keeping statistics.
This means that narrow-gauge railways could include tourist or forest railways, narrow-gauge tramways connecting towns or villages, or freight or mining railways. According to G7, only Switzerland and Ireland have a larger network of light railways per capita than Hungary.
G7 mentions that while Switzerland has made excellent use of its natural assets and built up an internationally renowned industry of Alpine tourist trains, Hungarian small railways are far less well known. At the same time, Ireland generally does not make use of its narrow-gauge lines in terms of tourism, but it more regularly uses them for freight.
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