The Rhaetian Railway (RhB) announced that it had beat the world record for the longest passenger train at an event marking the 175th anniversary of Switzerland's famous railway system
The world's longest passenger train—an assembly of 100 connected coaches measuring nearly two kilometres—wound through breath-taking scenery in the Swiss Alps Saturday.
The Rhaetian Railway (RhB) announced that it had beat the world record for the longest passenger train, at an event marking the 175th anniversary of Switzerland's famous railway system.
The 1,910-metre (6,266-foot) train, composed of 25 separable multiple-unit trains, or 100 coaches, travelled through the Alps in the eastern Swiss canton of Graubunden.
"For me, this is just Swiss perfection," RhB chief Renato Fasciati told the Blick daily's live feed of the event, as the long, red train snaked slowly through the mountainous landscape.
While there are freight trains that are longer, with some measuring over three kilometres, Saturday's event featured by far the longest passenger train ever run.