The common understanding of the railway is represented as rail traffic, which means that whenever it is affectionately described or discussed, it immediately calls to mind images of trains, of tracks, of certain stations that perhaps have played a key role in the history of the local area.
One aspect that is often overlooked, however, is that it bears the full weight of the surrounding world’s technological evolution, and of its adjustment to this evolution, which inevitably often progresses faster than its ability to absorb this unstoppable advancement. These are the reasons behind the decision to dedicate a small part of the museum to modernisation of the infrastructure, and to the commitment of those who work hard every day to make design choices which offer the public better access to the world around them. Choices which offer functional use of the infrastructure which every day forms an increasingly integral part of the daily lives of those whose routine coincides with the train timetable every morning.