- Mannheim–Karlsruhe–Basel railway
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Rhine Valley Railway
(Rheintalbahn)Route number: 665 (Mannheim–Heidelberg)
701 (Heidelberg–Karlsruhe)
702 (Karlsruhe–Basel)Line number: 4002 (Mannheim–Heidelberg)
4000 (Heidelberg–Karlsruhe)
4280 (Karlsruhe–Basel)Line length: 270.7 km (168.2 mi) Gauge: 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in) Voltage: 15 kV, 16⅔ Hz AC Maximum speed: 250 km/h (155.3 mph) State: Baden-Württemberg Orientation: North-South Stations and junctions LegendPalatine Ludwig Railway from Ludwigshafen
S 1S 2S 3S 4 (RheinNeckar)Riedbahn from Frankfurt via MA-Luzenberg 0.0 Mannheim Hbf Rhine Railway from Karlsruhe Riedbahn to Frankfurt via MA-Käfertal HSL from Stuttgart (Container terminal bridge) 4.0 Mannheim Rangierbahnhof Mannheim Rangierbahnhof (marshalling yard) 6.1 Mannheim-Seckenheim 8.5 Mannheim-Friedrichsfeld Süd junction To Mannheim-Friedrichsfeld and Frankfurt
via the Main-Neckar lineSchwetzingen–Mannheim line 9.0 Mannheim-Friedrichsfeld Süd Main-Neckar line from Darmstadt 14.5 Heidelberg-Wieblingen (junction)
(flying junction)A 5 14.8 Heidelberg-Pfaffengrund/Wieblingen to Heidelberg Hbf (old) 16.6 Heidelberg marshalling yard 17.5 19.1 Heidelberg Hbf to Heidelberger Hbf (old) Neckar Valley line to Jagstfeld S 1S 2S 5 from Heidelberger Hbf (old) Former route from Heidelberg Hbf (old) 22.1 Heidelberg-Kirchheim/Rohrbach 26.5 St Ilgen-Sandhausen 32.1 Wiesloch-Walldorf 37.5 Rot-Malsch 40.1 Bad Schönborn-Kronau 42.4 Bad Schönborn-Süd 46.2 Ubstadt-Weiher 46.6 Ubstadt-Weiher (junction) Connecting line to Bruchsal Rollenberg Katzbach Railway from Odenheim S 31
and Kraich Valley Railway from Menzingen S 32Mannheim–Stuttgart high-speed railway Connecting line from Bruchsal Rollenberg 49.6 Bruchsal Nord (junction) Bruchsal Stegwiesen Bruchsal Schloßgarten Bruhrain Railway from Graben-Neudorf 51.6 Bruchsal S 4/S 9 Western Railway to Stuttgart S 9 53.6 Bruchsal Bildungszentrum 55.9 Untergrombach crossover 56.8 Untergrombach 60.5 Weingarten (Baden) Karlsruhe Stadtbahn S 4S 5 From Pforzheim 68.2 Karlsruhe-Durlach to Karlsruhe freight station Karlsruhe-Hagsfeld–Karlsruhe freight station freight line Former route of the Rhine Valley Line Rhine Railway Mannheim former connection from Ausbesserungswerk (until 199x) Karlsruhe freight yard (old) (until 199x) Karlsruhe Hbf (until 1913) former route of the Hardt Railway, Maxau Railway 72.9 Karlsruhe Hbf S 3 Alb Valley Railway S 1S 11 (former route of the Rhine Valley Line until 1913) from Karlsruhe Albtalbf (where system changes) Palatine Maximilian Railway to Wörth Rhine Railway to Rastatt Karlsruhe West–Karlsruhe Rbf freight line Karlsruhe-Dammerstock–Karlsruhe Rbf freight line freight line from Karlsruhe Rbf (marshalling yard) Rüppurr (until 1913) 76.2 Karlsruhe-Brunnenstück (junction) (former route of the Rhine Valley line until 1913) 76.4 77.4 Km change as a result of route shortening 79.6 Ettlingen West Alb Valley Railway 82.5 Bruchhausen 87.9 Malsch 91.7 Muggensturm Rhine Railway from Karlsruhe S 4S 41 96.5 Rastatt Murg Valley Railway to Freudenstadt S 31S 41 Former route of Rhine Railway to Haguenau 101.3 Rastatt Süd junction (current start of parallel HSL) 102.6 Baden-Baden-Haueneberstein 103.2 Sandweier crossover 105.3 Baden-Baden Former line from old Baden station 108.3 Sinzheim Nord 109.5 Sinzheim (b. Bühl) 112.5 Baden-Baden-Rebland 116.9 Bühl (Baden) 119.2 Ottersweier 125.3 Achern Terminus of S 4S 32 Acher Valley Railway to Ottenhöfen 127.7 Önsbach 128.4 Önsbach crossover 131.7 Renchen To Strasbourg Rench Valley Railway from Bad Griesbach 137.9 Appenweier 138.7 Appenweier-Muhrhaag junction from Strasbourg 141.0 Windschläg junction to Offenburg freight yard 141.7 Offenburg Nord junction 145.5 Offenburg 146.1 Offenburg Süd junction Black Forest Railway to Singen 148.3 Schutterwald 154.4 Niederschopfheim 158.7 Friesenheim (Baden) 163.7 Lahr(Schwarzwald) former line to Lahr town 166.1 Kippenheim 171.8 Orschweier Former Rhine–Ettenheimmünster Local Railway 174.8 Ringsheim 177.7 Herbolzheim (Brsg) 181.0 Kenzingen Kaiserstuhl Railway from Breisach 185.9 Riegel am Kaiserstuhl 188.8 Köndringen crossover 188.8 Köndringen 190.2 Teningen-Mundingen 192.7 Emmendingen 196.5 Kollmarsreute Elz Valley Railway from Elzach 199.8 Denzlingen 202.6 Gundelfingen (Breisgau) 202.7 Gundelfingen junction Rail freight bypass to Freiburg Gbf 205.0 Freiburg-Zähringen 207.0 Freiburg-Herdern line from Breisach 208.3 Freiburg (Breisgau) Hbf Höllentalbahn to Donaueschingen 212.5 Freiburg-St. Georgen Rail freight bypass from Freiburg Gbf 214.6 Leutersberg (junction) 215.7 Ebringen 217.0 Schallstadt 219.9 Norsingen Münster Valley Railway from Münstertal 222.9 Bad Krozingen 224.1 Tunsel 228.8 Heitersheim 231.8 Buggingen 232.8 Hügelheim 237.3 Müllheim To Mulhouse 239.7 Auggen 239.7 Auggen siding 243.2 Schliengen 246.8 Bad Bellingen 250.0 Rheinweiler 252.8 Kleinkems Klotz Tunnel (242 metres) Kirchberg Tunnel (129 metres) 256.4 Istein Hartberg Tunnel (307 metres) 258.3 Efringen-Kirchen 262.2 Eimeldingen 264.3 265.3 Haltingen km change Former railway from Saint-Louis (1878–1937) 267.6 Weil am Rhein Terminus of S 5 (Basel) Garden Railway to Lörrach S 5 267.6 German/Swiss border 270.7 Basel Bad Bf Basel Trams Wiese Valley Railway to Zell S 6 Connecting line to Basel SBB and Olten S 6 Upper Rhine Railway to Konstanz The Mannheim–Karlsruhe–Basel railway (also known as the Rheintalbahn, German for Rhine Valley Line) is a German railway line from Mannheim via Heidelberg, Karlsruhe and Freiburg im Breisgau to Basel. It is part of the Baden Mainline (German: Badische Hauptbahn).
Contents
History
Date Start of section End of section 12 September 1840 Mannheim Hbf Heidelberg Hbf 10 April 1843 Heidelberg Hbf Karlsruhe Hbf 1 May 1844 Karlsruhe Hbf Rastatt 6 May 1844 Rastatt Baden-Oos 1 June 1844 Baden-Oos Offenburg 1 August 1845 Offenburg Freiburg Hbf 1 June 1847 Freiburg Hbf Müllheim (Baden) 15 June 1847 Müllheim Schliengen 8 November 1848 Schliengen Efringen 22 January 1851 Efringen Haltingen 1855 Haltingen Basel The line was financed and built by the Grand Duchy of Baden State Railway (Großherzogliche Badische Staatsbahn). The first section between Mannheim and Heidelberg was opened in 1840, and it was completed in several sections to Basel in 1855.
The line was originally built to 1600 mm broad gauge, but since the surrounding countries built their railways to standard gauge (1,435 mm) the line was converted to standard gauge between 1854 and 1855.
Since Schwetzingen and Hockenheim missed by the line through Heidelberg, another line was opened in 1870 on the Mannheim–Schwetzingen–Graben–Eggenstein–Karlsruhe route. A shorter and more direct line from Graben to Karlsruhe via Blankenloch was added in 1895 as a strategic railway. This converted the Karlsruhe–Eggenstein–Graben section of the old line into a branch line, now known as the Hardt Railway and partly incorporated into the Karlsruhe Stadtbahn.
In the northern section between Mannheim and Karlsruhe there are two different lines, the Mannheim–Graben-Neudorf–Karlsruhe line (the Baden Mainline as such) as well as the Mannheim–Heidelberg–Bruchsal–Durlach–Karlsruhe line (the Baden-Kurpfalz Railway). Particularly after World War I it became a major line for international traffic. Beginning in the 1950s,the Rhine Valley line was progressively electrified, with the whole line fully electrified by the middle of 1958.
Under a German-Swiss convention, the entire line was supposed to be converted to at least four lines by 2008, so that it can serve as the main northern approach route to the new Gotthard Base Tunnel line to Italy. Deutsche Bahn is building a high-speed line for this project from Karlsruhe to Basel, including new and upgraded sections.
Between Karlsruhe and Rastatt two lines run relatively near each other, effectively providing four tracks. The double-track section between Rastatt station and Rastatt-Niederbühl is to be widened to four lines, probably by the construction of a parallel tunnel. Between Rastatt Niederbühl and Offenburg two new high-speed tracks have been completed next to the old double-track line. The Katzenberg Tunnel between Freiburg and Basel is currently under construction to avoid a narrow, winding section between the Rhine and the Isteiner Klotz hills. The remaining sections between Offenburg, Freiburg and the Katzenbergtunnel are still being planned.
Operations
The Rhine Valley line is today one of the most important lines of Germany both for passenger and goods traffic, including international traffic to and from Switzerland and France. The main railway stations are Mannheim, Heidelberg, Karlsruhe, Offenburg, Freiburg and Basel Bad. Other stations are Baden-Baden, Rastatt und Bruchsal.
Since December 2003, line S3 of the Rhein-Neckar S-Bahn has operated on the Mannheim–Karlsruhe section of line and S4 (Speyer–Bruchsal) on the (Speyer–Karlsruhe) section. Lines S31, S32, S4 and S41 of the Stadtbahn Karlsruhe operate between Bruchsal and Achern.
At both ends of the line one the largest marshalling yards in Europe: Mannheim marshalling yard and Basel SBB marshalling yard in Muttenz. The other marshalling yards of this line in Heidelberg, Karlsruhe, Offenburg, Freiburg im Breisgau and Basel Badischer Bahnhof have been closed.
Karlsruhe–Basel high speed line
On 21 January 1987 the Federal Minister of Transport Werner Dollinger wrote to Deutsche Bundesbahn agreeing to the construction a new line from Karlsruhe to Offenburg and Basel as part of the 1985 federal transport plan. The costs was estimated at the time to be about 2.3 billion D Mark and building should have begun by the end of 1987. Once finished travel time between Hamburg and Basel was expected to be reduced by over two hours to five and a half hours. The maximum speed between Karlsruhe and Offenburg would have been 250 km/h and 200 km/h between Offenburg and Basel.[1]
In March 1993 the first section, between Bühl and Achern (9 km) was put into service.[2]
The current plan of the project manager, DB ProjektBau, is the continued development of the line as the ‘’’Neu- und Ausbaustrecke Karlsruhe–Basel’’’ (ie a mixture of new high-speed line and upgraded line). This line forms the most important northern access route to the Swiss AlpTransit project and is therefore part of a bilateral convention for an increase in the efficiency in rail transport between Switzerland and Germany.
Between Appenweier and Karlsruhe the line is also part of the Magistrale for Europe from Paris to Budapest, which is supported by the European Union as part of its Trans-European Networks.
The federal transport plan forecast that there would be 38 long-distance trains daily each way in the Offenburg–Basel section. It forecast that there would be 137 daily goods trains running from north to south and 147 daily goods trains running from south to north.[3]
Construction arrangements
The project is arranged into nine sections:
- Section 1: Karlsruhe–Rastatt-Süd (km 60.66–100.87): 24.3 km (planned)
- Section 2: Rastatt-Süd–Sinzheim (km 100.87–114.37): 13.5 km (open)
- Section 3: Bühl–Ottersweier (km 114.37–121.75): 7.4 km (open)
- Section 4: Achern–Sasbach (km 121.75–130.53): 7.8 km (open)
- Section 5: Renchen–Appenweier (km 130.52–140.16): 9.6 km (open)
- Section 6: Appenweier–Offenburg (km 140.16–145.48): 5.3 km (open)
- Section 7: Offenburg–Herbolzheim (km 145.48–178.00): 32.6 km (planned)
- Section 7.1: Offenburg Süd–Hohberg (about 8.7 km): the proposal is to build new tracks for 250 km/h close to current line,[4] in the summer of 2008 46,000 private objections were received[5] and the planning process has not been completed.
- Section 7.2: Hohberg–Friesenheim (km 154.200 to 161.200): the proposal is to build new tracks for 250 km/h close to current line and Friesenheim station is to be rebuilt. The planning process is not complete.
- Section 7.3: Lahr–Mahlberg (km 161–172): the proposal is to build new tracks for 250 km/h on the western side of the current line.[6] Planning approval is expected in 2011.
- Section 7.4: Ettenheim–Herbolzheim (km 172.1–178.0): the proposal is to build new tracks for 250 km/h on the western side of the current line, including the rebuilding of Ringsheim and Herbolzheim stations. The planning process is not complete.
- Section 8: Kenzingen–Heitersheim (km 178.00–222.40): 44.4 km (planned), this involves a bypass for freight trains to the west of Freiburg, generally along the A 5 autobahn, including the Mengener Tunnel (1,956 m), designed for 160km/h. Passenger trains will run on the current route through Freiburg. The planning process is not complete.
- Section 9: Buggingen–Basel (km 222.40–271.61): 37.4 km (under construction):
- Section 9.0: Buggingen–Auggen: planning process is not complete.
- Section 9.1: Auggen–Haltingen this 21 km-long section, including the 9.4 km-long Katzenberg Tunnel, is under construction and is expected to be put in service in December 2011.
- Section 9.2: Haltingen-Weil am Rhein, planning approval for this 5 km-long section on the northen edge of Basel was achieved in 2010[7] and construction has started.
- Section 9.3: Basel, planning process has not been completed.
The line between Rastatt south and Offenburg has a speed limit of 250 km/h. This speed limit will also apply to the sections of new line between Offenburg and Kenzingen and between Buggingen and Basel. Although, new lines in Germany are now planned to allow 300 km/h running, the uncompleted sections of the Karlsruhe–Basel lines are continuing to be built on alignments suitable for 250 km/h running because little time-savings would be achieved with higher speeds.[3]
The building of two additional tracks in the Karlsruhe/Rastatt Offenburg section began from the Achern end in 1987. The planning approval process commenced in the Solingen-Basel section in February 1988.[8]
Time frame
Originally the project was to have been completed in 2008, in accordance with an agreement with Switzerland. By 12 December 2004, sections 2-6, from Rastatt-Süd to Offenburg, were complete, and other sections were under construction, notably the Katzenberg tunnel. The remaining sections were still in the planning phase. With Federal Budget cuts the project will now not be completed until 2020.[9] The Federal Government has indicated that it intends to make funds available for further sections as planning approvals are achieved.[3]
Cost and finances
According to unofficial estimates the cost of the project is about 4.6 billion.[10] In 2006 about euro 108 million was invested in it.[11]
Notes
- ^ Meldung Bau der ABS/NBS Karlsruhe–Basel genehmigt. In: Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau. 36, Nr. 1/2, 1987, S. 102 (German)
- ^ Meldung Erster Abschnitt der Neubaustrecke Karlsruhe–Basel fertig. In Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau. 42, No. 5, 1993, S. 361 (German)
- ^ a b c "Antwort der Bundesregierung auf die Kleine Anfrage der Abgeordneten Winfried Hermann, Alexander Bonde, Kerstin Andreae, weiterer Abgeordneter und der Fraktion BÜNDNIS 90/DIE GRÜNEN, Bundestags-Drucksache 16/5037" (in German). 2007-04-16. http://dipbt.bundestag.de/dip21/btd/16/050/1605037.pdf. Retrieved 2009-02-18.
- ^ DB ProjektBau (Hrsg.): Ausbau- und Neubaustrecke Karlsruhe–Basel: Planfeststellungsabschnitt 7.1: Offenburg Süd–Hohberg. 12 page Brochure with status of December 2008, Karlsruhe, (PDF-Datei, 2,0 MB).
- ^ Regierungspräsidium Freiburg: Aus- und Neubau der Rheintalbahn: Erste Bewertung des Regierungspräsidiums Freiburg im Anhörungsverfahren für Offenburg: Antragstrasse der Bahn in der vorgelegten Form nicht genehmigungsfähig. Press release of 18 January 2011.
- ^ DB ProjektBau (ed.): Ausbau- und Neubaustrecke Karlsruhe–Basel: Planfeststellungsabschnitt 7.3: Lahr–Mahlberg. 12 page brochure with status of December 2008, Karlsruhe (PDF-file, 1.7 MB)
- ^ Deutsche Bahn AG: Aus- und Neubaustrecke Karlsruhe - Basel: Planfeststellungsbeschluss für Haltingen - Weil am Rhein kann sofort umgesetzt werden. Press release of 11 February 2010, (PDF-file, 1.0 MB)
- ^ Jahresrückblick 1988. In Die Bundesbahn 1/1989, S. 63 (German)
- ^ "400 Millionen Euro für weiteren Aus- und Neubau der Bahnstrecke Karlsruhe–Basel" (in German) (PDF) (Press release). Deutsche Bahn. 15 September 2010. http://www.karlsruhe-basel.de/index.php/pressemitteilungen.html?file=tl_files/dokumente/Pressemiteilungen/Pressemitteilung_15_09_2010.pdf. Retrieved 2 September 2011.
- ^ Holzhey, Michael (31 May 2005). "Wachstumskerne der Schiene – Investitionsschwerpunkte der Zukunft". BDZ Workshop. http://www.promobilitaet.de/downloads/050531_vortrag_holzhey.pdf. Retrieved 2007-06-29. (German)
- ^ Investitionsbilanz 2006 der DB AG Eurailpress of 2 January 2007 (German)
References
- Helmut Röth: Auf Schienen zwischen Odenwald und Pfalz. Fotografien 1955-1976. Ludwigshafen am Rhein, Verlag Pro Message. 2006. 168 pages. ISBN 3-934845-18-5. (German)
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Categories:- Railway lines in Baden-Württemberg
- High-speed railway lines in Germany
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