- Plauen–Cheb Line
The Plauen–Cheb Line is a mainline railway in
Saxony ,Germany and theCzech Republic , which was originally built and operated by the Kgl. Sächsischen Staatseisenbahnen. It runs fromPlauen imVogtland throughWeischlitz , Adorf undBad Brambach over the national border toCheb (also known as "Eger").History
Planning and Construction
The origins of the present mainline between Plauen–Cheb stem from the Vogtländischen Staatseisenbahn von
Herlasgrün throughFalkenstein/Vogtl. and Oelsnitz to Eger, which opened in November 1865. A direct track from Plauen to Bohemia was planned, and in October 1871 work started on the tracks from Plauen to Oelsnitz.To solve the height difference between the Sächsisch-Bayrischen Eisenbahn and the valley bottom of the Weißen Elster much earth working was needed.In Plauen a large arched viaduct was constructed over the Syra, and on
1 November 1874 , the twin-tracked section was opened.Operation
The section from Plauen–Eger developed into the most important route from
Mitteldeutschland andThüringen to Bohemia.The Express Trains fromDresden –München used the tracks as it was shorter than the route through Hof. After the First World War when Czechoslavakia was formed, the whole line remained in the control of the Kgl. Sächsischen Staatseisenbahnen and the subsequentDeutsche Reichsbahn .During World War 2
After the
Anschluss or annexation ofSudetenland in Autumn 1938 theVojtanov -Františkovy Lázně section became double track. At the end of the Second World War, the line was the target of heavy American bombing. On8 April 1945 , the station at Cheb was severely bombed so that rail traffic was no longer possible. Photographs from May 1945 show the impact of the bomb explosions and the severely damaged locomotives. On12 April 1945 the Eger viaduct was damaged. Till the end of the war the Plauen Obere Bahnhof was attacked and almost totally destroyed.Post War
At the end of the war on
9 July 1945 , the section in the Czech Republic passed over to the Tschechoslowakische Staatsbahn ČSD. No compensation was received. The tracks in the German section were given as war reparations to the Soviet Union, and the second track was removed. The Eger viaduct was replaced with a temporary bridge which remained in place until19 May 1951 when the bridge had been rebuilt.Cross border goods traffic resumed in 1957, and passenger trains in the Czech section between
Plesná (previously Fleißen) and Cheb. From the start of the 1960s crossborder passenger trains resumed, then an expressDR Baureihe VT 18.16 Karlex fromBerlin toKarlovy Vary . The goods traffic regained its importance, and the ČSD build a new border station at Vojtanov.From the beginning of the 1980s the Czech section was electrified to the normal southern standard of 25 kV 50 Hz. The tracks between Vojtanov and Cheb went live17 October 1983 . The Deutsche Reichsbahn began to double the tracks in the 1970s, and the section Pirk–Adorf and Raun–Bad Brambach were completed by the end of the 1980s.Though the line is principally used by Regional Express trains there is still a need for some goods traffic. Since 1997Vogtlandbahn has operated local trains from Zwickau–Bad Brambach, and from 2000 the trains have run over the Czech border to Cheb serving all the intermediate stations.RegionalExpress -trains of the Deutschen Bahn ran fromLeipzig toBad Brambach , but on the introduction of the "Karlex", in the mid 1990s there is no longer a need for this service.Future developments
During the 1990s, restoring the the second track through Bad Bambrach was discussed and in the long term this may happen. Similarly, it is possible that the line may be electrified- this was tied to the Leipzig City-Tunnel scheme.
Description of the route
From the Oberer Bahnhof (station) in Plauen, the route uses the tracks of the Leipzig–Hof Line and passes over the Syratalbrücke and reaches the halt on the site of the former Plauen West station. There are seven stations and halts in Plauen, that before July 2008 was not in the Vogtlandkreis. From Kürbitz the tracks run alongside the
Elstertalbahn as far as Weischlitz then follows the Weißen Elster under the motorway bridge that carries theBundesautobahn 72 .From Pirk station, the section becomes doubled tracked, it passes through
Oelsnitz/Vogtl. and on toAdorf/Vogtl. where it joins the tracks of theChemnitz-Aue-Adorf Line . AtBad Elster the track bed leaves the Elstertal and swings through a series of tight curves through the Mittelgebirgs landscape of theElstergebirge . Shortly before Bad Brambach the line passes in and out of the Czech territory.Shortly after
Bad Brambach station the tracks cross the Czech border again and reach the Czech station of Plesná, and again pass over to Germany on the south side of theKapellenberg hills. On a constant gradient the line descends into the Czech border station of Vojtanov. From here , the section is electrified. Shortly after the station there is a junction with the lines from Aš which formed theCheb–Oberkotzau Line .More important is the station at the famous spa town of
Františkovy Lázně , from here there is a express train toPrague and on intoSlovakia .Shortly before the final station in Cheb, the line passes over the imposing Eger viaduct one of the largest bridge works of the Kgl. Sächs. Staatseisenbahnen.
Literature
* Erich Preuß, Rainer Preuß: "Sächsische Staatseisenbahnen." transpress Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, Berlin, 1991
References
This article is sourced from German Wikipedia
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