Berlin – Blankenheim railway line

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Berlin-Charlottenburg-Blankenheim separation center
The Elbe bridge near Barby is the largest engineering structure on the route.
The Elbe bridge near Barby is the largest engineering structure on the route.
Section of the Berlin – Blankenheim railway line
Route
Route number (DB) : 6118 (long-distance train)
6024 (S-Bahn)
Course book section (DB) : 200.7, 207, formerly 258, 335
Route length: 188.1 km
Gauge : 1435 mm ( standard gauge )
Route class : D4
Power system : S-Bahn Berlin: 750 V  =
Power system : Berlin – Wiesenburg: 15 kV 16.7 Hz  ~
Top speed: 160 km / h
BSicon STR.svgBSicon STR.svgBSicon .svg
Berlin light rail
BSicon SBHF.svgBSicon BHF.svgBSicon .svg
11.2 00.0 Berlin-Charlottenburg
BSicon ABZglxr.svgBSicon KRZo.svgBSicon STR + r.svg
to Westend (until 1944), to Halensee
BSicon TSBHFu.svgBSicon KRZo.svgBSicon ABZql.svg
12.6 00.0 Berlin Westkreuz Ringbahn
BSicon KRZu.svgBSicon KRZo.svgBSicon ABZq + lr.svg
Freight tracks of the ring railway
BSicon SBRÜCKE.svgBSicon BRÜCKE1.svgBSicon BRÜCKE1.svg
Federal motorway 100
BSicon ABZgr.svgBSicon STR.svgBSicon STR.svg
to Spandau
BSicon KRZu.svgBSicon ABZgr.svgBSicon STR.svg
to Berlin-Spandau
BSicon SBHF.svgBSicon STR.svgBSicon DST.svg
14.6 00.0 Berlin-Grunewald
BSicon BS2l.svgBSicon BS2lc.svgBSicon BS2r.svg
4.0 Abzw Berlin-Grunewald Gds
BSicon SHST.svgBSicon STR.svg
22.5 00.0 Berlin-Nikolassee (light rail)
BSicon ABZg + l.svgBSicon KRZo.svg
from Zehlendorf
BSicon STR.svgBSicon ABZg + l.svg
Freight track of the Wannseebahn
BSicon BRÜCKE1.svgBSicon BRÜCKE1.svg
Federal motorway 115
BSicon SBHF.svgBSicon BHF.svg
24.1 12.7 Berlin-Wannsee
BSicon BRÜCKE1.svgBSicon BRÜCKE1.svg
Bundesstrasse 1
BSicon eABZgl.svgBSicon eKRZu.svg
to Stahnsdorf (until 1961)
BSicon WBRÜCKE1.svgBSicon WBRÜCKE1.svg
Teltow Canal
BSicon STR + GRZq.svgBSicon STR + GRZq.svg
State border Berlin / Brandenburg
BSicon STRr.svgBSicon ABZgr.svg
16.5 Griebnitzsee Ost to Potsdam
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Railway line Berlin – Magdeburg
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twice crossing the national border
Stop, stop
18.7 Potsdam media city Babelsberg
Bridge over watercourse (medium)
Nuthe
Station, station
21.7 Potsdam-Rehbrücke
   
24.3 Bergholz (b Potsdam) (until 1998) outer ring
   
25.1 Abzw Wilhelmshorst from the outer ring
Stop, stop
25.5 Wilhelmshorst
Bridge (medium)
Bundesstrasse 2
   
from Saarmund
Station, station
28.5 Michendorf
Bridge (medium)
Federal motorway 10
   
after Jüterbog and Seddin Gbf
Station, station
32.6 Seddin
   
from Seddin Gbf
   
34.7 to Potsdam
   
Bypass railway (until 1998)
   
from Potsdam
Station, station
37.9 Beelitz Heilstätten
Road bridge
Federal motorway 9
Station, station
43.9 Borkheide
Railroad Crossing
Bundesstrasse 246
Station, station
52.1 Bridge (mark)
Railroad Crossing
Bundesstrasse 246
Stop, stop
57.9 Baitz
Road bridge
Bundesstrasse 246
Bridge (medium)
Bundesstrasse 102
BSicon .svgBSicon eKRZo.svgBSicon exSTR + r.svg
of Brandenburg
BSicon .svgBSicon ABZg + l.svgBSicon eABZqlr.svg
from Treuenbrietzen
Station, station
65.2 Bad Belzig (until 2011 Belzig)
   
72.7 Borne (Mark) (until 1991)
Station, station
77.8 Wiesenburg (Mark)
Railroad Crossing
Bundesstrasse 107
   
to Rosslau
   
Reetz ( Bk )
   
State border Brandenburg / Saxony-Anhalt
   
Bundesstrasse 246
   
92.9 Nedlitz (until 2003)
   
97.6 Deetz (Kr Zerbst) (until 2003)
   
102.0 Lindau (Anh) (until 2003)
   
Bundesstrasse 184
   
110.2 to Biederitz
   
111.5 Güterglück (until 2003) Biederitz – Trebnitz
   
112.6 from Dessau
   
Flötz ( Bk )
   
Elbe bridge at Barby
   
Conn. Feed mill
Station without passenger traffic
120.2 Barby (passenger train service until 2004)
   
124.4 Abzw Werkleitz to Magdeburg
   
Connection curve (planned) from Magdeburg
Plan-free intersection - above
Magdeburg-Halle
   
126.8 Tornitz junction from Calbe (Saale) Ost
Stop, stop
Calbe (Saale) City (since 2014)
Station, station
130.7 Calbe (Saale) West
   
to Bernburg
   
Federal motorway 14
   
Bundesstrasse 71
   
Bode
   
137.6 Neugattersleben (until 1994)
   
143.9 Rathmannsdorf (Kr Staßfurt) (until 1998)
   
Federal Highway 185
BSicon ABZ + lr.svgBSicon xKRZo.svgBSicon .svg
from Magdeburg and Bernburg
BSicon STRl.svgBSicon xABZg + r.svgBSicon .svg
BSicon .svgBSicon BHF.svgBSicon .svg
147.3 Güsten (formerly Inselbahnhof )
BSicon STR + l.svgBSicon xABZgr.svgBSicon .svg
BSicon WBRÜCKE1.svgBSicon exWBRÜCKE1.svgBSicon .svg
Rocker
BSicon ABZlr.svgBSicon xABZg + r.svgBSicon .svg
150.6 Abzw Giersleben to Aschersleben
Railroad Crossing
Bundesstrasse 6
   
from Aschersleben
Station, station
163.4 Sandersleben (Anh) ( wedge station )
   
to Halle (Saale)
Station, station
169.8 Hettstedt
   
to the copper and brass works (MKM)
   
to Gerbstedt (HHE)
Plan-free intersection - below
Mansfeld mine railway
   
173.2 Siersleben (until 1993)
Bridge (medium)
Bundesstrasse 180 , Bundesstrasse 242
   
At the Klostermansfeld substation
   
from Wippra
Plan-free intersection - below
Mansfeld mine railway
Station, station
179.0 Klostermansfeld (formerly Mansfeld)
   
Mansfeld electric small train
Station without passenger traffic
181.3 Helbra
   
184.8 Hergisdorf
   
from Halle (Saale)
Station without passenger traffic
188.1 Blankenheim separation department
Route - straight ahead
to Sangerhausen

The Berlin – Blankenheim railway line (also: Berlin-Blankenheim Railway or Wetzlar Railway ) is a main line in Berlin , Brandenburg and Saxony-Anhalt , which was originally built as part of the so-called cannon railway between Berlin and Metz . It leads from Berlin-Charlottenburg via Bad Belzig , Güsten , Sandersleben (Anh) to Blankenheim , where it joins the Halle – Hann Münden railway .

The section from Berlin-Charlottenburg to shortly before Potsdam also took over all long-distance and regional traffic from Berlin to Potsdam and Magdeburg after 1945 . The section Wiesenburg -Güsten with the exception of a short section at Barby shut down since 2004 without trains and now.

Bodebrücke near Hohenerxleben

history

General

Until 1945

The line was built between 1877 and 1882 (for more details on the building history, see the article Kanonenbahn ). The aim was to establish a direct and militarily usable connection to the French border bypassing the metropolitan areas. The Berlin – Blankenheim section was the longest new section of the Kanonenbahn that did not use existing lines. The route was chosen so that larger cities were bypassed.

On April 15, 1879, the line from today's Berlin-Grunewald train station to Blankenheim went into operation initially for freight traffic, and on May 15 of the same year for passenger traffic. In the first years of operation, the trains were directed to the Berlin Ringbahn , the passenger trains began and ended in Berlin, initially until 1882 in the Dresden station . The goods traffic was partly led to the north station on Bernauer Strasse, partly also to the Lower Silesian-Märkischer station .

In 1882, the Charlottenburg station went into operation, the trains were now routed via this to the Berlin light rail . Between today's Berlin-Wannsee train station and the junction with the Berlin-Magdeburg railway near Kohlhasenbrück , the line ran parallel to the Wannsee Railway, which opened in 1874, on its own tracks. The section from Charlottenburg to there offered an additional connection from the Stadtbahn to the Berlin-Potsdam-Magdeburg Railway .

The location away from the metropolitan areas proved to be a disadvantage for the Kanonenbahn from the start, which was only able to achieve its intended importance in a few sections. The connections via Magdeburg or Halle / Leipzig always played a greater role for long-distance traffic from Berlin to West and Southwest Germany.

The branch line to Roßlau (left) has started in Wiesenburg (Mark) station since 1923

It was not until 1920 that the first branch of the railway went into operation with the Klostermansfeld – Wippra line. In 1923 the connection from Wiesenburg to Roßlau was opened, where connection to existing lines via Dessau to the south was established. This upgraded the Berlin – Wiesenburg section; Wiesenburg – Güsten lost its importance, however, because in addition to the route via Magdeburg, the connection via Dessau was now also available. Although the Berlin – Blankenheim line was viewed internally as a uniform line and is still today, continuous passenger traffic has been the exception there, especially since 1923.

In 1924 the large marshalling yard in Seddin went into operation. The project had been started before the First World War. Connecting curves from Seddin to the bypass line from Jüterbog to Nauen and a new route from Michendorf to Großbeeren on the Anhalter Bahn were created primarily for freight traffic .

In 1928 the suburban and long-distance tracks were separated between Nikolassee and Wannsee, and in 1937 between Grunewald and Nikolassee. The suburban tracks in the area of ​​the exhibition station (today Westkreuz station ) were given a route that was clearly distant from the long-distance tracks.

Between 1945 and 1990

After the end of the Second World War, the second track was dismantled as a reparation payment to the Soviet Union. In the following years the consequences of the division of Germany made themselves felt. However, through traffic to West Berlin initially remained on the route.

The section between Berlin-Wannsee and Drewitz was used from 1961 to 1989 only for freight traffic to West Berlin.
Southern connecting curve in Güterglück (Barby – Zerbst relation) with mast for the planned electrification

At the end of the 1950s, the last section of the Berlin outer ring between Potsdam and Saarmund was built, which crossed the cannon railway between Rehbrücke and Wilhelmshorst. The Bergholz stop was created as a transfer point for passenger traffic, which was opened on August 18, 1958. A connecting curve to the western outer ring was built for freight traffic. The Kanonenbahn was gradually expanded to double-track again between Berlin and Wiesenburg, and in 1951 the section between Belzig and Wiesenburg was given the second track again.

In 1961 the section Drewitz (now Potsdam Medienstadt Babelsberg) - Berlin-Wannsee was closed to passenger traffic as a result of the construction of the wall . The transit trains from Berlin to the Federal Republic continued via Potsdam city. This section remained in operation for freight traffic.

In the 1980s, an expansion of the connection was planned as an alternative to the congested route via Bitterfeld and Naumburg, at least for freight traffic. The section between Wiesenburg and Nedlitz had already been expanded to double tracks in 1979/80. Electrification was planned, catenary masts were installed in the Güterglück and Blankenheim separation station area, but this was not continued. In Güsten, in connection with the planned electrification of the line from Dessau to Aschersleben, a traction power plant and a converter plant were to be built. Only the marshalling yard in Seddin was connected to the electrical network in 1982 from the Berlin outer ring via Michendorf.

Since 1990

It was not until the early 1990s that the Seddin – Wiesenburg section was electrified. In preparation for the ICE traffic to Berlin, the Berlin Zoologischer Garten – Wannsee – Seddin section was electrified and the Wiesenburg – Güterglück section was restored and electrified, so that the Güterglück – Berlin section was expanded to two tracks from July 3, 1993. During construction work on the Berlin – Magdeburg railway line until December 14, 1995, it was used for ICE and intercity traffic. For this purpose, some sections have been upgraded for a top speed of 160 km / h.

The Wiesenburg – Güsten section then experienced a rapid decline. In 1998 the regional trains between Barby and Güsten were discontinued and instead led to Magdeburg. The class 628 was used as a replacement for the sets of 204 and one car. There was still an Interregio from Berlin via Wernigerode to Aachen and a weekend excursion train from Berlin to Wernigerode. In 1999 these trains were canceled or diverted and there was no traffic on the Barby – Güsten section. The management of the regional railways to Magdeburg did not result in the desired success. In 2002 they were completely discontinued except for two pairs of trains on weekends and on December 13, 2003. At the same time, freight traffic between Wiesenburg and Güterglück was relocated to the Brandenburg – Magdeburg route. The excursion train to Wernigerode, made up of 628s and, in the meantime, 624s , ran on this route for one year before the end was finally sealed on December 11, 2004.

In April 2004, DB Netz applied for the permanent cessation of operations on the Calbe (Saale) West – Güsten and Wiesenburg (Mark) –Güterglück – Barby sections, including the connecting curve to the Güterglück freight station. In the same year, the Federal Railway Authority approved these applications. In October 2012, DB Netz finally applied for the track system to be dismantled in the Calbe (Saale) West – Güsten section.

As a result, almost the entire route from Wiesenburg to Güsten is now closed . Only two short sections at Barby and Calbe still serve local freight traffic or a regional train line. On August 29, 2012, the Barby – Tornitz branch, which was still used for freight traffic, was put out to tender for cost reasons to be taken over by other railway infrastructure companies or to be closed. In the vicinity of Güsten the route had to give way to a bypass road. The Güsten station with its former depot has been significantly reduced.

Between December 2011 and December 2012, the long-distance railway tracks between Berlin-Grunewald and Berlin-Wannsee were completely closed in order to renew these and eight railway overpasses. The costs for this amounted to 23 million euros. In the following year, the overpasses of the parallel S-Bahn in this section were renewed, for which a further 13 million euros were estimated. With the approval of the renewed S-Bahn bridge over the Spanische Allee on August 4, 2014, the work of the project “Complete renovation of S7 West” came to an end.

The new Calbe (Saale) Stadt stop went into operation on December 22, 2014. It was built to increase demand on the route. The costs for this were 160,000 euros.

On the southern part of the route, DB Netz plans to bundle the control in the ESTW Sandersleben. Only the Klostermansfeld and Helbra train stations are affected for the time being.

With federal and state funds, a modernization including barrier-free expansion of the Wilhelmshorst station is planned over the next few years .

In order to create a direct connection between Bernburg and Magdeburg without worrying about it in Calbe (Saale) Ost, the construction of the connecting curve Calbe to the Magdeburg – Halle railway line is planned in the long term. However, this was postponed for cost reasons.

The state of Saxony-Anhalt is also considering reactivating the Barby – Güterglück section to relieve the Magdeburg node. At the request of the state, the section of the route was included in the draft of the service concept for Germany-Takt in order to relieve the Elbe crossings in Magdeburg and to create redundancy against the background of the Elbe flood disasters. There are also plans to run the RE 13 regional express line no longer via Gommern, but via Schönebeck, Barby and Güterglück. The poor public transport development of the entire Barby area would improve significantly.

passenger traffic

In the middle is the S-Bahn line to Wannsee with the sidings out of town at Westkreuz station , framed by the branching S-Bahn tracks towards Spandau , on the bridge a transit train to the Hamburger Bahn , on the right the track to the exhibition center

Until the Wiesenburg – Roßlau connection was completed, there was a small amount of long-distance traffic over the route. In 1914, for example, a continuous pair of express trains ran between Berlin and Frankfurt (Main) on the route; the route between Güsten and Blankenheim was used by other trains from Magdeburg.

In 1934 three long-distance train pairs ran in sections on the route, two express trains Berlin - Nordhausen - Kassel - Wiesbaden (one via Magdeburg - Güsten, one via Dessau - Güsten) and one express train Berlin - Frankfurt (Main) via Dessau - Güsten.

In the 1980s, the section to Wiesenburg (and on towards Dessau) was used by an express train Rostock - Potsdam - Karl-Marx-Stadt (Chemnitz), three express trains Berlin-Schöneweide - Dessau - Güsten - Aschersleben and one express train Brandenburg - Drive on Potsdam - Leipzig and the respective counter trains. In addition, there were occasional seasonal trains to the Baltic Sea as well as the transit trains that were closed to inland traffic and used the route between Beelitzer Kreuz and Wiesenburg. The passenger trains started and ended in Drewitz and in Bergholz had a connection to the Sputnik trains to Berlin via the Berlin outer ring . The dense suburban traffic ended in Beelitz Heilstätten; beyond that, the offer to Belzig and on via Wiesenburg to Dessau was comparatively dense.

Between Güsten and Wiesenburg (mostly on to Belzig), four to five passenger trains commuted a day, plus some amplifiers from Güsten to Güterglück or Nedlitz. Long-distance traffic ran only briefly and without traffic on individual sections of this route, around 1979 a D-Zug Leipzig - Cologne over the southern connection curve Güterglück and Barby to Magdeburg or in 1988/89 a train Magdeburg - Berlin over the northern curve in Güterglück and Wiesenburg.

The Güsten – Blankenheim – Sangerhausen section was used by three pairs of express trains from Magdeburg to Erfurt, plus a few passenger trains. In particular on the southern section behind Klostermansfeld the offer was very low.

Long-distance trains have been gradually reduced since 2006. Since the opening of the Tiergarten tunnel in Berlin, long-distance trains have been running via Lutherstadt Wittenberg; the last two intercity trains via Dessau were discontinued in December 2007. Since then, only a few night trains have run via Dessau.

In the 2019 timetable year, the Berlin – Bad Belzig – Wiesenburg section will be served by Regional Express trains on the RE 7 line to Dessau every hour, using Talent 2 vehicles . Traffic is denser in the Berlin area. Between Michendorf and Seddin or between Wannsee and Michendorf the lines RB 23 and RB 33 and in Berlin area also the entire S-Bahn, regional and long-distance traffic to Potsdam on this route.

Regional Express trains on the Magdeburg – Erfurt line run between Güsten and Sangerhausen every two hours.

Accidents

Train locomotive 229 113 of IC 995 after the head-on collision in Berlin-Wannsee, 1993

On February 7, 1918, the coupling between two cars in a military train between Sandersleben and Güsten broke . The rear part of the train rolled downhill and collided in front of the Sandersleben station with a freight train that was traveling from Halle to Aschersleben . 18 people died, 35 were also injured.

On April 9, 1993, the most serious railway accident in Berlin's post-war history occurred on the line. During a phase of construction work, an intercity and express train collided head - on at Berlin-Wannsee station due to an error by the dispatcher there . Three people died.

Others

The route between Barby and Güterglück was closed in 1993/94 due to construction work. There was replacement rail traffic. However, since there is no road bridge over the Elbe in this area , the Barby ferry was used.

In the 2003/04 timetable, the Berlin - Wernigerode excursion train, which ran twice a week (Saturday and Sunday), was the only train on the Wiesenburg – Güsten route. On the double-track section to Güterglück, both tracks were used on the outward and return journey. For these trains around eight signal boxes and barrier posts had to be staffed.

In the meantime, this section has been closed, one of the few cases of the closure of a double-track electrified main line , which was also only prepared for ICE traffic in the early 1990s due to the expansion of the connection via Magdeburg.

literature

  • Peter Bley: 100 years of the Wetzlar Railway . In: Berliner Verkehrsblätter, Volume 26, No. 3–4 (March / April 1979), pp. 51–108.
  • Wolfgang Klee: The cannon train Berlin – Metz. Stuttgart 1998. ISBN 3-613-71082-X
  • Jürgen Krebs: Kanonenbahn Berlin – Sangerhausen. Between Fläming and Mansfelder Land. Herdam Fotoverlag, Gernrode 2004. ISBN 3-933178-09-6

Web links

Commons : Berlin – Blankenheim railway line  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. a b Surrender of railway infrastructure. Route: Barby (including) –Abzw Tornitz (exclusively), announcement from August 29, 2012 to November 29, 2012. (PDF) (No longer available online.) DB Netze, August 29, 2012, formerly in the original ; Retrieved August 29, 2012 .  ( Page no longer available , search in web archives )@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / fahrweg.dbnetze.com
  2. Jürgen Krebs, Kanonenbahn Berlin – Sangerhausen. Between Fläming and Mansfelder Land , Herdam Fotoverlag, Gernrode 2004, ISBN 3-93317-809-6 , p. 18.
  3. Jürgen Krebs, Kanonenbahn Berlin – Sangerhausen. Between Fläming and Mansfelder Land , Herdam Fotoverlag, Gernrode 2004, ISBN 3-93317-809-6 , p. 108.
  4. Jürgen Krebs, Kanonenbahn Berlin – Sangerhausen. Between Fläming and Mansfelder Land , Herdam Fotoverlag, Gernrode 2004, ISBN 3-93317-809-6 , p. 51.
  5. Jürgen Krebs, Kanonenbahn Berlin – Sangerhausen. Between Fläming and Mansfelder Land , Herdam Fotoverlag, Gernrode 2004, ISBN 3-93317-809-6 , p. 47.
  6. Jürgen Krebs, Kanonenbahn Berlin – Sangerhausen. Between Fläming and Mansfelder Land , Herdam Fotoverlag, Gernrode 2004, ISBN 3-93317-809-6 , p. 87.
  7. a b c printed matter 16/7206. (PDF; 102 KiB) German Bundestag, November 15, 2007, accessed on October 30, 2012 .
  8. ^ Railway line (6118) Berlin-Charlottenburg - Blankenheim, section Calbe / S. West - Güsten, railway km 131.800 to railway km 146.800: "Replacement without replacement of various railway facilities". (PDF; 28 KiB) (No longer available online.) Federal Railway Office , June 13, 2013, formerly in the original ; Retrieved July 28, 2013 .  ( Page no longer available , search in web archives )@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.eba.bund.de
  9. ^ Heinrich G. Behrend: The most prominent route closure . In: Berliner Verkehrsblätter . No. 3 , 2012, p. 46 f .
  10. News in brief - S-Bahn . In: Berliner Verkehrsblätter . September 2014, p. 178 .
  11. Calbe (Saale) city. In: Saxony-Anhalt station program. Retrieved April 16, 2016 .
  12. Andreas Pinkert: Bahn creates another Christmas present. In: Volksstimme . December 23, 2014, accessed April 16, 2016 .
  13. Inclusion of the Klostermansfeld and Helbra train stations in ESTW Sandersleben. (No longer available online.) Federal Railway Office , formerly in the original ; accessed on June 7, 2017 .  ( Page no longer available , search in web archives )@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.eba.bund.de
  14. Modernization push for small train stations (including list of measures). Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure , June 17, 2016, accessed on June 17, 2016 .
  15. NASA GmbH: "Saxony-Anhalt invests in the expansion of the Bernburg - Magdeburg railway line" ( Memento from March 18, 2014 in the Internet Archive ), July 6, 2010. Accessed on March 18, 2014
  16. The train stop at the city center is urgently required. In: Volksstimme. November 26, 2013, accessed April 16, 2015 .
  17. Soon again directly from Merseburg to Leipzig? In: Mitteldeutsche Zeitung. February 18, 2019, accessed March 8, 2019 .
  18. ^ Line Barby - Güterglück (- Schönebeck) . In: Bahn-Report . No. 3 , 2020, p. 40 .
  19. ^ Deutsche Reichsbahn, Kursbuch 1988/89
  20. ^ Hans Joachim Ritzau: Railway disasters in Germany. Splinters of German history . Vol. 1: Landsberg-Pürgen 1979, p. 107.