Brunswick Southern Railway

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Börßum – Kreiensen
Route number (DB) : 1940
Course book section (DB) : 358
Route length: 105.8 km
Gauge : 1435 mm ( standard gauge )
Dual track : Neuekrug-Hahausen-Kreiensen
(formerly continuous)
   
from Jerxheim
   
from Braunschweig
Stop, stop
45.3 Börßum (formerly Bf)
   
to Osterwieck
   
to Bad Harzburg
Bridge over watercourse (medium)
Oker
Stop, stop
47.9 Werlaburgdorf
Road bridge
Federal motorway 36
Stop, stop
51.3 Gielde
Station, station
55.8 Small warning
   
Big warning
   
from Braunschweig
Station, station
60.5 Salzgitter bath
   
from Goslar
Station, station
64.7 Salzgitter-Ringelheim
   
to Hildesheim
Bridge over watercourse (medium)
Innermost
   
72.1 Lutter am Barenberge
   
from Goslar
Station without passenger traffic
79.2 Neuekrug- Hahausen
   
from Derneburg
Station, station
86.2 Seesen
   
to Herzberg
   
92.2 Ildehausen
Road bridge
Federal motorway 7
   
94.3 Harriehausen
   
from Bodenburg
Station, station
100.0 Bad Gandersheim
Plan-free intersection - below
High-speed line from Hanover to Würzburg
   
103.7 Orxhausen
   
from Hanover
Station, station
105.8 Kreiensen
   
to Osterode
   
to Kassel
Route - straight ahead
to Holzminden

Swell:

The Braunschweigische Südbahn was built by the Herzoglich Braunschweigische Staatseisenbahn as a connection between its Braunschweig – Bad Harzburg line and the Hanover Southern Railway . It leads through the northwestern Harz foreland from Börßum via Salzgitter , Ringelheim and Seesen to Kreiensen .

In 1956, a shorter connection to Braunschweig was created with the Braunschweig – Salzgitter Bad railway line and connected to the Braunschweig – Kreiensen railway line with this line .

traffic

The station Kreiensen with a regional train to Goslar
Salzgitter-Bad station building, view from the north, d. H. the track side
Station building in Seesen

Today it is mainly used for regional traffic, but there is also little freight traffic . With a few exceptions, there is no longer any continuous local transport on the route. In the eastern part it is used every hour by the regional train line Braunschweig-Seesen- Herzberg am Harz . Here, a train crossing takes place at the usual minute of symmetry just before half an hour in Salzgitter-Ringelheim. The western part of the route is served by the two regional train lines Bad Harzburg – Seesen – Kreiensen and Bad Harzburg – Seesen – Kreiensen – Göttingen, each two-hourly, which together, however, do not form an hourly service; however, a direct change to the metronome from Hanover is possible for the journeys to Kreiensen, which is not possible for the journeys to Göttingen. You can only change between the two lines of the Braunschweigische Südbahn at Seesen station, although the transfer time of 15–45 minutes is rather unattractive, so that on the Bad Harzburg – Herzberg route and back, the route via Ringelheim is longer but faster. There are normally Lint - railcars used (series 648) which, if Alstom were produced in Salzgitter. In terms of tariffs, the route from Braunschweig to Seesen is part of the Braunschweig Region regional tariff and from Seesen to Kreiensen is part of the Southern Lower Saxony transport association .

history

In the Brunswick - Hanover State Treaty of 1837, which regulated the construction of the Braunschweig – Bad Harzburg railway line , a basic agreement had been reached that both states would jointly endeavor to establish a connection to the south. Another contract followed 15 years later. This allowed Braunschweig to build the Hannöversche Südbahn over the Braunschweigische Kreiensen. In return, Hanover allowed the construction of a railway line from Börßum (in Braunschweig) via Ringelheim (in Hanover) to Seesen (in Braunschweig). From there a construction via Harriehausen (again Hanoverian) to Kreiensen was agreed, where both lines were connected. The line was opened on August 5, 1856; the Hanover line to Kassel was already open three months earlier .

The line developed well, in 1865 the Kreiensen – Altenbeken railway was put into operation as a western connection towards the Ruhr area. 1868 was followed by the connection of Börßum after Jerxheim at the former rail link Braunschweig Wolfenbüttel -Jerxheim- Oschersleben - Magdeburg . This connection had become an important east-west route, with traffic in the direction of Göttingen – Frankfurt being stronger than that in the direction of the Ruhr. The Herzberg – Seesen railway line , which was connected in 1878, did not meet expectations.

After the division of Germany , the traffic flows changed. All railway lines that crossed the inner-German border between Helmstedt ( Braunschweig – Magdeburg railway ) and Walkenried ( southern Harz line ) were interrupted, including the connections from Magdeburg via Eilsleben and Oschersleben to Jerxheim. To this end, a better transport connection for the Salzgitter area was sought. In 1956, a direct connection from Salzgitter-Bad to Braunschweig was opened by closing a gap to Salzgitter-Drütte , and from Leiferde to Drütte, the new route Braunschweig – Derneburg had been in existence since the early 1940s .

The railway line is not electrified and is now a single track from Salzgitter-Drütte to Neuekrug- Hahausen . Until Neuekrug-Hahausen it still functions as a main line . It belongs to the "Harz-Weser network" and is to be remotely controlled by an ESTW in Göttingen in the future.

Planning

As part of the northern Harz concept, the regional association for the greater Braunschweig area is examining various offer concepts for the Goslar - Braunschweig connection. One variant is to relocate the RB 43 line, which today runs from Goslar via Vienenburg to Braunschweig. This is to run between Salzgitter-Ringelheim and Braunschweig every half hour to the RB 46 from Herzberg. A double-track expansion between Salzgitter-Bad and Salzgitter-Ringelheim is compared with a new Ringelheim curve to be built. At Ringelheim station, an extension of the pedestrian underpass is also being examined so that the low entry speeds caused by the passenger crossings can be eliminated.

literature

  • Josef Högemann: Railways in the Harz (I), Volume 1: The State Railways . Kenning Verlag, Nordhorn 1995, ISBN 3-927587-43-5 .

Individual evidence

  1. DB Netze - Infrastructure Register
  2. Railway Atlas Germany . 9th edition. Schweers + Wall, Aachen 2014, ISBN 978-3-89494-145-1 .
  3. ^ Regional Association Greater Braunschweig, Committee for Regional Transport, Item 2: Local transport plan for the greater Braunschweig area - draft, April 24, 2019, pp. 143, 151.