History of the tram in Berlin
The history of the tram in Berlin begins in 1865 with the opening of a horse-drawn tram from the Brandenburg Gate to Charlottenburg . In 1881 the world's first electric tram drove in Groß-Lichterfelde (a district of Berlin since 1920 ) . By the beginning of the 20th century, the network was converted to electrical operation. By 1930 it had a route length of more than 630 kilometers and over 90 lines were operated. In 1929 all transport companies merged to form the BVG . When the city was divided after the Second World War , the BVG became a western and an eastern company on August 1, 1949, which were reunited in 1992. All tram lines in West Berlin were shut down by 1967 . With the exception of three routes built after reunification, Berlin trams in the 21st century will only run in the eastern part of the city .
From the beginning to the BVG
Horse buses
Local public transport in Berlin is the oldest in Germany. As early as 1825, Simon Kremser's horse-drawn buses drove from the Brandenburg Gate to Charlottenburg, and later also from other gates to the surrounding area. The first bus line within the Berlin customs wall was operated from 1840 by Kommerzienrat Israel Moses Henoch , who had been a cab entrepreneur since 1815 , with three buses between Alexanderplatz and Potsdamer Bahnhof , but without a fixed timetable. In 1847 the Concessionierte Berliner Omnibus Compagnie began setting up five lines and fixed timetables. In 1864 there were 36 bus companies in Berlin.
Horse trams
The age of the tram began in Germany on June 22, 1865. The Berlin Horse Railway Company E. Besckow started operations. The first line ran from the Brandenburg Gate via Berliner Straße (today the axis Straße des 17. Juni , Otto-Suhr-Allee ) to Charlottenburg to the former horse station at the intersection of Spandauer Damm and Sophie-Charlotten-Straße. It was extended on August 28 via Dorotheenstrasse to Kupfergraben on Museum Island . The terminal is still in operation (as of winter 2019).
As before with the horse-drawn bus, other entrepreneurs followed the new development and built horse-drawn tram routes in all parts of the city. In 1873 a line from Rosenthaler Platz to Gesundbrunnen opened , operated by the newly founded Great Berlin Horse Railway, which later became the dominant transport company in Berlin under the name Great Berlin Tram (GBS).
The electric
On May 16, 1881, Werner von Siemens opened the world's first electric tram in what was then Groß-Lichterfelde , a part of Berlin's Steglitz district only 39 years later . Siemens described it as an " elevated railway taken from the pillars and girders " because its actual goal was to build an electrical elevated railway network in Berlin. In order to convince the hesitant political decision-makers of the advantages of the electric drive, Siemens chose the former material railway in Lichterfelde as a demonstration object. Since the concerns of the Berlin magistrate were not allayed, Siemens was not able to put the first Berlin elevated railway into operation until 21 years later.
The electric tram in Lichterfelde received its power from the tracks, so the route had to be fenced in for safety reasons. The meter-gauge route ran from the Lichterfelde train station to the Prussian main cadet institute in Finckensteinallee. A trip cost more than the average hourly wage at the time.
In the following year, on May 1, 1882, electrical operation began on an existing horse-drawn railway line in Charlottenburg, here with a two-pole overhead line. In addition to technical problems, there were also reservations of the Berlin city administration (and the emperor) against overhead lines. That is why accumulators were also used as a power source, in 1886 on a trial basis in Charlottenburg between the horse station and Lützowplatz, in the longer term from 1895 from Charlottenburg to the Brandenburg Gate from 1897 even to the Kupfergraben.
The Berlin Horse Railway signed a contract with Siemens & Halske in 1893 for the electrification of its route network in Berlin and Charlottenburg. In the same year Siemens & Halske entered into negotiations with the municipality of Pankow in order to be able to tackle another electric railway. This railway was on 10 September 1895 between the Prince Avenue corner Badstraße in Gesundbrunnen and Broad Street in Pankow in operation and was the first electric tram within the then city limits of Berlin.
The GBS opened its first "Electric" on May 1, 1896; the route led from the city center to the site of the trade exhibition in the municipality of Treptow . In 1899 the line, which had previously been operated with battery cars, also received an overhead line. In 1901 all lines were equipped with overhead lines. On August 21, 1902, the last inner-city horse-drawn tram line was converted to electric operation, and the use of battery-powered railcars ended in the same year.
tunnel
From December 18, 1899, it was possible to travel underground in Berlin even before the opening of the subway : the 450-meter-long Spree tunnel between Treptow and Stralau , shown at the 1896 trade fair , was handed over to the tram. The tunnel had construction defects and had to be closed on February 15, 1932. After being badly damaged by a bomb during the war and flooded by Spree water, it was filled in after 1945. The tram had a second tunnel from 1916 to 1951, the Lindentunnel , with which the boulevard Unter den Linden was crossed underground - Kaiser Wilhelm II did not want the boulevard to be defaced by the overhead lines of an electric tram.
Tram companies
The company history of the Berlin tram is complicated. In addition to private companies, which changed frequently due to takeovers , mergers and bankruptcies , the urban and rural communities of Berlin , Spandau , Cöpenick , Rixdorf / Neukölln , Steglitz , Mariendorf , Britz , Niederschönhausen , Friedrichshagen , Heiligensee and French owned Buchholz as well as the Teltow district at least temporarily own municipal tram company.
The most important private operator was the Great Berlin Horse Railway , which was called Great Berlin Tram (GBS) after the start of electrification and which gradually bought up almost all other companies. On December 13, 1920, GBS merged with BESTAG and SSB to form the Berlin tram . In parallel to this merger, the remaining companies agreed on uniform transport tariffs in the course of the 1920s.
opening | Operating company | Track width (in mm) |
taken over on | taken over by | particularities | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
06/22/1865 | BPfE | Berlin horse train | 1435 | 09/26/1894 | BCS | first horse-drawn tram in Germany, experiments with steam operation and battery powered rail cars |
11/01/1871 | Westend Terrain Society H. Quistorp & Co. | 1435 | 1878 | BPfE | Operational management by BPfE | |
07/08/1873 | GBPfE | Great Berlin horse train | 1435 | 01/25/1898 | GBS | Experiments with steam operation and battery railcars |
01/01/1877 | NBPf | New Berlin horse tram company | 1435 | 01/01/1900 | GBS | |
04/01/1879 | GIPfEG | Great International Horse Railroad Company | 1435 | 1886 | GBPfE | Operational management by GBPfE |
05/16/1881 | Electric train in Groß-Lichterfelde | 1000 | March 1895 | ESGL | first electric tram in the world, initially power supply via the rails, 1890/93 conversion to overhead lines | |
06/04/1881 | Horse tram Tegeler Chaussee - Tegel | 1435 | 1881 | GBPfE | Operational management by GBPfE | |
10/18/1882 | CPfE | Cöpenicker Horse Railway | 1435 | 08/11/1903 | SSC | |
06/13/1885 | Horse-drawn railway in the municipality of Rixdorf | 1435 | 01/01/1887 | GBPfE | Operational management by GBPfE | |
05/05/1886 | Berlin steam tram ( Davy, Donath & Co. ) | 1435 | 1888 | BDK | ||
08/06/1887 | Horse-drawn railway of the municipality of Mariendorf | 1435 | 01/01/1888 | GBPfE | Operational management by GBPfE | |
05/18/1888 | WSD | Wilmersdorf - Schmargendorfer steam tram Reymer & Masch | 1435 | 12/22/1888 | BDK | |
07/01/1888 | Groß-Lichterfelde - Seehof - Teltow steam tram | 1435 | 05/31/1891 | DLSTS | ||
1888 | BDK | Berlin steam tram consortium | 1435 | 10/01/1898 | WBV | also operated horse rides |
05/17/1891 | Friedrichshagen tram | 1000 | December 16, 1906 | SSC | in the winter horse business, taken over by the municipality in 1894, electrified with takeover by the SSC and converted to the standard gauge | |
05/31/1891 | DLSTS | Groß-Lichterfelde - Seehof - Teltow - Stahnsdorf steam tram | 1435 | 04/01/1906 | TKB | |
08/01/1891 | Horse-drawn railway in the municipality of Britz | 1435 | 08/01/1891 | GBPfE | ||
06/05/1892 | Spandau tram Simmel, Matzky & Müller | 1000 | 03/17/1896 | SpS | on September 1, 1894 operations management at the Allgemeine Deutsche Kleinbahn-Gesellschaft | |
06/01/1892 | Horse-drawn railway of the community of Niederschönhausen | 1435 | 06/01/1892 | GBPfE | ||
09/26/1894 | BCS | Berlin-Charlottenburg tram | 1435 | 05/15/1919 | GBS | Trials with battery-powered railcars, completion of electrification on October 1, 1900, introduction of line numbers (N – Z) on May 6, 1902 |
03/04/1895 | ESGL | Electric tram Groß-Lichterfelde – Lankwitz – Steglitz – Südende | 1000 | 04/01/1906 | TKB | |
09/10/1895 | Siemens & Halske | 1435 | 07/01/1899 | BESTAG | ||
03/18/1896 | SpS | Spandau tram | 1000/1435 | December 8th, 1920 | GBS | 1906/07 gauge change to 1435 mm |
01/25/1898 | GBS | Big Berlin tram | 1435 | 12/13/1920 | BSt | on May 6, 1902 introduction of line numbers (1-199), completion of electrification on December 15, 1902; Acquired on September 20, 1919 by the Zweckverband Groß-Berlin , also battery operation |
10/01/1898 | WBV | Western Berlin suburban railway | 1435 | 05/15/1919 | GBS | also operated horse trams, completion of electrification on June 19, 1900, introduction of line numbers (A – M) on May 6, 1902 |
07/01/1899 | BESTAG | Berlin electric trams | 1435 | 12/13/1920 | BSt | |
07/01/1899 | SBV | Southern Berlin suburban train | 1435 | 05/15/1919 | GBS | on May 6, 1902 introduction of line numbers (I – V) |
10/21/1899 | Tram Berlin – Hohenschönhausen | 1435 | 12/10/1906 | NBSNO | ||
December 18, 1899 | BO | Berlin East Railways | 1435 | 08/01/1920 | GBS | operated the Spree tunnel |
10/01/1901 | Flb | Flat line of the company for electric elevated and underground railways in Berlin (tram Warschauer Brücke - Central cattle yard) | 1435 | 04/01/1928 | BSBG | on January 1, 1910 sale of the route to the SSB, for building new, later one of the Warsaw bridge to Scharnweber- / belt road to Wagner (today Roedeliusplatz ) in Lichtenberg extended |
08/11/1903 | SSC | Cöpenick municipal tram | 1435 | December 8th, 1920 | GBS | |
July 1904 | Horse-drawn tram in the French-Buchholz community | 1435 | December 19, 1907 | BESTAG | electrification took place when BESTAG took over | |
December 3rd, 1905 | GWB | Tram of the municipality of Steglitz | 1435 | 04/16/1921 | BSt | |
04/01/1906 | TKB | Teltower Kreisbahnen | 1000/1435 | 04/16/1921 | BSt | The DLSTS steam train was not electrified until March 30, 1907 |
12/10/1906 | NBSBO | New Berlin trams northeast | 1435 | 05/03/1910 | NöBV | |
07/01/1908 | SSB | Urban trams Berlin | 1435 | 12/13/1920 | BSt | |
09/30/1908 | SpN | Electric tram Spandau – Nonnendamm | 1435 | 10/01/1914 | SpS | by Siemens & Halske founded |
05/03/1910 | NöBV | Northeast Berlin suburban railway | 1435 | 05/15/1919 | GBS | |
08/07/1910 | Tram of the Johannisthal airfield | 1435 | October 1910 | shut down | last horse tram in the Berlin urban area | |
03/09/1912 | SGU | Schmöckwitz – Grünauer Uferbahn | 1435 | 03/01/1925 | BSBG | Electrification on July 25, 1912 |
05/29/1913 | SGH | Tram of the community Heiligensee an der Havel | 1435 | December 3rd, 1920 | GBS | |
12/13/1920 | BSt | Berlin tram | 1000/1435 | 09/10/1923 | BSBG | 1000 mm sections ex TKB |
01/08/1923 | Spandau-West – Hennigsdorfer Kleinbahn | 1435 | 01/01/1929 | BVG | Operational management by BSt, electrification on November 11, 1929 | |
09/10/1923 | BSBG | Berlin tram company | 1000/1435 | 01/01/1929 | BVG | 1000 mm sections ex TKB |
01/01/1929 | BVG | Berliner Verkehrs-Aktiengesellschaft | 1000/1435 | last meter-gauge lines closed on February 15, 1930 (lines 42 and 97) | ||
01/01/1938 | BVG | Berlin transport companies | 1435 | Conversion into a municipal company |
The table contains in chronological order all companies that operated tram routes in Berlin before the BVG was founded. The background color of the respective line marks the type of traction with which the company started operations (blue = Horse tram, red = Steam train, White = electric train, green = benzene-powered train).
As the Berlin region grew, it was necessary to coordinate local public transport between the individual municipalities and cities. On April 1, 1912, therefore, the special purpose association Greater Berlin was formed by law . In addition to Berlin, this included the cities of Charlottenburg, Wilmersdorf, Schöneberg, Rixdorf (Neukölln), Lichtenberg and Spandau, as well as the districts of Teltow and Niederbarnim . One of the tasks was seen in the coordinated transport policy. At the time the association was founded, the following 15 tram companies existed in this area:
- Private companies
- GBS - Great Berlin Tram and its Subsidiaries
- BO - Berlin East Railways
- BESTAG - Berliner Elektro Straßenbahnen AG
- Flb - flat railway company for electrical elevated and underground railways
- Municipal companies
- SSB - urban trams Berlin
- SSC - Cöpenick municipal tram
- SpS - Spandau Tram
- SpN - Spandau – Nonnendamm electric tram
- SGU - Schmöckwitz – Grünauer Uferbahn
- GWB - tram of the municipality of Steglitz
- TKB - Teltower Kreisbahnen
On October 1, 1920, the united community of Greater Berlin was formed. By the end of the year almost all tram operations in this area had largely been merged. Only the Teltower Kreisbahnen , whose headquarters were still in the Teltow district, were only taken over by the Berlin tram on April 16, 1921 . At the same time the tram of the municipality of Steglitz came to the Berlin tram , whose operating rights were with the TKB. From that day on, there were still the following tram companies in Berlin:
- BSt - Berlin tram
- Flb - flat railway of the company for electric elevated and underground railways (was part of the underground)
- SGU - Schmöckwitz – Grünauer Uferbahn (there was an operational management contract with the AG for railway construction and operation )
By November 5, 1921, all lines of the companies taken over were classified in the BSt line number system.
Tramless day in Berlin
The financial situation of the Berlin tram company established on December 13, 1920, had deteriorated further and further in the following years. The route network taken over from the numerous predecessor companies had not yet been adapted to the economic management from a single source and had numerous sections with insufficient utilization. Over-indebtedness reached a level in September 1923 during the inflation of 1923 that the city of Berlin could no longer bear. The expenditures for wages and operating resources, especially electricity, rose faster and faster. Despite regular wage increases, however, the income was no longer sufficient because the population's purchasing power, adjusted for inflation, fell.
The necessary measures were discussed very controversially in the Berlin city council . According to the plans of the Berlin magistrate , the previously purely municipal company Berliner Straßenbahn should file for bankruptcy in order to be able to dismiss around 7,000 drivers, conductors and workshop workers. In a new private limited company, Berliner Straßenbahn-Betriebsgesellschaft mbH , only around 4,000 workers were to continue to be employed. In addition, it was planned to withdraw from the Reichsmanteltarifvertrag and waive retroactive wage increases. The range of routes should be significantly reduced from around 90 to around 30. The intended reduction of the distance between journeys to initially only 15 minutes on the remaining lines was commented very critically in the daily press.
The city council approved the proposal after heated debates. At the end of Saturday, September 8, 1923, all 89 lines of the Berlin tram were shut down, bankruptcy was declared for this company and the staff were laid off.
On Sunday, September 9, 1923, with the exception of the flat railway and the Uferbahn , there were no trams in Berlin.
This business interruption was necessary in order to convert operations to the new tram operating company under private law . The new company tried to justify the necessity of the change by publishing the previous daily losses. As the Vossische Zeitung reported, the other Berlin transport companies - the omnibus company , the elevated railway and the ring railway of the Reichsbahn - tried to increase their travel offers in order to take over tram passengers. However, the other transport companies could not avoid further increases in ticket tariffs. At the same time, a new transfer tariff was introduced for the tram.
Berlin tram company
On Monday, September 10, 1923, tram traffic - reduced to just 32 lines - was resumed by the newly founded company Berliner Straßenbahn-Betriebs-GmbH (BSBG) . In addition to the announced 15-minute intervals, emergency vehicles with trailers ran on sections. For the drivers, however, in addition to reduced wage rates, a change in working conditions came into force. The working time has been extended by 1½ hours a day compared to the previous conditions, because only the pure working time, but no longer the work breaks, are taken into account.
In the months and years that followed, the number of routes and trips was gradually expanded again.
From 1924 the BSBG began to procure new tram cars in larger numbers, e.g. B. around 1,300 cars of the type later known as the T 24 / B24 . The architect and designer Bruno Paul was involved in the design of these cars . In addition, older cars were equipped with a closed standard driver's cab in order to standardize operation and to improve the working conditions of the drivers.
Under the leadership of the architect Jean Krämer and with the support of the structural engineer Gerhard Mensch , work began on replacing the small and outdated carriage sheds with modern depots. These include the new construction of the Britz depot in Gradestrasse, which opened in 1926, and the new Müllerstrasse depot, which opened in 1927 .
In 1924, on behalf of BSBG, Krämer also designed the traffic tower at Potsdamer Platz in order to curb the increasing number of irregularities and delays in regular services.
line | from | to | comment |
---|---|---|---|
1 | City ring | ||
3 | Big ring | ||
4th | East-West Ring | ||
7th | West ring | ||
13 | Moabit, Gotzkowskystraße and Turmstraße | Silesian train station | |
15th | Moabit, Bremer Strasse at the corner of Birkenstrasse | Neukölln, Hermannplatz | |
23 | Mitte, Leipziger Platz | Pankow, Damerowstrasse | |
Pankow, Damerowstrasse | Buchholz, church | One-man operation | |
Pankow, Kreuzstrasse | Niederschönhausen, Kaiserweg and Platanenstraße | One-man operation | |
28 | Tegel, main street | Britz, town hall | |
Tegel, main street | Tegelort | One-man operation | |
Tegel, main street | Heiligensee | One-man operation | |
Reinickendorf, Berliner Strasse at the corner of Scharnweberstrasse | Wittenau railway station (northern line) | One-man operation | |
Britz, town hall | Buckow West | One-man operation | |
32 | Mitte, Charlottenstrasse at the corner of Unter den Linden | Reinickendorf, Pankower Allee | |
41 | Reinickendorf, town hall | Kreuzberg, Baerwaldstraße and Gneisenaustraße | |
44 | Görlitz train station | Wilmersdorf, Kaiserplatz | |
47 | Northrend, tram station | Britz, Rudower Strasse and Jahnstrasse | |
Britz, Rudower Strasse and Jahnstrasse | Rudow | One-man operation | |
54 | Middle, Am Kupfergraben | Spandau, market | |
Spandau, market | Hook field | One-man operation | |
57 | Prenzlauer Berg, Danzigerstraße and Pappelallee | Wilmersdorf, Emser Platz | |
Wilmersdorf, Emser Platz | Grunewald, Roseneck | One-man operation | |
60 | Weißensee, castle | Schöneberg, Rubensstrasse and Canovastrasse | |
Schöneberg, Mühlenstrasse | Lindenhof | One-man operation | |
64 | Hohenschönhausen, Degnerstrasse | Charlottenburg, Sophie-Charlotte-Platz | |
Charlottenburg, Sophie-Charlotte-Platz | Heerstrasse station | One-man operation | |
69 | Wilmersdorf, Kaiserplatz | Lichtenberg, Frankfurter Allee and Hubertusstraße | |
Lichtenberg, Frankfurter Allee and Hubertusstraße | Friedrichsfelde, church | One-man operation | |
72 | Mitte, Alexanderplatz | Weissensee, Antonplatz | |
Mitte, Alexanderplatz | Heinersdorf, church | ||
74 | Prenzlauer Berg, Kniprodestrasse and Elbinger Strasse | Lichterfelde, Handelplatz | |
76 | Halensee, Hobrechtstrasse | Frankfurter Allee train station | |
Friedrichshain, Frankfurter Allee and Koenigsberger Strasse | Lichtenberg, Viktoriaplatz | One-man operation | |
76/91 | Ring: Wilmersdorf-Grunewald | One-man operation | |
83 | Mahlsdorf train station | Reversible lock | |
84 | Altglienicke, church | Friedrichshagen station | |
87 | Steglitz, city park | Köpenick, Lindenstrasse and Bahnhofstrasse | |
91 | Görlitz train station | Wilmersdorf, Wilhelmsaue | |
98 | Neukölln, Venusplatz | Pichelsdorf | |
99 | Wedding, Seestrasse and Amrumer Strasse | Mariendorf, Lichtenrader Chaussee | |
Reinickendorf, Pankower Allee | Mariendorf, Lichtenrader Chaussee | ||
120 | Spandau-West train station | Hennigsdorf, Rathenaustraße and Spandauer Allee | Benzene operation |
J | Zoologischer Garten station | Lichterfelde, Unter den Eichen at the corner of Drakestrasse | |
LH | Steglitz station | Lichterfelde-Ost train station | Meter gauge |
M. | Steglitz station | Mariendorf, Kaiserstraße at the corner of Chausseestraße | Meter gauge |
Z | Lichterfelde-Ost train station | Stahnsdorf |
On March 9, 1927, the Berliner Straßenbahn-Betriebs-Gesellschaft , the Hochbahngesellschaft and the Allgemeine Berliner Omnibus AG signed the so-called Community of Interest Agreement, with which the 20-pfennig standard tariff between the three modes of transport came into force on March 15, 1927 . The tariff allowed a one-time change within a means of transport or to the tram or subway, and from January 1, 1928 also to the bus.
Foundation of the BVG
On January 1, 1929, the Berlin tram operating company was transferred to the newly founded urban Berliner Verkehrs-AG ( BVG ). The BVG also took over the elevated and underground railways of the elevated railway company as well as the bus services of the Allgemeine Berliner Omnibus-Actien-Gesellschaft (ABOAG).
On the very day of the BVG this 89 tram lines and a network operating with 634 km length of the route , had 4,000 trams and employed 14,400 people alone in the tram. The tram operated 170 million kilometers per year and carried 929 million passengers in 1929. At the end of 1929 there were 93 tram lines.
In the early 1930s, the Berlin tram network slowly began to shrink. After the meter-gauge network (including the historic, first electric tram route) in Lichterfelde and Steglitz (lines 42 and 97) was replaced by bus services in February 1930, the route opened in 1865 through Charlottenburger Chaussee followed on October 31, 1934 (since 1953 Straße of June 17 ), which was converted into a monumental east-west axis in the course of Germania planning . At the beginning of 1935, the BVG discontinued the transport of parcels by tram, which was introduced in 1917 . In 1938 there were still 71 tram lines, 2,800 vehicles and around 12,500 employees. The bus network, on the other hand, was systematically expanded, and trolleybuses have also been running in Berlin since 1933 .
Second World War
During the Second World War, trams increasingly took on the task of transporting buses and trucks to save gasoline and diesel fuel ; Among other things, extensive freight transport was set up. Many companies and some ports were given a siding to the tram. In the course of the war, due to a lack of personnel and electricity as well as the Allied air raids on Berlin (especially from March 1943), the tram's performance continued to decline until operations collapsed on April 23, 1945 during the final phase of the Battle of Berlin .
Despite the immense destruction of routes, vehicles and depots, trams started running again in the outskirts of Berlin from May 20, 1945, and 328 km of trams could be reopened by the end of 1945.
Conversion of pantographs
When some economic life began to sprout again, there was a change from the previous pantographs to pantographs . In addition to the replacement of the pantographs, this also included changes to the overhead lines, the course of which should have as few corners as possible for pantographs, but should be zigzagged for brackets to avoid selective wear of the contact strip. In the western part of the city the first line was changed on April 12, 1948, in the east in 1951. The changeover was completed in 1955. Because of this change, museum vehicles from the pre-war period now usually have “wrong” pantographs.
line | from | to | comment |
---|---|---|---|
1 | City ring | ||
2 | Bahnhofsring | ||
3 | Big ring | ||
4th | East-West Ring | ||
5 | Outer ring | ||
6th | Südring | ||
7th | West ring | ||
8th | North ring | ||
9 | Ostring | ||
12 | Siemensstadt, administration building | Neukölln, Köllniche Allee | |
13 | Moabit, Gotzkowskystraße and Turmstraße | Klingenberg power plant | |
14th | Moabit, Gotzkowskystraße and Turmstraße | Kreuzberg, Friesenstrasse and Schwiebusser Strasse | |
15th | Wilhelmsruh, Hauptstrasse | New parish churchyard Neukölln | |
115 | Moabit, Bremer Strasse at the corner of Birkenstrasse | Buckow-Ost, hospital | |
19th | Gesundbrunnen, Schwedenstrasse and Badstrasse | Schöneberg, Eisenacher Strasse at the corner of Hauptstrasse | |
119 | Niederschönhausen, Friedensplatz | Schöneberg, Rubensstrasse and Canovastrasse | |
120 | Spandau-West train station | Hennigsdorf, Rathenaustraße and Spandauer Allee | Benzene operation |
21st | Wedding, Augustenburger Platz | Britz, town hall | |
23 | Anhalter Bahnhof | Rosenthal train station | |
24 | Schöneberg, Gotenstrasse | Buchholz, church | |
25th | Tegel, main street | Mariendorf, racecourse | |
27 | Tegel, main street | Britz, town hall | |
28 | Tegelort | Britz, Germania promenade | |
128 | Heiligensee | Britz, Germania promenade | |
29 | Reinickendorf-West, sports field | Buckow West | |
32 | Reinickendorf, Humboldtstrasse and Teichstrasse | Britz, Germania promenade | |
132 | Reinickendorf, Humboldtstrasse and Teichstrasse | Neukölln, Köllniche Allee | |
35 | Wedding, Togostraße and Seestraße | Tempelhof, Kaiserin-Augusta-Strasse | |
36 | Schönholz, Provinzstrasse and Germanenstrasse | Neukölln, Kranoldstrasse | |
40 | Gesundbrunnen, Grünthaler Strasse and Bornholmer Strasse | Zehlendorf, Dahlemer Weg | |
41 | Tegel, main street | Tempelhof, General-Pape-Strasse | |
Reinickendorf-West, sports field | Kreuzberg, Kreuzbergstrasse | ||
42 | Steglitz station | Lichterfelde-Ost train station | Meter gauge |
Lichterfelde-Ost train station | Lichterfelde-West train station | ||
43 | Prenzlauer Berg, Kniprodestrasse and Elbinger Strasse | Dahlem, Queen-Luise-Strasse | |
44 | Görlitz train station | Steglitz, Birkbuschstrasse and Siemensstrasse | |
45 | Pankow, Damerowstrasse at the corner of Mendelstrasse | Steglitz, Birkbuschstrasse and Siemensstrasse | |
47 | Pankow, Bürgerpark | Rudow | |
48 | Northrend, tram station | Neukölln station | |
148 | Gesundbrunnen, Grünthaler Strasse and Bornholmer Strasse | Neukölln, Schulenburgpark | |
49 | Niederschönhausen, Blankenburger Strasse | Görlitz train station | |
51 | Nordend, Schillerstrasse | Grunewald, Roseneck | |
53 | Westend, Reichskanzlerplatz | Lichtenberg, Gudrunstrasse | |
54 | Prenzlauer Berg, Danziger Strasse and Weißenburger Strasse | Hook field | |
154 | Frankfurter Allee train station | Johannesstift | |
55 | Treptow, Bouchéstrasse | Spandau-West, Nauener Strasse | |
56 | Pankow, Lindenpromenade | Lichterfelde-Ost train station | |
57 | Pankow, Bürgerpark | Grunewald, Roseneck | |
58 | Neukölln station | Spandau, city park | |
60 | Weißensee, Rennbahnstrasse | Schöneberg, Rubensstrasse and Canovastrasse | |
61 | Weißensee, castle | Steglitz, city park | |
62 | Weißensee, Rennbahnstrasse | Charlottenburg train station | |
63 | Moabit, Gotzkowskystraße and Turmstraße | Britz, town hall | |
64 | Middle, Dönhoffplatz | Garden field | |
65 | Friedrichshain, Samariterstraße | Schöneberg, Rubensstrasse and Canovastrasse | |
66 | Hohenschönhausen, Falkenberger Strasse | Tempelhof, Adolf-Scheidt-Platz | |
68 | Wittenau railway station (northern line) | Mountains of hearts | |
69 | Friedrichsfelde, church | Friedenau, Südwestkorso at the corner of Laubacher Strasse | |
70 | Mitte, Behrenstrasse and Kanonierstrasse | Johannisthal | |
71 | Weißensee, Rennbahnstrasse | Steglitz, Hindenburgdamm | |
72 | Weißensee, Rennbahnstrasse | Grunewald Stadium | |
73 | Heinersdorf, Kronprinzenstrasse and Neukirchstrasse | Tempelhof Airport | |
74 | Prenzlauer Berg, Kniprodestrasse and Elbinger Strasse | Lichterfelde, Zehlendorfer Strasse at the corner of Sternstrasse | |
174 | Prenzlauer Berg, Greifswalder Strasse and Danziger Strasse | Lichterfelde, Handelplatz | |
75 | Middle, Am Kupfergraben | Hook field | |
76 | Grunewald, dog throat | Lichtenberg, Gudrunstrasse | |
176 | Grunewald, dog throat | Lichtenberg, Gudrunstrasse | |
77 | Quiet life | Zehlendorf, Dahlemer Weg | |
177 | Zoologischer Garten station | Lichterfelde-Süd, Eugen-Kleine-Brücke | |
Lichterfelde-Süd, Eugen-Kleine-Brücke | Teltow, Schützenplatz | Division due to bridge closure | |
78 | Prenzlauer Berg, Danziger Strasse and Weißenburger Strasse | Grunewald, Roseneck | |
79 | Prenzlauer Berg, Nordkapstraße and Bornholmer Straße | Halensee station | |
82 | Middle, Dönhoffplatz | Stralau, church | |
Stralau, church | Treptow, place at the Spree tunnel | through Spree tunnel | |
83 | Mahlsdorf train station | Reversible lock | |
84 | Altglienicke, Straße am Falkenberg | Friedrichshagen, waterworks | |
86 | Koepenick train station | Schmoeckwitz | |
87 | Mitte, Behrenstrasse and Markgrafenstrasse | Köpenick, hospital | |
187 | Mitte, Behrenstrasse and Markgrafenstrasse | Friedrichshagen station | |
88 | Treptow train station | Steglitz, city park | |
89 | Charlottenburg, Spandauer Strasse | Lichtenberg, Gudrunstrasse | |
90 | Friedrichshain, Warsaw Bridge | Lichtenberg, Wagnerplatz | |
91 | Halensee station | Oberspree train station | |
191 | Görlitz train station | Grunewald, Roseneck | |
92 | Treptow, Bouchéstrasse | Grunewald, Roseneck | |
93 | Treptow, town hall | Westend, Reichskanzlerplatz | |
95 | Schöneberg, Eisenacher Strasse at the corner of Hauptstrasse | Koepenick train station | |
96 | Mitte, Behrenstrasse and Markgrafenstrasse | Lichterfelde-Ost train station | |
97 | Steglitz station | Mariendorf, Kaiserstraße at the corner of Chausseestraße | Meter gauge |
98 | Moabit, Ottostraße at the corner of Alt-Moabit | Baumschulenweg station | |
99 | Wedding, Togostraße and Seestraße | Lichtenrade station | |
199 | Northrend, tram station | Marienfelde, Daimlerstrasse | |
100 | Lichterfelde-Ost train station | Machnower lock |
Division of the BVG
The BVG was also divided in the course of the political division of Berlin on August 1, 1949. Two separate companies emerged, the BVG-West in the three western sectors (36 tram lines) and the BVG-East (13 lines) in the Soviet sector, from 1969 VEB Kombinat Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe (BVB). On October 14, 1950, traffic on the tram lines from West Berlin to the Brandenburg area (to Stahnsdorf and Schönefeld ) was discontinued, and on January 15, 1953, regular traffic across the inner-city sector border was discontinued. The reason for the latter event was the fact that the BVG-Ost used women as drivers, which was not allowed in the West at that time and therefore the joint line operation was terminated. The lines of one half of the city now ended at the border, the passengers crossed this on foot and continued with the line of the same name of the other company (and the same ticket).
West Berlin
Trams are gradually being replaced by other means of transport from 1954
From 1954, there was a change in traffic policy in West Berlin, aimed at replacing tram traffic by extending the underground and bus routes. A formal resolution was not reached in this regard, rather the change crystallized only gradually. It started with an order for new, much-needed trams and buses. A loan of twelve million marks for the purchase of 40 trams and 20 buses was applied for to finance them . On the part of the Berlin Senate and the top of the BVG, more and more concerns were expressed, among other things, the tests with the new tram prototype TED 52 were not promising. However, these problems were not of a technical nature, but of an operational nature. The TED 52 was a one-way car and could therefore not be used on many routes, and the long train length caused difficulties for the conductors when handling the trams.
As a further argument against the tram, the city administration referred to other European metropolises in which the trams were also discontinued. The tram was considered obsolete and superfluous at the time, as Berlin already had a good basic underground network. The rapidly growing surface traffic would only hinder the tram (which often ran on its own track). This problem can only be solved through tunnels. Based on these arguments, the loan was finally converted and, with the approval of the Berlin Senate, used to purchase 120 (double-decker) buses.
This was not a direct decision to abolish the tram, but it was the logical consequence of the non-renewal of the rolling stock. From 1954 the tram lines were gradually replaced by omnibuses and in individual cases by the subway, which was generously expanded in the following decades. It started with lines 76 and 79 on Kurfürstendamm, they were replaced by bus lines 19 (since 2004 M19 ) and 29 (M29).
Line closures of trams and trolleybuses
First, the north of West Berlin became tram-free, in 1958 the Müllerstraße and Tegel depots closed , followed by the closure of the Reinickendorf depot on September 30 and the suspension of line 35, the last in the Reinickendorf district . At the end of 1962 there were still 18 tram lines in the western part of the city.
On March 22, 1965, the last trolleybus line in West Berlin was shut down. Unlike in other countries (e.g. Switzerland), the means of transport could not prevail here and neither became a serious competitor nor a replacement for the tram.
At the end of 1965, BVG-West was still operating eight tram lines, and the closings continued at a rapid pace. On October 2, 1967, a tram ran for the last time in West Berlin: the last line with the number 55, the one from Zoo station via Ernst-Reuter-Platz - Charlottenburg town hall - Jungfernheide station - Siemensdamm - Nonnendammallee - Falkenseer Platz - Neuendorfer Road to Spandau, Hakenfelde drove, was closed.
Many Metrobus lines have followed the course of earlier tram lines since the 21st century .
line | course | set on | replaced by
line |
Current lines as of 2014 |
---|---|---|---|---|
2 | Bernauer Strasse, sector boundary - Schöneberg, Gotenstrasse at the corner of Torgauer Strasse | 06/01/1964 | A84, A90 | 245, M10 *** |
3 * | U Fehrbelliner Platz - Grüntaler Straße and Osloer Straße | 08/01/1964 | A89 | U7, M13 ***, 104, 106 |
6th | Charlottenburg, Richard-Wagner-Platz - Neukölln, Elsenstrasse / corner of Heidelberger Strasse | 07/01/1961 | A73 | M46 |
15th | Marienfelde, Daimlerstrasse - Neukölln, Schulenburgpark | 07/01/1966 | A77 | 246, 277 |
21st | Tram station Moabit, Wiebestraße - Kreuzberg, Friesenstraße | 01/22/1953 | A24 | TXL, M41, 248 |
23 * | Moabit, Zwinglistraße - Wollankstraße, sector limit | 05/02/1960 | A70 | M27 |
24 * | Bernauer Strasse, sector boundary - Wollankstrasse, sector boundary | 05/02/1960 | Without replacement | Without replacement |
25th | Schöneberg, Gotenstrasse - Bernauer Strasse, sector boundary | 09/01/1961 | U9, A64 | U9, 106, 247 |
26th | Spreewaldplatz - Tempelhof, Industriestrasse | 29.09.1963 | Without replacement | U7, M29, 277 |
27 | Spreewaldplatz - Buckow, Alt-Buckow | 10/01/1964 | A91 | M44 , 344 |
28 | Gesundbrunnen train station, Rügener Strasse - Tegelort, Almazeile | 06/01/1958 | U6, ext. A20 | U6, 222 |
29 | Gesundbrunnen train station, Rügener Strasse - Alt-Heiligensee | 06/01/1958 | U6, ext. A14 | U6, 124 |
35 ** | Gartenfeld - Kopenhagener Straße, sector boundary | 10/01/1960 | A72 | U7, X33, M27, 327 |
36 ** | Copenhagener Strasse, sector boundary - Gesundbrunnen station, Rügener Strasse | 05/02/1960 | A71 | 327 |
40 | Dahlem, Clayallee - Steglitz, Birkbuschstrasse | 10/01/1959 | A68 | X83, 186 |
41 | Bernauer Strasse, sector boundary - Alt-Tegel | 06/01/1958 | A61 | U6, U8, 122 |
44 | Invalidenstraße at the corner of Heidestraße - Steglitz, Birkbuschstraße | 05/02/1963 | A86 | U7 , 186, 245 |
47 | Britz, Gradestrasse - Rudow, city limits | 10/01/1966 | A41 | 171 |
51 | Zoologischer Garten station - Roseneck | 05/01/1957 | A60 | 249 |
53 | Charlottenburg, Richard-Wagner-Platz - Spandau, Hakenfelde | 05/02/1967 | A56 | 136 , M45 |
54 | Charlottenburg, Richard-Wagner-Platz - Spandau, Johannesstift | 05/02/1967 | A54, AS1 | M45 |
55 | Zoologischer Garten station - Spandau, Hakenfelde (via Siemensstadt) | 10/02/1967 | A55 | U7, 136, 139 |
57 | Wilmersdorf, Emser Platz - Grunewald, Roseneck | 11/01/1954 | A50 | 115 |
60 | Schöneberg, Lindenhof - Charlottenburg, Königin-Elisabeth-Strasse | 05/02/1962 | A74 | U7 , 309 , 106 |
66 | Schöneberg, Wartburgplatz - Steglitz, Thorwaldsenstrasse | 05/02/1963 | A83 | 187 |
68 | Wedding station, Nettelbeckplatz - Wittenau station (northern line) | 06/01/1958 | A62 | M21, X21 |
73 * | Potsdamer Platz, sector boundary - Lichterfelde Ost station | 05/02/1962 | A48, ext. A53 |
M48, M85 , M11 |
74 * | Potsdamer Platz, sector boundary - Lichterfelde, Finckensteinallee | 05/02/1963 | A83, A84 | M48, M85 , 184 |
75 | Zoologischer Garten station - Spandau, Hakenfelde (via Kantstraße) | 01/24/1966 | A94, A97 | X34, X49, 136 , M49 |
76 (I) | Grunewald, Roseneck - Anhalter Bahnhof | 07/01/1954 | A29 | M29 |
76 (II) | Zoologischer Garten station - Spandau, Johannis pen (from 1959) | 01/24/1966 | A94, A97 | X34, X49, M45, M49 |
77 | Zoologischer Garten station - Lichterfelde, Goerzallee | 05/02/1963 | A85 | U9, M85, 188 , 285, M46 |
78 | Zoologischer Garten station - Lichterfelde Süd, Lindenstrasse | 05/02/1963 | A85 | U9, M85, 188 , 285, M46 |
79 | Grunewald, Hagenplatz - U Nollendorfplatz | 07/01/1954 | A19 | M19 |
88 | Kreuzberg, Wiener Brücke - Steglitz, Stadtpark | 03/01/1961 | A75 | M29, M48 / M85, 246, 181 |
94 | Oranienplatz - Neukölln, Schulenburgplatz | 10/01/1959 | A67 | M41 |
95 * | Sonnenallee corner Schwarzer Weg - Mehringplatz | 05/02/1965 | A95 | M41 |
96 * | U Mehringdamm - Lichterfelde, Goerzallee and Darser Straße | 05/02/1966 | A96 | 117, 184, 248 |
98 | U Tempelhof - Marienfelde, Daimlerstrasse | 10/01/1961 | A77 | U6, 277 |
99 | U Tempelhof - Lichtenrade station | 10/01/1961 | A76 | U6, M76, X76 |
* Former joint route BVG-West / BVG-Ost with vehicles from both administrations (until January 15, 1953) | ||||
** Former joint route BVG-West / BVG-Ost with BVG West vehicles (until January 15, 1953) | ||||
*** Tram line rebuilt after 1990 | ||||
Current lines shown in italics correspond completely or largely to the course of the tram lines at the time of closure. |
East Berlin
With the more and more deep division of Berlin after 1948, there were major problems with the maintenance of the tram vehicles used by the East Berlin BVG. The main workshop of the tram was located on West Berlin Uferstrasse and could not be approached, or maintenance was not desired there. For the time being, numerous small businesses and the state-owned locomotive and wagon construction companies (LOWA) carried out the necessary general inspections and repairs. From 1954 the RAW Schöneweide took over these tasks. Thus the Reichsbahn repair shop was responsible for the S-Bahn as well as for the underground and trams.
If West Berlin was oriented towards metropolises such as Paris and London , Moscow, with its wide, tram-free thoroughfares, was the model for East Berlin's transport policy . As a result, numerous tram routes were shut down in the eastern part of the city as part of the car-oriented traffic planning of the 1950s and 1960s, especially in the districts of Mitte and Treptow . In 1967, when the new building on Alexanderplatz was completed, the lines through the center of East Berlin were shut down. The GDR wanted to present itself to tourists and other visitors (especially from western countries) with a modern center; trams were considered to be outdated in terms of traffic. Allegedly, due to the many accidents and tram delays, there was an economic loss of 2.5 million marks. However, the tram remained in the city center, albeit less visible, and continued to run close to the Friedrichstrasse train station (Am Kupfergraben). There were also closures later, including in Baumschulenstrasse and Leipziger Strasse .
A complete abandonment of the tram network was not envisaged, however, and at the end of the 1970s , new tram routes were built in order to develop new large estates such as Marzahn , later Hohenschönhausen and finally Hellersdorf . Some of these new routes were created before the settlement was completed, so that the construction workers could take the tram to the construction site. When building these lines, attention was paid to speed and integration into the cityscape, and so the new lines were largely given a track that was independent of road traffic.
Energy policy reasons also played a role. If the GDR had previously received oil from the Soviet Union at a preferential price, this was no longer possible after the oil crisis and so the tram powered by domestic energy sources ( lignite electricity), as in many other cities in the GDR, played the most important role in inner-city traffic . Nevertheless, there was no reintroduction of the tram in the East Berlin center, here the passenger flows through the U-Bahn line A (now part of the U 2 line ) and the S-Bahn were absorbed.
At the end of the 1980s, twelve lines ran in Berlin-Mitte. The end point Am Kupfergraben was reached with tight curves via Am Weidendamm - Planckstraße.
- Lines 22/46 to Schönhauser Allee - Pankow - Rosenthal (22) / Niederschönhausen (46)
- Line 70 to Pappelallee - Langhansstraße - Weißensee - Hohenschönhausen, Zingster Straße
- Line 71 to Prenzlauer Allee - Heinersdorf.
The second important terminal was at the World Youth Stadium , today Schwartzkopffstraße underground station :
- Lines 11/18 to Mollstraße - Leninallee (today Landsberger Allee) - Herzbergstraße (18) - Marzahn - Ahrensfelde (18)
- Line 24 to Greifswalder Straße - Weißensee, Pasedagplatz
- Line 63 to Mollstrasse - Konrad-Wolff-Strasse - Hohenschönhausen, Zingster Strasse.
The Hackesche Markt was the end point for the four remaining lines:
- 20 to Prenzlauer Allee - Langhansstrasse - Weißensee - Herzbergstrasse - Lichtenberg
- 28/58 to Greifswalder Straße - Weißensee - Hohenschönhausen - Zingster Straße (28) / Falkenberg (58)
- 49 to Schönhauser Allee - Pankow - Buchholz.
Other lines ran from the city districts with endpoints on Eberswalder , Bornholmer and Warschauer Straße , in Schöneweide , Adlershof and Mahlsdorf, among others .
Passenger numbers were also influenced by tariff policy. The highly subsidized normal ticket for 20 pfennigs was valid for a journey on a single line without changing trains - from the start to the end. With a ticket you could get from the Kupfergraben across the city to Hohenschönhausen or Rosenthal . The subway, on the other hand, required a change to another line in Pankow. The S-Bahn had graduated prices (in East Berlin 20 and 30 pfennigs). Since the 1960s and 1970s, all trams and sidecars have been equipped with payment boxes . A ticket inspection was planned by other passengers (season tickets should be held up open after boarding and shown to other passengers), so basically did not take place.
Track openings
From 1951 to 1990 the following routes were opened in East Berlin :
date | route |
---|---|
08/02/1951 | Ehrlichstrasse, Blockdammweg |
08/02/1951 | Buschallee (between Kniprodeallee [today Hansastraße ] and Suermondtstraße), Suermondtstraße |
08/02/1951 | Markgrafendamm, Hauptstrasse (between Markgrafendamm and Karlshorster Strasse) |
02/15/1953 | Groß-Berliner Damm |
06/13/1953 | Falkenberger Strasse (today Gehrenseestrasse, Garden City Hohenschönhausen) |
05/17/1954 | Friedenstrasse, Friedrichsberger Strasse, Lebuser Strasse |
01/28/1962 | Adlershof S-Bahn station (west side) |
December 14, 1965 | Langhansstraße (between Gustav-Adolf-Straße and Prenzlauer Promenade) |
May 18, 1966 | Stralauer Platz |
08/01/1966 | Holzmarktstrasse (between Krautstrasse and Andreasstrasse) |
09/16/1966 | Stahlheimer Strasse (between Wichertstrasse and Wisbyer Strasse) |
12/12/1966 | Mollstraße (between Leninplatz [today United Nations Square] and Hans-Beimler-Straße [today Otto-Braun-Straße]) |
01/02/1967 | Mollstrasse (between Hans-Beimler-Strasse [today Otto-Braun-Strasse] and Prenzlauer Allee) |
11/14/1971 | Bleicheroder Straße, Stiftweg |
11/02/1975 | Herzbergstrasse (from Siegfriedstrasse), Allee der Kosmonauten (to Rhinstrasse), Rhinstrasse (between Allee der Kosmonauten and Strasse der Befreiung [today Alt-Friedrichsfelde]) |
04/06/1979 | Allee der Kosmonauten (between Rhinstrasse and Elisabethstrasse loop) |
03/17/1980 | Altenhofer Straße, Leninallee (today Landsberger Allee), Marzahn S-Bahn station |
10/06/1982 | Marzahner Promenade, Bruno-Leuschner-Straße (today Raoul-Wallenberg-Straße), Allee der Kosmonauten (between Leninallee [today Landsberger Straße] and loop Elisabethstraße), Trasse Lea-Grundig-Straße / Max-Hermannstraße / Trusetaler Straße (up to the loop Henneckestrasse) |
December 21, 1984 | Wartenberger Strasse, Rüdickenstrasse, Zingster Strasse |
04/01/1985 | Rhinstrasse (between Hauptstrasse and Allee der Kosmonauten) |
04/01/1985 | Leninallee (today Landsberger Alle, between the Allee der Kosmonauten and the Marzahn depot) |
10/06/1986 | Henneckestrasse loop to Ahrensfelde loop |
08/10/1987 | Kniprodeallee, Falkenberger Chaussee (to Prerower Platz) |
08/20/1988 | Falkenberger Chaussee (between Prerower Platz and Falkenberg loop) |
Line closures
From 1950 to 1990, the following routes, among others, were closed:
date | route |
---|---|
10/14/1950 | Waltersdorfer Chaussee, Mittelstrasse ( Schönefeld ) |
03/19/1951 | Königstraße , Spandauer Straße (between Königstraße and Molkenmarkt ), Schloßplatz , Werderstraße, Französische Straße (to Charlottenstraße, Lindentunnel , Oberwallstraße, Jerusalemer Straße) |
01/02/1952 | Elsenstrasse (between Plesser Strasse and Heidelberger Strasse) |
03/03/1952 | Stalinallee (between Andreasstraße and Jacobystraße) |
06/16/1952 | Charlottenstrasse (between Unter den Linden and Clara-Zetkin-Strasse) |
January 16, 1953 | Ebertstrasse (between Potsdamer Platz and Clara-Zetkin-Strasse) |
January 16, 1953 | Wide street (middle) |
January 16, 1953 | Wollankstrasse (between the sector boundary and Breite Strasse (Pankow)) |
January 16, 1953 | Copenhagener Strasse, Hauptstrasse (between the sector boundary and Wilhelmsruh (Pankow)) |
January 16, 1953 | Bornholmer Strasse (between the sector boundary and Björnsonstrasse) |
03/27/1953 | Rosenfelder Strasse, Irenenstrasse, Weitlingstrasse , Lückstrasse, Nöldnerstrasse, Stadthausstrasse, Türrschmidtstrasse |
01/11/1956 | Kommandantenstrasse, Beuthstrasse |
06/25/1957 | Bulgarian road (to Alt-Treptow) |
06/05/1959 | Groß-Berliner Damm |
08/30/1959 | Alt-Stralau, Tunnelstrasse |
11/13/1959 | Bulgarische Strasse (between Alt-Treptow and Köpenicker Landstrasse) |
08/01/1960 | Puschkinallee, Am Treptower Park (between Puschkinallee and Elsenstraße) |
08/13/1961 | Clara-Zetkin-Strasse (between Ebertstrasse and Planckstrasse), Ebertstrasse (between the Brandenburg Gate and the Reichstagufer) |
08/13/1961 | Oberbaum Bridge |
08/23/1961 | Heinrich-Heine-Strasse (between Dresdner Strasse and Schmidstrasse) |
19.09.1961 | Köpenicker Straße (between Schillingbrücke and Brückenstraße) |
01/28/1962 | Adlergestell (between Dörpfeldstrasse and Köpenicker Strasse) |
08/03/1962 | Elisabethstraße, Karl-Marx-Allee (between Elisabethstraße and Leninallee ) |
07/01/1965 | Hannoversche Strasse |
December 14, 1965 | Gustav-Adolf-Straße (between Langhansstraße and Prenzlauer Promenade) |
04/01/1966 | Idastrasse, Wackenbergstrasse, Buchholzer Strasse, Blankenburger Strasse |
May 18, 1966 | Fruchtstrasse (between Mühlendamm and Am Ostbahnhof) |
07/04/1966 | Breslauer Strasse (between Andreasstrasse and Krautstrasse) |
08/25/1966 | Heinrich-Heine-Strasse (between Schmidstrasse and Köpenicker Strasse) |
09/16/1966 | Krügerstrasse, Wichertstrasse (between Stahlheimer Strasse and Gudvanger Strasse), Gudvanger Strasse (between Wichertstrasse and Krügerstrasse) |
10/10/1966 | Jacobystraße, Kleine Frankfurter Straße, Leninallee (between Alexanderplatz and Leninplatz) |
10/10/1966 | At the Ostbahnhof (between Fruchtstrasse and Andreasstrasse) |
10/20/1966 | Charlottenstrasse, Taubenstrasse (Wendeschleife) |
December 19, 1966 | Prenzlauer Strasse, Hans-Beimler-Strasse (between Alexanderplatz and Mollstrasse), Weinmeisterstrasse, Jüdenstrasse (Wendeschleife) |
01/20/1967 | Münzstraße , Memhardstraße, Alexanderplatz , Alexanderstraße (between Alexanderplatz and Wallnerstraße ) |
12/12/1967 | Stralauer Allee, Markgrafendamm |
October 19, 1968 | Wallnerstraße , Raupachstraße (Wendeschleife), Alexanderstraße (between Wallnerstraße and Holzmarktstraße) |
07/01/1969 | Dönhoffplatz (turning loop) |
07/01/1969 | Stralauer Platz , Mühlenstraße, Warschauer Straße (between Mühlenstraße and Helsingforser Platz) |
10/13/1969 | Karlshorster Strasse, Stubenrauchbrücke |
08/24/1970 | Leipziger Strasse , Spittelmarkt , Wallstrasse, Inselstrasse, Köpenicker Strasse (between Inselstrasse and Brückenstrasse), Brückenstrasse, Jannowitzbrücke , Holzmarktstrasse, Andreasstrasse, Lebuser Strasse, Friedrichsberger Strasse, Friedenstrasse |
04/01/1971 | Baumschulenstrasse, Hasselwerderstrasse, Schnellerstrasse (between Hasselwerderstrasse and Bruno-Bürgel-Weg), Bruno-Bürgel-Weg |
11/08/1971 | Damerowstrasse |
07/14/1973 | Wiener Brücke (Wendeschleife), Karl-Kunger-Straße, Plesser Straße, Elsenstraße, Am Treptower Park (between Elsenstraße and Bulgarische Straße), Köpenicker Landstraße, Schnellerstraße (between Köpenicker Landstraße and Brückenstraße), Wendeschleife S-Bahnhof Schöneweide |
11/01/1975 | Road of Liberation |
03/01/1983 | Falkenberger Strasse, Arnimstrasse |
Since the reunification
In 1992, BVG (West) and BVB (East) were reunited to form BVG, and the company was now called Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe. In addition to bus and underground lines, the new BVG also operated the tram, which only ran in the eastern districts. There were some critical voices about the tram, calling for its partial abolition.
Above all, there were considerations to shut down the tram lines running to Pankow , because on the one hand the trams in Schönhauser Allee run parallel to the U2 underground line and on the other hand the branch to Rosenthal is underutilized. However, this could not be implemented and so soon afterwards the Senator for Transport Herwig Haase presented plans for reactivating the tram in the western districts. A new route was to lead from Warschauer Strasse to Hermannplatz, and the tram was to continue from Björnsonstrasse via Bornholmer Strasse to Seestrasse. There were also plans for a route through Leipziger Strasse to Potsdamer Platz and for an isolated tram network in Spandau .
In 1995 the first route was opened in two stages to the west on Bornholmer Strasse. The Rudolf-Virchow-Klinikum and the underground stations Seestraße in Wedding and Osloer Straße in Gesundbrunnen have since been connected to the tram network again.
Since 1997 there has been a tram stop directly at Friedrichstrasse station. Before that, a long walk had to be covered to get to the train station, which was renovated at the same time. Since then, the trams have stopped in the Wendeschleife Am Kupfergraben near the Humboldt University and Museum Island .
The following year the tram reopened at Alexanderplatz. This now drives directly from the intersection of Moll-corner Otto-Braun-Straße across the square and stops both at the underground station of the U2 and at the station building of the regional and S-Bahn, where there is a direct transition to the U5 and U8 . The increase in personal accidents with trams in the pedestrian zone, feared by critics, did not occur.
In 2000, the BVG extended the tram tracks from the previous terminus on Revaler Straße via the Warschauer Straße S-Bahn station directly to the subway station of the same name. Since there was no space for a turning loop here, a blunt-ended track was set up. For this purpose, bidirectional vehicles were procured. The tracks that were laid on the Oberbaumbrücke in 1995 , however, remain unused, as an extension of the tram to Hermannplatz is only planned in the long term.
Since the same year, the tram in Pankow has been running via the previous terminus at the French Buchholz Church to Guyotstrasse, connecting the new development areas there to the network.
In 2006, the BVG opened the second line in the western part of the city, and the M10 line has been running from its previous terminus at Eberswalder Strasse through Bernauer Strasse in Gesundbrunnen to the Nordbahnhof in Mitte. The extension towards the main train station took place in August 2015.
In May 2007, a new line was put into operation from Prenzlauer Tor via Karl-Liebknecht-Straße to Alexanderplatz, where the M2 line ends directly at the S-Bahn and regional train station, instead of traveling via Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz to Hackescher Markt as before. In the longer term, there are plans to extend the route over Rathausstrasse and Leipziger Strasse towards Potsdamer Platz. A large part of the rails for this has already been laid in Leipziger Strasse. The previous route in Alte and Neue Schönhauser Strasse is no longer operated as a regular service, but only maintained as an operating route .
On September 4, 2011, the lines 60 and 61 from the Adlershof S-Bahn station were extended by 1.5 kilometers to the Adlershof science and business location . Three new stops were created for this. The end of the line is Karl-Ziegler-Straße on the Adlershof campus of the Humboldt University.
With the timetable change on December 14, 2014, the tram was opened through Invalidenstrasse to the main station with the final stop Lüneburger Strasse on Alt Moabit, making it the third new route in the former western part of Berlin. The extension to the Turmstrasse underground station is planned.
Track openings
The following routes were opened after reunification:
date | route |
---|---|
05/01/1991 | Zossener Strasse, Stendaler Strasse, Riesaer Strasse |
10/14/1995 | Bornholmer Strasse , Osloer Strasse |
12/20/1997 | Friedrichstrasse , Dorotheenstrasse |
10/25/1997 | Seestrasse |
12/18/1998 | Otto-Braun-Strasse (from Mollstrasse), Wadzeckstrasse, Alexanderplatz , Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse (between Gontardstrasse and Spandauer Strasse), Spandauer Strasse |
May 28, 2000 | Warschauer Straße (to the underground station) |
09/29/2000 | Continuation of the tram line 50 from Franz. Buchholz, church to Guyotstraße |
05/28/2006 | Bernauer Street |
05/30/2007 | Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse (between Mollstrasse and Gontardstrasse), Dircksenstrasse |
04.09.2011 | Rudower Chaussee (between S Adlershof and Max-Born-Straße), Max-Born-Straße, Karl-Ziegler-Straße ( WISTA ) |
12/14/2014 | Chausseestrasse (reopening) - Invalidenstrasse - Central Station - Alt-Moabit |
Line closures
The following routes have been closed since reunification:
date | route |
---|---|
01/01/1993 | Route S-Bahn station Adlershof / Köpenicker Straße, Köpenicker Straße, Grünauer Straße, Am Falkenberg |
05/23/1993 | Hauptstrasse (to Karlshorster Strasse) |
12/20/1997 | Am Weidendamm (between Friedrichstraße and Planckstraße), Planckstraße (between Am Weidendamm and Georgenstraße) |
09/29/2000 | Parkstraße, Elfenallee, Gravensteinstraße (Wendeschleife), Grünstraße |
05/30/2007 | Alte Schönhauser Strasse, Neue Schönhauser Strasse (continues as an operating route) |
08/26/2013 | Chausseestrasse (between Invalidenstrasse and Wöhlertstrasse), Schwartzkopffstrasse, Pflugstrasse, Wöhlertstrasse |
Main street in Rummelsburg with the Gotha open seating car , 1991
KT4D articulated multiple unit Am Weidendamm 1991
T6A2 train in Chausseestrasse, 1991
Business premises
Until the complete merger to form the Berlin tram, almost every company had its own depots and depots. Since these were designed to be small for the size of the company, most of the plants were closed in the 1920s.
The former depot Niederönhausen (Nie) was built in 1901 as station 3 of the GBS and was designed for a capacity of 190 cars. The depot includes a 19-track main hall and a seven-track wagon hall, which was added later as an extension. Since the end of the 20th century, the car hall has been used by the local traffic preservation association for storing historic tram vehicles.
The Schmöckwitz depot on the Adlergestell was operated between 1912 and 1926 as a depot for the Uferbahn and between 1945 and 1948 as a provisional depot for the BVG, after which it was only used as a depot. Until 2006, the site was used by the local traffic monument preservation association as a workshop and depot for their historic vehicles. Since then, the listed car hall can no longer be used for the historic trams, as no switches were built into the line network during the track loop renovation in Alt-Schmöckwitz and the car hall is thus separated from the tracks of tram line 68. On the night of August 31, 2008, there was a fire that destroyed the building. At that time the historic type 4305 multiple unit TF 21 S was still in the hall, which was also destroyed.
Depot | place | Opened | Built by |
---|---|---|---|
Koepenick | Wendenschloßstraße | 1903 | Cöpenick municipal tram |
Weissensee | Bernkasteler Strasse | 1912 | Big Berlin tram |
Lichtenberg | Siegfriedstrasse | 1913 | Big Berlin tram |
Marzahn | Landsberger Allee | 1985 | Berlin transport company |
Nalepastrasse | Nalepastrasse | 1901 | Berlin East Railways |
vehicles
From individual vehicle types to new series vehicles
Since the various tram companies only merged to form the BVG in 1929, several vehicle types from different manufacturers shaped the cityscape at that time.
The first uniform vehicle types were the 1920/21 design (from 1934: TF 20/29, B 21) and the 1924/25 design designed by Bruno Paul (from 1934: T 24, B 24, T 25 and B 25), the With 1,304 vehicles, it was the largest number of a type delivered to a company to date. Other series followed later, such as the 1927 type center entry railcars (from 1934: TM 33, TM 34, TM 36). They were used a long time after the war, as hardly any new vehicles were procured in the western part of the city due to the intended suspension of the tram and in the eastern part due to a lack of materials. During the Second World War , a larger series of vehicles were adopted that were originally intended for use on the Warsaw tram . After the end of the war, the vehicles known as “ Warsaw ” ended up in the Polish capital as reparations.
In West Berlin , the delivery of the new equipment series TED 52 began in 1952 , it was the first one-way vehicles for the Berlin tram. Among other things, the fact that new reversing loops should have been built prompted the BVG advisory board in 1954 to discontinue the tram in West Berlin within 15 years. This was implemented as early as 1967, the last vehicles used were those of the TM 33 series.
Upgrading existing cars
The vehicles that remained in East Berlin were initially electrically upgraded, new vehicles were hardly ever delivered. Exceptions were some prototypes such as the TDE 52 , mostly produced by Waggonbau Gotha , which were either scrapped or later adapted to the existing series. From 1959 the raw material Schöneweide , which took over the function of a main workshop, began with the conversion of the T 24 to Reko cars of the series TE 59, TE 63 and TE 64. Both one-way and two-way vehicles were produced. Until the 1970s, these cars printed next to the about the same time delivered Gothawagen type 61 TDE the cityscape. In addition, some pre-war series such as the TM 33 ran. Only with the acquisition of modern Tatra vehicles could the older series be retired. The Reko cars drove until 1996, most recently in the Köpenick subnet.
The last vehicles procured by the Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe were 118 four-axle T6A2D open- plan cars and 59 B6A2D sidecars, which were put into service between 1988 and 1991. In 1995 another five sidecars without bogies were added, which came from a canceled order for the Rostock tram. They were added to the modernization program immediately after purchase. All vehicles in this series were taken out of service by December 2007 and some were sold because the BVG wanted to reduce maintenance costs by reducing the number of vehicle families. In their place, already parked, modernized KT4Dt articulated trolleys were reactivated.
Foreign vehicles on Berlin tracks
Occasionally, vehicles from other companies were used on Berlin's tram tracks, either as demonstration vehicles or for advertising purposes. In November 1991 the Bremen GT6N prototype was in the city for demonstration purposes and could also be used by passengers. In 2001 the city of Basel advertised itself with a Combino . Since the railways of the two cities have different gauges, a Potsdam vehicle was borrowed , which was optically transformed into a tram for the Basler Verkehrs-Betriebe .
literature
- Berlin Heritage Preservation Association V .: Rekowagen - The somewhat harder way of driving the tram . Verlag GVE, Berlin 1996, ISBN 3-89218-045-8 .
- Berlin Heritage Preservation Association V .: Historic local transport vehicles - Berlin and Brandenburg . Verlag GVE, Berlin 2001, ISBN 3-89218-027-X .
- Berlin Heritage Preservation Association V .: 100 years of "Electric" in Köpenick . Verlag GVE, Berlin 2003, ISBN 3-89218-082-2 .
- Sigurd Hilkenbach, Wolfgang Kramer, Claude Jeanmaire: Berlin trams. The history of the Berlin tram companies since 1865 . (Archive No. 6), Verlag Eisenbahn, Villigen AG (Switzerland) 1973, ISBN 3-85649-006-X .
- Sigurd Hilkenbach, Wolfgang Kramer, Claude Jeanmaire: Berlin Tram History II. A report on the development of the tram in Berlin after 1920 . (Archive No. 31), Verlag Eisenbahn, Villigen AG (Switzerland) 1977, ISBN 3-85649-031-0 .
- Sigurd Hilkenbach, Wolfgang Kramer, Claude Jeanmaire: The tram lines in the western part of Berlin. The reconstruction from 1945 and the closure in the western part of the city until 1967. (2 volumes; archive no. 46/52), Verlag Eisenbahn, Villigen AG (Switzerland) 1986, ISBN 3-85649-046-9 .
- Sigurd Hilkenbach, Wolfgang Kramer: The tram of the Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe (BVG-Ost / BVB) 1949–1991 . Transpress, Stuttgart June 1997, ISBN 3-613-71063-3 .
- Wolfgang Kramer, Heinz Jung: Line chronicle of the electric tram of Berlin. (2 volumes), Arbeitskreis Berliner Nahverkehr e. V., 1994 (1st volume), 2001 (2nd volume).
- Gerhard Bauer: Tram Archive Volume 5 . Transpress VEB Verlag for Transport, 1987, ISBN 3-344-00172-8 .
- Kiessling's Berlin Baedeker: Timetable of the Great Berlin Horse Railway , the twelve lines; P. 43.
Web links
- Heinz Jung: The introduction of line numbers on the tram in Berlin in 1902
- Page no longer available , search in web archives: city map from 1895 ) at www.alt-berlin.info - with tram routes, but without routes (also 1875 and 1893) (
- City map from 1907 on www.blocksignal.de - with tram routes, but without routes
- Historical network maps from 1925 and 1936 at www.berliner-verkehrsseiten.de (PDF)
- The tram network of Berlin all network plans since 1945 - private page by Sascha Teichmann
- Tram in Berlin on berliner-bahnen.de (systematic description in particular of the network structure before 1945)
- Tram and buses on chronik-berlin.de (city history until 1945 and West Berlin until 1986)
- Berlin's blind traffic structures Private page from Florian Schulz
Individual evidence
- ↑ Elfi Bendikat: Public transport policy in Berlin and Paris from 1839 to 1914. ((Walter de Gruyter), p 103 books.google.de ).
- ↑ Cecilengärten Berlin: Timeframe ( Memento from March 5, 2016 in the Internet Archive )
- ^ A b Author collective: Tram Archive 5. Berlin and the surrounding area . transpress VEB Verlag for Transport, Berlin 1987, ISBN 3-344-00172-8 , p. 14-18 .
- ^ Author collective: Tram Archive 5. Berlin and the surrounding area . transpress VEB Verlag for Transport, Berlin 1987, ISBN 3-344-00172-8 , p. 116-123 .
- ^ Author collective: Tram Archive 5. Berlin and the surrounding area . transpress VEB Verlag for Transport, Berlin 1987, ISBN 3-344-00172-8 , p. 55-83 .
- ^ Author collective: Tram Archive 5. Berlin and the surrounding area . transpress VEB Verlag for Transport, Berlin 1987, ISBN 3-344-00172-8 .
- ↑ Tram from the Johannisthal airfield at www.berliner-bahnen.de
- ↑ August 28, 1923: The collapse of the tram In: Vorwärts , August 28, 1923, evening edition No. 400, p. 3, accessed on December 15, 2019.
- ↑ September 5, 1923: The new tram operating company . In: Vossische Zeitung , September 5, 1923, morning edition, supplement pp. 1 and 2, accessed on December 10, 2019.
- ↑ September 6, 1923: The choking of traffic . In: Vossische Zeitung , September 6, 1923, morning edition, supplement p. 1, accessed on December 10, 2019.
- ↑ September 7, 1923: Traffic throttling instead of tram renovation and the tram in the city parliament . In: Vossische Zeitung , September 7, 1923, morning edition, supplement p. 1, accessed on December 10, 2019.
- ↑ September 7, 1923: The Berlin Budget - The Fate of the Tram - Company throttling and layoffs In: Vorwärts , September 7, 1923, morning edition No. 417, p. 3, accessed on December 15, 2019.
- ↑ Uwe Kerl: 100 years of the flat railway . In: Berliner Verkehrsblätter . Issue 10, 2001, pp. 179-189 .
- ^ September 9, 1923: Increased traffic everywhere - The answer to the tram standstill . In: Vossische Zeitung , September 9, 1923, morning edition, supplement p. 1, accessed on December 11, 2019.
- ↑ Berlin tram - accessed on April 15, 2019; there u. a. with "Berliner Straßenbahn-Betriebs-GmbH"; also (probably only colloquially or in general terms) also referred to as the “Berlin tram operating company”
- ↑ September 10, 1923: The tram is running - With sufficient emergency vehicles. In: Vossische Zeitung , September 10, 1923, evening edition, p. 4, accessed on December 16, 2019.
- ^ A b Wolfgang Kramer, Heinz Jung: Line chronicle of the electric trams in Berlin until 1945 . Ed .: Arbeitskreis Berliner Nahverkehr eV Berlin 1994.
- ↑ March 15, 1927: First day of uniform tariff. - Smooth traffic management. - The flood of discarded elevated railway tickets. In: Vorwärts , March 15, 1927, evening edition No. 125, p. 6, accessed on December 19, 2019.
- ^ Reinhard Demps: Mail delivery by tram in Berlin . In: Verkehrsgeschichtliche Blätter . Volume 5, 1990, pp. 108-109 .
- ^ Wolfgang Kramer: Line chronicle of the Berlin tram 1945–1993 . Ed .: Arbeitskreis Berliner Nahverkehr eV Berlin 2001.
- ↑ Opening in Adlershof - tram lines 60 and 61 are being extended. Senate Department for Urban Development and the Environment, September 4, 2011, accessed on September 16, 2012 .
- ↑ tagesspiegel.de
- ↑ Fire night in Berlin - man dies in fire, historic tram is destroyed . In: Berliner Morgenpost , August 31, 2008