Jura footline

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Olten – Lausanne
ICN passing through Twann
ICN passing through Twann
Timetable field : 210 (Biel / Bienne – Lausanne)
410 (Olten – Biel / Bienne)
Route length: 231.6 km
Gauge : 1435 mm ( standard gauge )
Power system : 15 kV 16.7 Hz  ~
Route - straight ahead
from Basel , from Aarau
Station, station
39.2 Olten 396  m above sea level M.
   
to Bern , to Lucerne
   
Aare Bridge Olten Hammer (135 m)
Station, station
40.6 Olten Hammer 403 m above sea level M.
Station, station
43.0 Wangen near Olten 417 m. ü M.
Station, station
45.3 Hägendorf 427 m above sea level M.
Station, station
49.1 Egerkingen 435 m above sea level M.
Station, station
51.4 Oberbuchsiten 442 m above sea level M.
   
OeBB von Balsthal-Klus
Station, station
56.6 Oensingen 462 m above sea level M.
Station, station
58.8 Niederbipp 468 m above sea level M.
Route - straight ahead
to Solothurn and Melchnau
   
Aare Bridge Wangen (96 m)
Station, station
64.3 Cheeks on the Aare 422 m above sea level M.
Stop, stop
67.6 Deitingen 429 m above sea level M.
Station, station
70.3 Luterbach - Attisholz 429 m above sea level M.
   
Expansion of the Solothurn – Wanzwil line
Station, station
73.8 Solothurn 431 m above sea level M.
Route - straight ahead
to Niederbipp , Bern and Burgdorf
   
formerly to Lyss
   
Aare Bridge Solothurn (104 m)
Station, station
74.7 Solothurn West 432 m above sea level M.
   
Weissenstein Line to Moutier ( BLS )
Stop, stop
75.7 Solothurn Allmend 443 m above sea level M.
Stop, stop
76.7 Bellach 443 m above sea level M.
   
77.6 Bellach 429 m above sea level M.
Station without passenger traffic
77.6 Bellach industry
Station, station
80.6 Selzach 438 m above sea level M.
Stop, stop
82.8 Bed laugh 440 m above sea level M.
Station, station
85.3 Grenchen south 440 m above sea level M.
BSicon .svgBSicon KRZu.svgBSicon STR + r.svg
Mösliviadukt (285 m)
BSicon .svgBSicon ABZg + l.svgBSicon STRr.svg
88.0 Jural line from Basel
Station, station
88.0 Lengnau BE 439 m above sea level M.
Stop, stop
90.2 Pieterlen 435 m above sea level M.
Stop, stop
94.0 Biel / Bienne Bözingenfeld / Champs-de-Boujean 444 m above sea level M.
Station without passenger traffic
95.8 Biel Mett junction
   
to Biel RB
Stop, stop
96.2 Biel Mett 443 m above sea level M.
   
98.0 Connection curve to Bern
Station, station
99.4
104.5
Biel / Bienne 437 m above sea level M.
Route - straight ahead
to Bern , Neuchâtel , Sonceboz and Ins
Tunnel - if there are several tunnels in a row
Vingelz tunnel (2432 m)
Station, station
99.8 Tüscherz 434 m above sea level M.
Station, station
96.0 Twann 433 m above sea level M.
Stop, stop
94.0 Ligerz 434 m above sea level M.
Station without passenger traffic
93.7 Chavannes Beginning of the double track
Stop, stop
90.0 La Neuveville 433 m above sea level M.
Station, station
87.7 Le Landeron 437 m above sea level M.
Stop, stop
85.5 Cressier NE 436 m above sea level M.
Station, station
83.6 Cornaux 435 m above sea level M.
Tunnel - if there are several tunnels in a row
St-Blaise tunnel (155 m)
Stop, stop
85.5 Saint Blaise CFF 464 m above sea level M.
   
BLS from Kerzers
Station, station
75.3 Neuchâtel 479 m above sea level M.
   
73.6 to Le Locle
Tunnel - if there are several tunnels in a row
Route-de-France tunnel (58 m)
Stop, stop
72.3 Neuchâtel-Serrières 437 m above sea level M.
Station, station
70.3 Auvernier 492 m above sea level M.
   
to Pontarlier
Station, station
67.6 Colombier NE 490 m above sea level M.
Stop, stop
66.3 Boudry 491 m above sea level M.
Stop, stop
62.3 Bevaix 489 m above sea level M.
Stop, stop
58.1 Gorgier - St-Aubin 451 m above sea level M.

Route - straight ahead
Upgraded line
Tunnel - if there are several tunnels in a row
St-Aubin-Sauges tunnel (2252 m)
Stop, stop
54.8 Vaumarcus 447 m above sea level M.
Tunnel - if there are several tunnels in a row
La Raisse Tunnel (1245 m)
Tunnel - if there are several tunnels in a row
Fin-de-Lance tunnel (286 m)
Stop, stop
50.7 Concise 430 m above sea level M.
Tunnel - if there are several tunnels in a row
Concise tunnel (365 m)

   
47.5 Onnens - Bonvillars 435 m above sea level M.
Stop, stop
42.7 Grandson 437 m above sea level M.
   
Thièle Bridge Yverdon (79 m)
Station, station
39.1 Yverdon-les-Bains S 1 S 11 434 m above sea level M.
Route - straight ahead
TRAVYS to Ste-Croix
   
to Payerne
Stop, stop
32.7 Ependes 440 m above sea level M.
Stop, stop
29.6 Essert-Pittet 438 m above sea level M.
Station, station
27.4 Chavornay 447 m above sea level M.
   
TRAVYS by Orbe
Stop, stop
24.9 Bavois 442 m above sea level M.
Tunnel - if there are several tunnels in a row
Nord-de-Mormont tunnel (182 m)
Tunnel - if there are several tunnels in a row
Sud-de-Mormont tunnel (302 m)
Stop, stop
21.4 Eclépens 455 m above sea level M.
   
20.2 Industrial tracks
   
SBB from Vallorbe S 2
Station without passenger traffic
19.3 Daillens 445 m above sea level M.
   
19.0 to the post-logistics center
   
19.0 from the Post-Logistic Center
BSicon uKHSTeq.svgBSicon BHF.svgBSicon .svg
14.4 Cossonay 428 m above sea level M.
Route - straight ahead
Cossonay Gare – Ville funicular
Stop, stop
11.0 Vufflens-la-Ville 406 m above sea level M.
   
10.0 Industrial tracks
Station, station
6.9
14.9
Bussigny 407 m above sea level M.
BSicon STR + l.svgBSicon ABZlr.svgBSicon STR + r.svg
BSicon hSTRae.svgBSicon .svgBSicon STR.svg
Poimboeuf bridge right / left (64/71 m)
BSicon hSTRae.svgBSicon .svgBSicon STR.svg
Bridge Poudrière III (216 m)
BSicon DST.svgBSicon STR + l.svgBSicon ABZg + r.svg
13.2
7.3
Lécheires service station
BSicon STR.svgBSicon hSTRae.svgBSicon STR.svg
Larges-Pièces Bridge (106 m)
BSicon ABZg + l.svgBSicon STRr.svgBSicon BHF.svg
4.5 Renens 416 m above sea level M.
BSicon STR.svgBSicon .svgBSicon BHF.svg
0.0 Lausanne S 1 S 2 S 11 447 m above sea level M.
BSicon STRl.svgBSicon STR + r.svgBSicon STRl.svg
Connection to Bern and Brig
Route - straight ahead
Route to Geneva

As the Jura foothills line or Jurasüdfusslinie is called the Swiss railway line that from Olten along the eponymous Jurasüdfusses about Solothurn - Grenchen - Biel / Bienne - Neuchâtel - Yverdon-les-Bains to Morges and on to Geneva leads.

It is an important west-east connection in Switzerland, although the railway line in Ligerz is only single-track. This leads to major problems , especially with regional trains . The expansion on two lanes between Twann and Ligerz with the Ligerz tunnel is included in the expansion step 2025 of the FABI project , the financing of which was decided in 2014.

There is also the Mittellandlinie , Switzerland's most important west-east connection, which connects the city of Olten to Morges via Langenthal - Burgdorf , Bern , Friborg and Lausanne .

Because of the winding route on Lake Neuchâtel, the southern Jura foot line is used by tilting trains.

history

Station Yverdon-les-Bains , right train of narrow- Yverdon-Ste-Croix railway (YSteC)
Niederbipp train station , on the left is a railcar of the Solothurn-Niederbipp-Bahn (SNB)
Solothurn train station , in the back left a train on the platform of the regional traffic Bern – Solothurn (RBS)

The continuous Jura footline was implemented in several stages.

The oldest section is the Yverdon-les-Bains - Bussigny - Renens - Morges line, opened by the Compagnie de l'Ouest Suisse (OS) in 1855 . In 1856 the connecting curve Bussigny – Morges followed and in 1858 it was possible to drive from Morges along Lake Geneva to Geneva . 1859 was followed by the piece Yverdon Vaumarcus and society Franco-Suisse (FS) opened the continuation of Vaumarcus by Frienisberg , a makeshift station and harbor at Le Landeron at Lake Biel where by sea to connect to in 1858 built station in Nidau was .

From the other side, the Swiss Central Railway (SCB) opened the line from Olten via Herzogenbuchsee to Solothurn and along the southern foot of the Jura to Biel . Today the old route from Herzogenbuchsee to Solothurn is part of the upgraded Solothurn – Wanzwil line . In 1858 the SCB built a short stretch from Biel station to Nidau ​​am Bielersee, from where there was a connection by sea to the provisional station in Frienisberg near Landeron, which was built in 1859. When, in 1860, the gap along the northern shore of Lake Biel from Biel to Landeron was closed by the Swiss Ostwestbahn (OWB) company, the SCB closed the short stretch from Biel to Nidau ​​on December 10, 1860.

By closing the gap on December 3, 1860, it was possible for the first time to cross Switzerland entirely by rail from the east ( St. Margrethen ) to the west ( Geneva ); because of the different railway companies you had to change trains a few times.

As the last section of the Jura foot line, SCB opened the line from Olten via Oensingen to Solothurn, also known as the Gäubahn , in December 1876 .

Since the introduction of synchronized timetable railway lines of Switzerland wearing three-digit numbers by the editors of the Swiss official timetable to be determined. All trains on the Lausanne - Cossonay section are listed in timetable field 202 and the entire Jura foot line in field 210.

Accidents

On March 22, 1871, as a result of incorrectly setting the switches at the Franco-Suisse station in Colombier, an extra military train with members of the interned Bourbaki army collided with a parked freight train consisting of 22 coal wagons and a baggage car. A platoon leader and 22 internees died and 72 were injured. This was the worst railway accident in Switzerland to date.

On October 2, 1942, a freight train between Tüscherz and Biel collided with a passenger train . Eleven people died and ten were injured. An overtired engine driver had run over the stop signal. After the accident, the exit signals throughout Switzerland were equipped with Integra-Signum .

On December 8, 1978, a locomotive driver died near Vaumarcus when he was driving a freight train onto another freight train standing in front of a signal. There was great damage to property. Around 100,000 liters of liquid bitumen flowed out of two cars and some of them ended up in Lake Neuchâtel .

On August 4, 2007, two BLS freight trains each with two multi- controlled Re 4/4 collided head-on in the Biel marshalling yard . A train driver was injured; there was great property damage. Due to construction work, the freight trains at Biel Mett were diverted via the marshalling yard. One of the engine drivers had no knowledge of the route in the marshalling yard.

On April 25, 2015, the last six wagons of a Basel RB - Lausanne-Triage freight train derailed near the former Daillens station . Several tank wagons tipped down the embankment after about 500 meters. A good 20 tons of concentrated sulfuric acid leaked from one of the cars and seeped into the ground. The employees at the nearby post office package center were evacuated. The tracks, overhead lines and the signal box in Daillens were badly damaged. A leaf spring and a wheelset bearing were found in front of the scene of the accident , which apparently came from the third from last car of the train.

References and comments

  1. ↑ Platoon leader and 22 internees dead, 72 injured: In: Paul Winter: Schweizer Bahnen unter Fahnen . The history of the military railroad service. Minirex, Luzern 1988, ISBN 3-907014-02-2 , p. 26 . 24 dead including train driver: In: Walter Moser: The railway accident in Colombier. (PDF 0.4 MB) Yearbook for Solothurn History, Volume 70 (1997), p. 384 , accessed on January 10, 2015 .
  2. The collision ferroviaire prés de Vaumarcus est la plus coûteuse des dix dernières années . ( Memento of the original from March 6, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. In: Gazette de Lausanne , December 11, 1978, p. 9; with photo @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.letempsarchives.ch
  3. Lake Neuchatel gravement pollué . ( Memento of the original from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. In: Gazette de Lausanne , December 12, 1978, p. 8 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.letempsarchives.ch
  4. Final report of the Accident Investigation Board Railways and Ships on the train collision between trains 68097F and 66966F from BLS Cargo from Saturday, August 4, 2007 in the Biel marshalling yard (pdf)
  5. Freight train derailed with sulfuric acid. Neue Zürcher Zeitung, April 25, 2015, accessed on May 2, 2015 .
  6. ^ Ralph Pringsheim, Walter von Andrian, Mathias Rellstab: SBB freight train with dangerous goods wagons derailed in Daillens . In: Swiss Railway Review . No. 6 . Minirex, 2015, ISSN  1022-7113 , p. 306-308 .