Leipzig–Probstzella railway

Leipzig-Leutzsch–Probstzella
Route number: 550 (Leipzig–Gera)
555 (Gera–Saalfeld)
Line number: 6383
Line length: 159.97
Voltage: Leipzig-Leutzsch–Leipzig-Plagwitz,
Saalfeld–Probstzella:15 kV 16.7 Hz AC
Maximum speed: 120
Legend
from Leipzig Hbf
from Leipzig-Wahren
6.69 Leipzig-Leutzsch until Dec 2012
to Großkorbetha
7.5 Leipzig-Leutzsch from Dec 2012 (Keilbahnhof)
8.2 Leipzig-Industriegelände West until Dec 2012
10.1 Leipzig-Lindenau
from Leipzig-Connewitz
10.8 Leipzig-Plagwitz
Lindenau loading point–Leipzig-Plagwitz industrial railway
to Leipzig-Miltitzer Allee
to Pörsten
to Gaschwitz
13.7 Leipzig-Großzschocher
16.4 Leipzig-Knauthain
New alignment due to Zwenkau lignite mine
21.0 Knautnaundorf
21.8 Eythra
22.2
21.2
Kilometrage change
24.66 Groß Dalzig
to Neukieritzsch
29.9 Pegau
SaxonySaxony-Anhalt state border
34.4 Profen
37.3 Reuden (bei Zeitz)
39.5 Bornitz (bei Zeitz)
from Weißenfels
to Altenburg
44.6 Zeitz
to Camburg
50.6 Haynsburg
55.0 Wetterzeube
Saxony-AnhaltThuringia state border
60.0 Crossen Ort
60.9 Crossen a. d. Elster
to Porstendorf
Weiße Elster
66.3 Bad Köstritz
68.5 Gera-Langenberg
from Weimar
72.9 Gera Hbf
74.6 Gera Süd
to Gößnitz
to Weischlitz
76.9 Gera-Zwötzen
Weiße Elster
79.79 Wolfsgefärth
from Werdau
85.1 Weida
Werdau–Weida–Mehltheuer
from Münchenbernsdorf
93.6 Niederpöllnitz
100.5 Triptis
to Marxgrün
Orla
104.4 Traun
108.9 Neustadt(Orla)
112.2 Neunhofen
Orla
Orla
Harrasmühlen Tunnel (117 m)
117.5 Oppurg
to Orlamünde
122.4 Pößneck ober (upper) station
126.2 Krölpa-Ranis
130.6 Könitz(Thür.)
134.5 Unterwellenborn
from Großheringen
from Arnstadt
140.01 Saalfeld 211 m
Saale bridge, Breternitz (114 m)
145.81 Breternitz 216 m
149.85 Kaulsdorf 229 m
until 1954 Eichicht
152.08 Hockeroda 258 m
to Blankenstein
155.76 Unterloquitz 280 m
160.96 Marktgölitz 310 m
to Sonneberg (connecting curve)
from Sonneberg
164.99 Probstzella 365 m
166.66 Thuringia/Bavaria state border
to Nuremberg

The Leipzig–Probstzella railway is a line in the German states of Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia. It runs from Leipzig through the valley of the Weisse Elster via Zeitz, Gera, Triptis, the Orlasenke lowland and Saalfeld to Probstzella. Since it runs parallel with the Saal Railway but is higher, it is also called the Obere Bahn ("upper railway").

Contents

Route

The line begins in Leipzig Leutzsch and runs south from the city. Leipzig-Halle S-Bahn trains run on the line as far as Plagwitz. The line then runs through the flat Leipzig lowlands along the Elster through the former central German lignite mining area. This section of the line was once used to transport lignite to nearby power plants, but this traffic has declined considerably.

The line reaches Zeitz at the southern edge of the lowlands, were it connects with other lines, although some of the network has been closed since 1990. The hills on either side of the Weisse Elster south of Zeitz are steeper. Near Ahlendorf (the administrative centre of Heideland-Elstertal), the line crosses the border between Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia. The line now runs on a long curve through the communities of Crossen an der Elster and the brewery town of Bad Köstritz to Gera, where it meets several other lines. Until 1998, the Crossen–Porstendorf line ran from Crossen an der Elster station via Eisenberg and Bürgel to Porstendorf (north of Jena).

The line runs to the south from Gera Hauptbahnhof. Once out of the city it runs along the banks of the Weisse Elster before running along the valley of the Weida. To the west of the town of Weida the line crosses a crest on the approach to Triptis at an altitude of about 375 metres above sea level. The line now runs through the Orlasenke lowland and continues on a straight path to the south-west through the town of Neustadt an der Orla, continuing to Oppurg, where until 1944 the Orla Railway branched off towards Pößneck unterer (lower) station and Orlamünde. It then runs through Pößneck ober (upper) station to Saalfeld, where it connects with the Saal Railway, which links Berlin and Munich.

History

The second quarter of the line was opened in 1859. At that time, a line was built from Weißenfels (connecting there with the Thuringian Railway opened in 1846) via Zeitz to Gera. It was the first line to Gera, which was capital of the Principality of Reuss Younger Line and had about 14,000 inhabitants at that time.

The northern section of the line between Zeitz and Leipzig traffic was opened in 1873. Until the completion of the connecting curve between the Thuringian railway and the Saal Railway at Großheringen in 1900, it was the most important link between Prussia and Bavaria, except for the Saxon-Bavarian Railway. Although the curve at Großheringen meant that the Saal Railway was 25 km shorter, the north–south connection (Nord-Süd-Verbindung) through Gera continued to be used as a long-distance line from Leipzig in the north to Nuremberg in the south.

The section from Gera to Eichicht (now part of Kaulsdorf) was opened 20 December 1871. It was of great importance for the nearby towns. It allowed the textile industry in the Orlasenke, especially in Pößneck, to grow rapidly before the First World War. Pößneck thus became a centre of the Thuringian textile industry along with Apolda and Greiz. Also of importance to this section was the former Maxhütte steel and rolling mill in Unterwellenborn as well as the steel works, now known as the Thuringian Steelworks (Stahlwerk Thüringen). The line built in 1871 ran through the following states (starting in Gera): Reuss Younger Line, Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, Prussia, Saxe-Meiningen, Prussia, Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt and Sachsen-Meiningen. A temporary terminus was built in Eichicht as the route for the continuation of the line and connection to Bavaria was still unclear.

Before the Second World War the entire line was double track. In 1946 the second track was dismantled as reparations to the Soviet Union. The line at Knautnaundorf was realigned for the establishment of an open cut lignite mine under the East German regime.

The section from Saalfeld and Probstzella was electrified by 1939. Seven years later, all components of the electrification along with the second track were removed for reparations to the Soviet Union. Because of the division of Germany the line had little importance for the next four decades.

Double track has been restored on the sections between Leipzig Hauptbahnhof and Zeitz, between Gera Hauptbahnhof and Gera Süd and between Unterwellenborn and Probstzella. Electrification has been restored on the section between Saalfeld and Probstzella.

Current operations

Regional-Express (RE) 12 services and Regionalbahn (RB) 51 services run between Leipzig and Gera. The RB and RE services both run every two hours, alternating with each other to create an hourly service. In addition, on Saturdays (during the summer timetable), a pair of RE trains run from Leipzig via Gera and Saalfeld to Blankenstein (Schiefergebirgs-Express) and to Katzhütte (Schwarzatal Express).

The Gera-Saalfeld section is served by RE 4 services between Gera and Saalfeld every two hours. In addition, RB services alternate with the RE services every two hours between the two cities. These are mostly operated by class 612 and class 642 diesel multiple units.

From 2012, passenger services on the Leipzig–Zeitz–Gera–Saalfeld section will be operated by Erfurter Bahn.[1]

Notes

  1. ^ "Erfurter Bahn wird Ostthüringer Dieselnetz betreiben" (in German). Nahverkehrsservicegesellschaft Thüringen mbH. http://nvsthueringen.de/News/20100830_dieselnetz-ost-vergeben.php. Retrieved 17 February 2011. 

References

External links