Bremer Straßenbahn

Bremer Straßenbahn AG
Information
Head offices Flughafendamm 12
28199 Bremen
www.bsag.de
Transport association Verkehrsverbund Bremen Niedersachsen
Employees 2150 (2004)
Gauge 1435 mm
Lines
Tramway lines 8 (2005)
3 express lines
Bus lines 46 (2004)
Vehicles
Tramway
(2006-03)
77 low floor trams GT8N
6 low floor trams GT8N-1
40 articulated trams
7 museal vehicles
15 work vehicles.
Omnibus
(2006-03)
72 low floor buses
140 low floor bendy buses
3 minibuses
1 coach
Statistics
Passengers (per year) 96,900,000 mio (2004)
Passengers (per day) 266,000 (2004)
Transport volume (per year) 22,100,000 km (2004)
Source: Geschäftsbericht 2004

Bremer Straßenbahn AG (translates from German as Bremen Tramways Corporation), often abbreviated BSAG, is the public transport provider for Bremen, Germany, offering tramway and bus services.

Contents

History

Horse tramway

On March 28, 1876 the Actiengesellschaft Bremer Pferdebahn was founded. The enterprise opened a horse tramway line from Herdentor to Vahrster Brücke on June 4, 1876, extending the line to Horn in 1877. In 1883, the extension from Herdentor to the stock exchange in the city centre was opened.

The rival company Große Bremer Pferdebahn, which used British capital, opened a line from Hastedt to Walle on 3 November 1879; today's line 2 partly follows the trajectory of that horse line. Both companies extended their network, and lines were opened to Freihafen (1888), Hohentor (1889) and Arsterdamm (1880/1884).

Electric tramway

In 1890, the line from the stock exchange to the Bürgerweide exhibition grounds was electrified as a trial for the duration of an exhibition. After the exhibition ended, the catenary was removed, but the system had worked so well that it was decided to electrify all tramways. Electrification started in 1892, and lasted until 1913. By then the network was fully electrified, with the exception of the Freihafen line, which had since been abandoned. Meanwhile, Große Bremer Pferdebahn merged with the Bremer Pferdebahn (which had renamed itself to Bremer Straßenbahn in 1890) in 1899.

In 1908, line numbers were introduced. By 1939, the network consisted of the following lines:

The system suffered severe damage during World War II - tramway services were abandoned on April 22, 1945. After WWII had ended, only 10% of the rolling stock were in working order, and 80% of the catenary had been damaged.

World War II aftermath

On June 13, 1945 the first tramways went into operation again. In the immediate WWII aftermath, the Bremen network consisted of two parts, as the bridges over the river Weser had been destroyed. In 1947, the connection between the two parts of the network was made, and apart from the tramway line over the Stephanibrücke, the 1950s BSAG network reached its pre-war spread. In 1953, bus traffic was taken over by the BSAG. The new workshop Flughafendamm near Bremen Airport was constructed in 1959; in 1963 the head offices moved to that site also. In 1965, the main stepover stop was moved from the marketplace to Domsheide.

Line closures

Bremen, like other cities in the world, had lines close in the 1950s and 1960s due to increased use of automobiles. On the following lines, service was abandoned:

Lines 15 and 16 were renumberd to lines 5 and 6 in 1967.

Network extensions

However, some lines were also notably extended:

Rolling stock

GT4

The oldest vehicles still in active service are the articulated tramcars GT4d, GT4e and GT4f and the fitting trailers GB4d, GB4e and GB4f. The vehicles were built from 1973 to 1977 by Wegmann & Co. in Kassel. Of the 61 trams and 57 trailers originally delivered, four GT4f-vehicles are still in service, though this is limited to the purposes of the tram driving school, and other special occasions. The rest has been demolished or delivered to Timişoara in Romania.

GT8N

In the late 1990s, the Hansa-built stock dating from the 1960s was scheduled for replacement. Since the BSAG had already invested in low-floor buses, low-floor tram vehicles were wanted as well. In 1990, the BSAG presented a prototype to the public. This three-part articulated car was the world's first 100% low floor tram. From 1993 to 1996, 78 low-floor trams, called GT8N, were ordered from AEG. Their main difference to the prototype is that they have four parts instead of three, hence offering more space and thus more beneficial for wheelchair users. One vehicle has been taken out of service after an accident, the prototype was sold to the Norrköping tramways in Sweden in 1999.

GT8N-1

The GT8N-1 is the newest tramway vehicle in BSAG's rolling stock fleet. The first car was delivered in September 2005, a total number of 20 trams is ordered from Bombardier. Furthermore an option of 23 additional vehicles can be honoured. The GT8N-1 is the second generation of low floor tramcars in Bremen. Its task is to replace older GT4 Wegmann vehicles and to increase the comfort for BSAG passengers. Therefore in comparison to the older GT8N low floor cars several changes have been made. The width of the car has been enlarged to 2.65 m, that makes the interior more spacious and allows the introduction of four seats in wide range, altogether 106 seats are available. Also an air-condition for the passengers is installed, five low floor doorways and a lift for disabled passengers facilitate the entry for all passengers. The vehicle has an overall length of 35,400 mm and a reaches a maximum speed of 70 km/h. It consists of three sections with a total of four bogies. Two of them carrying are the middle section of the car, the two end sections are carried by one bogie each of them. The end section bogies are driven, that's why above them it was not possible to realise a low floor like in the other parts of the car, altogether the GT8N-1 has 74 % low floor. The car is uni-directional for the use in BSAG's tramway network. It is also possible to build a similar bi-directional, two-systems vehicle that can also be used on DB tracks and so may connect BSAG's inner-city tramway network with railway lines. The GT8N-1 is based on Bombardier's FLEXITY Classic modular tramcar concept. Vehicles of that type run in several cities in Germany and also in Poland and Australia, the first car of this family was the 8NGTW, delivered in 1997 to KVG Kassel.

Historic BSAG cars

In Bremen some historic tram cars still exist:

External links