Flieden–Gemünden railway

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Flieden–Gemünden am Main
Route number:801
Line length:56.3
Track gauge:1435
Voltage:15 kV 16.7 Hz AC
Maximum speed:160
State: Hesse, Bavaria
Legend
Kinzig Valley Railway from Fulda
0.0 Flieden
(new/old path of the Kinzig Valley Railway)
Katzenberg
Schlüchtern tunnel (3576 and 3995 m)
3.3 A66
5.5 Distelrasen(Flieden-Fulda yards)
3.2 10.0 Schlüchtern Ziegenberg(junction)
0.0 10.0 Schlüchtern
Kinzig Valley Railway to Hanau
7.7 10.2 Elm(former station)
12.4 Ebertsberg tunnel (232 m)
13.0 Brandenstein tunnel (150 m)
16.6 Vollmerz
18.0 Ramholz tunnel (new, 474 m)
21.6 Sterbfritz
22.2 Sterbfritz tunnel (1092 m)
24.2 Mottgers
29.9 Altengronau Nord
30.2 Ziegenberg tunnel (208 m)
former Sinn Valley Railway to Wildflecken
33.2 Jossa
34.0 Ruppertsberg tunnel (321 m)
Sinn, Hesse / Bavaria state border
36.4 Obersinn
38.4 Mittelsinn
43.5 Burgsinn
to high-speed to Würzburg
from high-speed from Hanover
48.3 Rieneck Sinnberg(junction)
Rieneck-Tunnel (422 m)
50.4 Rieneck
Würzburg ↔ Hannover high-speed line
54.3 Gemünden Zollberg(junction)
Main–Spessart railway from/to Aschaffenburg
Franconian Saale Valley Railway from Bad Kissingen
55.0 Gemünden Saalebrücke(junction)
56.3 Gemünden (Main)
Wern Valley Railway to Waigolshausen
Main–Spessart railway to Würzburg

The Flieden–Gemünden railway is a double track electrified railway line from Fulda, Flieden and Schlüchtern via Jossa to Gemünden am Main. The northern part of the line is in the German state of Hesse and it crosses into Bavaria south of Jossa.

Route

Sterbfritz station
New and old Ramholz tunnel portals

The route runs from Fulda, initially on the same tracks as the line via Hanau to Frankfurt am Main, the Kinzig Valley line. At Flieden it leaves the Kinzig Valley line and runs through the Spessart and Rhön foothills through the closed stations of Elm and Vollmerz, followed by Sterbfritz station, which remains open to passengers, and the abandoned stations of Mottgers and Altengronau Nord before reaching Jossa in the Sinn Valley.

The route mostly follows the Sinn river and runs partly parallel to the Würzburg–Hannover high-speed line. There is a link to the new line south of Burgsinn through the Burgsinn depot. The old 388 metre-long Ramholz tunnel (built 1868-1871) has been replaced by a new 474 metre-long tunnel. The new tunnel was broken through in June 2007.[1][2] Since 17 June 2008 trains running to the south have used the new tunnel.

History

The railway line was part of the old North-South line from Hanover to Würzburg. It was opened in 1872. Prior to the opening of the Schlüchtern Tunnel in 1914 all trains between Frankfurt and Fulda on the train Kinzig Valley line had to reverse in Elm.

Operations

Regionalbahn trains run between Schlüchtern and Jossa roughly every two hours and roughly hour between Jossa and Gemünden.

References

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