Hagen–Dieringhausen railway

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Hagen–Dieringhausen
Map of the Oberbergish railways
Route number:434
Line length:61
Track gauge:1435
Maximum speed:90
State: North Rhine-Westphalia
Operating points and lines[1]
Legend
Main line from Dortmund
(141.7) 0,0 Hagen Hbf
S-Bahn line to Gevelsberg
(140.8) 0.0 Rehsiepen (Nord)(turnout)
Main line to Wuppertal
(140.4) 0.0 Braun-Angott(turnout)
(140.1) 1.6 Rehsiepen (Süd)(turnout)
Goldberg Tunnel (2230 m)
(old way - 1910)
4.1
1.7
Hagen-Oberhagen
Volme
4.1 Hagen-Delstern
7.2 Hagen-Ambrock
Volme (2x)
9.5 Dahl
Volme
Hengstenberger Tunnel (232 m)
11.5 Breckerfeld-Priorei
Volme
13.2 Rummenohl
Volme
Twieströmer Tunnel (152 m)
16.3 Dahlerbrück
Volme
18.1 SchalksmühleHälver Valley Railway
Volme
Winkhauser Tunnel (227 m)
Volme
Branch line from Lüdenscheid
23.8 Brügge (Westf.)
26.1 Oberbrügge(turnout until 2012)
former link to the Wupper Valley Railway
28.2 Bollwerk
30.6 Vollme
33.4 Grünenbaum
35.3 Kierspe
Wehe
Hahnenbecke
38.8 Meinerzhagen(station to 1986 & from 2013)
Line to Krummenerl (freight only)
Meinerzhagener Tunnel (384 m)
Genkel
Deipensiepen
43.8 Holzwipper
former Wipper Valley Railway from Wipperfürth
47.9 Marienheide
51.0 Kotthausen
51.0 Schrotthändler
Rospebach
54.6 Gummersbach Nord
56.1 Gummersbach
Rospebach
60.4 Vollmerhausen Berg
former line from Olpe
Strombach
61.2 Dieringhausen
Line to Cologne

The Hagen–Dieringhausen railway (also called the Volmetalbahn: Volme Valley Railway) is a mostly single-track (continuously double track as far as Brügge) and non-electrified railway line from Hagen Hauptbahnhof via Brügge, Meinerzhagen and Gummersbach to Dieringhausen in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia.

The Volmetalbahn is also the name of the trains running on this line as Regionalbahn service RB 52, from Lüdenscheid via Hagen to Dortmund. The Brügge–Marienheide section is not used for passenger services, but the RB 25 (Oberbergische Bahn) service runs from Marienheide to Cologne on the line.

The railway and the Regionalbahn service is named after the Volme river, which it largely follows.

History

Elevated signalbox in Brügge
The closed station at Oberbrügge with passing loop until 2012

The route was studied in the 1840s as an alternative to the route of the Ruhr–Sieg railway.[2] In May 1870, the Bergisch-Märkische Railway Company (Bergisch-Märkischen Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft, BME) began construction of the Volme Valley Railway. The route was opened from Hagen to Oberhagen on 16 October 1871 and the line was extended to Dahl for freight traffic on 15 March 1874. On 6 September 1874 this section was released for passenger services. After the nationalisation of the BME, the Volme Valley Railway was extended to Brügge via Meinerzhagen towards Marienheide and Gummersbach in 1891/92. The entire route was completed to Dieringhausen in 1893.[3] Construction of an extension via Krummenerl for connection to the Finnentrop–Freudenberg railway (Bigge Valley Railway) and on to Kreuztal was started several times, but not completed. Construction stopped at Krummenerl in 1927.[4]

In Hagen, the line initially ran through the city (along the present-day Bergstraße). Because of the significant difficulties experienced by road users, construction of a bypass was started in November 1906. As a result the Goldberg tunnel was put into operation on 1 July 1910.[5][6] During the duplication of the line in 1906 the Kotthausen Tunnel and the Hammerhausen Tunnel were removed.

At the beginning of the 20th century there were plans to connect the Volme Valley Railway with the Plettenberg–Herscheid railway, thus creating a connection between the Volme and Lenne valleys. However, this failed due to high construction costs.

Until 1958, freight was transferred in Marienheide to the metre gauge Leppe Valley Railway (Leppetalbahn).

On the route between Hagen and Brügge there are three disused railway stations. The stations of Delstern and Ambrock were between Oberhagen and Dahl. There was once was a station at Breckerfeld-Priorei between Dahl and Rummenohl. Delstern and Breckerfeld-Priorei stations closed on 27 May 1979, while Ambrock closed in 1964 or 1965.[7][8][9]

DB 212 312-3 with N6367 on 23 May 1986 at the exit from Marienheide towards Meinerzhagen
Marienheide station in 1986 with a City-Bahn service

From 1965 until September 1994, the Volme Valley Railway was operated with push–pull trains consisting of Hagen-based class 212 diesel locomotives with two to three, mostly Silberling, carriages. Until 1979 there was also a Deutsche Bundesbahn bus shuttle between Lüdenscheid and Brügge, which connected with the express trains between Cologne and Hagen. A class 628.4 diesel multiple unit operated from September 1994 to 30 May 1999. City-Bahn services operated on the (Cologne–) Dieringhausen–Meinerzhagen section (cut back in 1986 to Marienheide and in 1987 to Gummersbach) from 1984 to 1995.

Operations of the Volme Valley Railway was put to tender in 1996; it was the first railway line in Germany to be put to European-wide tender. This was won by the Dortmund-Märkische Eisenbahn (DME), a company mainly owned by the City of Dortmund. It took over operations of the Hagen-Brügge-Lüdenscheid route on 30 May 1999 and operated Bombardier Talent DMUs. In 2004, the route was retendered and won by Deutsche Bahn, which has operated it with Alstom Coradia LINT 41 (class 648) railcars.

During the first period of tendered operations the single track section between Brügge and Hagen-Delstern was rebuilt in order to accelerate it. However, this accelerated operations only minimally, as various passing tracks had been dismantled and timetabling was restricted. Gravel trains that still regularly running from Meinerzhagen and empty trains running in the opposite direction must stop regularly in Brügge or Delstern. Passenger trains may be delayed in reaching their scheduled crossings in Rummenohl, leading to further delays, which cancel out the intended acceleration.

A plan presented in 1997 for a Hagen Regionalstadtbahn (Regionalstadtbahn Hagen), which included the Volme Valley Railway from Dortmund via Hagen to Lüdenscheid as a light rail to operate directly from Dortmund city centre via Hagen city centre to central Lüdenscheid, was rejected for cost reasons, despite its traffic-related benefits.

Current condition

Shunting locomotive 294 151-6 hauling a front train towards Hagen in Brügge (Westfalen) station
The Volmetal-Bahn service leaving the Goldberg Tunnel in Hagen

The Volme Valley Railway, including the 2,200 m-long Goldberg tunnel in Hagen, is a major piece of railway infrastructure.

One of the two signal boxes on Gummersbacher station has served a local savings bank as a training centre since 2006. Most other signal boxes are now demolished or are disused.

Rail services

The Volme Valley Railway is served hourly (with gaps on Sunday mornings) by Regionalbahn service RB 52 (Volmetal-Bahn). It starts in Dortmund Hauptbahnhof and runs via Hagen Hbf and Brügge (where it reverses) to Lüdenscheid. The trains cross just before the half-hour in Rummenohl. Since 12 December 2004 services on the Volme Valley Railway have been operated by DB Regio NRW using DB Class 648 (LINT 41) diesel railcars, which are capable of speeds of up to 120 km/h, although the line allow a maximum of 90 km/h. Occasionally, rollingstock of classes 612, 628.4 and 640 (LINT 27) is used.

The line from Dieringhausen to Marienheide is served by class 644 (Bombardier Talent) multiple units, operating as RB 25 (Oberbergische Bahn) from Cologne, and reaching the Volme Valley Railway in Dieringhausen over the Siegburg–Olpe railway.

Notes

  1. Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2009/10 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0. 
  2. Martin Vormberg (1989). "Die Ruhr-Sieg-Eisenbahn.". In Alfred Bruns. Die Eisenbahn im Sauerland. (in German). Schmallenberg. pp. 41 ff. ISBN 3-922659-63-2. 
  3. "Line 2810: (Hagen ↔) Hagen-Oberhagen ↔ Dieringhausen". NRW rail archive (in German). André Joost. Retrieved 21 October 2013. 
  4. Albert K. Hömberg (1967). Heimatchronik des Kreises Olpe. (in German) (2 ed.). Cologne. pp. 301f. 
  5. "Line 2819: Hagen ↔ Hagen-Oberhagen (new line from 1910)". NRW rail archive (in German). André Joost. Retrieved 21 October 2013. 
  6. Lothar Brill. "Tunnel portals on line 2819" (in German). tunnelportale. Retrieved 21 October 2013. 
  7. "Hagen-Delstern station operations". NRW Rail Archive (in German). André Joost. Retrieved 21 October 2013. 
  8. "Hagen-Ambrock station operations". NRW Rail Archive (in German). André Joost. Retrieved 21 October 2013. 
  9. "Breckerfeld-Priorei (Po11) station operations". NRW Rail Archive (in German). André Joost. Retrieved 21 October 2013. 

References

  • Sascha Koch, Horst Kowalski und andere (2005). Eisenbahnen im Oberbergischen und die Geschichte des Bahnbetriebswerkes Dieringhausen (in German). Nümbrecht: Galunder Verlag. ISBN 3-89909-050-0. 
  • Christoph Riedel (1999). Eisenbahn im Sauerland. Schienenwege zwischen Ruhr und Sieg (in German). Munich: Geramond-Verlag. ISBN 3-932785-22-3. 
  • Christoph Riedel (1994). "Strecke Hagen–Dieringhausen/Lüdenscheid". In Wolf-Dietger Machel. Neben- und Schmalspurbahnen in Deutschland. (in German). Munich: GeraMond. ISSN 0949-2143. 
  • Bernd Franco Hoffmann (April 2013). Stillgelegte Bahnstrecken im Bergischen Land (in German). Erfurt: Sutton-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-95400-147-7. 

External links

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