Vectus Verkehrsgesellschaft

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Vectus Verkehrsgesellschaft mbH
Type Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung
Industry Rail transport
Headquarters Limburg an der Lahn, Germany
Area served Rhein-Main-Verkehrsverbund
Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Mosel
Key people Bernhard Maßberg, Veit Salzmann, Horst Klein
Owner(s) 74.9 % Hessische Landesbahn GmbH
25.1 % Westerwaldbahn GmbH of the Altenkirchen district
Employees 75
Website www.vectus-online.de

Vectus Verkehrsgesellschaft mbH ("Vectus Transportation Company", from Latin vectus: "carried") is a German transport company based in Limburg an der Lahn. In 2004.It took over the operation of a regional rail network located in the Lahn valley, the Westerwald and the Taunus, which is called the Westerwald-Taunus network. The operations of the network focus on Limburg.

Foundation

Vectus was founded on 23 July 2003. Its shareholders are the Hessische Landesbahn GmbH (HLB) with 74.9% and the Westerwaldbahn GmbH with 25.1% of the shares. Both were partners in a consortium that won a concession on 14 November 2002 against numerous competitors—including DB Regio—to operate a roughly 218 km long railway network in the states of Hesse and Rhineland-Palatinate for a period of ten years. The operating concession was signed on 10 January 2003 with the Zweckverband Schienenpersonennahverkehr Rheinland-Pfalz Nord ("purpose association for rail transport of Rhineland-Palatinate North", SPNV Nord) and Rhein-Main-Verkehrsverbund (Rhine-Main Transport Association, RMV). The SPNV Nord is also responsible for sections of line in southern North Rhine-Westphalia.[1] Vectus took over the operations at the timetable change in December 2004, using 28 new vehicles and 70 staff.

Routes

The routes operated by Vectus—with the regional service numbers of the RMV—are as follows:

Line number Line Route
RB 20 Main-Lahn railway Limburg (Lahn)IdsteinNiedernhausen
RB 21 Ländches Railway Niedernhausen – Wiesbaden Hbf
RB 25 Lahn Valley Railway Limburg (Lahn) – Diez – Nassau – Bad EmsNiederlahnsteinKoblenz Hbf

Limburg (Lahn) – WeilburgWetzlarGießen partly, on behalf of the Hessischen Landesbahn

RB 28 Upper Westerwald Railway Limburg (Lahn) – StaffelHadamarWesterburg – Altenkirchen – Au (Sieg)
RB 29 Lower Westerwald Railway Limburg (Lahn) – Staffel – MontabaurSiershahn

Limburg is the junction where Vectus services connect with the services of Deutsche Bahn. It operates services on the Main-Lahn Railway to Frankfurt and Regional-Express services on the Lahn Valley Railway. There are also buses from the Limburg (Lahn) station, connecting to Intercity-Express (ICE) services at Limburg Süd station. Connections to the ICE network also exist in Montabaur station on the Limburg-Staffel–Siershahn railway (Lower Westerwald Railway) and in Wiesbaden.

Rolling stock

Vectus operates a total of 2.4 million train-km per year, using 10 Alstom Coradia LINT 27 diesel railcars and 18 Alstom Coradia LINT 41 railcars. All vehicles were built in 2004 and are identical to the class 640 and 648 railcars of Deutsche Bahn. After the delivery of the first railcars, some ran on the Limburg–Wiesbaden line and other routes in the summer of 2004.

In addition Vectus has three Stadler GTW diesel railcars that it acquired from its parent company, HLB, in compensation for three LINT 27 railcars it transferred to HLB.[2]

Proposed resolution

In October 2012, HLB was awarded the contract for the future operations of the Westerwald network, which will operate from the end of Vectus’ ten-year contract in 2014. The contract for the operation of the Taunus network will be taken over by DB Regio. The operations centre in Limburg will close in mid-2015 and subsequently Vectus Verkehrsgesellschaft mbH will be dissolved. All railcars will be taken over by Hessische Landesbahn and they will only be maintained occasionally in the Limburg workshop after 2015.

Notes

  1. "The Westerwald network" (in German). westerwaelder-bahnen.net. Retrieved 21 June 2013. 
  2. "vectus Verkehrsgesellschaft mbH – rolling stock" (in German). Westerwälder Bahnen. Retrieved 21 June 2013. 

External links

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