Jüterbog–Röderau railway

Jüterbog–Zeithain Bogendreieck junction
Route number:204 Jüterbog–Falkenberg (Elster)
213 Falkenberg (Elster)–Riesa
Line number:6133
Line length:142.04
Track gauge:1435
Voltage:15 kV 16.7 Hz AC
Maximum speed:120
Legend
from Berlin
62.8 Jüterbog(Berlin Anhalter Bahnhof - km 0.0)
B 102
to Potsdam
to Lutherstadt Wittenberg
70.8 Oehna
75.8 Zellendorfclosed 1995
BrandenburgSaxony-Anhalt state border
79.0 Linda (Elster)
Holzdorf Air Base siding
84.0 Holzdorf (Elster)
Schwarze Elster
Saxony-Anhalt-Brandenburg state border
101.1 Herzberg (Elster)
B 87
Connecting curve to Uckro
Connecting curve to Dessau
from Dessau
from Uckro
111.9 Falkenberg (Elster)Halle–Cottbus
to Ruhland
121.7 Saxdorfclosed 1995
from Mühlberg
125.7 Neuburxdorf(passenger services until 2004)
BrandenburgSaxony state border
135.7 Jacobsthalclosed 2004
Zeithain military training base siding
Strategic railway from Oschatz (gravel siding)
140.9 Röderau(passenger services until 2004)
from Leipzig
142.04 Zeithain Bogendreieck junction
to Dresden and to Elsterwerda

The Jüterbog–Röderau railway is an electrified main line in the German states of Brandenburg, Saxony-Anhalt and Saxony. It runs from Jüterbog via Falkenberg (Elster) to Röderau, near Riesa. There it ends in a triangular junction with the Leipzig–Dresden railway, connecting to Riesa and Dresden. The Jüterbog–Falkenberg section consists of a single track; the Falkenberg–Riesa section has two tracks. It was opened in 1848 and is one of the oldest lines in Germany.

History

Planning and Construction

The Berlin-Anhalt Railway Company (German: Berlin-Anhaltische Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft, BAE) was one of the major railway companies in Germany for more than four decades during the 19th century. One of its major objects was to connect Berlin and Dresden. The first section of the Anhalt trunk line was opened on 1 July 1841 from Berlin to Jüterbog. After several delays, the Jüterbog–Röderau line opened in two stages in 1848. On 2 July, the line from Jüterbog to Herzberg was opened and on 1 October it was extended to Röderau, where it connected with the Leipzig-Dresden main line.

In 1871, the Halle–Cottbus line of the Halle-Sorau-Guben Railway (Halle-Sorau-Gubener Eisenbahn) was opened over the Jüterbog–Röderau line in Falkenberg. A two-level station was built at the junction.

Operations

The line was used mainly for transport between Berlin and Dresden. In 1875 the competing direct Berlin–Dresden line of the Berlin-Dresden Railway Company (Berlin-Dresdener Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft) was opened between the two cities. This line, which ran via Elsterwerda, was about twelve kilometres shorter. At the end of the World War II long-distance traffic was shared between both routes. Most trains running via Röderau divided at Falkenberg, with one section continuing to Chemnitz and the other to Dresden.

After the division of Berlin, long distance trains no longer ran to Anhalt station, but instead ran on the Berlin outer ring to eastern Berlin. The Anhalt route involved a greater detour for trains to and from Dresden; as a result all trains between Berlin and Dresden ran via Elsterwerda. Some express trains continued to run via Falkenberg to Chemnitz (renamed Karl-Marx-Stadt in 1953). Express trains were diverted to the Riesa–Elsterwerda line in the early 1970s and the line via Falkenberg was served only by freight and regional passenger services. The only prestige service on the line was an express train on the Dresden–Falkenberg–Dessau route (later running on to Köthen) and return, running on Fridays and Sundays.

After the fall of Communism, services improved on the northern section between Jüterbog and Falkenberg, which connected to Berlin. The trains were given a minimum of investment and connected directly to Berlin. In contrast, traffic on the southern sector to Riesa steadily declined. In December 2004, passenger services on this section were cancelled by the Upper Elbe Transport Association.

Current situation

The Jüterbog–Falkenberg section is now served every two hours by Regional-Express trains as line RE5, connecting to Berlin. There are now no scheduled passenger trains on the southern sector, only freight trains.

References