Wendlingen–Ulm high-speed railway

Wendlingen–Ulm high-speed railway
Overview of the planned high-speed line
Line number:4813
Line length:58
Maximum incline: 3.5  %
Maximum speed:250
State: Baden-Württemberg
Direction: West–east
Construction: two track,
electrification
Legend
Stuttgart–Wendlingen high-speed railway
Neckar-Alb Railway
Wendlingen am Neckar
Teck Railway
Neckar-Alb Railway
Beginning of the Wendlingen–Ulm high-speed line
25.6
0.0

[1]

Neckartal junction Little Wendlingen Curve to Neckar-Alb Railway
Freight connection to Neckar-Alb Railway
Albvorland Tunnel(8176 m)
Teck Railway
Weilheim Tunnel(225 m)
Boßler Tunnel(8806 m)
Fils Viaduct(ca. 485 m)
Steinbühl Tunnel(ca. 4847 m)
Autobahn Tunnel(378 m)
Widderstall Tunnel(963 m)
AS Merklingen Tunnel(424 m)
Imberg Tunnel(499 m)
Albabstiegs Tunnel(5940 m)
Fils Valley Railway–Ulm Rbf connecting line
End of the high-speed railway
Fils Valley Railway
Brenz Railway from Aalen
Danube Valley Railway from Tuttlingen
82.4[1] Ulm Hbf
Southern Railway
85.0 Danube, Bavaria/BW state border
Neu-Ulm West cut and cover (250 m)
83.8 Neu-Ulm
Neu-Ulm Ost cut and cover (200 m)
Iller Valley Railway to Memmingen
Continuing as Ulm–Augsburg railway

Wendlingen-Ulm high-speed line is a proposed high-speed railway line crossing the Swabian Alb with speeds of up to 250  km/h and will run in many sections parallel to the A 8. In the east the line will connect with the Neu-Ulm station opened on 18 March 2007, in the west to the Stuttgart 21 project.

As a section of the Stuttgart–Augsburg new and upgraded line, the Wendlingen-Ulm project is also a component of the Magistrale for Europe from Paris to Budapest, which is supported by the European Union as part of its Trans-European Networks. The European Union is providing up to 50 per cent of the planning phase of the project and is expected to fund ten per cent of its construction costs.

Project

Once opened, the travel time for high-speed traffic between Stuttgart and Ulm will be only 28 minutes rather than the current 54 minutes, if a stop at Stuttgart Airport is omitted. This is part of Deutsche Bahn's Netz 21 (network 21) concept, which envisages a reduction of the travel time between Frankfurt and Munich from over three and a half today to two and a half hours in the future. However, this timing can only be achieved with a by-pass of Mannheim on the proposed Rhine/Main–Rhine/Neckar high-speed rail line, which would allow the travel time between Frankfurt and Stuttgart to be reduced to one hour. Deutsche Bahn has shelved the proposed bypass because of opposition to it in Mannheim.

27.1 km of the 58 km new line run in seven twin-tube tunnels. The estimated construction cost of € 2 billion, is affected by the difficult geology that the tunnels will run through.[2]

Sections

A key point of criticism is the 15-km-long steep ramp on which the line climbs the Swabian Alps at gradients between 17 and 31 per mille.

The project is divided into seven planning sections:

Construction timetable

In May 2005 it was decided to commence construction. Under the plans of DB ProjektBau (Deutsche Bahn’s construction subsidiary), if construction had commenced in autumn 2005, it would have been ready to open in 2013. However, as a result of Federal Budget cuts commencement of construction has been delayed. On July 19, 2007, it was announced by the Federal Government, the State of Baden-Württemberg and DB that the project had been officially approved. € 2.0 billion will be invested in the Wendlingen-Ulm high-speed line, along with € 2.8 billion in Stuttgart 21. Baden-Württemberg agreed to provide funds of € 950 million for the Wendlingen-Ulm line, but the Federal Government will not provide funding for it before 2016. This agreement is expected to bring forward the commencement of construction from 2016 to 2010 and completion to 2020.[3][4][5][6]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 SMA und Partner AG (4 June 2008). "Aktennotiz: Neubauprojekt Stuttgart - Ulm" (PDF, 14 pages, 7.1 MB) (in German). Retrieved 21 March 2011.
  2. 27 Kilometer Tunnel durch schwieriges Gestein, Stuttgarter Nachrichten of 4 October 2006 (German)
  3. "Einigung auf Finanzierung von Stuttgart 21" (in German). SWR3 Radio news. 19 July 2007. Retrieved 2007-07-20.
  4. "Finanzierung für Stuttgart 21 steht" (in German). Spiegel online. 19 July 2007. Retrieved 2007-07-20.
  5. "Tiefensee: Durchbruch für die Neubaustrecke Stuttgart - Ulm - Augsburg und "Stuttgart 21"" (Press release) (in German). Federal Ministry of Transport, Building and Urban Affairs. 19 July 2007. Retrieved 2007-07-20.
  6. "Memorandum of Understanding" (pdf) (in German). Federal Ministry of Transport, Building and Urban Affairs. 19 July 2007. Retrieved 2007-07-20.
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References