Weser-Aller Railway

Weser-Aller Railway
Rotenburg (Wümme)–Minden
Minden station – the beginning of the line
Route number:124
Track gauge:1435
Voltage:15 kV 16.7 Hz AC
Maximum speed:120
Legend
Main line to Hamburg
former Line to Walsrode
27,1 Rotenburg (Wümme)
Main line to Bremen
25,0 Line to Bremervörde
21,0 Unterstedt
15,6 Westerwalsede
10,7 Holtum
5,8 Walle (Verden)
A 27 motorway
Uelzen-Langwedel
Main line to Bremen
0,0
86,6
Verden (Aller) station
Verden-Walsrode Railway
Aller
83,3 Wahnebergen crossover
Former Aller Valley Railway
78,1 Dörverden
Line to Syke
71,0 Eystrup
61,2 Rohrsen (b Nienburg)
Line to Uchte and
former line to Sulingen
55,2
0,0
Nienburg/Weser station
Main line to Hanover
4,4 Langendamm (Han) passing siding
7,7 Schäferhof passing siding
11,1 Estorf (Weser)
14,9 Landesbergen (Han) siding
18,8 Leese RWG siding
20,8 Leese-Stolzenau
former Steinhuder Meer Railway
20,9 former Line to Stadthagen
22,7 LS / NRW
24,9 Schlüsselburg (Weser)
28,9 Heimsen
33,0 Döhren (Weser) siding
36,3 Windheim (Weser)
from the Kraftwerk Heyden
40,8 Petershagen-Lahde
45,1 Frille
50,4 Dankersen
Main line to Hanover
51,8 Minden (Westfalen) station
53,0 Minden (Westfalen) station
Main line to Hamm

The Weser-Aller Railway (German: Weser-Aller-Bahn) is an electrified railway line in northwestern Germany, that links Rotenburg (Wümme) in Lower Saxony with Minden in Westphalia. The Deutsche Reichsbahn built the line in 1928. For most of its course it runs parallel to the Middle Weser River, but its northerns section leaves the Weser after crossing the River Aller near Verden.

The two-hourly Regionalbahn service on this line between Rotenburg and Minden is also known in North Rhine-Westphalia as the Weser-Aller-Bahn.

See also

Source

External links

References


    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, March 21, 2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.