Görlitz–Dresden railway

Görlitz–Dresden-Neustadt
Overview
Locale Saxony
Line number 6212
Technical
Line length 102.100 km (63.442 mi)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Minimum radius 429 m (1,407 ft)
Electrification DD-Klotzsche–DD-Neustadt:
15 kV/16.7 Hz AC overhead catenary
Operating speed 120 km/h (74.6 mph) (maximum)
Maximum incline 1.9%
Route number 230
Route map

from (Wrocław–) Węgliniec and from Wałbrzych
from (Zawidów–) Hagenwerder
0.000 Görlitz 221 m
to Schlauroth yard–Schlauroth junction
to Berlin Görlitzer Bf
0.600 Bundesstraße 99 bridge (30 m)
1.200 Rauschwalder Straße bridge (40 m)
3.150 Görlitz-Rauschwaldesince 1999 225 m
3.904 Schlauroth Hp1907–1999 234 m
4.185 Schlaurothuntil 1907 234 m
from Görlitz–Schlauroth yard
4.260 Schlauroth junction
4.285 Görlitzer Straße LC (12 m) state road 125
6.900 Markersdorf (Bk) 245 m
8.350 Friedersdorfer Wasser bridge (15 m)
9.850 Gersdorf b Görlitz
9.943 Gersdorf bridge (20 m)
14.040 Reichenbach (OL) 250 m
14.850 former Prussia–Saxony national border
15.550 Sohland bridge (32 m)
17.670 Zoblitz 243 m
19.900 Rosenhainer Wasser bridge (30 m)
20.480 Bk Rosenhain 245 m
23.600 Löbau (Sachs) Ost1945 only 260 m
23.809 Löbau viaduct (190 m), Löbauer Wasser
24.230 Löbau (Sachs) 263 m
to Ebersbach (Sachs) and to Zittau
to Großpostwitz
to Radibor (Sachs)
27.260 Laucha (Bk)
30.443 Breitendorf 259 m
33.762 Kupritz Viaduct (96 m; Niethener Viaduct)
34.562 Pommritz 237 m
39.477 Kubschütz 225 m
43.050 Falkenberg (Bk)
from Bad Schandau
Bombardier Transportation siding
45.912 Bautzen 203 m
46.661 Spree viaduct (225 m)
47.870 Stiebitz junction (Bk) 210 m
47.905 to Hoyerswerda
51.000 Grubschütz junction (Bk) 224 m
53.996 Seitschen 241 m
56.680 Zockau (Bk)
Demitz-Thumitz granite works siding
Naundorfer Wasser bridge 238 m
59.856 Demitz viaduct (220 m), Schwarzwasser
60.323 Demitz-Thumitz 264 m
from Kamenz (Sachs)
from Neukirch (Lausitz) West
64.932 Bischofswerda 288 m
67.850 Weickersdorf (Sachs) 280 m
70.690 Kleindrebnitz (Bk)
71.370 Wesenitz bridge (34 m)
72.480 Großharthau 281 m
75.710 Seeligstadt (Bk)
78.410 Fischbachuntil 1877 257 m
78.470 Fischbach (Bk)
from Pirna
80.196 Arnsdorf (Dresden)since 1875 250 m
to Kamenz
83.089 Rödertal bridge (67 m)
83.220 Rödertal bridge (57 m)
83.280 Kleinwolmsdorf
83.884 Rödertal bridge (32 m)
85.566 Radeberg 243 m
87.650 Lotzdorf (Bk)
90.820 Langebrück (Sachs) 222 m
92.810 Heide (Bk)
from Straßgräbchen-Bernsdorf
94.000 Dresden-Klotzsche Bbf W4
from Dresden Airport
94.600 Dresden-Klotzsche Bbf
95.400 Dresden-Klotzsche 191 m
95.480 Nesselgrund bridge (60 m)
98.120 Hellerau (Bk)
99.230 Dresden Industriegelände 152 m
from Dresden-Albertstadt
100.425 Albertstadt (Bk)
to Dresden-Neustadt freight yard
from Leipzig Hbf
102.100 Dresden-Neustadt 118 m
Děčín–Dresden Hbf

Source: German railway atlas[1]

The Görlitz–Dresden railway is a two-track main line railway in the German state of Saxony, originally built and operated by the Saxon-Silesian Railway Company. It runs through Upper Lusatia from Dresden via Bischofswerda, Bautzen and Löbau to Görlitz. The line is part of the route from Dresden to Wrocław and Pan-European Transport Corridor III. The first section of the line opened in 1845 and it is one of the oldest lines in Germany.

History

Construction and opening

A treaty between Prussia and Saxony signed on 24 July 1843 authorised the construction of a cross-border railway and its proposed connection to the Lower Silesian-Markish Railway company's line from Görlitz to Węgliniec (Kohlfurt), which was the first step in the building of a railway between Dresden and Görlitz. The treaty required the construction of the line to be finished within four years. The Saxon-Silesian Railway Company (German: Sächsisch-Schlesische Eisenbahngesellschaft) was established for the construction of the line, with capital of six million thalers. The Saxon government owned a third of the company. The Saxon government required the company to build a branch from Löbau to Zittau.[2]

The construction began on 10 May 1844 and the first section from Dresden to Radeberg was opened to traffic on 17 November 1845. The line was extended to Bischofswerda on 21 December 1845, to Bautzen on 23 June 1846 and to Löbau on 23 December 1846. A test run from Bautzen on 16 December 1846 was stuck in heavy snow drifts in a cutting in Rabitz, just four kilometres beyond Bautzen. On the Prussian side, construction of earthworks began at Reichenbach in October 1845. Up to 800 men worked simultaneously on the section between Reichenbach and Gersdorf, but the snowy winter of 1846/47 brought work to take a stop. A test run between Löbau and Reichenbach was held on 29 April 1847 and the section was opened on 1 July of that year. The 102.2 km long line from Görlitz to Dresden was formally opening on 1 September 1847, along with the line from Görlitz to Węgliniec.[2]

For nearly 20 years the railway line was controlled by the Saxon government. Following the Austro-Prussian War of 1866, in which Saxony had fought on the Austrian side, and the Peace of Prague, Saxony ceded ownership of the railway section located in Prussia to Prussia, but continued to operate the whole line on a contractual basis.[3]

In the Second World War

With the outbreak of the Second World War on 1 September 1939, restrictions were soon imposed on the right of the public to travel on trains.[4]

In April 1945 the line became heavily used for the passage of refugees, especially from Silesia, and the retreating Wehrmacht. All military trains had first priority on the line, often preventing the movement of trains carrying refugee and the wounded for days. On 16 April the Eastern Front reached the Neisse river and the spearhead of the Soviet 52nd Army reached the edge of Bautzen on 19 April. On 20 April the 52nd Soviet army began an attack on the defences of the Wehrmacht and the Volkssturm in the town centre. The German army held the Soviets off, but the Soviets broke through to the centre of the town on 24 April and heavy street fighting took place around Bautzen station. The last refugee train ran on the morning of 20 April from Bautzen towards Bischofswerda. As a result of the fighting on 24 April, the station building was completely destroyed. After the end of the war on 9 May 1945, almost all of the line was unusable, since all the bridges between Görlitz and Bautzen had been blown up or otherwise destroyed by the German Army on 7 May 1945, including the Neisse viaduct in Görlitz, the rail bridge in Löbau and the Spree viaduct in Bautzen. Furthermore, the line also lacked rolling stock, as many locomotives had been moved to the west.[5][6]

Reconstruction after the Second World War

The reconstruction of the viaducts proved to be especially difficult, therefore travellers often had to change train. New stations were established, for example, Löbau Ost station opened at the eastern end of the Löbau viaduct on 6 August 1945 for a shuttle service from Görlitz. According to the timetable of November 1945, travellers from Görlitz had to take a two km walk from Löbau Ost to Löbau station. Numerous temporary bridges were built. The temporary bridge in Bautzen was completed in September 1945 and it was followed in October by the temporary Demitz viaduct. After the completion of temporary bridges at Blösa (6 November 1945) and Löbau (10 November), a continuous train service officially resumed between Görlitz and Dresden-Neustadt. Most of the temporary bridges were continuously monitored by so-called "bridge guards" of the transport police. Probably in anticipation of the subsequent dismantling of the second track, the temporary bridges were built for one track only.[7][8]

In March 1946 work began on removing one track between Dresden and Görlitz to provide reparations to the Soviet Union. Stations left with crossing loops included Breitendorf, Pommritz, Kubschütz and Seitschen stations.[9]

Normalisation in the 1970s and 1980s

In 1970, the second track was restored between Dresden-Klotzsche and Bautzen. This was followed in later years by the restoration of the Bautzen–Breitendorf, Reichenbach–Gersdorf and Markersdorf–Schlauroth marshalling yard sections. Between 1980 and 1984, the Gersdorf–Markersdorf and Löbau–Zoblitz sections regained their second track. One reason for the restoration of the track was increasing coal freight traffic. Single track remained until 1993 or 2000 only on the sections between Breitendorf and Löbau and between Schlauroth and Görlitz. In 1975 there were nine pairs of express trains, six of which ran to or from Poland. Travel time was a minimum of 92 minutes, only seven minutes less than in 1905.[10]

After the political changes in East Germany in 1989

After the political changes in Eastern Germany in 1989, reconstruction of the second track was accelerated. On 16 October 1994, the last remaining significant section of the line between Breitendorf and Löbau was restored to two tracks. Single track initially remained on short section of line between Schlauroth junction and Görlitz. During the reconstruction of the Görlitz node in 2000 this was reconstructed as double track. On 25 June 2000, two track operations commenced.[11]

The former express service between Dresden and Görlitz was replaced in the late 1990s by InterRegio trains. Services stopping in Bautzen, Görlitz and Löbau ran every two hours. With the progressive abolition of InterRegio trains, this service was replaced by three pairs of trains, which reversed in Görlitz to continue to Wroclaw. On 11 December 2004, long-distance trains were discontinued altogether on this line. Since then, the Dresden–Görlitz line has only been served by regional trains.

In 2002 electrical contact wire was installed on the short section between Dresden-Neustadt and Dresden-Klotzsche for the S-Bahn service to Dresden Airport.

In 2003, a German–Polish agreement was signed on cooperation to improve rail links. As part of this agreement, it was agreed to upgrade the Polish border–Görlitz–Dresden section to allow speeds of 120–160 km/h, with long-term electrification. This is intended to reduce travel times for EuroCity and InterCity trains with traditional railway vehicles to about 3 hours 45 minutes between Dresden and Wroclaw. The implementation of these measures depends on funding.[12] This work has not yet started.

Operations

The Görlitz–Dresden line traffic is currently served by regional transport only. Trains on the line are managed by the Verkehrsverbund Oberelbe (Upper Elbe Transport Authority) and the Verkehrsverbund Oberlausitz-Niederschlesien (Upper Lusatia–Lower Silesia Transport Authority). A few services are provided under a contract awarded in December 2008 to Ostdeutsche Eisenbahn and operated as line OE60V. From March 2009 until December 2014, three pairs of regional trains each day have been operated between Dresden and Wrocław Główny by DB Regio. These services have been continued since then by Vogtlandbahn and Koleje Dolnośląskie, but had been interrupted for a few months in 2015.

The following table shows regional services that use all or part of the Görlitz–Dresden line (May 2017):

Line Route Frequency in minutes Remarks
RE1 Dresden – Bischofswerda – Görlitz 120 3x daily to Wrocław
RE2 Dresden – Bischofswerda (– ZittauLiberec) 120
RB33 Dresden – Dresden-Klotzsche (– Königsbrück) 60 (Sa/Su: 120)
RB34 Dresden – Radeberg (– Kamenz) 60 (Su: 120)
RB60 Dresden – Bischofswerda – Görlitz 120
OE60V Bischofswerda – Görlitz 120 Mo-Sa only
RB61 Dresden – Bischofswerda (– Zittau) 120
S2 (Pirna –) Dresden-Neustadt – Dresden-Klotzsche (– Dresden Airport) 30

Sources

Notes

  1. Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  2. 1 2 Rettig, 1994, p. 62
  3. Rettig, 1994, p. 62f
  4. Von Polenz, 2006, p. 141f
  5. Von Polenz, 2006, p. 144
  6. Rettig, 1994, p. 63
  7. Rettig, 1994, p. 66
  8. Von Polenz, 2006, p. 146
  9. Von Polenz, 2006, p. 145ff
  10. Rettig, 1994, pp. 62, 70
  11. "Mehrgleisiger Streckenausbau in Sachsen" (in German). Eissenbahnen in Sachsen. Retrieved 27 August 2010.
  12. "Agreement between Germany and Poland of railway services" (in German). German Ministry of Transport, Building and Housing. Retrieved 27 August 2010.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.