Weilheim (Oberbay) station

Weilheim (Oberbay)
Deutsche Bahn
Crossing station

Entrance building from the streetside
Location Weilheim in Oberbayern, Bavaria
Germany
Coordinates 47°50′42″N 11°08′35″E / 47.844929°N 11.143133°E / 47.844929; 11.143133Coordinates: 47°50′42″N 11°08′35″E / 47.844929°N 11.143133°E / 47.844929; 11.143133
Line(s)
Platforms 5
Other information
Station code 3979
DS100 codeNWH [1]
IBNR8000220
Category4[2]
Website stationsdatenbank.de
History
Opened 1 February 1866
Traffic
Passengers < 10,000 [3]
(2006)

Weilheim (Oberbay) station is the station of the Bavarian district town of Weilheim in Oberbayern. It is a crossing station on the Munich–Garmisch-Partenkirchen railway, the Ammersee Railway from Mering and the Weilheim–Schongau railway. It is classified by Deutsche Bahn as a category 4 station[2] and has five platform tracks. It is served by about 100 trains daily operated by Deutsche Bahn and Bayerische Regiobahn (BRB).

At the opening of the station in Weilheim on 1 February 1866, it was a through station on the Munich–Unterpeißenberg line. With the opening of the line to Murnau on 15 May 1879, which was extended to Garmisch-Partenkirchen in 1889, it became a “separation” station (Trennungsbahnhof) and with the opening of the Ammersee Railway on 30 June 1898 it became a “crossing” station (Kreuzungsbahnhof). It has a small locomotive depot until 1986 with a roundhouse and a turntable.

Location

Weilheim station is located north of inner Weilheim. The tracks run in the north–south direction and runs around the city in an arc to the west. The station building is located east of the railway tracks on Bahnhofstraße (station street) and has the address of Bahnhofplatz 1. The street of Am Öferl runs west of the tracks. To the north of the station Zargesstraße crosses under the tracks through an underpass. To the south, state road 2057, here called Schützenstraße, also runs under the tracks through an underpass.

Weilheim station is at a railway junction of three lines. The Munich–Garmisch-Partenkirchen line (VzG 5504) is a single-track and electrified main line, over which regional services and, at the weekend, Intercity Express trains run. Furthermore, services running from Mering on the Ammersee Railway (VzG 5370) and from Schongau on the Weilheim–Schongau line (VzG 5450) meet each other in Weilheim. Both lines are single track and not electrified and are served only by regional services operated by Bayerische Regiobahn.

Weilheim is served by the following timetable routes:

History

Architect's drawing of an elevation of the station building in 1866
Old station building from the track side

Weilheim station was opened on 1 February 1866, together with the line from Starnberg via Tutzing to Unterpeißenberg. Starnberg had already been connected by a line from Munich completed on 28 November 1854. The line would primarily carry “pitch coal” (Pechkohle, a form of lignite) mined in Peißenberg. At the station a three-story station building was built with a hip roof and two side extensions, in the neoclassical style. A “railway committee” was founded in Murnau on 8 May 1874 with the aim of building a branch line (a Vizinalbahn, literally a "local railway", which was built by a local community with a state subsidy under a Bavarian law of 1869) from Weilheim to Murnau. On 29 July 1876, the Bavarian state parliament approved the route, allowing construction to start in 1878. The branch line was opened on 15 May 1879,[4] turning Weilheim station into a railway junction. A private railway company, Lokalbahn AG (LAG) opened a branch line from Murnau to Garmisch-Partenkirchen on 25 July 1889 as an extension of the Vizinalbahn, creating a continuous line from Munich via Weilheim to Garmisch-Partenkirchen.

In the early 1870s planning began for a railway line from Augsburg to the Ammersee (Lake Ammer) and continuing towards the Alps. In 1886, the Bavarian government approved the Ammersee Railway, running from Mering near Augsburg via Diessen to Weilheim. Construction of the line began in the autumn of 1886. The Royal Bavarian State Railways opened the section from Weilheim to Dießen on 30 June 1898 and the whole line from Mering to Weilheim was opened on 23 December 1898. Weilheim station became a crossing station. In the 1900s, another building was built for a station restaurant as a southern extension of the entrance building. In addition, the platform roofing was extended on the platform next to the station building.[5] On 1 January 1917, the Weilheim–Peissenberg line (also known as the Pfaffenwinkelbahn—Pfaffenwinkel Railway—after the Pfaffenwinkel region, which lies mainly to the west and south of Weilheim) was extended to Schongau, where it connected to the existing Fuchs Valley Railway to Landsberg am Lech.

In 1924, Deutsche Reichsbahn electrified the line from Munich to Garmisch-Partenkirchen. Electrical operations began between Weilheim and Garmisch-Partenkirchen on 5 January 1925 and electrical operations began between Weilheim and Starnberg on 16 February 1925. Electrical operations on the whole line from Munich to Garmisch-Partenkirchen began on 20 January 1925 and continued over the Mittenwald Railway to Mittenwald and Innsbruck.[6] On 1 May 1925, the Pfaffenwinkel Railway between Weilheim and Peissenberg was also electrified; the electrification on this line mainly served coal transportation.[5]

During the Second World War the Allies dropped about 250 bombs on the station during an air raid on Weilheim on 19 April 1945. The bombs destroyed the northern part of the station building, parts of the railway tracks and the overhead lines and 20 carriages. A hospital train with wounded Hungarian soldiers was destroyed by fire.[7] There were 24 deaths, including five Hungarian soldiers who were in the hospital train.[8] After the war, Deutsche Reichsbahn replaced the destroyed station building with a long two-storey building with a gable roof.

Former goods hall

In 1977, the station had 23 tracks, but they were cut back during rationalisations by Deutsche Bundesbahn in the following years. In 1981, the three mechanical interlockings of the station were replaced by a centralised track plan pushbutton interlocking and the semaphore signals dating from the State Railways era were replaced by colour light signals. In 1983, Deutsche Bundesbahn removed the overhead line on the line to Peissenberg, since its replacement was necessary, but not financially viable.[9] The locomotive depot was closed and demolished along with its roundhouse and turntable in 1986.[10] The staff of the station fell from 251 to 198 employees between 1982 and 1986.[5]

Most loading and storage sidings to the west and east of the station were closed in November 2001. The town of Weilheim bought the vacant western part of the station precinct in 2002. Railway workers dismantled the disused tracks in this area in March 2002. The other disused sidings were eliminated in 2004.[10]

Infrastructure

Entrance building

Entrance building from the track side

The first Weilheim station building was opened in 1866. It was a three-story symmetrical building with a hip roof in the neoclassical style. The facades of the main building were richly structured. To the north and south of the main building there were single-storey extensions with flat roofs, which were the same size as each other. An unusual feature was that the platform canopy over the “home” platform extended along the entire length of the building, which was more common in Austria than in Germany at the time. In the 1900s, a further single-storey building with a hip roof was built on to the southern extension; this included a station restaurant. The platform canopy was extended accordingly. During World War II, the northern part of the building was destroyed in an air raid on 19 April 1945.

In the postwar period the ruins of the old station building was demolished and a new building was built in its place, which is still in operation.[5] The station building is a long two-story building with an asymmetrical gable roof, connected to the south and north to single-storey buildings with flat roofs. The two-story part of the building includes the operations room, a single-storey annex to the south, which houses the waiting room with access to the platform subway and some shops and a DB travel centre.

Platforms and railway tracks

Platforms

By 1977, Weilheim station had 23 tracks, including five platform tracks. East of the platform tracks there were the local loading tracks, five of which were north and five south of the station building. South of the building there was also the goods shed with a loading dock, equipped with two tracks and a loading road. West of the platform tracks were located freight and storage sidings as well as the roundhouse and the turntable of the locomotive depot. Most of the loading and storage sidings were closed and dismantled In the following years and in 2002 and 2004.[5]

Diesel filling station

The five platform tracks are located on a home platform and two island platforms, all of which are covered. The platform canopies of the two island platforms still come from the state railway period and are built of wood joists. All platforms are equipped with digital destination indicators. The island platforms are connected by an underpass to the station building. There are no lifts, so the station is not accessible for the disabled. Because of the low platform height of 34 cm, Intercity-Express trains cannot stop in Weilheim. West of the platform tracks, there exist two freight tracks without platforms and three terminating tracks that can only be approached from the north and are used for the parking of Bayerische Regiobahn (BRB) railcars. The goods shed south of the station building is preserved. To the west of the three terminating tracks of the station there is a diesel filling station.

From 2015, Weilheim station will be upgraded to make it barrier-free for the disabled, while also raising the platforms to the standard heights of 76 cm and 55 cm.[11][12]

Track Length in m[13] Height in cm[13] Comment
1 238 34 Trains towards Munich and Garmisch-Partenkirchen
2 239 34 Not used for passenger services
3 239 34 Some services towards Garmisch-Partenkirchen
4 224 34 BRB services towards Geltendorf and Augsburg
5 224 34 BRB services towards Peißenberg and Schongau

Signal boxes

Track-plan push-button interlocking

The Weilheim station originally had three mechanical signal boxes. Signal box 1 controlled movements between different parts of the station precinct and was located at the northern end of the station west of the tracks. Signal box 2 was operated by the train despatcher and was situated south of the entrance building between the local loading tracks and the station building. Both were mechanical interlocking of the Krauss class of 1902. Signal box 3 was a mechanical interlocking of the Krauss class of 1925, which controlled the marshalling yard and was located at the southern end of the sidings to the west of the station. In 1983, the three signal boxes were replaces by a centralised signal box with a track-plan push-button interlocking of the Lorenz L60 class, which is housed in an cubic, three-storey building with an attached observation deck.[5] This signal box controls, in addition to the Weilheim station area, the Wilzhofen and Polling areas.[14] The signal box is located on the main platform north of the entrance building.

Locomotive depot

Due to its importance as a hub, Weilheim station had its own locomotive depot (Lokomotivstation), a branch of Bw München Hbf at Munich Central Station. The locomotive station was located to the west of the station and consisted of a three-stall roundhouse, a turntable and some sidings. Signal box 3 controlled the tracks of the locomotive depot. The locomotive station was closed in 1986 and the roundhouse and turntable were demolished.[5]

Services

Regionalbahn service to Mittenwald hauled by class 111 locomotive
LINT 41 DMU of the BRB

Weilheim station is served by Regionalbahn services of Deutsche Bahn trains and Bayerische Regiobahn (BRB). The hourly Regionalbahn services from Munich stops in Mittenwald; this continues every two hours to Innsbruck. They consist of electric locomotives of class 111 with Silberling carriages or mixed sets of double-decker and Silberling carriages. In the peak, additional hourly Regionalbahn services run between Munich and Garmisch-Partenkirchen, which means there are services every half-hour in the peak. The Ammersee and the Weilheim–Schongau lines are served every hour by BRB trains operated with LINT 41 diesel multiple units from Augsburg to Schongau. In the peak, additional services run between Geltendorf and Peißenberg, also creating a service at 30 minute intervals. In the winter, the Garmischer Skiexpress (classified as a Regional Express) also runs on weekends from Munich to Garmisch-Partenkirchen Hausberg and is formed from double-decker carriages.

From December 2013, class 442 (Bombardier Talent 2) railcars replace the locomotive-hauled carriage trains on the Regionalbahn service from Munich to Garmisch-Partenkirchen.

Intercity Express trains that run on weekends on the Munich–Garmisch-Partenkirchen line, run through Weilheim station without stopping because of the low platform heights of 34 cm.

Train class Route Frequency
RE Garmischer Skiexpress:
MunichTutzingWeilheim – Garmisch-Hausbergbahn
Individual services
RB Munich – Tutzing – Weilheim – Murnau – Garmisch-Partenkirchen – Mittenwald (– Innsbruck) Hourly
RB Munich – Tutzing – Weilheim – Murnau – Garmisch-Partenkirchen Hourly in
peak hours
BRB Augsburg-OberhausenAugsburg Hbf – Mering – GeltendorfWeilheim – Peißenberg – Schongau Hourly
BRB Geltendorf – Weilheim – Peißenberg Hourly in
peak hours

Notes

  1. Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2009/2010 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  2. 1 2 "Stationspreisliste 2017" [Station price list 2017] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 18 November 2016. Retrieved 14 December 2016.
  3. "Brochure: Personenbahnhöfe in Bayern" (PDF; 7.4 MB) (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Retrieved 16 April 2013.
  4. Rudolf Birzer (1979). "Projektierung, Bau und Betrieb der Bahnlinie Weilheim-Murnau". 100 Jahre Eisenbahn Weilheim Murnau (in German). Weilheim. (brochure for the anniversary celebration, 19/20 May 1979)
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Andreas Janikowski (1996). Die Ammerseebahn. Verkehrsentwicklung im westlichen Oberbayern (in German). Stuttgart: Transpress. pp. 64–66. ISBN 978-3-89494-136-9.
  6. Dr. Matthias Wiegner, Norbert Moy and Werner Bommersbach (2004). Von der Vizinalbahn zum Werdenfels-Takt – 125 Jahre Bahnlinie Weilheim–Murnau, 10 Jahre Werdenfels-Takt (in German). Munich: PRO BAHN Verlag und Reisen GmbH. ISBN 3-9809568-1-4.
  7. Andreas Janikowski (1996). Die Ammerseebahn. Verkehrsentwicklung im westlichen Oberbayern (in German). Stuttgart: Transpress. p. 79. ISBN 978-3-89494-136-9.
  8. Joachim Heberlein (19 April 2010). "Weilheims schwarzer Donnerstag kurz vor Kriegsende". Weilheimer Tagblatt (in German). p. Local section p. 3.
  9. "Das Ende der Stromzeit". Weilheimer Tagblatt (in German). 2 April 2013. p. 6 (Local section). Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  10. 1 2 "Description of Weilheim station" (in German). Ammerseebahn.de. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  11. "Bahnhofs-Umbau ist gebongt in Weilheim" (in German). Münchner Merkur. 24 January 2013. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
  12. "Grünes Signal für Bahnhofsumbau" (in German). Kreisboten. 26 March 2013. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
  13. 1 2 "Platform information for Weilheim station" (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
  14. "List of German signal boxes" (in German). stellwerke.de. Retrieved 22 April 2013.

References

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