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Mannheim–Karlsruhe–Basel railway

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Rhine Valley Railway
Overview
Native nameRheintalbahn
Line number
  • 4002 (Mannheim–Heidelberg)
  • 4000 (Heidelberg–Karlsruhe)
  • 4280 (Karlsruhe–Basel)
LocaleBaden-Württemberg, Germany
Termini
Service
Route number
  • 665 (Mannheim–Heidelberg)
  • 701 (Heidelberg–Karlsruhe)
  • 702 (Karlsruhe–Basel)
Technical
Line length270.7 km (168.2 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification15 kV/16.7 Hz AC overhead catenary
Operating speed250 km/h (160 mph) (max)
Route map

km
from Ludwigshaven
S1S2S3S4 (RheinNeckar)
Riedbahn from Frankfurt via MA-Luzenberg
0.0
Mannheim Hbf
95 m
Riedbahn to Frankfurt via MA-Käfertal
HSL from Stuttgart (Container terminal bridge)
4.0
Mannheim Rbf station
4.3
Mannheim ARENA/Maimarkt
95 m
6.1
Mannheim-Seckenheim
96 m
8.5
Mannheim-Friedrichsfeld Süd junction
to Mannheim-Friedrichsfeld and Frankfurt
via the Main-Neckar line
Schwetzingen–Mannheim line
9.0
Mannheim-Friedrichsfeld Süd
102 m
14.5
Heidelberg-Wieblingen (junction)
(flying junction)
14.8
Heidelberg-Pfaffengrund/Wieblingen
108 m
to Heidelberg Hbf (old)
16.6
Heidelberg marshalling yard
17.5
19.1
Heidelberg Hbf
107 m
to Heidelberger Hbf (old)
from Heidelberger Hbf (old)
former route from Heidelberg Hbf (old)
22.1
Heidelberg-Kirchheim/Rohrbach
107 m
26.5
St Ilgen/Sandhausen
106 m
32.1
Wiesloch-Walldorf
111 m
37.5
Rot-Malsch
106 m
40.1
Bad Schönborn-Kronau
108 m
42.4
Bad Schönborn-Süd
109 m
44.185
Stettfeld-Weiher
(from Dec 2019)
46.2
Ubstadt-Weiher
110 m
46.6
Ubstadt-Weiher
(junction)
49.6
Bruchsal Nord
(junction)
Bruchsal Stegwiesen
111 m
Bruchsal Schloßgarten
113 m
51.6
Bruchsal
terminus of S33S4/S 9
114 m
53.6
Bruchsal Bildungszentrum
111 m
55.9
Untergrombach crossover
56.8
Untergrombach
115 m
60.5
Weingarten (Baden)
115 m
Karlsruhe Stadtbahn S 4S 5
From Pforzheim
68.2
Karlsruhe-Durlach
116 m
Former route of the Rhine Valley Line
former connection from Ausbesserungswerk (until 199x)
Karlsruhe freight yard (old)
Karlsruhe Hbf
(until 1913)
former route of the Hardt Railway, Maxau Railway
72.9
Karlsruhe Hbf
terminus of S3S 31S 32
121 m
(former route of the Rhine Valley Line until 1913)
from Karlsruhe Albtalbf (where system changes)
Rüppurr
(until 1913)
76.2
Karlsruhe-Brunnenstück
(junction)
(former route of the Rhine Valley line until 1913)
76.4
77.4
(km change as a result of route shortening)
79.6
Ettlingen West
121 m
82.5
Bruchhausen
118 m
87.9
Malsch
120 m
88.5
Malsch Süd
120 m
91.7
Muggensturm
123 m
Rastatt Tunnel from Karlsruhe (planned)
96.5
Rastatt
terminus ofS 7S 71
120 m
Rastatt Tunnel (south portal, planned)
101.3
Rastatt Süd junction
(current start of parallel HSL)
102.6
Baden-Baden-Haueneberstein
103.2
Sandweier crossover
105.3
Baden-Baden
126 m
108.3
Sinzheim Nord
127 m
109.5
Sinzheim (b. Bühl)
126 m
112.5
Baden-Baden-Rebland
133 m
116.9
Bühl (Baden)
135 m
119.2
Ottersweier
125.3
Achern
terminus of S 4S 32
145 m
Acher Valley Railway to Ottenhöfen
127.7
Önsbach
128.4
Önsbach crossover
131.7
Renchen
144 m
137.9
Appenweier
147 m
138.7
Appenweier-Muhrhaag junction
141.0
Windschläg junction
to Offenburg freight yard
141.7
Offenburg Nord junction
145.5
Offenburg
159 m
146.1
Offenburg Süd
current end of the HSL
former bypass curve from the Black Forest Railway
148.3
Schutterwald
154.4
Niederschopfheim
153 m
158.7
Friesenheim (Baden)
155 m
163.7
Lahr (Schwarzwald)
161 m
166.1
Kippenheim
171.8
Orschweier
166 m
174.8
Ringsheim/Europa-Park
169 m
177.7
Herbolzheim (Brsg)
172 m
181.0
Kenzingen
175 m
185.9
Riegel-Malterdingen
180 m
HSL will have a separate alignment from here
188.8
Köndringen
(crossover)
188.8
Köndringen
187 m
190.6
Teningen-Mundingen
194 m
192.7
Emmendingen
201 m
196.5
Kollmarsreute
221 m
199.8
Denzlingen
235 m
202.6
Gundelfingen
241 m
202.7
Gundelfingen junction
205.0
Freiburg-Zähringen
253 m
207.0
Freiburg-Herdern
264 m
208.3
Freiburg (Breisgau) Hbf
269 m
212.5
Freiburg-St. Georgen
253 m
214.6
Leutersberg
(junction)
215.7
Ebringen
239 m
217.0
Schallstadt
235 m
219.9
Norsingen
230 m
222.9
Bad Krozingen
231 m
224.1
Tunsel
Eschbach-Tunsel
(planned)
228.8
Heitersheim
226 m
Flying junction (planned)
end of separate HSL alignment
231.8
Buggingen
223 m
232.8
Hügelheim
237.3
Müllheim (Baden)
233 m
former level crossing of
Müllheim–Badenweiler railway (metre gauge)
Line to Mulhouse
239.7
Auggen
233 m
239.7
Auggen
(siding)
242.7
Schliengen
(junction) HSL has a separate course
243.2
Schliengen
241 m
portal extension to reduce tunnel boom
245.4
Start of Katzenberg Tunnel (9,385 m)
246.8
Bad Bellingen
254 m
250.0
‹See TfM›Rheinweiler
257 m
252.8
‹See TfM›Kleinkems
258 m
255.3
Klotz Tunnel (242 m)
256.0
Kirchberg Tunnel (129 m)
256.4
‹See TfM›Istein
258 m
256.8
Hartberg Tunnel (307 m)
254.8
End of Katzenberg Tunnel (9,385 m)
258.3
‹See TfM›Efringen-Kirchen
258 m
262.2
‹See TfM›Eimeldingen
266 m
259.2
262.8
end of separate HSL alignment
264.3
265.3
‹See TfM›Haltingen
269 m
former line from Saint-Louis [de] (1878–1937)
267.6
Weil am Rhein
Terminus of S5 (Basel)
261 m
267.6
German/Swiss border
270.7
Basel Bad Bf
Terminus of S6
261 m
km
Source: German railway atlas[1]

The Mannheim–Karlsruhe–Basel railway is a double-track electrified mainline railway in the German state of Baden-Württemberg. It runs from Mannheim via Heidelberg, Bruchsal, Karlsruhe, Rastatt, Baden-Baden, Offenburg and Freiburg to Basel, Switzerland. It is also known as the Rhine Valley Railway (German: Rheintalbahn) or the Upper Rhine Railway (Oberrheinbahn).

The line was built as part of the Baden Mainline (Badische Hauptbahn). Between Mannheim and Rastatt it runs parallel to the Baden Rhine Railway (Rheinbahn). The Karlsruhe–Basel high-speed railway, called the Ausbau- und Neubaustrecke Karlsruhe–Basel in German (literally: "Upgraded and new line Karlsruhe–Basel"), has been under construction since April 1987. This includes upgrading the current line to four-tracks in places and the construction of new line elsewhere. It was originally envisaged as being completed in 2008. The new construction work will be completed by 2035. The existing Rhine Valley Railway will then be expanded in the Offenburg – Hügelheim section by 2041 for speeds of up to 200 km/h.

The Mannheim–Basel railway is one of the most important routes in the Deutsche Bahn network.

History

[edit]

Baden main line

[edit]
Bruchsal station

The railway on the German side of the Rhine was financed and built by the Grand Duchy of Baden State Railway (Großherzogliche Badische Staatsbahn). At the enactment of the Baden law permitting the construction of the Baden main line on 28 March 1838, only the starting point in Mannheim and the end point in Basel had been determined.[2] The route was determined by the Technischen Baukommission (“Technical Building Commission”), which was formed in 1837. It adopted as its basic aims that the construction cost should be as low as possible as was consistent with good running times and that the line should be built as straight as possible to connect the major cities. It decided that the should be built, if possible, in the Upper Rhine Plain. The first section between Mannheim and Heidelberg was opened in 1840 and the line was completed in several section to Basel until 1855. The first route designs provided for a route from Heidelberg via Schwetzingen to Karlsruhe. After the then third largest city in the Grand Duchy of Baden, Bruchsal learned of these plans, the Baden Parliament sat to consider a connection via Bruchsal and Durlach.[3] On 2 January 1846, two trains ran into each other in St. Ilgen, a village near Leimen. One person died and 16 others were injured.[4] This was one of the first fatalities in a rail accident in Germany.

The line was originally built to 5 ft 3 in (1,600 mm) Irish gauge, but since the surrounding countries built their railways to 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge, the line was converted to standard gauge between 1854 and 1855.

Date Start of section End of section
12 September 1840 Mannheim Hbf Heidelberg Hbf
10 April 1843 Heidelberg Hbf Karlsruhe Hbf
1 May 1844 Karlsruhe Hbf Rastatt
6 May 1844 Rastatt Baden-Oos
1 June 1844 Baden-Oos Offenburg
1 August 1845 Offenburg Freiburg Hbf
1 June 1847 Freiburg Hbf Müllheim (Baden)
15 June 1847 Müllheim Schliengen
8 November 1848 Schliengen Efringen
22 January 1851 Efringen Haltingen
1855 Haltingen Basel

Since Schwetzingen and Hockenheim were not on the line through Heidelberg, another line was opened in 1870 on the Mannheim–Schwetzingen–Graben–Eggenstein–Karlsruhe route. A shorter and more direct line from Graben to Karlsruhe via Blankenloch was added in 1895 as a strategic railway. This converted the Karlsruhe–Eggenstein–Graben section of the old line into a branch line, now known as the Hardt Railway and partly incorporated into the Karlsruhe Stadtbahn.

Developments in the 20th century

[edit]
Bad Schönborn-Kronau station

In the northern section between Mannheim and Karlsruhe there are two different lines, the Mannheim–Graben-Neudorf–Karlsruhe line (the Baden Mainline as such) as well as the Mannheim–Heidelberg–Bruchsal–Durlach–Karlsruhe line (the Baden-Kurpfalz Railway). Particularly after World War I it became a major line for international traffic. Beginning in the 1950s,the Rhine Valley line was progressively electrified, with the line fully electrified by the middle of 1958.

In the late 1960s, a fundamental renewal of signaling installations began on the 120 km-long section between Offenburg and Basel. The line, which was previously equipped with mechanical interlockings—with the exception of Freiburg Hauptbahnhof—was converted to control by relay interlockings. By the late 1960s the line was already being used by well over 100 trains per day in each direction.[5]

With the commissioning of the first section of the Mannheim–Stuttgart high-speed railway between Mannheim and Graben-Neudorf, the Rhine Valley Railway was relieved, making an integrated regular interval service possible.[6] The signal boxes in Achern and Freiburg were built as electronic interlockings. The signal boxes at Leutersberg, Bad Krozingen, Heitersheim and Müllheim (Baden) have been modified under CIR ELKE and equipped with LZB.

The current Baden-Baden station was originally called Oos, between 1906 and the closure of the old Baden-Baden town station in 1977 it was called Baden-Oos and then it received its current name.

Developments in the 21st century

[edit]

As part of the construction of the Karlsruhe–Basel high-speed railway, it was planned in 1990 to upgrade the railway between Karlsruhe and Offenburg for continuous operations at 160 km/h.[7] Under a German-Swiss convention, the entire line was supposed to be converted to at least four lines by 2008, so that it could serve as the main northern approach route to the new Gotthard Base Tunnel line to Italy. As a result, Deutsche Bahn is building a high-speed line from Karlsruhe to Basel, including new and upgraded sections.

Between Karlsruhe and Rastatt two lines run relatively near each other, effectively providing four tracks. The double-track section between Rastatt station and Rastatt-Niederbühl is to be increased to four lines with the construction of the Rastatt Tunnel. Between Rastatt-Niederbühl and Offenburg, two new high-speed tracks have been completed next to the old double-track line. A new section of line from Schliengen to Haltingen between Freiburg and Basel, including the 9,385-metre-long (30,791 ft) Katzenberg Tunnel, was opened on 9 December 2012 to avoid a narrow, winding section between the Rhine and the Isteiner Klotz hills.[8] The remaining sections between Offenburg, Freiburg and the Katzenberg Tunnel are still being planned.

Operations

[edit]
Rhine-Neckar S-Bahn train between Mannheim and Heidelberg

The Rhine Valley Railway is now one of the most important lines of Germany both for passenger and goods traffic, including international traffic to and from Switzerland and France. An investigation by the Hochschule Kehl (a school of public administration) estimated the traffic to be up to 286 trains a day.

The line is overloaded and was considered to have an occupancy rate of 126 percent in 2011. Trains have to run at especially close intervals.[9] All long-distance services stop at Mannheim, Heidelberg, Karlsruhe, Freiburg and Basel Bad Bf, some stop at Wiesloch-Walldorf, Bruchsal, Karlsruhe-Durlach, Rastatt, Baden-Baden and Offenburg.

Since December 2003, line S3 of the Rhein-Neckar S-Bahn has operated on the Mannheim–Karlsruhe section of line and S4 (Speyer–Bruchsal) on the (Speyer–Karlsruhe) section. Lines S31, S32, S4 and S41 of the Stadtbahn Karlsruhe operate between Bruchsal and Achern. Lines S32 and S4 continue from Rastatt to Achern. Regional-Express (RE) services of the Black Forest Railway have run hourly between Karlsruhe and Offenburg since December 2009; at times they run every half-hour; RE and Regionalbahn services together provide a half-hourly service between Offenburg and Basel.

At each end of the line are two of the largest marshalling yards in Europe: Mannheim marshalling yard and Basel SBB marshalling yard in Muttenz. One marshalling yard of this line—in Heidelberg—has been closed and the new district of Bahnstadt has been built on its site. There are still DB freight yards in Karlsruhe, Offenburg, Freiburg and Basel. Karlsruhe freight yard is equipped with electronic interlocking and is controlled from the control centre in Karlsruhe. The other are still operated locally, some using electromechanical interlocking.

The double-track high-speed line through the Katzenberg Tunnel between Schliengen and Haltingen has been in operation since 9 December 2012. This will be complemented in the future by the segregation of fast long-distance passenger traffic and freight traffic in the Basel area. This will be made possible by the construction of another bridge over the Rhine on the so-called Connecting Line (Verbindungsbahn) between Basel Badischer Bahnhof (north of the Rhine) and Gellert junction (south of the Rhine).

The section between Schliengen and Haltingen via Bad Bellingen was completely renovated while it was completely closed in the summer of 2014. Its tracks, sleepers and the tunnels were renewed.[10]

As part of the expansion of the operations of the Rhine-Neckar S-Bahn, a three-track section is planned between Mannheim Hauptbahnhof and Mannheim-Friedrichsfeld Süd. Any further quadruplication towards Heidelberg is at the design phase (as of 2012).[11] In March 2014, the EU provided grants amounting to 30 to 40% of the cost.[12]

Operations between Rastatt and Baden-Baden were blocked from 12 August 2017 as a result of subsidence caused by the boring of the Rastatt Tunnel under the line.

Rolling stock

[edit]

The long-distance services towards Hamburg and Berlin are operated with ICE 1 trains and towards Dortmund with ICE 3 trains. EuroCity and Intercity services are mostly hauled by class 101 locomotives and regional services consist of class 146 and class 111 locomotives hauling double-decker coaches or Silberling coaches.

In central Baden, the Albtal-Verkehrs-Gesellschaft (AVG) operates the Karlsruhe Stadtbahn services. Two system light rail vehicles of the GT8-100C/2S and GT8-100D/2S-M classes are used; some have toilets and panoramic windows.

In the Upper Rhine, Regionalbahn services often use class 425 EMUs and occasionally they are operated with class 111 locomotives hauling Silberling coaches. Südwestdeutsche Verkehrs-Aktiengesellschaft and the Breisgau S-Bahn operate Stadler Regio-Shuttle RS1 and Talent 2 EMUs. The Ortenau S-Bahn also operates Regio-Shuttle EMUs.

The Swiss Federal Railways operate Stadler Flirt EMUs between Basel SBB and Basel Badischer Bahnhof. SNCF operates TGV Duplex sets between Bruchsal and Appenweier and between Freiburg and Müllheim, stopping in Karlsruhe, Freiburg and some also in Baden-Baden.

Rail services

[edit]

Long-distance services

[edit]

The Rhine valley Railway is traversed by several Intercity-Express and Intercity services.

Line Route
ICE 12 BerlinBraunschweigKassel-WilhelmshöheFrankfurt (Main)KarlsruheBasel (– BernInterlaken Ost)
ICE 20 (Kiel –) Hamburg – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Frankfurt (Main) – Karlsruhe – Basel (– Bern – Interlaken Ost)
IC 35 Norddeich Mole – Cologne/Hamburg – Frankfurt – Karlsruhe – Offenburg – Triberg – Singen – Konstanz
ICE 43 (AmsterdamDuisburg or Dortmund –) Cologne – Frankfurt Airport Karlsruhe – Basel
ICE 60 Basel Bad BfBaden-BadenBruchsal – Stuttgart – Munich
ICE/TGV 83 ParisKarlsruheStuttgart (– Munich)
ICE/TGV 84 Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Baden-BadenStrasbourgMulhouse-VilleBelfort-MontbéliardBesançonChalonLyon-Part-DieuAvignonAix-en-ProvenceMarseille-Saint-Charles
ECE 85 Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – RingsheimFreiburg Basel Bad Basel SBB OltenLucerneArth-GoldauBellinzonaLuganoChiassoComoMonzaMilan
TGV Freiburg – Emmendingen – Lahr – Offenburg – Straßburg – Paris Est
NJ Hamburg – Hannover – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Freiburg – Basel – Zürich
NJ Berlin – Magdeburg – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Freiburg – Basel – Zürich
NJ Amsterdam – Köln – Mainz – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Freiburg – Basel – Zürich
FlixNight Hamburg – Hannover – Karlsruhe – Freiburg – Lörrach

Regional services

[edit]

The Rhine valley Railway is used by two Interregio-Express services and a variety of Regional-Express, Regionalbahn, S-Bahn and Stadtbahn services.

Line Route
DB Regio
RE 2 Karlsruhe – Baden-Baden – Offenburg – Hausach – Villingen – Konstanz
RE 40 Karlsruhe – Rastatt – Gaggenau – Gernsbach – Forbach – Baiersbronn – Freudenstadt
RE 7 (Karlsruhe – Rastatt – Baden-Baden –) Offenburg – Lahr – Emmendingen – Freiburg – Bad Krozingen – Müllheim – Weil am Rhein – Basel Bad Bf (– Basel SBB)
RE 73 Karlsruhe – Bruchsal – Wiesloch-Walldorf – Heidelberg (– Mannheim)
RB 68 Frankfurt am Main – Darmstadt – Bensheim – Weinheim – Neu-Edingen/Friedrichsfeld – Heidelberg – Wiesloch-Walldorf
RB 26 Offenburg – Lahr – Riegel-Malterdingen – Emmendingen – Denzlingen – Freiburg
RB 27 Freiburg – Bad Krozingen – Müllheim – Weil am Rhein – Basel Bad Bf
RB 27 (Freiburg – Bad Krozingen –) Müllheim – Neuenburg
RB 41 Karlsruhe – Rastatt – Gaggenau – Gernsbach – Forbach (– Baiersbronn – Freudenstadt – Eutingen (Gäu) – Herrenberg)
RB 44 Karlsruhe – Rastatt – Baden-Baden – Bühl – Achern
Südwestdeutsche Verkehrs-Aktiengesellschaft
RE 10a Mannheim – Heidelberg – Eberbach – Mosbach-Neckarelz – Bad Friedrichshall – Heilbronn
RE 10b Mannheim – Heidelberg – Meckesheim – Sinsheim – Bad Friedrichshall – Heilbronn
S2 (Elzach –) Bleibach – Waldkirch – Denzlingen – Freiburg
S3 (Freiburg –) Bad Krozingen – Staufen – Staufen Süd (– Münstertal)
RB 20 Bad Griesbach – Oppenau – Oberkirch – Appenweier – Offenburg – Hausach (– Hornberg/Freudenstadt)
RB 24 (Offenburg – Appenweier –) Achern – Kappelrodeck – Ottenhöfen
RB 25 Offenburg – Appenweier – Kehl – Straßburg
Rhine-Neckar S-Bahn:
S1 Homburg – Kaiserslautern – Mannheim – Heidelberg – Mosbach – Osterburken
S2 Kaiserslautern – Mannheim – Heidelberg – Mosbach
S3 Germersheim – Mannheim – Heidelberg – Bruchsal – Karlsruhe
S4 Germersheim – Mannheim – Heidelberg – Bruchsal
S9 Groß-Rohrheim – Mannheim – Schwetzingen – Graben-Neudorf – Karlsruhe
Karlsruhe Stadtbahn:
S 31 Odenheim – Bruchsal – Karlsruhe – Ettlingen West – Rastatt – Freudenstadt
S 32 Menzingen – Bruchsal – Karlsruhe – Ettlingen West – Rastatt – Baden-Baden – Achern
S 7 Karlsruhe Tullastraße/Verkehrsbetriebe – Karlsruhe Marktplatz – Rastatt – Baden-Baden – Achern
S 71 Karlsruhe – Ettlingen West – Rastatt – Baden-Baden – Achern
S 8 Karlsruhe Tullastraße/Verkehrsbetriebe – Karlsruhe Marktplatz – Durmersheim – Rastatt – Freudenstadt – Eutingen im Gäu
S 81 Karlsruhe – Ettlingen West – Rastatt – Freudenstadt
Basel trinational S-Bahn:
S5 (Schopfheim –) Steinen – Lörrach – Weil am Rhein
S6 Zell im Wiesental – Basel Bad Bf – Basel SBB

In November 2015, the operation of a group of services called Netz 4 Rheintal, was tendered as three lots. The transport contracts for regional services on the line would cover a total of approximately 4.7 million kilometres per year and run from December 2019 to December 2032.[13] The investment of €250 million has been earmarked for its new rolling stock, which must be suitable for the Katzenberg Tunnel.[14]

In December 2015, the operational concept of a regional transport timetable between Offenburg and Basel was presented. It provided an hourly service over the whole route with stops at all stations as a backbone. In addition, two Regional-Express services would run every two hours: a faster regional train would run every two hours between Offenburg and Basel in less than 90 minutes, with stops in Offenburg, Lahr, Hebolzheim, Kenzingen, Riegel-Malterdingen, Emmendingen, Denzingen, Freiburg Hauptbahnhof, Bad Krozingen, Heitersheim, Müllheim, Weil am Rhein and Basel SBB. A slower RE would stop in addition at Orschweier, Ringheim, Schallstadt, Bad Bellingen, Efringen-Kirchen and Haltingen. For many stations, the number of train stopping would significantly increase.[14]

The tendering of the Freiburger Y network (Netz 9b) is also provided.[14]

The target concept for rail services in 2025 of the state of Baden-Württemberg, which provides—three trains each hour and in each direction between Offenburg and Freiburg and four between Riegel-Malterdingen and Freiburg—cannot be implemented because of the congestion of the line. The infrastructure needed for this is expected to be opened in 2031.[15]

Southbound steam train parallel to the River Leimbach, with Tonwaren Industrie Wiesloch siding at the north end of Wiesloch-Walldorf station, c.1925. The area would later contain the Wiesloch Feldbahn and Industrial Museum and Leimbach Park.

References

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ Railway Atlas 2017, pp. 86, 93, 101–2, 110, 158, 160–1.
  2. ^ Handbuch der deutschen Eisenbahnstrecken: Eröffnungsdaten 1835–1935 (in German) (reprint ed.). Mainz: Deutsche Reichsbahn. 1984. ISBN 3-921426-29-4.
  3. ^ Werner Greder (1983). Bruchsal und die Eisenbahn. Entstehung der Eisenbahnen in und um Bruchsal in den Jahren 1843–1914 (in German). Bruchsal. p. 16.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ Hans Joachim Ritzau (1979). Eisenbahn-Katastrophen in Deutschland. Splitter deutscher Geschichte (in German). Vol. 1. Landsberg-Pürgen. p. 55.
  5. ^ "'Neue Signalanlagen auf der Strecke Offenburg–Basel". Die Bundesbahn (in German). 43: 329. 1969. ISSN 0007-5876.
  6. ^ Erich Fein (1985). "Die Westliche Einführung der Riedbahn in den Hauptbahnhof Mannheim". Die Bundesbahn (in German) (61): 401–408.
  7. ^ Johann Leonhäuser (1990). "Brücken für die ABS/NBS Karlsruhe–Basel im Abschnitt Karlsruhe–Offenburg". Die Bundesbahn (in German). 66 (5): 481–485. ISSN 0007-5876.
  8. ^ "Katzenberg cut-off inaugurated". 5 December 2012. Retrieved 5 December 2012.
  9. ^ Nicolaus Doll; Steffen Fründt; Ernst-August Ginten; Thomas Heuzeroth; Birger Nicolai; Andre Tauber; Daniel Wetzel (12 May 2013). "Das unfassbare deutsche Infrastruktur-Desaster". Welt am Sonntag (in German). p. 13. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
  10. ^ "Südwest: Bahnverkehr: Südliche Rheintalstrecke wird zur Großbaustelle". Badische Zeitung (in German). 7 April 2014. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
  11. ^ DB ProjektBau, ed. (2012). "Ausbau der Infrastruktur für die S-Bahn Rhein-Neckar". Infrastrukturprojekte 2012: Bauen bei der Deutschen Bahn (in German). Hamburg: Eurailpress. pp. 136–139. ISBN 978-3-7771-0445-4.
  12. ^ "Südwest: Infrastruktur: Ausbau der Rheintalbahn: EU übernimmt 40 Prozent". Badische Zeitung (in German). 19 March 2014. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
  13. ^ "Deutschland-Stuttgart: Öffentlicher Schienentransport/öffentliche Schienenbeförderung: document 2015/S 221-403208". Tenders Electronic Daily (in German). 14 November 2015. Retrieved 17 May 2016.
  14. ^ a b c "Konzept für Netz "Rheintal" fixiert". Eisenbahn-Revue International (in German) (2): 58. 2016. ISSN 1421-2811.
  15. ^ "RE-Halte auf der Rheintalbahn zwischen Offenburg und Basel" (in German). Ministerium für Verkehr und Infrastruktur. 25 September 2015. Retrieved 17 May 2016.

Sources

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  • Röth, Helmut (2006). Auf Schienen zwischen Odenwald und Pfalz. Fotografien 1955-1976 [By rail between the Odenwald and Palatine. Photography 1955–1976] (in German). Ludwigshafen am Rhein: Verlag Pro Message. p. 168. ISBN 3-934845-18-5.
  • Greder, Werner (1983). Bruchsal und die Eisenbahn. Entstehung der Eisenbahnen in und um Bruchsal in den Jahren 1843–1914 (in German). Bruchsal.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) (Publication no. 2 of the city of Bruchsal Historical Commission).
  • Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland [German railway atlas]. Schweers + Wall. 2017. ISBN 978-3-89494-146-8.
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