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Saturday, August 18, 2018

Rail transport in Germany - Wikipedia
src: upload.wikimedia.org

As of 2015, Germany had a railway network of 33,331 km of which 19,983 km were electrified and 18,201 km were double track. Germany is a member of the International Union of Railways (UIC). The UIC Country Code for Germany is 80.


Video Rail transport in Germany



Overview

There are around 23,500 powered rail vehicles in Germany, operated by the main operator Deutsche Bahn as well as around 1,500 smaller private railway companies:

In 2006, railways in Germany carried around 119,968,000 passengers on long-distance trains (at an average distance of 288 km), and 2,091,828,000 passengers on short-distance trains (21 km on average). In the same year they carried 346,118,000 tonnes of goods at an average distance of 309 km.

Deutsche Bahn (state-owned private company) is the main provider of railway service. In recent years a number of competitors have started business. They mostly offer state-subsidized regional services, but some, like Veolia Verkehr offer long-distance services as well.

  • Deutsche Bahn - long distance trains
    • Intercity-Express - high speed train, largely national but some routes to the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria, France and Denmark
    • EuroCity - international long-distance trains
    • Intercity - national long-distance trains
    • EuroNight - international night trains
    • UrlaubsExpress - national night trains to the Alps and the Baltic Sea during vacation times

InterRegio services, introduced in 1988 to replace the former Schnellzug and Intercity, were abolished in 2003. Deutsche Bahn is gradually increasing the percentage of InterCityExpress services, and downgrading the remaining InterCity services to the role formerly played by InterRegio.

  • Veolia Verkehr - offers services on certain former Interregio routes
    • Harz-Berlin-Express
    • Ostseeland Express
  • Thalys - high-speed services to Belgium and France, using modified French TGV trains
  • Cisalpino - to Italy, service discontinued mid-December 2006
  • Regional rail and local rail traffic is organised and subsidised (as the fares usually do not cover the running costs) by the federal states. Usual procedure under EU legislation is to award the contract to the lowest bid by means of a tender procedure. The respective states are free to announce short- or long-term contracts as well as to stipulate further conditions e.g. on rolling stock. In recent years, many bids were won by private rail companies like NordWestBahn or Arriva, although some states have awarded long-term contracts to local DB Regio subsidiaries. The train types for regional and local traffic are:
    • Regional-Express and Interregio-Express - medium-distance semi-fast trains for regional services
    • Regionalbahn - basic local service, usually calling at all stations
    • S-Bahn - suburban rail services mostly provided by Deutsche Bahn
    • U-Bahn - underground train services provided by the various cities' transport bodies (not Deutsche Bahn)
    • Tram/light rail services; in a few major cities these run underground in the city centre (often called "Stadtbahn", especially if they have been upgraded to railway standards)

Maps Rail transport in Germany



History

The earliest form of railways, wagonways were developed in Germany in 16th century. A wagonway operation was illustrated in Germany in 1556 by Georgius Agricola (image right) in his work De re metallica. This line used "Hund" carts with unflanged wheels running on wooden planks and a vertical pin on the truck fitting into the gap between the planks to keep it going the right way. The miners called the wagons Hunde ("dogs") from the noise they made on the tracks. Such wagonways soon became very popular in Europe.

Modern rail history officially began with the opening of the steam-hauled Bavarian Ludwig Railway between Nuremberg and Fürth on 7 December 1835. The first long distance railway was the Leipzig-Dresden railway, completed on 7 April 1839. The following years saw a rapid growth: By the year 1845, there were already more than 2,000 km of railroads in Germany, ten years later that number was above 8,000.

German unification in 1871 stimulated consolidation, nationalization into state-owned companies, and further rapid growth. Unlike the situation in France, the goal was support of industrialization, and so heavy lines crisscrossed the Ruhr and other industrial districts, and provided good connections to the major ports of Hamburg and Bremen. By 1880, Germany had 9,400 locomotives pulling 43,000 passengers and 30,000 tons of freight, and forged ahead of France.

During the Second World War, austere versions of the standard locomotives were produced to speed up construction times and minimise the use of imported materials. These were the so-called war locomotives (Kriegslokomotiven and Übergangskriegslokomotiven). Absent a good highway network and trucks, the Germans relied heavily on the railways, supplemented by slower river and canal transport for bulk goods.

In 1989, the Berlin Wall fell. Train frequency rapidly increased on the existing East/West corridors; closed links which had formerly crossed the border were re-opened. On 3 October 1990, Germany was reunified; however, this was not immediately the case with the railways. Administrative and organisational problems led to the decision to completely re-organise and reconnect Germany's railways. The so-called Bahnreform (Railway Reform) came into effect on 1 January 1994, when the State railways Deutsche Bundesbahn and Deutsche Reichsbahn were formally reunited to form the current German Railway Corporation (Deutsche Bahn).

The German railways were long protected from competition from intercity buses on journeys over 50 km. However, in 2013, this protection was removed, leading to a significant shift from rail to bus for long journeys. In addition, Deutsche Bahn has officially lost its railway monopoly status already in 1996; since then its share in regional railway market has dropped to 67% (for year 2016), while in freight inland market to 68.6%. As of October 2016, there were 452 railway operators registered in Germany, among them 20 being long-distance operators.


Munich, Germany, train, Ice, locomotive, rail, tranway, transport ...
src: c8.alamy.com


Track gauges


National Express wins two new German rail contracts - National ...
src: nexgroup.blob.core.windows.net


Platform height

The European Union Commission issued a TSI (Technical Specifications for Interoperability) on 30 May 2002, (2002/735/EC) that sets out standard platform heights for passenger steps on high-speed rail. These standard heights are 550 mm and 760 mm.

In Germany new builds are 550 mm and 760 mm. Mecklenburg-Vorpommern has new builds with 550 mm. Hesse, NRW, Berlin had new builds with 760 mm.


Researching the train of the future
src: www.dlr.de


Rail links to adjacent countries

All these links are to countries of the same gauge, although electrification and other systems (such as signalling) may differ.

  • Denmark -- voltage change to 25 kV AC
  • Poland -- voltage change to 3 kV DC
  • Czech Republic -- voltage change to 3 kV DC
  • Austria -- same voltage (15 kV AC, 16.7 Hz)
  • Switzerland -- same voltage, but different pantographs
  • France -- voltage change to 25 kV AC (no direct connection to France's 1500 V DC network)
  • Luxembourg-- voltage change to 25 kV AC or 3 kV DC
  • The Netherlands -- voltage change to 1500 V DC
    • Betuweroute voltage change to 25 kV AC - freight only
  • Belgium -- voltage change to 3 kV DC

International passenger trains

  • Amsterdam Centraal -- Berlin Ostbahnhof
  • Amsterdam Centraal -- Frankfurt / Basel
  • Copenhagen Hovedbanegarden -- Hamburg Hbf
  • Copenhagen Hovedbanegarden -- Basel / Amsterdam Centraal, night train (City Night Line)
  • Novosibirsk/Astana/Moscow/Saint Petersburg/Kharkiv -- Berlin Lichtenberg
  • Berlin -- Prague Hole?ovice
  • Frankfurt am Main -- Strasbourg/Basel
  • Munich -- Verona

Germany to reduce TACs for rail freight operators
src: www.railwaypro.com


Railway subsidies

Public sector subsidies accounted for 23.7% of the cost of short-distance passenger transport including all rail and bus services. Subsidies are generally not paid in the long-distance market.


German V2 Rocket Transport Train Set - YouTube
src: i.ytimg.com


See also

  • Rail transport by country
  • Rail transport in Europe
  • Transport in Germany
  • History of rail transport in Germany
  • German locomotive classification

Iran-Germany Rail Corridors in the Making | Financial Tribune
src: financialtribune.com


Notes


What America can learn from Europe's high-speed trains | Grist
src: grist.files.wordpress.com


References


REI REI0033s - German WWII Wehrmacht V2 Transport Set in Grey ...
src: az95169.vo.msecnd.net


External links

  • German rail transport gallery

Source of article : Wikipedia