Berlin–Dresden railway

Berlin–Dresden railway
Berlin Dresdener Bf–Dresden-Friedrichstadt
Route number: 200.2 (Yorckstraße–Blankenfelde)
203 0 (Glasower Damm–Elsterwerda)
225 0 (Elsterwerda–Dresden Hbf)
240 0 (all traffic)
Line length: 174.2
Gauge: 1435
Voltage: 15 kV 16.7 Hz AC
Maximum speed: 160
Legend
Unknown BSicon "exKBHFa"
Berlin Dresdener Bahnhof
Unknown BSicon "tSTRrg" Unknown BSicon "xKRZt"
from Potsdamer Platz Berlin S2.svgBerlin S25.svg
Unknown BSicon "tKRZ" Unknown BSicon "xABZlg"
from Berlin Hbf
Exit tunnel Straight track
Unknown BSicon "SHST" Straight track
1.600 Yorckstraße
Unknown BSicon "TSBHFu" Tower station on transverse bridge over straight track
3.500 Berlin Südkreuz (Papestraße until 2006) Ring line Berlin S41.svgBerlin S42.svgBerlin S46.svgBerlin S47.svg
Straight track Junction from left
from Ring line
Straight track Unknown BSicon "eDST"
Berlin-Tempelhof freight yard
Unknown BSicon "SBHF" Straight track
5.100 Berlin Priesterweg
Junction to right Junction to right
to Teltow Berlin S25.svg
Unknown BSicon "SHST" Straight track
6.700 Attilastraße (formerly Mariendorf)
Unknown BSicon "BS2l" Unknown BSicon "BS2r"
6.800 Berlin-Mariendorf junction freight line from Ring line
Bridge over water
Teltow Canal
Unknown BSicon "SHST"
Kamenzer Damm (planned)
Unknown BSicon "BS2+l" Unknown BSicon "BS2+r"
Unknown BSicon "SBHF" Unknown BSicon "KDSTxe"
9.400 Berlin-Marienfelde
Unknown BSicon "SHST" Unknown BSicon "exSTR"
11.000 Buckower Chaussee
Unknown BSicon "eKRZ" Unknown BSicon "exSTRrf"
to GAR
Unknown BSicon "eKRZ"
old freight ring (GAR)
Unknown BSicon "eABZrg"
from GAR
Unknown BSicon "SHST"
12.300 Schichauweg
Unknown BSicon "SBHF"
13.800 Lichtenrade
Unrestricted border on track
BerlinBrandenburg state border
Unknown BSicon "SBHF"
16.800 Mahlow
Junction to left Track turning from right
Unknown BSicon "KRZo" Unknown BSicon "KRZo"
outer ring (BAR)
Unknown BSicon "KRZo" Unknown BSicon "ABZdg"
19.100 Glasower Damm Süd junction from BAR
Unknown BSicon "KSHSTe" Stop on track
19.400 Blankenfelde (Teltow-Fläming district), terminus of Berlin S2.svg
Unknown BSicon "BS2c2" Unknown BSicon "BS2r"
Stop on track
20.800 Dahlewitz
Station on track
24.300 Rangsdorf
Stop on track
30.700 Dabendorf
Junction from left
31.200 Zossen Zoa junction from Mittenwalde
Station on track
32.700 Zossen 37 m
Junction to right
to Jüterbog
Small arched bridge over water
Notte Canal
Stop on track
36.000 Zossen Lager
Station on track
39.100 Wünsdorf-Waldstadt 50 m
Stop on track
42.100 Neuhof (b Zossen)
Station on track
51.500 Baruth (Mark) 55 m
Stop on track
56.100 Klasdorf
Station on track
61.800 Golßen (Niederl) 62 m
Stop on track
68.600 Drahnsdorf 65 m
Junction from right
from Dahme
Station on track
76.000 Luckau-Uckro 84 m
Unknown BSicon "KRZu"
Falkenberg (Elster)–Beeskow
Stop on track
81.100 Gehren (Kr Luckau)
Station on track
85.500 Walddrehna 115 m
Non-passenger station/depot on track
93.700 Brenitz-Sonnewalde 99 m
Junction to left
100.000 Doberlug-Kirchhain Nord junction to Cottbus
Junction to right
to Falkenberg
Tower station on bridge over transverse track
102.900 Doberlug-Kirchhain Halle–Cottbus line
Station on track
108.900 Rückersdorf (Niederl)
Station on track
116.500 Hohenleipisch
Stop on track
121.700 Biehla
Unknown BSicon "KRZu"
Węgliniec–Falkenberg (Elster)
Junction from right
from Elsterwerda-Biehla
Station on track
122.800 Elsterwerda 93 m
Small arched bridge over water
Schwarze Elster
Small arched bridge over water
Pulsnitz
Junction to right
to Riesa
Unknown BSicon "KMW"
124.600
50.400
Route no. change 6135 / 6248
Stop on track
48.120 Prösen Ost 93 m
Unrestricted border on track
BrandenburgSaxony state border
Station on track
43.450 Frauenhain 110 m
Stop on track
39.530 Zabeltitz 113 m
Junction to left
Connecting line to Großenhain Cottbus station
Non-passenger station/depot on track
33.520 Großenhain Berlin station (passengers to 2002) 118 m
Unknown BSicon "KRZo"
27.900 Priestewitz–Cottbus line
Non-passenger station/depot on track
26.071 Böhla (passenger station to 2002) 144 m
Unknown BSicon "eABZlg"
25.280 Weißig–Böhla connecting curve (under construction)
Non-passenger station/depot on track
17.480 Weinböhla (passenger station to 2002) 143 m
Stop on track
13.310 Neucoswig (to 2002) 123 m
Unknown BSicon "eBST"
11.800 Az junction (Bk)
Junction to left
11.946 to Dresden-Neustadt
Unknown BSicon "KRZo"
Leipzig–Dresden
Junction from right
from Coswig
Small non-passenger station on track
10.950 Radebeul-Naundorf junction (Bk)
Stop on track
10.800 Radebeul-Naundorf 111 m
Bridge over water
Elbe bridge, Niederwartha (354 m)
Stop on track
8.970 Niederwartha 112 m
Junction to left
Niederwartha pumped-storage plant siding
Station on track
6.784 Cossebaude 110 m
Stop on track
5.350 Dresden-Stetzsch 110 m
Stop on track
3.890 Dresden-Kemnitz 108 m
Stop on track
2.220 Dresden-Cotta 116 m
Junction from left
from Dresden port (freight line)
Station on track
0.230 Dresden-Friedrichstadt marshalling yard 114 m
Unknown BSicon "KMW"
0.000 (start of line)
Unknown BSicon "ABZld"
to Dresden-Neustadt
Unknown BSicon "ABZrd"
to Werdau Bogendreieck
Straight track
to Dresden Hbf–Děčín

The Berlin-Dresden railway is a double track, electrified main line railway in the German states of Berlin, Brandenburg and Saxony, which was originally built and operated by the Berlin-Dresden Railway Company (Berlin-Dresdener Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft). It runs from Berlin through the southern Teltow countryside and then between Lower Lusatia and Fläming Heath through Elsterwerda and the Großenhainer Pflege countryside to Dresden.

The line is being fully rehabilitated so that by 2012 maximum speeds will generally be 160 km/h.

Contents

History

Up to 1945

In 1848 the Berlin-Anhalt Railway Company opened the Jüterbog–Riesa line, connecting with the Leipzig-Dresden line and creating the first direct rail link between Berlin and Dresden. In 1872 the Berlin-Dresden Railway Company was founded to build a competing a line via Elsterwerda that was twelve km shorter. This route was opened on 17 June 1875. Long-distance traffic between Berlin and Dresden was divided between the two routes until the end of World War II.

1 October 1877 management of the line was taken over by Prussian state railways. On 24 January 1887 Saxony and Prussia contracted a treaty, under which ownership of the company passed to Prussia from 1 April 1887. This treaty also provided that the Elsterwerda–Dresden section was resold to the Saxon government on 1 April 1888, when it became part of the Royal Saxon State Railways.

Original Berlin station in Dresden
Former Berlin station in Dresden, now part of a goods yard
Elsterwerda station
Elbe bridge in Niederwartha

At both ends of the line new stations were built, the Dresdner Bahnhof (Dresden station) in Berlin and Berliner Bahnhof (Berlin station) in Dresden. Both stations were used only briefly. In 1882 the Dresden station in Berlin (located on the site of the present-day Gleisdreieck U-Bahn station and the former postal station in Luckenwalder Strasse) was closed for passenger traffic. The line’s Berlin terminus was moved a little further north to the Anhalter Bahnhof (Anhalt station). A little later, the Berlin train station in Dresden was abandoned as part of the redevelopment of the Dresden railway node. In its place the Dresden-Friedrichstadt station was built, which has been used since 1894 for freight and regional services. Since that time, long distance services have turned off towards Radebeul-Zitzschewig on the Leipzig–Dresden line and Dresden-Neustadt to Dresden Hauptbahnhof. In contrast, freight trains to and from Leipzig use the Berlin-Dresden railway from Radebeul-Naundorf station to Friedrichstadt.

From 1875 until World War I the Prussian military railway ran parallel with the line from Berlin to Zossen. This line was dismantled in 1919. Between 1901 and 1904 high-speed trials were carried out with electric locomotives and railcars and speeds of up to 210.8 km/h were achieved. A new railway bridge on the Dresden line had to be built south of the S-Bahn station at Mariendorf (now Attilastraße) as a result of the construction of the Teltow canal in 1905.

In 1936 a high-speed express service commenced between Berlin and Dresden using the Henschel-Wegmann Train, taking 100 minutes. The Berlin suburb train operations were electrified in 1939 and 1940. Berlin S-Bahn services commenced on 15 May 1939 between Priesterweg and Mahlow and on 6 October 1940 the S-Bahn was extended to Rangsdorf. The S-Bahn shared tracks in southern Berlin with long-distance passenger and freight trains. At the end of the 1930s work began on the new track to separate the S-Bahn and long-distance tracks, but by the beginning of the Second World War this work was not completed.

In April 1945, S-Bahn services ceased as a result of the war.[1]

Reopening in 1945

After the end of the war in 1945 the railway line was seriously damaged by the allies. In addition the bridges over the Teltow Canal in Berlin were blowed up in the last days of the war by the German army. Later the line’s second track was dismantled to provide reparations to the Soviet Union. Only two tracks have been restored on these bridges. Services resumed between August and October 1945. Between Mariendorf and Marienfelde stations S-Bahn services and the remaining passenger and freight services ran on a common two-track section. Between Rangsdorf and Wünsdorf steam suburban trains operated to connect with the S-Bahn.

The division of Germany and Berlin also had an impact on the traffic on the Berlin-Dresden line. In 1951, a connecting curve was built in an easterly direction from the line linking with the newly established Berlin outer ring. Long-distance trains from Dresden used it to avoid West Berlin. The terminal stations on West Berlin territory were closed, including the Anhalt station on 18 May 1952. Afterwards regional services used the outer ring to reach the East Berlin stations of Schöneweide, Lichtenberg or Ostbahnhof. Only the S-Bahn service from Rangsdorf ran over the border into West Berlin. Freight services continued to operate in West Berlin from the north to Marienfelde station (including to the gas works at Mariendorf and the Daimler factory at Marienfelde). The remaining long-distance tracks south of Marienfelde station was partially dismantled or became overgrown in the following decades.

After the building of the Berlin Wall on 13 August 1961, S-Bahn-operations between Lichtenrade and Mahlow were abandoned. S-Bahn services initially operated a shuttle service between Mahlow and Rangsdorf, but this was discontinued on 9 October 1961 due to the lack of repair and storage facilities. Commuter trains from Wünsdorf ran to Schönefeld Airport station. From 1962 there was an S-Bahn service to Berlin. As of 26 May 1963 a shuttle train consisting of a class VT 2.09 railbus (known as the "piglet taxi") ran between Mahlow and Blankenfelde, connecting to services on the outer ring.

Upgrading of the line since the 1960s

The low capacity of the single-track line and the poor condition of the track had long caused operational problems. The high density of freight on the line left only a small number of paths for fast passenger trains. An improvement occurred in 1972, after the whole line was duplicated. In the 1960s work began on the raising of maximum speeds on the line to 160 km/h. The stations from Baruth to Brenitz-Sonnewalde were converted for high speed with the relocation of platforms onto sidings. For various reasons, trains could still only operate at 120 km/h. The section from Dresden-Friedrichstadt to Radebeul-Naundorf was electrified on 28 September 1969. The rest of the line to the Berlin outer ring including the two connecting curves on the ring was electrified in several sections between 1979 and 1983. Services on the West Berlin section of the S-Bahn between Marienfelde and Lichtenrade, which had been closed in September 1980 following a strike, were restored in 1988. The line had only one track.

The line had a dense express traffic to Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania and Austria and to southern East Germany. Regional services ran every hour between Schönefeld and Wünsdorf, some continued to Baruth. Further south local traffic was low: between Baruth and Elsterwerda for many years there were only four passenger trains a day. South of Elsterwerda there were a few more services.

Upgrades since 1990

After the fall of the Berlin Wall a single-track of the S-Bahn was rebuilt between Lichtenrade and Mahlow and services were restored to Blankenfelde on 31 August 1992. Occasionally freight trains ran on the S-Bahn tracks to the south, including trains carrying refuse. Between January and May 1992 extensive renovation was carried out on the track. The speed limit was raised to 160 km/h in May 1992. This reduced long-distance journey times by 35 minutes.

Further upgrading of the line

Restoration at Doberlug-Kirchhain

Under an agreement signed on 7 June 1995 the Berlin–PragueVienna line is being upgraded, including the raising of maximum speeds to 200 km/h between Berlin and Dresden. In addition, the Böhla–Neucoswig section of the line is being upgraded as part of German Unity Transport Project No 9, which covers the upgrading of the Leipzig–Dresden line. The Weissig–Böhla connecting curve will in future link the Leipzig–Dresden line to Böhla so that long-distance passenger and fast freight trains can use the Berlin–Dresden line to and from Leipzig, allowing the better separation of traffic at the Dresden railway node.

Restoration of the Dresden railway in Berlin

Since May 2006, most long-distance and regional trains operating on the line run from the new Berlin Hauptbahnhof by the new line under the Tiergarten and join the old Anhalt line from Anhalt station to Dresden near Gleisdreieck. Until the restoration of the line between Südkreuz and the southern outer ring, trains run from near Priesterweg S-Bahn station on a detour along the Anhalt line to a recently built connecting curve at Genshagener Berlin on to the outer ring. At Glasower Damm junction trains leave the outer ring and rejoin the Dresden railway at the19.0 km mark.

In the next few years, the direct connection of the Berlin–Dresden line between the southern outer ring at Blankenfelde and Südkreuz will be restored. This line is important in the development of a fast connection to the future Berlin-Brandenburg International Airport for Airport Express trains.

The planning process is currently under way, with community consultation incomplete. Local residents are pressing for a tunnel at the northern end of the line. It is estimated that the new section will shorten travel time for passenger trains by about ten minutes. Completion is expected in about 2015.

Notes

  1. ^ Bley, Peter (1993) (in German). Berlin S-Bahn. Düsseldorf: publication Alba. p. 26. 

References

  • Bley, Peter (1999) (in Germany). 125 Jahre Berlin–Dresdener Eisenbahn (125 years of the Berlin-Dresden railway). Düsseldorf: Alba Publikation. ISBN 3-87094-360-2. 
  • Kaiß, Kurt; Hengst, Matthias (1994) (in Germany). Dresdens Eisenbahn (Dresden Railway): 1894–1994. Düsseldorf: Alba Publikation. ISBN 3-87094-350-5. 
  • "Dresdener Bahn" (in Germany). beefland. http://www.beefland.de/berlin/fernbahnen/dresden/index.html. Retrieved 23 May 2010. 

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