fbpx
Wikipedia

Ringzug

The Ringzug ("ring train"), also called the 3er-Ringzug ("ring train of the 3") is a passenger transport network in the districts of Tuttlingen, Rottweil and Schwarzwald-Baar in southern Baden-Württemberg, Germany. The Ringzug went into regular operations on 31 August 2003 and has operated in its current form since 12 December 2004. The concept of the Ringzug is the operation of a clockface timetable, coordinated with a variety of other buses and train services, over an S-Bahn-like network in a rural environment. In March 2006, the passenger association Pro Bahn described the Ringzug as an exemplary public transport system at its 2006-passenger transport awards (Fahrgastpreis 2006).[1] The Ringzug has aroused interest beyond the region and can point to steadily rising passenger numbers and declining deficits.

Logo of the 3er-Ringzug
A Ringzug railcar in Rottweil
Line map of the Ringzug

Name Edit

The term Ringzug was chosen because its route was originally intended to form a ring, but it is interrupted by the gap between Immendingen and Donaueschingen. The network also includes lines that are not part of the ring. These include the Trossingen Railway and parts of the Breg Valley Railway, the Wutach Valley Railway and the Tuttlingen–Inzigkofen railway. The alternative term 3er-Ringzug indicates that three districts participate in the project.

History Edit

 
In the mid-1990s the Trossingen Stadt station of the Trossingen Railway was in danger of being closed

The majority of stations in the Ringzug area were skipped in the 1970s and 1980s due to the implementation of Deutsche Bundesbahn's so-called eilzugmäßigen (semi-fast running) of regional services. On the 28 kilometre-long section of the Plochingen–Immendingen railway (part of the Gäubahn) between Tuttlingen and Rottweil, Spaichingen was the only remaining stop. No train stopped even in Aldingen, which had 7,500 residents.

Passenger services on the Marbach–Bad Dürrheim railway were abandoned in 1953, the abandonment of passenger services on the Heuberg Railway followed in 1966 and the northern section of the Wutach Valley Railway from Lauchringen to Zollhaus-Blumberg had no scheduled passenger traffic from 1967. After 1972, this was also true for the Breg Valley Railway. Even the Trossingen Railway would have been completely shut down if a decision taken by the Trossingen council in 1996 had been implemented.

In the area of Upper Danube Nature Park between Tuttlingen and Fridingen, the "Danube Valley" model was launched in September 1990 by the district of Tuttlingen to reverse some of the displacement of school transport from rail. Otherwise, public transport in the region was largely focused on school bus services.

As a result of this withdrawal of services from the area, the Schwarzwald-Baar-Heuberg area had no regional connections, except on long-distance services. On the Black Forest Railway, in addition to the express trains, an InterRegio service ran at two-hour intervals between Hamburg and Konstanz. On the Plochingen–Immendingen railway, express trains (Durchgangszug or later EuroCity services) ran from Stuttgart via Zurich to Italy. There were also long-distance passenger trains on the Ulm–Tuttlingen-Donaueschingen–Neustadt (Schwarzw) and the Rottweil–Villingen–Donaueschingen–Neustadt (Schwarzw) routes.

Political decisions on the way to the establishment of Ringzug 1995–2001 Edit

 
The Region Schwarzwald-Baar-Heuberg
 
Logo of the Hohenzollerischen Landesbahn

In January 1995, the regional association of Schwarzwald-Baar-Heuberg was presented by the Tübingen transport consultant Gerd Hickmann with an elaborate study of an integrated timetable for buses and trains in the Schwarzwald-Baar-Heuberg region. This suggested an integrated regular-interval timetable be introduced in the region to connect rail and bus services. The backbone of this new transport concept would be a Ringzug. Following Hickmann's study his colleague Ulrich Grosse supervised the development of the concept and advised the political authorities to implement it. In January 1996. the district councils of Tuttlingen, Rottweil and the Schwarzwald-Baar-Kreis decided to implement the developed concept under the so-called "Trossingen agreement" (Trossinger Vereinbarung). The residence of then Premier Erwin Teufel as the region's representative in the parliament of Baden-Württemberg assured the promotion of the new transport system.

After the Trossingen agreement, the three councils developed the concept and approved it in 1999. Then, the state of Baden-Württemberg called for tenders for an operator for the Ringzug network. Among several tenders received, four were from railway companies, including Deutsche Bahn. Finally, the tender of Hohenzollerische Landesbahn was accepted at the end of 1999. Between 1999 and 2001, further planning stopped because a dispute over the distribution of operating costs between the districts had broken out. This dispute was settled in 2001 and in the same year, the financial agreement with the State of Baden-Württemberg was also completed. In December 2001, the special-purpose association (Zweckverband) was established to create the Ringzug, initially under the chairmanship of the former administrator of Tuttlingen District, Hans Volle.

Improving transport infrastructure 2001–2003 Edit

The partial disuse of lines for decades and the lack of stations required massive investment in transport infrastructure. The signalling technology, which originated in part from the early part of the 20th century, had to be fundamentally overhauled and was eventually replaced by a computerised system. Even electronic interlockings were introduced, which are now remotely controlled from Karlsruhe. Overall the new signalling technology, the stations and the upgrading of the network cost about €67 million. In addition, €33 million was spent on a total of 20 Regio-Shuttle sets that were delivered at the beginning of 2003 and intended for use on the new network. A new depot was built for this in Immendingen.

Limited Ringzug operations in 2003/2004 Edit

Originally, the Ringzug was scheduled to open on 15 December 2002, but significant delays in the renovation work delayed the start of operations until 31 August 2003. However, since the infrastructure was not yet fully available at that time, only a limited operation was launched. Many of the proposed new stations were not yet completed, so trains could not stop at them for months. Because an electronic interlocking was being installed at the junction to the Wutach Valley Railway branch in Hintschingen, the line also could not be included at first. So the Ringzug was launched with an incomplete route network and a few stations, which meant that in the first year buses still ran parallel to the railway lines.

Network Edit

 
The Ringzug as part of HzL-operated network, which also includes routes outside the main network.

Integrated lines Edit

The Ringzug network consists of the following seven railways:

None of the railway lines is part of the main line of the Hohenzollern Landesbahn. For the majority of these services the DB Netz is responsible for the railway Infrastructure, while the Trossingen Railway belongs to Stadtwerke Trossingen (the municipal utility), the Wutach Valley Railway belongs to the town of Blumberg and the Hüfingen-Bräunlingen section was the responsibility of the Südwestdeutsche Verkehrs-Aktiengesellschaft ("Southwest German Transport Company", SWEG). The last two were reactivated for the Ringzug, after decades without regular passenger services. On the three lines that do not belong to DB Netz AG, passenger services are now operated exclusively by Ringzug. On the remaining sections there are additional services operated by Deutsche Bahn.

Gap between Donaueschingen and Immendingen Edit

There is a gap in the system between Immendingen and Donaueschingen. This was due to the timetabling in the mid-1990s, when the concept was developed. At that time InterRegio services that ran on the Black Forest Railway between Donaueschingen and Immendingen occupied train paths that the Ringzug would have needed. Therefore, the Ringzug has to date refrained from operating over this route. Instead, it was decided to include the Wutach Valley Railway, running through the relatively sparsely populated Immendingen–Zollhaus-Blumberg section, in the Ringzug. This led to the reactivation of this section, which was not originally planned, leaving the Donaueschingen–Immendingen gap.

After the end of the InterRegio traffic on the Black Forest Railway and changes in the timing of services on this line, it would be now be possible for Ringzug services to operate through the gap between Immendingen and Donaueschingen. This would connect Geisingen station, Geisingen-Gutmadingen, Donaueschingen-Neudingen and Donaueschingen-Pfohren. This is frequently the subject of political discussion, but operations are not currently planned.

Stations Edit

 
Weilheim station on the Plochingen–Immendingen railway; the station was restored for Ringzug services
 
Near Geisingen-Kirchen on the Wutach Valley Railway
 
At Donaueschingen Mitte/Siedlung station on the Black Forest Railway
 
Blumberg-Zollhaus is the southern terminus of the Ringzug

By 2004, DB Station&Service established 18 new stations and reactivated 16 abandoned stations for the Ringzug operations. Some existing stations were moved closer to their respective settlements. The average distance between the stations is 1.9 kilometres. All municipalities and parts of municipalities lying on lines are usually connected, so that the large towns will continue to have one or even several stations. Many of the Ringzug stations are request stops, most have access for the disabled.

Station km Route Transport association
Bräunlingen 0 Breg Valley Railway VSB
Bräunlingen Industriegebiet 3 Breg Valley Railway VSB
Hüfingen Mitte 6 Breg Valley Railway VSB
Donaueschingen Allmendshofen 7 Breg Valley Railway VSB
Donaueschingen 8 Breg Valley Railway/ Black Forest Railway VSB
Donaueschingen Mitte / Siedlung 9 Black Forest Railway VSB
Donaueschingen Aufen 11 Black Forest Railway VSB
Donaueschingen Grüningen 14 Black Forest Railway VSB
Brigachtal Klengen 17 Black Forest Railway VSB
Brigachtal Kirchdorf 18 Black Forest Railway VSB
Marbach West (Villingen-Schwenningen) 19 Black Forest Railway VSB
Villingen (Schwarzw) 22 Black Forest Railway/ Rottweil–Villingen VSB
Marbach Ost (Villingen-Schwenningen) 25 Rottweil–Villingen VSB
Zollhaus (Villingen-Schwenningen) 28 Rottweil–Villingen VSB
Schwenningen Eisstadion 30 Rottweil–Villingen VSB
Schwenningen (Neckar) 31 Rottweil–Villingen VSB
Schwenningen Hammerstatt 32 Rottweil–Villingen VSB
Trossingen 37 Rottweil–Villingen TUTicket, VSB, VVR
Deißlingen Mitte 40 Rottweil–Villingen VVR
Rottweil Saline 46 Rottweil–Villingen VVR
Rottweil 49 Rottweil–Villingen / Stuttgart–Hattingen VVR
Rottweil Göllsdorf 50 Stuttgart–Hattingen VVR
Rottweil Saline 52 Stuttgart–Hattingen VVR
Rottweil-Neufra 56 Stuttgart–Hattingen VVR
Aldingen (b Spaichingen) 60 Stuttgart–Hattingen TUTicket
Spaichingen Mitte 62 Stuttgart–Hattingen TUTicket
Spaichingen 64 Stuttgart–Hattingen TUTicket
Balgheim 66 Stuttgart–Hattingen TUTicket
Rietheim (Württ) 69 Stuttgart–Hattingen TUTicket
Weilheim (Württ) 71 Stuttgart–Hattingen TUTicket
Wurmlingen Nord 73 Stuttgart–Hattingen TUTicket
Wurmlingen Mitte 74 Stuttgart–Hattingen TUTicket
Tuttlingen Schulen 76 Stuttgart–Hattingen TUTicket
Tuttlingen 77 Stuttgart–Hattingen / Tuttlingen–Inzigkofen TUTicket
Tuttlingen Gänsäcker 78 Tuttlingen–Inzigkofen TUTicket
Möhringen 81 Tuttlingen–Inzigkofen TUTicket
Möhringen Rathaus 82 Tuttlingen–Inzigkofen TUTicket
Immendingen Mitte 87 Tuttlingen–Inzigkofen TUTicket
Immendingen 88 Tuttlingen–Inzigkofen TUTicket
Immendingen-Zimmern 89 Tuttlingen–Inzigkofen/ Wutach Valley Railway TUTicket
Geisingen-Hausen 93 Wutach Valley Railway TUTicket
Geisingen-Kirchen 94 Wutach Valley Railway TUTicket
Geisingen-Aulfingen 96 Wutach Valley Railway TUTicket
Geisingen-Leipferdingen 99 Wutach Valley Railway TUTicket, VSB
Blumberg-Riedöschingen 103 Wutach Valley Railway VSB
Blumberg-Zollhaus 107 Wutach Valley Railway VSB

Operations and Organisation Edit

Links with other transport modes Edit

With the start of Ringzug operations, public transport services in the region has been fundamentally reorganised. Parallel bus services along the railway lines were largely discontinued. Buses have since then served as feeders to the railway and have been coordinated with Ringzug services. Important points of connection between the railway and buses are at Bräunlingen station, Donaueschingen station, Brigachtal-Klengen, Brigachtal-Kirchdorf, Villingen (Schwarzwald), Schwenningen, Rottweil, Aldingen, Tuttlingen, Immendingen, Geisingen-Hausen and Geisingen-Leipferdingen.

In Rottweil, Ringzug services running in both directions coordinate with long-distance services on the Plochingen–Immendingen railway, so all stations between Leipferdingen and Rottweil have connections to following InterCity trains running every two hours to Stuttgart. In Immendingen and Villingen there are regular connections to the Black Forest Railway towards Karlsruhe or Konstanz. In the summer the Ringzug also connects at Blumberg-Zollhaus with the Museum Railway to Weizen.

Transport and cycle sequence Edit

 
A railcar at the edge of the network in Neustadt (Schwarzwald)

The Ringzug operates on both weekdays and weekends over the line from Bräunlingen to Geisingen-Leipferdingen or Blumberg at a two-hour regular interval. On weekdays this basic service is supplemented by numerous additional services which usually do not complete the basic route. Many trains start or end in Rottweil or Trossingen Stadt and run to or from Leipferdingen. On weekdays there are services between Bräunlingen and Trossingen and between Rottweil and Leipferdingen at least once an hour. This service is amplified again on some section during the peak, so that, for example, between Tuttlingen and Spaichingen on weekdays between 15:00 and 18:00, giving an approximate half-hour service. However, between Trossingen and Rottweil on weekdays during the off-peak there is only a two-hour basic service, so Deißlingen station outside the peak and on weekdays is served only every two hours.

 
An operation under multiple-unit train control on the section between Tuttlingen and Fridingen, which is not served at regular intervals

Some services do not run to the regular interval pattern. So trains run on the Trossingen Railway stop at Trossingen Bahnhof to ensure that nearly all connections can be achieved. On the Tuttlingen–Inzigkofen railway section from Tuttlingen to Fridingen an der Donau, however, the Ringzug services do not run at regular intervals. Only irregular services operate on weekdays. At the weekend there are no Ringzug services. Here, the majority of public transport traffic continues to be handled by buses. Most Ringzug services on the Wutach Valley Railway on weekdays begin in Leipferdingen rather than in Zollhaus-Blumberg so that the Wutach Valley Railway section between Leipferdingen and Zollhaus on weekdays is mostly also served by buses. A few Ringzug services run off the formal route network to Sigmaringen and to Neustadt (Schwarzw). One pair of trains also runs on school days from Immendingen via Geisingen station to Donaueschingen.

Ringzug trains operate 1,258,000 train-kilometres annually.

Rolling stock Edit

 
Railcars under multiple-unit train control

Ringzug services are operated by DMUs former by 20 Stadler Regio-Shuttle RS1 sets. They differ from other vehicles of this type in that there are sockets at some seats for laptop use. There is also one ticket machine in each railcar. All are air conditioned and have a toilet.

In the morning peak hour Ringzug services are partly carried out in cooperation with DB Regio and are operated with class 425 EMUs. This is because the Ringzug Regio Shuttles cannot handle the high demand at this time. The Ringzug plans to operate class 611 sets.

The unexpectedly high ridership quickly led to capacity constraints, meaning among other things, that from December 2004 vintage railcars of the T3 and T5 model built in 1938 and 1956, were restored to service on the Trossingen Railway for regular services. The modern Regio-Shuttle sets that were actually intended to run on the Trossingen Railway were used to run in multiple on other unexpectedly heavily loaded trains on other routes.

References Edit

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ "Fahrgastpreis für Ringzug". Eisenbahn-Revue International (in German) (5): 215. 2006. ISSN 1421-2811.

Sources Edit

  • Frank von Meißner (2005). "Eine S-Bahn auf dem Lande: Der 3er-Ringzug auf Erfolgskurs". Tagungsband der Horber Schienen-Tage, 2005 (in German). München.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Zweckverband Ringzug Schwarzwald-Baar-Heuberg (in German). Villingen-Schwenningen: Der 3er Ringzug: Eine Investition für die Zukunft der Region Schwarzwald-Baar-Heuberg. 2006.
  • "HzL-Ringzug fährt ab September". Eisenbahn-Revue International (in German) (8–9): 383. 2003. ISSN 1421-2811.
  • Frank von Meißner (2003). "Ringzug-Konzept erfolgreich gestartet". Eisenbahn-Revue International (in German) (11): 3522 f. ISSN 1421-2811.

External links Edit

  • "Website of the Zweckverband Ringzug" (in German). Retrieved 18 June 2016.
  • "Der Ringzug" (in German). www.privat-bahn.de. Retrieved 18 June 2016.
  • "Private site with photographs and newspaper articles on the Ringzug" (in German). Retrieved 18 June 2016.

ringzug, ring, train, also, called, ring, train, passenger, transport, network, districts, tuttlingen, rottweil, schwarzwald, baar, southern, baden, württemberg, germany, went, into, regular, operations, august, 2003, operated, current, form, since, december, . The Ringzug ring train also called the 3er Ringzug ring train of the 3 is a passenger transport network in the districts of Tuttlingen Rottweil and Schwarzwald Baar in southern Baden Wurttemberg Germany The Ringzug went into regular operations on 31 August 2003 and has operated in its current form since 12 December 2004 The concept of the Ringzug is the operation of a clockface timetable coordinated with a variety of other buses and train services over an S Bahn like network in a rural environment In March 2006 the passenger association Pro Bahn described the Ringzug as an exemplary public transport system at its 2006 passenger transport awards Fahrgastpreis 2006 1 The Ringzug has aroused interest beyond the region and can point to steadily rising passenger numbers and declining deficits Logo of the 3er RingzugA Ringzug railcar in RottweilLine map of the Ringzug Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Political decisions on the way to the establishment of Ringzug 1995 2001 2 2 Improving transport infrastructure 2001 2003 2 3 Limited Ringzug operations in 2003 2004 3 Network 3 1 Integrated lines 3 1 1 Gap between Donaueschingen and Immendingen 3 2 Stations 4 Operations and Organisation 4 1 Links with other transport modes 4 2 Transport and cycle sequence 4 3 Rolling stock 5 References 5 1 Footnotes 5 2 Sources 6 External linksName EditThe term Ringzug was chosen because its route was originally intended to form a ring but it is interrupted by the gap between Immendingen and Donaueschingen The network also includes lines that are not part of the ring These include the Trossingen Railway and parts of the Breg Valley Railway the Wutach Valley Railway and the Tuttlingen Inzigkofen railway The alternative term 3er Ringzug indicates that three districts participate in the project History Edit nbsp In the mid 1990s the Trossingen Stadt station of the Trossingen Railway was in danger of being closedThe majority of stations in the Ringzug area were skipped in the 1970s and 1980s due to the implementation of Deutsche Bundesbahn s so called eilzugmassigen semi fast running of regional services On the 28 kilometre long section of the Plochingen Immendingen railway part of the Gaubahn between Tuttlingen and Rottweil Spaichingen was the only remaining stop No train stopped even in Aldingen which had 7 500 residents Passenger services on the Marbach Bad Durrheim railway were abandoned in 1953 the abandonment of passenger services on the Heuberg Railway followed in 1966 and the northern section of the Wutach Valley Railway from Lauchringen to Zollhaus Blumberg had no scheduled passenger traffic from 1967 After 1972 this was also true for the Breg Valley Railway Even the Trossingen Railway would have been completely shut down if a decision taken by the Trossingen council in 1996 had been implemented In the area of Upper Danube Nature Park between Tuttlingen and Fridingen the Danube Valley model was launched in September 1990 by the district of Tuttlingen to reverse some of the displacement of school transport from rail Otherwise public transport in the region was largely focused on school bus services As a result of this withdrawal of services from the area the Schwarzwald Baar Heuberg area had no regional connections except on long distance services On the Black Forest Railway in addition to the express trains an InterRegio service ran at two hour intervals between Hamburg and Konstanz On the Plochingen Immendingen railway express trains Durchgangszug or later EuroCity services ran from Stuttgart via Zurich to Italy There were also long distance passenger trains on the Ulm Tuttlingen Donaueschingen Neustadt Schwarzw and the Rottweil Villingen Donaueschingen Neustadt Schwarzw routes Political decisions on the way to the establishment of Ringzug 1995 2001 Edit nbsp The Region Schwarzwald Baar Heuberg nbsp Logo of the Hohenzollerischen LandesbahnIn January 1995 the regional association of Schwarzwald Baar Heuberg was presented by the Tubingen transport consultant Gerd Hickmann with an elaborate study of an integrated timetable for buses and trains in the Schwarzwald Baar Heuberg region This suggested an integrated regular interval timetable be introduced in the region to connect rail and bus services The backbone of this new transport concept would be a Ringzug Following Hickmann s study his colleague Ulrich Grosse supervised the development of the concept and advised the political authorities to implement it In January 1996 the district councils of Tuttlingen Rottweil and the Schwarzwald Baar Kreis decided to implement the developed concept under the so called Trossingen agreement Trossinger Vereinbarung The residence of then Premier Erwin Teufel as the region s representative in the parliament of Baden Wurttemberg assured the promotion of the new transport system After the Trossingen agreement the three councils developed the concept and approved it in 1999 Then the state of Baden Wurttemberg called for tenders for an operator for the Ringzug network Among several tenders received four were from railway companies including Deutsche Bahn Finally the tender of Hohenzollerische Landesbahn was accepted at the end of 1999 Between 1999 and 2001 further planning stopped because a dispute over the distribution of operating costs between the districts had broken out This dispute was settled in 2001 and in the same year the financial agreement with the State of Baden Wurttemberg was also completed In December 2001 the special purpose association Zweckverband was established to create the Ringzug initially under the chairmanship of the former administrator of Tuttlingen District Hans Volle Improving transport infrastructure 2001 2003 Edit The partial disuse of lines for decades and the lack of stations required massive investment in transport infrastructure The signalling technology which originated in part from the early part of the 20th century had to be fundamentally overhauled and was eventually replaced by a computerised system Even electronic interlockings were introduced which are now remotely controlled from Karlsruhe Overall the new signalling technology the stations and the upgrading of the network cost about 67 million In addition 33 million was spent on a total of 20 Regio Shuttle sets that were delivered at the beginning of 2003 and intended for use on the new network A new depot was built for this in Immendingen Limited Ringzug operations in 2003 2004 Edit Originally the Ringzug was scheduled to open on 15 December 2002 but significant delays in the renovation work delayed the start of operations until 31 August 2003 However since the infrastructure was not yet fully available at that time only a limited operation was launched Many of the proposed new stations were not yet completed so trains could not stop at them for months Because an electronic interlocking was being installed at the junction to the Wutach Valley Railway branch in Hintschingen the line also could not be included at first So the Ringzug was launched with an incomplete route network and a few stations which meant that in the first year buses still ran parallel to the railway lines Network Edit nbsp The Ringzug as part of HzL operated network which also includes routes outside the main network Integrated lines Edit The Ringzug network consists of the following seven railways The Breg Valley Railway from Braunlingen formerly from Furtwangen to Donaueschingen over its entire remaining length the Black Forest Railway from Offenburg to Konstanz over the Donaueschingen Villingen section the Rottweil Villingen railway over its entire length the Plochingen Immendingen railway over the Rottweil Tuttlingen section the Tuttlingen Inzigkofen railway over the Immendingen Tuttlingen Fridingen an der Donau section the Wutach Valley Railway from Immendingen to Waldshut over the Immendingen Blumberg Zollhaus section and the Trossingen Railway from Trossingen station to Trossingen Stadt over its entire length None of the railway lines is part of the main line of the Hohenzollern Landesbahn For the majority of these services the DB Netz is responsible for the railway Infrastructure while the Trossingen Railway belongs to Stadtwerke Trossingen the municipal utility the Wutach Valley Railway belongs to the town of Blumberg and the Hufingen Braunlingen section was the responsibility of the Sudwestdeutsche Verkehrs Aktiengesellschaft Southwest German Transport Company SWEG The last two were reactivated for the Ringzug after decades without regular passenger services On the three lines that do not belong to DB Netz AG passenger services are now operated exclusively by Ringzug On the remaining sections there are additional services operated by Deutsche Bahn Gap between Donaueschingen and Immendingen Edit There is a gap in the system between Immendingen and Donaueschingen This was due to the timetabling in the mid 1990s when the concept was developed At that time InterRegio services that ran on the Black Forest Railway between Donaueschingen and Immendingen occupied train paths that the Ringzug would have needed Therefore the Ringzug has to date refrained from operating over this route Instead it was decided to include the Wutach Valley Railway running through the relatively sparsely populated Immendingen Zollhaus Blumberg section in the Ringzug This led to the reactivation of this section which was not originally planned leaving the Donaueschingen Immendingen gap After the end of the InterRegio traffic on the Black Forest Railway and changes in the timing of services on this line it would be now be possible for Ringzug services to operate through the gap between Immendingen and Donaueschingen This would connect Geisingen station Geisingen Gutmadingen Donaueschingen Neudingen and Donaueschingen Pfohren This is frequently the subject of political discussion but operations are not currently planned Stations Edit nbsp Weilheim station on the Plochingen Immendingen railway the station was restored for Ringzug services nbsp Near Geisingen Kirchen on the Wutach Valley Railway nbsp At Donaueschingen Mitte Siedlung station on the Black Forest Railway nbsp Blumberg Zollhaus is the southern terminus of the RingzugBy 2004 DB Station amp Service established 18 new stations and reactivated 16 abandoned stations for the Ringzug operations Some existing stations were moved closer to their respective settlements The average distance between the stations is 1 9 kilometres All municipalities and parts of municipalities lying on lines are usually connected so that the large towns will continue to have one or even several stations Many of the Ringzug stations are request stops most have access for the disabled Station km Route Transport associationBraunlingen 0 Breg Valley Railway VSBBraunlingen Industriegebiet 3 Breg Valley Railway VSBHufingen Mitte 6 Breg Valley Railway VSBDonaueschingen Allmendshofen 7 Breg Valley Railway VSBDonaueschingen 8 Breg Valley Railway Black Forest Railway VSBDonaueschingen Mitte Siedlung 9 Black Forest Railway VSBDonaueschingen Aufen 11 Black Forest Railway VSBDonaueschingen Gruningen 14 Black Forest Railway VSBBrigachtal Klengen 17 Black Forest Railway VSBBrigachtal Kirchdorf 18 Black Forest Railway VSBMarbach West Villingen Schwenningen 19 Black Forest Railway VSBVillingen Schwarzw 22 Black Forest Railway Rottweil Villingen VSBMarbach Ost Villingen Schwenningen 25 Rottweil Villingen VSBZollhaus Villingen Schwenningen 28 Rottweil Villingen VSBSchwenningen Eisstadion 30 Rottweil Villingen VSBSchwenningen Neckar 31 Rottweil Villingen VSBSchwenningen Hammerstatt 32 Rottweil Villingen VSBTrossingen 37 Rottweil Villingen TUTicket VSB VVRDeisslingen Mitte 40 Rottweil Villingen VVRRottweil Saline 46 Rottweil Villingen VVRRottweil 49 Rottweil Villingen Stuttgart Hattingen VVRRottweil Gollsdorf 50 Stuttgart Hattingen VVRRottweil Saline 52 Stuttgart Hattingen VVRRottweil Neufra 56 Stuttgart Hattingen VVRAldingen b Spaichingen 60 Stuttgart Hattingen TUTicketSpaichingen Mitte 62 Stuttgart Hattingen TUTicketSpaichingen 64 Stuttgart Hattingen TUTicketBalgheim 66 Stuttgart Hattingen TUTicketRietheim Wurtt 69 Stuttgart Hattingen TUTicketWeilheim Wurtt 71 Stuttgart Hattingen TUTicketWurmlingen Nord 73 Stuttgart Hattingen TUTicketWurmlingen Mitte 74 Stuttgart Hattingen TUTicketTuttlingen Schulen 76 Stuttgart Hattingen TUTicketTuttlingen 77 Stuttgart Hattingen Tuttlingen Inzigkofen TUTicketTuttlingen Gansacker 78 Tuttlingen Inzigkofen TUTicketMohringen 81 Tuttlingen Inzigkofen TUTicketMohringen Rathaus 82 Tuttlingen Inzigkofen TUTicketImmendingen Mitte 87 Tuttlingen Inzigkofen TUTicketImmendingen 88 Tuttlingen Inzigkofen TUTicketImmendingen Zimmern 89 Tuttlingen Inzigkofen Wutach Valley Railway TUTicketGeisingen Hausen 93 Wutach Valley Railway TUTicketGeisingen Kirchen 94 Wutach Valley Railway TUTicketGeisingen Aulfingen 96 Wutach Valley Railway TUTicketGeisingen Leipferdingen 99 Wutach Valley Railway TUTicket VSBBlumberg Riedoschingen 103 Wutach Valley Railway VSBBlumberg Zollhaus 107 Wutach Valley Railway VSBOperations and Organisation EditLinks with other transport modes Edit With the start of Ringzug operations public transport services in the region has been fundamentally reorganised Parallel bus services along the railway lines were largely discontinued Buses have since then served as feeders to the railway and have been coordinated with Ringzug services Important points of connection between the railway and buses are at Braunlingen station Donaueschingen station Brigachtal Klengen Brigachtal Kirchdorf Villingen Schwarzwald Schwenningen Rottweil Aldingen Tuttlingen Immendingen Geisingen Hausen and Geisingen Leipferdingen In Rottweil Ringzug services running in both directions coordinate with long distance services on the Plochingen Immendingen railway so all stations between Leipferdingen and Rottweil have connections to following InterCity trains running every two hours to Stuttgart In Immendingen and Villingen there are regular connections to the Black Forest Railway towards Karlsruhe or Konstanz In the summer the Ringzug also connects at Blumberg Zollhaus with the Museum Railway to Weizen Transport and cycle sequence Edit nbsp A railcar at the edge of the network in Neustadt Schwarzwald The Ringzug operates on both weekdays and weekends over the line from Braunlingen to Geisingen Leipferdingen or Blumberg at a two hour regular interval On weekdays this basic service is supplemented by numerous additional services which usually do not complete the basic route Many trains start or end in Rottweil or Trossingen Stadt and run to or from Leipferdingen On weekdays there are services between Braunlingen and Trossingen and between Rottweil and Leipferdingen at least once an hour This service is amplified again on some section during the peak so that for example between Tuttlingen and Spaichingen on weekdays between 15 00 and 18 00 giving an approximate half hour service However between Trossingen and Rottweil on weekdays during the off peak there is only a two hour basic service so Deisslingen station outside the peak and on weekdays is served only every two hours nbsp An operation under multiple unit train control on the section between Tuttlingen and Fridingen which is not served at regular intervalsSome services do not run to the regular interval pattern So trains run on the Trossingen Railway stop at Trossingen Bahnhof to ensure that nearly all connections can be achieved On the Tuttlingen Inzigkofen railway section from Tuttlingen to Fridingen an der Donau however the Ringzug services do not run at regular intervals Only irregular services operate on weekdays At the weekend there are no Ringzug services Here the majority of public transport traffic continues to be handled by buses Most Ringzug services on the Wutach Valley Railway on weekdays begin in Leipferdingen rather than in Zollhaus Blumberg so that the Wutach Valley Railway section between Leipferdingen and Zollhaus on weekdays is mostly also served by buses A few Ringzug services run off the formal route network to Sigmaringen and to Neustadt Schwarzw One pair of trains also runs on school days from Immendingen via Geisingen station to Donaueschingen Ringzug trains operate 1 258 000 train kilometres annually Rolling stock Edit nbsp Railcars under multiple unit train controlRingzug services are operated by DMUs former by 20 Stadler Regio Shuttle RS1 sets They differ from other vehicles of this type in that there are sockets at some seats for laptop use There is also one ticket machine in each railcar All are air conditioned and have a toilet In the morning peak hour Ringzug services are partly carried out in cooperation with DB Regio and are operated with class 425 EMUs This is because the Ringzug Regio Shuttles cannot handle the high demand at this time The Ringzug plans to operate class 611 sets The unexpectedly high ridership quickly led to capacity constraints meaning among other things that from December 2004 vintage railcars of the T3 and T5 model built in 1938 and 1956 were restored to service on the Trossingen Railway for regular services The modern Regio Shuttle sets that were actually intended to run on the Trossingen Railway were used to run in multiple on other unexpectedly heavily loaded trains on other routes References EditFootnotes Edit Fahrgastpreis fur Ringzug Eisenbahn Revue International in German 5 215 2006 ISSN 1421 2811 Sources Edit Frank von Meissner 2005 Eine S Bahn auf dem Lande Der 3er Ringzug auf Erfolgskurs Tagungsband der Horber Schienen Tage 2005 in German Munchen a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Zweckverband Ringzug Schwarzwald Baar Heuberg in German Villingen Schwenningen Der 3er Ringzug Eine Investition fur die Zukunft der Region Schwarzwald Baar Heuberg 2006 HzL Ringzug fahrt ab September Eisenbahn Revue International in German 8 9 383 2003 ISSN 1421 2811 Frank von Meissner 2003 Ringzug Konzept erfolgreich gestartet Eisenbahn Revue International in German 11 3522 f ISSN 1421 2811 External links Edit Website of the Zweckverband Ringzug in German Retrieved 18 June 2016 Der Ringzug in German www privat bahn de Retrieved 18 June 2016 Private site with photographs and newspaper articles on the Ringzug in German Retrieved 18 June 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ringzug amp oldid 1160736211, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.