fbpx
Wikipedia

Breckenheim–Wiesbaden railway

The Breckenheim–Wiesbaden railway is a 13-kilometre (8.1 mi) long railway line in the vicinity of the Hessian state capital of Wiesbaden. It connects the Cologne–Frankfurt high-speed rail line with Wiesbaden Central Station.

Breckenheim–Wiesbaden railway
Overview
Line number3509
LocaleHesse, Germany
Technical
Line length13 km (8.1 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification15 kV/16.7 Hz AC overhead catenary
Operating speed160 km/h (99.4 mph) (maximum)
Route map

High-speed line from Cologne
Breckenheim Tunnel
0.0
Breckenheim
(junction)
HSL to Frankfurt Airport
0.5
Wandersmann North Tunnel (1,090 and 1,145 m), A 3
1.9
Wandersmann South Tunnel (795 m), A 66
9.4
Wiesbaden-Erbenheim cross (316 m), A 66
Ländches Railway from Niedernhausen
10.2
Wiesbaden-Kinzenberg
(junction)
former connecting curve to Wiesbaden East
Taunus Railway from Wiesbaden East
Connecting curve to Right Rhine Railway
Connecting curve from the Aar Valley Railway
11.6
Wiesbaden Wäschbach North
(junction)
13.2
Wiesbaden Hbf
Source: German railway atlas[1]

The double-track line was built from the late 1990s as a new line. It was completed in December 2002. With a scheduled train service of two long-distance pairs each day on the section between Kinzenberg and Breckenheim junctions, it is one of the least-congested sections of railway in Germany. This section is not used by either regional passenger or freight traffic.

The total cost of construction of the line amounted to €279 million. It was originally estimated to cost €29 million less. The additional costs were assumed by Deutsche Bahn.[2]

Route edit

 
Separation from the high-speed line at Breckenheim junction, south of Breckenheim Tunnel. While the new line runs towards Frankfurt (central tracks), the track from Wiesbaden joins on the left and the line to Wiesbaden sepaprates on the right. Nearby to the south are to the two portals of the Wandersmann North Tunnel.
 
Line near the 7.0 km mark on the line

The line branches off the Cologne–Frankfurt high-speed line at Breckenheim junction near the Wiesbaden Cross autobahn junction on the A 3 autobahn, which it passes under in Wandersmann North Tunnel. After running through a short section of trough (with concrete walls) near Wallau it runs through the Wandersmann South Tunnel, passing under the A 66 autobahn. It resurfaces west of the Wallau autobahn junction. The route runs parallel to the A 66 through Nordenstadt on the northern edge of Lucius D. Clay Kaserne (a U.S. base formerly called the Wiesbaden Army Airfield) to Erbenheim. At the 10 kilometre mark from Breckenheim junction, it connects with the Ländches Railway (Ländchesbahn), which it follows to Wiesbaden Central Station and reaches at the 13 kilometre mark.

History edit

The connection from Wiesbaden to the new line was planned under various options for the Cologne-Rhine/Main high-speed line under discussion during the 1980s. Only in the case of a purely left-bank route (to the west of the Rhine) was a link not provided to Wiesbaden.[3] The Hessian state government considered that a remote link to the Wiesbaden would be inadequate. The forecasts in the 1990s were that more than 1,000 passengers a day would use high-speed services to Wiesbaden.[4]

The (ultimately realised) right bank route between Cologne and Frankfurt along the A 3 initially provided for a connection from Niedernhausen to Wiesbaden Central Station. This required the construction of an 11 kilometre long tunnel between the northern edge of the city and the station. This option was originally analysed with a maximum grade of 2.5 percent, which was subsequently increased to 4 percent. The city of Wiesbaden suggested that the continuation of the route to Frankfurt be abandoned and that all trains run via Wiesbaden Central Station and from there run on existing (partially upgraded) lines. Deutsche Bundesbahn (DB) examined numerous route options between the Niedernhausen-Wiesbaden Central Station route and a corridor between Niedernhausen and Wiesbaden Cross (along the A 3). Primary emphasis was placed on a grade of up to 4.0 percent. A variant developed at this time envisaged, for example, the building of a station between Bierstadt and Erbenheim, east of the settlement of Hainerberg. South of Erbenheim station there would be a branch line. Geological studies showed significant geological problems with a route running under Bierstadt and the Salzbach valley. DB then distanced itself from such variations, looking for geologically favourable solutions, even if they required trains to reverse in the central station.[3] From a variety of route options, three were examined closely:[3]

  • A variant of an option that DB had examined before with the high-speed line running from the north along the A 3 with a branch line running from the vicinity of Wiesbaden Cross to Wiesbaden. It would reach Wiesbaden Central Station by running along the A 66 and the Ländches Railway between Wiesbaden and Niedernhausen.[3]
  • The so-called "Best Wiesbaden Solution" (Beste Wiesbadener Lösung) was left as the most favourable of the options that would provide a new line through Wiesbaden Central Station. From Wiesbaden Central Station, the route would follow the A 66 to Wiesbaden's Cross and from there run to Frankfurt Airport. While parts of the railway would be in cuttings, it would run through the city of Wiesbaden in a continuous tunnel.[3]
  • The so-called "Hainerberg variant" envisaged a route parallel with the B 455 with a new station near Hainerberg. South of this point the line would branch towards Wiesbaden and Frankfurt. This variant was assessed as having a large potential for urban development in eastern Wiesbaden, but would have reduced traffic to Wiesbaden Central Station.[3]

In a summit meeting between DB, the state of Hesse and the Wiesbaden city council, the Hainerberg variant was discarded, while DB agreed to develop the other two variants equally and bring them into the regional planning process. As part of the process the "Best Wiesbaden Solution" was ultimately rejected due to the unacceptable time and effort required for its planning and for architectural and geological reasons. There was a threat from ground water at the edge of the Taunus that had not previously been seen with this intensity on a high-speed line in Germany. An expert hired by the city confirmed the DB results. The city of Wiesbaden finally developed a so-called "optimised spatial route" (optimierte Raumordnungstrasse) with a triangle: in addition to the new line a branch would run to the southwest with provision for a connecting link to the southeast, which would be included in the regional planning and planning approval processes. While DB wanted to use this link to enhance regional passenger rail transport, the city of Wiesbaden wanted the link to be used by long-distance rail services.[3]

Planning edit

In the planning approval process, the line was part of Section 33.2 (connection with the high-speed line) and 34.1/34.2 (Wiesbaden Central Station area).[5]

At the demand of the U.S. military, part of the route was shifted 15 metres to the north (away from the Wiesbaden Army Airfield). In addition, at the end of 1996, the U.S. military required that the control tower be able to stop the train traffic next to the airport.[6] An agreement at the beginning of 1977 envisaged that the control tower would control a signal controlling the approach of trains.[7]

During the planning, the construction of a previously agreed by-pass road around Wallau was considered for inclusion in the project. DBBauProjekt, which had already been commissioned to design the new line, was also contracted to design the road and to implement the first stage of the bypass.[8]

Initially it was planned to build the line as a single-track and at a later stage to build the second track. In mid-1998, it was announced that the connecting curve would be constructed with two tracks and opened at the same time as the Cologne-Rhine/Main high-speed line. With the commissioning of the high-speed line there would initially be a regular interval Intercity-Express (ICE) service from Wiesbaden and later, if there was a sufficient volume of traffic, two services.[9] The estimated additional cost of the second track amounted to 12 million Deutschmarks (about €6 million).[10]

In the 1990s, two pairs of trains per hour were planned for the connection to Wiesbaden. From mid-1998 only one hourly train pair was planned.[10]

In the course of the route planning, a connecting curve between Erbenheim and Wiesbaden East, which would have run along the route of the freight rail line abandoned in 1997 and would have allowed direct operations between the high-speed line and Mainz Central Station (bypassing Wiesbaden Central Station), was not realised.[11] The reason was low estimated traffic demand.[2]

Construction edit

The track was built as part of the section C contract, covering the central section of the new line. The part between Erbenheim and Wiesbaden was assigned to the southern section of the new line.[12]

Operations edit

 
ICE 3 near Wiesbaden-Erbenheim, running towards Wiesbaden

The number of trains running on the Breckenheim–Wiesbaden line has been reduced in several stages since the opening of the line. At the beginning of operations in December 2002, eight pairs of ICE services per day ran between Wiesbaden and Mainz, in the 2005 timetable it was reduced to five and from June 2006 to four. From December 2007, three pairs of trains running via Wiesbaden remained. DB runs said that the low passenger numbers was the reason for the cuts.[13] In autumn 2008, the ICE services running between Cologne and Wiesbaden were, according to Deutsche Bahn, occupied by an average of 88 passengers. They were thus to be the least loaded ICE trains operated by DB. The trains carry more than 440 seats.[14] Since the timetable change in December 2008, two pairs of service remain, running only from Monday to Friday.[14]

The loading of ICE services terminating in Wiesbaden ranges from 3 to 20 percent.[2]

Future edit

Given the low utilisation of the line and the desirability of improving access from Wiesbaden to Frankfurt Airport, the city of Wiesbaden is seeking the construction of the proposed southern curve at Wallau. This two kilometre link would branch off near the Hofheim-Wallau autobahn junction to the southeast and connect to the high-speed line running south. The travel time between Wiesbaden and Frankfurt Airport would be reduced from 28–39 minutes today to about 15 minutes. The costs were calculated in the 1990s to be about 100 million marks and they were estimated in 2007 to cost €65 million.[15]

Engineering edit

The tracks are partly on slab track (Rheda-Dywidag system).[16] The two turnouts at Breckenheim junction are each 138 m long and weigh 500 tons, allowing branching speeds of up to 160 km/h (4,000 m radius).[17] The switch blades are 54 metres long. It is the largest turnout on the whole Cologne-Rhine/Main high-speed line project.[8]

The speed limit on the line is 40 km/h at the exit from the Wiesbaden Central Station and shortly later (at the 13.1 km mark) climbs to 100 km/h. At Wiesbaden Kinzenberg junction (km 9.9) the speed over the junction is 155–160 km/h. The line is equipped from the 4.9 km mark with the Linienzugbeeinflussung train protection system.

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (10 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2017. p. 151. ISBN 978-3-89494-146-8.
  2. ^ a b c Die öffentliche Verschwendung 2010 (in German). Berlin: Bund der Steuerzahler Deutschland e. V. 2010. p. 21.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Rolf W. Schaaff (1994). "Wiesbaden und die Neubaustrecke Köln – Rhein-Main". Baukultur (in German) (3): 16–19. ISSN 0722-3099.
  4. ^ DBProjekt Köln–Rhein/Main, ed. (1999). "Zum Thema" (in German) (June). Frankfurt am Main: 2. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  5. ^ DBProjekt Köln–Rhein/Main, ed. (April 1997). Zum Thema (in German). Frankfurt am Main (2/97): 2, 5. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  6. ^ "Die Schnellfahrstrecke Köln – Rhein/Main / Folge 1". Schiene (in German) (2): 52. 1997. ISSN 0932-2574.
  7. ^ "Die Schnellfahrstrecke Köln – Rhein/Main / Folge 2". Schiene (in German) (3): 50 f. 1997. ISSN 0932-2574.
  8. ^ a b "Besuchertag im Siegauen-Tunnel; Baubeginn Gestüt Röttgen; Spatenstich Ortsumgehung; größte Weiche eingebaut". Zum Thema (in German) (2/2001): 7–9. April 2001.
  9. ^ "Zweigleisiger ICE-Anschluss für Wiesbaden". Eisenbahn-Revue International (in German) (9): 338. 1998. ISSN 1421-2811.
  10. ^ a b "Bahn lenkt ein: Teilstück zweigleisig". Frankfurter Rundschau (in German). No. 152. 4 July 1998.
  11. ^ "Köhler: Deutsche Bahn zahlt falsch abgerechnete Millionen an Bund zurück". Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). 12 January 2010.
  12. ^ DBProjekt GmbH Köln–Rhein/Main, Projektleitung, ed. (September 1998). Neubaustrecke Köln–Rhein/Main: Bauabschnitt Mitte Los C: Hünfelden–Eddersheim/Nordenstadt (in German). Frankfurt am Main. p. 3(brochure, 16 pages){{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  13. ^ "Weniger Züge nach Köln". Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). 20 September 2007. Retrieved 20 July 2012.
  14. ^ a b "Chaostage bei der Bahn AG". Wiesbadener Kurier (in German). 22 October 2008.
  15. ^ "Auf der Spange schnell nach Frankfurt". Wiesbadener Kurier (in German). 1 December 2007.
  16. ^ Hartmut Schorlig. "Ein Tunnel aus zwei Röhren". In DB ProjektBau GmbH, Frankfurt (ed.). Neubaustrecke Köln–Rhein/Main. Brücken und Tunnel (in German). pp. 98–103.
  17. ^ "Über die Superweiche nach Wiesbaden". Frankfurter Rundschau (in German). 28 July 2001.

Sources edit

  • Sven Andersen (2001). "Künftige Bedienung von Wiesbaden, Mainz und Frankfurt-Flughafen – Neubaustreckenführungen im Grossraum Frankfurt (M)". Eisenbahn-Revue International (in German) (6): 278–282. ISSN 1421-2811.

External links edit

  • Die Verbindungskurve Breckenheim bei OpenStreetMap.org

breckenheim, wiesbaden, railway, kilometre, long, railway, line, vicinity, hessian, state, capital, wiesbaden, connects, cologne, frankfurt, high, speed, rail, line, with, wiesbaden, central, station, overviewline, number3509localehesse, germanytechnicalline, . The Breckenheim Wiesbaden railway is a 13 kilometre 8 1 mi long railway line in the vicinity of the Hessian state capital of Wiesbaden It connects the Cologne Frankfurt high speed rail line with Wiesbaden Central Station Breckenheim Wiesbaden railwayOverviewLine number3509LocaleHesse GermanyTechnicalLine length13 km 8 1 mi Track gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeElectrification15 kV 16 7 Hz AC overhead catenaryOperating speed160 km h 99 4 mph maximum Route mapLegendHigh speed line from Cologne Breckenheim Tunnel0 0 Breckenheim junction HSL to Frankfurt Airport0 5 Wandersmann North Tunnel 1 090 and 1 145 m A 31 9 Wandersmann South Tunnel 795 m A 669 4 Wiesbaden Erbenheim cross 316 m A 66Landches Railway from Niedernhausen10 2 Wiesbaden Kinzenberg junction former connecting curve to Wiesbaden EastTaunus Railway from Wiesbaden EastConnecting curve to Right Rhine RailwayConnecting curve from the Aar Valley Railway11 6 Wiesbaden Waschbach North junction 13 2 Wiesbaden HbfSource German railway atlas 1 The double track line was built from the late 1990s as a new line It was completed in December 2002 With a scheduled train service of two long distance pairs each day on the section between Kinzenberg and Breckenheim junctions it is one of the least congested sections of railway in Germany This section is not used by either regional passenger or freight traffic The total cost of construction of the line amounted to 279 million It was originally estimated to cost 29 million less The additional costs were assumed by Deutsche Bahn 2 Contents 1 Route 2 History 2 1 Planning 2 2 Construction 2 3 Operations 2 4 Future 3 Engineering 4 References 4 1 Footnotes 4 2 Sources 5 External linksRoute edit nbsp Separation from the high speed line at Breckenheim junction south of Breckenheim Tunnel While the new line runs towards Frankfurt central tracks the track from Wiesbaden joins on the left and the line to Wiesbaden sepaprates on the right Nearby to the south are to the two portals of the Wandersmann North Tunnel nbsp Line near the 7 0 km mark on the lineThe line branches off the Cologne Frankfurt high speed line at Breckenheim junction near the Wiesbaden Cross autobahn junction on the A 3 autobahn which it passes under in Wandersmann North Tunnel After running through a short section of trough with concrete walls near Wallau it runs through the Wandersmann South Tunnel passing under the A 66 autobahn It resurfaces west of the Wallau autobahn junction The route runs parallel to the A 66 through Nordenstadt on the northern edge of Lucius D Clay Kaserne a U S base formerly called the Wiesbaden Army Airfield to Erbenheim At the 10 kilometre mark from Breckenheim junction it connects with the Landches Railway Landchesbahn which it follows to Wiesbaden Central Station and reaches at the 13 kilometre mark History editThe connection from Wiesbaden to the new line was planned under various options for the Cologne Rhine Main high speed line under discussion during the 1980s Only in the case of a purely left bank route to the west of the Rhine was a link not provided to Wiesbaden 3 The Hessian state government considered that a remote link to the Wiesbaden would be inadequate The forecasts in the 1990s were that more than 1 000 passengers a day would use high speed services to Wiesbaden 4 The ultimately realised right bank route between Cologne and Frankfurt along the A 3 initially provided for a connection from Niedernhausen to Wiesbaden Central Station This required the construction of an 11 kilometre long tunnel between the northern edge of the city and the station This option was originally analysed with a maximum grade of 2 5 percent which was subsequently increased to 4 percent The city of Wiesbaden suggested that the continuation of the route to Frankfurt be abandoned and that all trains run via Wiesbaden Central Station and from there run on existing partially upgraded lines Deutsche Bundesbahn DB examined numerous route options between the Niedernhausen Wiesbaden Central Station route and a corridor between Niedernhausen and Wiesbaden Cross along the A 3 Primary emphasis was placed on a grade of up to 4 0 percent A variant developed at this time envisaged for example the building of a station between Bierstadt and Erbenheim east of the settlement of Hainerberg South of Erbenheim station there would be a branch line Geological studies showed significant geological problems with a route running under Bierstadt and the Salzbach valley DB then distanced itself from such variations looking for geologically favourable solutions even if they required trains to reverse in the central station 3 From a variety of route options three were examined closely 3 A variant of an option that DB had examined before with the high speed line running from the north along the A 3 with a branch line running from the vicinity of Wiesbaden Cross to Wiesbaden It would reach Wiesbaden Central Station by running along the A 66 and the Landches Railway between Wiesbaden and Niedernhausen 3 The so called Best Wiesbaden Solution Beste Wiesbadener Losung was left as the most favourable of the options that would provide a new line through Wiesbaden Central Station From Wiesbaden Central Station the route would follow the A 66 to Wiesbaden s Cross and from there run to Frankfurt Airport While parts of the railway would be in cuttings it would run through the city of Wiesbaden in a continuous tunnel 3 The so called Hainerberg variant envisaged a route parallel with the B 455 with a new station near Hainerberg South of this point the line would branch towards Wiesbaden and Frankfurt This variant was assessed as having a large potential for urban development in eastern Wiesbaden but would have reduced traffic to Wiesbaden Central Station 3 In a summit meeting between DB the state of Hesse and the Wiesbaden city council the Hainerberg variant was discarded while DB agreed to develop the other two variants equally and bring them into the regional planning process As part of the process the Best Wiesbaden Solution was ultimately rejected due to the unacceptable time and effort required for its planning and for architectural and geological reasons There was a threat from ground water at the edge of the Taunus that had not previously been seen with this intensity on a high speed line in Germany An expert hired by the city confirmed the DB results The city of Wiesbaden finally developed a so called optimised spatial route optimierte Raumordnungstrasse with a triangle in addition to the new line a branch would run to the southwest with provision for a connecting link to the southeast which would be included in the regional planning and planning approval processes While DB wanted to use this link to enhance regional passenger rail transport the city of Wiesbaden wanted the link to be used by long distance rail services 3 Planning edit In the planning approval process the line was part of Section 33 2 connection with the high speed line and 34 1 34 2 Wiesbaden Central Station area 5 At the demand of the U S military part of the route was shifted 15 metres to the north away from the Wiesbaden Army Airfield In addition at the end of 1996 the U S military required that the control tower be able to stop the train traffic next to the airport 6 An agreement at the beginning of 1977 envisaged that the control tower would control a signal controlling the approach of trains 7 During the planning the construction of a previously agreed by pass road around Wallau was considered for inclusion in the project DBBauProjekt which had already been commissioned to design the new line was also contracted to design the road and to implement the first stage of the bypass 8 Initially it was planned to build the line as a single track and at a later stage to build the second track In mid 1998 it was announced that the connecting curve would be constructed with two tracks and opened at the same time as the Cologne Rhine Main high speed line With the commissioning of the high speed line there would initially be a regular interval Intercity Express ICE service from Wiesbaden and later if there was a sufficient volume of traffic two services 9 The estimated additional cost of the second track amounted to 12 million Deutschmarks about 6 million 10 In the 1990s two pairs of trains per hour were planned for the connection to Wiesbaden From mid 1998 only one hourly train pair was planned 10 In the course of the route planning a connecting curve between Erbenheim and Wiesbaden East which would have run along the route of the freight rail line abandoned in 1997 and would have allowed direct operations between the high speed line and Mainz Central Station bypassing Wiesbaden Central Station was not realised 11 The reason was low estimated traffic demand 2 Construction edit The track was built as part of the section C contract covering the central section of the new line The part between Erbenheim and Wiesbaden was assigned to the southern section of the new line 12 Operations edit nbsp ICE 3 near Wiesbaden Erbenheim running towards WiesbadenThe number of trains running on the Breckenheim Wiesbaden line has been reduced in several stages since the opening of the line At the beginning of operations in December 2002 eight pairs of ICE services per day ran between Wiesbaden and Mainz in the 2005 timetable it was reduced to five and from June 2006 to four From December 2007 three pairs of trains running via Wiesbaden remained DB runs said that the low passenger numbers was the reason for the cuts 13 In autumn 2008 the ICE services running between Cologne and Wiesbaden were according to Deutsche Bahn occupied by an average of 88 passengers They were thus to be the least loaded ICE trains operated by DB The trains carry more than 440 seats 14 Since the timetable change in December 2008 two pairs of service remain running only from Monday to Friday 14 The loading of ICE services terminating in Wiesbaden ranges from 3 to 20 percent 2 Future edit Given the low utilisation of the line and the desirability of improving access from Wiesbaden to Frankfurt Airport the city of Wiesbaden is seeking the construction of the proposed southern curve at Wallau This two kilometre link would branch off near the Hofheim Wallau autobahn junction to the southeast and connect to the high speed line running south The travel time between Wiesbaden and Frankfurt Airport would be reduced from 28 39 minutes today to about 15 minutes The costs were calculated in the 1990s to be about 100 million marks and they were estimated in 2007 to cost 65 million 15 Engineering editThe tracks are partly on slab track Rheda Dywidag system 16 The two turnouts at Breckenheim junction are each 138 m long and weigh 500 tons allowing branching speeds of up to 160 km h 4 000 m radius 17 The switch blades are 54 metres long It is the largest turnout on the whole Cologne Rhine Main high speed line project 8 The speed limit on the line is 40 km h at the exit from the Wiesbaden Central Station and shortly later at the 13 1 km mark climbs to 100 km h At Wiesbaden Kinzenberg junction km 9 9 the speed over the junction is 155 160 km h The line is equipped from the 4 9 km mark with the Linienzugbeeinflussung train protection system References editFootnotes edit Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland German railway atlas 10 ed Schweers Wall 2017 p 151 ISBN 978 3 89494 146 8 a b c Die offentliche Verschwendung 2010 in German Berlin Bund der Steuerzahler Deutschland e V 2010 p 21 a b c d e f g Rolf W Schaaff 1994 Wiesbaden und die Neubaustrecke Koln Rhein Main Baukultur in German 3 16 19 ISSN 0722 3099 DBProjekt Koln Rhein Main ed 1999 Zum Thema in German June Frankfurt am Main 2 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help DBProjekt Koln Rhein Main ed April 1997 Zum Thema in German Frankfurt am Main 2 97 2 5 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Missing or empty title help Die Schnellfahrstrecke Koln Rhein Main Folge 1 Schiene in German 2 52 1997 ISSN 0932 2574 Die Schnellfahrstrecke Koln Rhein Main Folge 2 Schiene in German 3 50 f 1997 ISSN 0932 2574 a b Besuchertag im Siegauen Tunnel Baubeginn Gestut Rottgen Spatenstich Ortsumgehung grosste Weiche eingebaut Zum Thema in German 2 2001 7 9 April 2001 Zweigleisiger ICE Anschluss fur Wiesbaden Eisenbahn Revue International in German 9 338 1998 ISSN 1421 2811 a b Bahn lenkt ein Teilstuck zweigleisig Frankfurter Rundschau in German No 152 4 July 1998 Kohler Deutsche Bahn zahlt falsch abgerechnete Millionen an Bund zuruck Allgemeine Zeitung in German 12 January 2010 DBProjekt GmbH Koln Rhein Main Projektleitung ed September 1998 Neubaustrecke Koln Rhein Main Bauabschnitt Mitte Los C Hunfelden Eddersheim Nordenstadt in German Frankfurt am Main p 3 brochure 16 pages a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint postscript link Weniger Zuge nach Koln Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in German 20 September 2007 Retrieved 20 July 2012 a b Chaostage bei der Bahn AG Wiesbadener Kurier in German 22 October 2008 Auf der Spange schnell nach Frankfurt Wiesbadener Kurier in German 1 December 2007 Hartmut Schorlig Ein Tunnel aus zwei Rohren In DB ProjektBau GmbH Frankfurt ed Neubaustrecke Koln Rhein Main Brucken und Tunnel in German pp 98 103 Uber die Superweiche nach Wiesbaden Frankfurter Rundschau in German 28 July 2001 Sources edit Sven Andersen 2001 Kunftige Bedienung von Wiesbaden Mainz und Frankfurt Flughafen Neubaustreckenfuhrungen im Grossraum Frankfurt M Eisenbahn Revue International in German 6 278 282 ISSN 1421 2811 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Breckenheim Wiesbaden railway Die Verbindungskurve Breckenheim bei OpenStreetMap org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Breckenheim Wiesbaden railway amp oldid 1175855721, 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.