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Chemnitz–Adorf railway

The Chemnitz–Adorf railway is a branch line in Saxony, Germany that was built and operated by the Chemnitz-Aue-Adorfer Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft (CAAE). The 115 km long line originally ran from Chemnitz in a southwesterly direction along the valley of the River Zwönitz to Aue. From Aue the line ran along the Zwickauer Mulde to Muldenberg and up to Schöneck and through Markneukirchen to Adorf in Vogtland.

Chemnitz–Adorf railway
Overview
Line number6645/6663; Saxon CA
Service
Route number524, 539
Technical
Line length114.59 km (71.20 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)
Minimum radius193 m (633 ft)
Operating speed80 km/h (50 mph)
Maximum incline25
Route map
-0,12 Chemnitz Hbf
302 m
2,09 Chemnitz Süd 312 m
2,47 Chemnitz Süd Gbf
312 m
to Stollberg
6,11 Chemnitz-Reichenhain
321 m
7,36 Chemnitz-Erfenschlag
329 m
9,08 Einsiedel Gymnasium
336 m
10,39 Einsiedel
344 m
13,11 Dittersdorf
360 m
17,39 Kemtau
388 m
19,45 Burkhardtsdorf
402 m
20,61 Burkhardtsdorf Mitte
23,02 Meinersdorf (Erzgeb)
418 m
27,29 Thalheim (Erzgeb)
451 m
30,92 Dorfchemnitz (b Zwönitz)
476 m
33,61 Niederzwönitz
since 2006
from Stollberg
36,42 Zwönitz
548 m
to Scheibenberg
42,03 Lößnitz ob Bf
483 m
46,64 Lößnitz unt Bf
413 m
48,76 Aue (Sachs) Erzgebirgsstadion
50,81 Aue (Sachs)
349 m
56,18
Tunnel Bockau (296 m)
57,75 Bockau (Erzgeb) Ost
only 1954
428 m
58,90 Bockau (Erzgeb)
434 m
63,01 Blauenthal
471 m
64,45 Wolfsgrün
482 m
from Eibenstock Oberer Bf.
68,72 Eibenstock unt Bf
513 m
70,3
Schönheiderhammer tunnel (102 m)
71,36 Schönheide Ost
formerly Schönheiderhammer
543 m
76,84 Schönheide Süd
formerly Wilzschhaus
596 m
Narrow gauge to Carlsfeld
79,66 Rautenkranz
(ehem. Bf)
614 m
82,11 Tannenbergsthal (Vogtl)
628 m
87,71 Hammerbrücke
680 m
from Falkenstein
89,13 Muldenberg
692 m
90,7 Muldenberg Flossplatz
since 2001
96,27 Schöneck (Vogtl)
(former station)
768 m
97,13 Schöneck Ferienpark
101,57 Zwotental
673 m
from Klingenthal
104,57 Gunzen
615 m
from Erlbach
110,16 Siebenbrunn
(former station)
471 m
114,47 Adorf (Vogtl)
444 m
to Aš

Source: German railway atlas[1][page needed]

The line was cut in two by the construction of the Eibenstock dam reservoir in 1975. The two truncated end sections are still in use, with the Vogtlandbahn railway company operating over the south western section from Adorf to Muldenburg, and the Erzgebirgsbahn railway company operating the Chemnitz to Aue section under the name Zwönitz Valley Railway (German: Zwönitztalbahn).

History Edit

Background and Construction Edit

In July 1872 the Chemnitz-Aue-Adorfer Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft gained the concession to build and operate a railway line from Chemnitz through Aue und Schöneck to Adorf in Vogtland. The Sächsische Eisenbahnbaugesellschaft were given the contract to construct the line, but there were financial difficulties so suddenly, in 1874, the contract was taken back in house. The topology of the line presented challenges but the work was completed by 15 November 1875. The Zwickauer Mulde valley section between Aue–EibenstockSchöneck/Vogtl. was ready for opening on 7 September 1875. On 24 December 1875 the complementary line, the 8 km long Zweigbahn from Zwotental to the Czech border at Klingenthal was opened. Here it joined to the Falkenau–Graslitz(–Border) line of the Buschtiehrader Eisenbahn. But even in the first year of operation, the takings were below expectation and the company sold the line on 15 July 1876 to the Saxony government. This was the end of the CAAE and their planned extension to Hof, Germany, in Bavaria.

Operations Edit

The Royal Saxon State Railways ran the line under the name CA (taking the letters from Chemnitz and Adorf). A planned extension was never implemented. Due to the unfavourable topology of the line, with long climbs and tight corners in the region of Lössnitz and Schöneck, made it unsuitable for heavy goods trains. The short section between Aue und Zwönitz was known as the Sächsischer Semmering, the line climbed 255 m.

In 1920 the Chemnitz-Aue-Adorfer railway passed to the newly formed Deutsche Reichsbahn. After World War II regional express trains ran from Dresden and Chemnitz to Adorf. On 1 March 1967 the former mainline was reclassified as a branch line.

Extensions Edit

From 1899 to 1970 a goods line ran from Zwönitz to Stollberg to bring the coal from the Oelsnitzer Revier in the Erzgebirge. The track was removed on closure.

In 1900, it was extended through Beierfeld und Elterlein to Scheibenberg. This line fell to the Soviet Union as a war reparation and was closed and removed in 1945.

The district capital of Auerbach was connected to the line in 1891/92 by means of a short connection from Falkenstein/Vogtl. and Muldenberg. On 15 November 1892 the line was opened and it is still in use today by the Vogtlandbahn as part of the ZwickauKraslice route.

Only a short connecting line was needed from the CA-Linie to the town Eibenstock which was opened in 1905 and ran until 5 October 1975. This was the most precipitous line in Saxony with a gradient of 1:20 or 50 ‰.

A further extension was from Siebenbrunn to Erlbach, this gave a direct connection to Markneukirchen. Traffic ran to Markneukirchen from 20 September 1910, and to Erlbach from 1 October 1911. The line closed 1 June 1975. .

Contraction Edit

In 1975 the section between Wolfsgrün und Schönheide was permanently cut by the successful construction of the Talsperre Eibenstock reservoir. The last train between Adorf and Karl-Marx-Stadt (Chemnitz) was on 27 September 1975, as was the last train on the short stretch to Eibenstock ob. Bf. Passenger trains continued between Karl-Marx-Stadt and Blauenthal, and also between Schönheide Ost und Adorf. The service between Schönheide Ost and Schönheide Süd finished 1 January 1979. The section to Muldenberg closed on 23 May 1982. Goods traffic continued to Schönheide ost until 1995. The passenger service from Aue to Blauenthal was also withdrawn in 1995.

Reorganisation Edit

 
Vogtlandbahn RegioSprinter near Schöneck

The Vogtlandbahn has been running trains on this section from Muldenberg to Adorf since 1997. As part of regeneration project for derelict lines in 1996, the tracks were rebuilt to 80 km/h standard. This section is used by VB5 Hof- Plauen - Falkenstein - Adorf, using Duewag RegioSprinter train sets.

Then in 2002 the section from Chemnitz to Aue was opened by the DB Erzgebirgsbahn, and in 2003 this section was upgraded to 80 km/h standard. And since 2005 whole section is now back in service. Construction work remains (May 2008) particularly at the level crossings. This section is now known as the Zwönitztalbahn. Chemnitz is a centre for a train-tram experiment. Here the low floored trains run on tram lines through the city, both using the 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge and adapting to the two power systems.

Further Usage Edit

On 6 October 2007 a 2.8 kilometer stretch of the track between Schönheide Süd and Rautenkranz was brought back in service. The Westsächsische Eisenbahn (FHWE) railway preservation group has created a museum railway running the Wernesgrüner Schienen-Express.

Description of the line Edit

The Chemnitz-Aue-Adorfer railway leaves Chemnitz Hauptbahnhof with the tracks of the Dresden–Werdau line towards the west. In Chemnitzer Südbahnhof the track branches south. After a junction with the line to Stollberg, the line follows the Zwönitztal, and this section is known as the Zwönitztalbahn. At the former Zwönitz station the tracks cross the watershed of the Zwickauer Mulde. The tracks follow the Lößnitztal downwards into Aue. Aue was one of the biggest and most notable stations on the former CA line. Today the station mainly used by Erzgebirgsbahn passenger trains. There is no goods traffic. Aue is a terminus for the Zwickau–Johanngeorgenstadt line.

The next section, from Aue to Muldenberg, has been closed since 1995. After the Aue station the tracks make an arc around the town centre and lead down the Muldetal. Shortly before Bockau is one of the two tunnels on the line. The tracks have been removed and the track bed is part of a cycle way between Aue and Eibenstock. The track bed continues through Wolfsgrün station to Eibenstock. The Talsperre Eibenstock reservoir cuts the line, and floods the former Eibenstock unterer Bahnhof, which was the starting point of the steep line to the Eibenstock oberen Bahnhof. The second tunnel on the line is also beneath the reservoir. From Schönheide Ost station the track bed resumes.

In Muldenberg the tracks take Vogtlandbahn running from Falkenstein and ascend to Schöneck on the crest of the Erzgebirge. It steeply descends to Zwotental where the branch to Klingenthal and Kraslice joins. Descending further the track reaches Adorf in Elstertal where it meets the Plauen-Cheb line which was originally the Herlasgrün-Eger line of the Vogtländischen Staatseisenbahn.

References Edit

  1. ^ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland [German railway atlas]. Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.

Sources Edit

  • Preuss, Erich; Preuss, Rainer (1991). Sächsische Staatseisenbahnen. Berlin: transpress Verlagsgesellschaft mbH. ISBN 3-344-70700-0.
  • Bergelt, Siegfried (2004). Auf den Spuren der alten Westsachsenmagistrale - Die Eisenbahnstrecke Chemnitz - Aue - Adorf. Witzschdorf: Bildverlag Böttger. ISBN 3-9808250-7-8.

External links Edit

  • (via Archive.org)
  • Description of the Zwönitztalbahn
  • Wernesgrüner Schienen-Express

chemnitz, adorf, railway, branch, line, saxony, germany, that, built, operated, chemnitz, adorfer, eisenbahn, gesellschaft, caae, long, line, originally, from, chemnitz, southwesterly, direction, along, valley, river, zwönitz, from, line, along, zwickauer, mul. The Chemnitz Adorf railway is a branch line in Saxony Germany that was built and operated by the Chemnitz Aue Adorfer Eisenbahn Gesellschaft CAAE The 115 km long line originally ran from Chemnitz in a southwesterly direction along the valley of the River Zwonitz to Aue From Aue the line ran along the Zwickauer Mulde to Muldenberg and up to Schoneck and through Markneukirchen to Adorf in Vogtland Chemnitz Adorf railwayOverviewLine number6645 6663 Saxon CAServiceRoute number524 539TechnicalLine length114 59 km 71 20 mi Track gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in Minimum radius193 m 633 ft Operating speed80 km h 50 mph Maximum incline25 Route mapLegendfrom Neukieritzsch Riesa and Dresden Hbf 0 12 Chemnitz Hbf 302 m2 09 Chemnitz Sud junction 312 mto Abzw Werdau Bogendreieck2 47 Chemnitz Sud Gbf 312 mto Stollberg6 11 Chemnitz Reichenhain 321 m7 36 Chemnitz Erfenschlag 329 m9 08 Einsiedel Gymnasium 336 m10 39 Einsiedel 344 m13 11 Dittersdorf 360 m17 39 Kemtau 388 m19 45 Burkhardtsdorf 402 m20 61 Burkhardtsdorf Mitte23 02 Meinersdorf Erzgeb 418 mNarrow gauge to Thum27 29 Thalheim Erzgeb 451 m30 92 Dorfchemnitz b Zwonitz 476 m33 61 Niederzwonitzsince 2006from Stollberg36 42 Zwonitz 548 mto Scheibenberg42 03 Lossnitz ob Bf 483 m46 64 Lossnitz unt Bf 413 m48 76 Aue Sachs Erzgebirgsstadionfrom Zwickau50 81 Aue Sachs 349 mto Schwarzenberg56 18 Tunnel Bockau 296 m 57 75 Bockau Erzgeb Ostonly 1954 428 m58 90 Bockau Erzgeb 434 m63 01 Blauenthal 471 m64 45 Wolfsgrun 482 mfrom Eibenstock Oberer Bf 68 72 Eibenstock unt Bf 513 m70 3 Schonheiderhammer tunnel 102 m 71 36 Schonheide Ostformerly Schonheiderhammer 543 mNarrow gauge from Wilkau Hasslau76 84 Schonheide Sudformerly Wilzschhaus 596 mNarrow gauge to Carlsfeld79 66 Rautenkranz ehem Bf 614 m82 11 Tannenbergsthal Vogtl 628 m87 71 Hammerbrucke 680 mfrom Falkenstein89 13 Muldenberg 692 m90 7 Muldenberg Flossplatzsince 200196 27 Schoneck Vogtl former station 768 m97 13 Schoneck Ferienpark101 57 Zwotental 673 mfrom Klingenthal104 57 Gunzen 615 mfrom Erlbach110 16 Siebenbrunn former station 471 mfrom Cheb114 47 Adorf Vogtl 444 mto Asto PlauenSource German railway atlas 1 page needed The line was cut in two by the construction of the Eibenstock dam reservoir in 1975 The two truncated end sections are still in use with the Vogtlandbahn railway company operating over the south western section from Adorf to Muldenburg and the Erzgebirgsbahn railway company operating the Chemnitz to Aue section under the name Zwonitz Valley Railway German Zwonitztalbahn Contents 1 History 1 1 Background and Construction 1 2 Operations 1 3 Extensions 1 4 Contraction 1 5 Reorganisation 1 6 Further Usage 2 Description of the line 3 References 3 1 Sources 4 External linksHistory EditBackground and Construction Edit In July 1872 the Chemnitz Aue Adorfer Eisenbahn Gesellschaft gained the concession to build and operate a railway line from Chemnitz through Aue und Schoneck to Adorf in Vogtland The Sachsische Eisenbahnbaugesellschaft were given the contract to construct the line but there were financial difficulties so suddenly in 1874 the contract was taken back in house The topology of the line presented challenges but the work was completed by 15 November 1875 The Zwickauer Mulde valley section between Aue Eibenstock Schoneck Vogtl was ready for opening on 7 September 1875 On 24 December 1875 the complementary line the 8 km long Zweigbahn from Zwotental to the Czech border at Klingenthal was opened Here it joined to the Falkenau Graslitz Border line of the Buschtiehrader Eisenbahn But even in the first year of operation the takings were below expectation and the company sold the line on 15 July 1876 to the Saxony government This was the end of the CAAE and their planned extension to Hof Germany in Bavaria Operations Edit The Royal Saxon State Railways ran the line under the name CA taking the letters from Chemnitz and Adorf A planned extension was never implemented Due to the unfavourable topology of the line with long climbs and tight corners in the region of Lossnitz and Schoneck made it unsuitable for heavy goods trains The short section between Aue und Zwonitz was known as the Sachsischer Semmering the line climbed 255 m In 1920 the Chemnitz Aue Adorfer railway passed to the newly formed Deutsche Reichsbahn After World War II regional express trains ran from Dresden and Chemnitz to Adorf On 1 March 1967 the former mainline was reclassified as a branch line Extensions Edit From 1899 to 1970 a goods line ran from Zwonitz to Stollberg to bring the coal from the Oelsnitzer Revier in the Erzgebirge The track was removed on closure In 1900 it was extended through Beierfeld und Elterlein to Scheibenberg This line fell to the Soviet Union as a war reparation and was closed and removed in 1945 The district capital of Auerbach was connected to the line in 1891 92 by means of a short connection from Falkenstein Vogtl and Muldenberg On 15 November 1892 the line was opened and it is still in use today by the Vogtlandbahn as part of the Zwickau Kraslice route Only a short connecting line was needed from the CA Linie to the town Eibenstock which was opened in 1905 and ran until 5 October 1975 This was the most precipitous line in Saxony with a gradient of 1 20 or 50 A further extension was from Siebenbrunn to Erlbach this gave a direct connection to Markneukirchen Traffic ran to Markneukirchen from 20 September 1910 and to Erlbach from 1 October 1911 The line closed 1 June 1975 Contraction Edit In 1975 the section between Wolfsgrun und Schonheide was permanently cut by the successful construction of the Talsperre Eibenstock reservoir The last train between Adorf and Karl Marx Stadt Chemnitz was on 27 September 1975 as was the last train on the short stretch to Eibenstock ob Bf Passenger trains continued between Karl Marx Stadt and Blauenthal and also between Schonheide Ost und Adorf The service between Schonheide Ost and Schonheide Sud finished 1 January 1979 The section to Muldenberg closed on 23 May 1982 Goods traffic continued to Schonheide ost until 1995 The passenger service from Aue to Blauenthal was also withdrawn in 1995 Reorganisation Edit Vogtlandbahn RegioSprinter near SchoneckThe Vogtlandbahn has been running trains on this section from Muldenberg to Adorf since 1997 As part of regeneration project for derelict lines in 1996 the tracks were rebuilt to 80 km h standard This section is used by VB5 Hof Plauen Falkenstein Adorf using Duewag RegioSprinter train sets Then in 2002 the section from Chemnitz to Aue was opened by the DB Erzgebirgsbahn and in 2003 this section was upgraded to 80 km h standard And since 2005 whole section is now back in service Construction work remains May 2008 particularly at the level crossings This section is now known as the Zwonitztalbahn Chemnitz is a centre for a train tram experiment Here the low floored trains run on tram lines through the city both using the 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gauge and adapting to the two power systems Further Usage Edit On 6 October 2007 a 2 8 kilometer stretch of the track between Schonheide Sud and Rautenkranz was brought back in service The Westsachsische Eisenbahn FHWE railway preservation group has created a museum railway running the Wernesgruner Schienen Express Description of the line EditThe Chemnitz Aue Adorfer railway leaves Chemnitz Hauptbahnhof with the tracks of the Dresden Werdau line towards the west In Chemnitzer Sudbahnhof the track branches south After a junction with the line to Stollberg the line follows the Zwonitztal and this section is known as the Zwonitztalbahn At the former Zwonitz station the tracks cross the watershed of the Zwickauer Mulde The tracks follow the Lossnitztal downwards into Aue Aue was one of the biggest and most notable stations on the former CA line Today the station mainly used by Erzgebirgsbahn passenger trains There is no goods traffic Aue is a terminus for the Zwickau Johanngeorgenstadt line The next section from Aue to Muldenberg has been closed since 1995 After the Aue station the tracks make an arc around the town centre and lead down the Muldetal Shortly before Bockau is one of the two tunnels on the line The tracks have been removed and the track bed is part of a cycle way between Aue and Eibenstock The track bed continues through Wolfsgrun station to Eibenstock The Talsperre Eibenstock reservoir cuts the line and floods the former Eibenstock unterer Bahnhof which was the starting point of the steep line to the Eibenstock oberen Bahnhof The second tunnel on the line is also beneath the reservoir From Schonheide Ost station the track bed resumes In Muldenberg the tracks take Vogtlandbahn running from Falkenstein and ascend to Schoneck on the crest of the Erzgebirge It steeply descends to Zwotental where the branch to Klingenthal and Kraslice joins Descending further the track reaches Adorf in Elstertal where it meets the Plauen Cheb line which was originally the Herlasgrun Eger line of the Vogtlandischen Staatseisenbahn References Edit Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland German railway atlas Schweers Wall 2009 ISBN 978 3 89494 139 0 Sources Edit Preuss Erich Preuss Rainer 1991 Sachsische Staatseisenbahnen Berlin transpress Verlagsgesellschaft mbH ISBN 3 344 70700 0 Bergelt Siegfried 2004 Auf den Spuren der alten Westsachsenmagistrale Die Eisenbahnstrecke Chemnitz Aue Adorf Witzschdorf Bildverlag Bottger ISBN 3 9808250 7 8 External links EditDescription of Saxony s Railway lines via Archive org Description of the Zwonitztalbahn Wernesgruner Schienen Express Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chemnitz Adorf railway amp oldid 1026301182, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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