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Dresden–Werdau railway

The Dresden–Werdau railway is an electrified, double-track main line in the German state of Saxony. It runs from Dresden via Freiberg, Chemnitz and Zwickau to Werdau wye, where it joins the Leipzig-Hof railway.

Dresden Hbf–Werdau wye
Overview
Line number
  • 6258; Saxon DW
  • 6257; Saxon DWCh
LocaleSaxony, Germany
Termini
Service
Route number510, 510.3
Technical
Line length136.304 km (84.695 mi)
Number of tracks2
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Minimum radius213 m (699 ft)
Electrification15 kV/16.7 Hz AC overhead catenary
Operating speed120 km/h (74.6 mph) (maximum)
with tilting: 160 km/h (99.4 mph)
Maximum incline2.6%
Route map

-0.048
Dresden Hbf
117 m
1.100
Dresden Altstadt junction (Bk)
from Dresden-Altstadt Elbe bank
1.500
Dresden-Altstadt
120 m
2.922
Dresden-Plauen
since 1926
135 m
3.700
Dresden-Plauen
until 1926
139 m
0
Felsenkeller Tunnel,
roof removed in 1895 (56 m)
3.820
Bk Felsenkeller
4.600
5.528
Freight line to Tharandt (see below)
5.670
Freital Ost junction (Bk)
155 m
5.717
to Possendorf
6.844
Freital-Potschappel
162 m
Narrow gauge line to Nossen and
Niederhermsdorf coal branch line
8.736
Freital-Deuben
176 m
10.092
Freital-Hainsberg
187 m
Narrow gauge line to Kurort Kipsdorf
11.550
Freital-Hainsberg West
190 m
Freight line from Freital Ost junction
13.705
Tharandt
208 m
15.920
Bk Breiter Grund
18.020
Edle Krone
281 m
18.200
Edle Krone Tunnel (122 m)
Maximum gradient 2.6% (1:37.5)
21.520
Bk Seerenteich
25.369
Klingenberg-Colmnitz
436 m
Narrow gauge lines to Frauenstein
and Mohorn
27.450
Colmnitz Viaduct(148 m)
30.850
Niederbobritzsch
407 
31.250
Niederbobritzsch Viaduct (175 m)
Üst Niederbobritzsch
35.890
Muldenhütten
395 m
36.490
Muldenhütten Viaduct (196 m)
38.510
Kunstgraben Tunnel (36 m; roof removed)
from Halsbrücke
from (Moldava–) Holzhau
40.005
Freiberg (Sachs)
413 m
to Nossen
42.300
Bk Hospitalwald
42.810
Nossen–Moldava
45.380
Kleinschirma
415 m
48.720
Frankenstein Viaduct (349 m)
49.819
Frankenstein (Sachs)
396 m
52.240
Bk Kaltes Feld
54.380
Bk Memmendorf
57.149
Oederan
407 m
59.100
Bk Breitenau
61.560
Bk Hetzdorf
(new route 1992)
61.897
Hetzbach viaduct (344 m)
62.300
Hetzdorf Viaduct (326 m)
(Flöha Valley Railway)
62.805
Flöha viaduct (344 m)
(Flöha Valley Railway)
63.600
64.566
km change -966 m
64.750
Falkenau (Sachs) Süd
310 m
67.370
Flöha
278 m
67.625
B 180 level crossing
68.079
Zschopau bridge (65 m)
70.130
Niederwiesa junction; sig box 1
70.170
B 73 LC
71.280
Niederwiesa
291 m
73.620
Bk Ebersdorf
75.50
Bk Chemnitz-Hilbersdorf sig box A
76.021
0.000
km change (start of line 6257)
0.490
Chemnitz-Hilbersdorf
325 m
76.520
Chemnitz-Hilbersdorf
320 m
3.098
78.600
km change (end of line 6257)
79.730
Chemnitz Hbf
302 m
connection to Chemnitz tram network
81.820
Chemnitz Süd
312 m
to Aue and Stollberg
82.630
Bk Chemnitz Süd
82.850
Chemnitz Mitte
307  m
83.480
Chemnitz-Kappel
310 m
85.530
Chemnitz-Schönau
320 m
85.900
Bk Schönau
88.010
Chemnitz-Siegmar
326 m
91.250
Grüna (Sachs)
350 m
from Limbach and from Küchwald
to Neuoelsnitz
94.310
Wüstenbrand
(former Keilbahnhof)
378 m
95.907
Bk Oberlungwitz
98.230
Hohenstein-Ernstthal
345 m
Interurban tramway to Oelsnitz
98.654
Hohenstein-Ernstthal–Oelsnitz tramway
99.700
Hüttengrund viaduct (150 m)
101.220
Bk Hermsdorf
from Stollberg (Sachs)
104.910
St. Egidien
283 m
107.762
Bk Lobsdorf
109.500
Bk Niederlungwitz
112.140
Glauchau (Sachs)
244 m
114.310
Bk Gesau
115.990
Glauchau-Schönbörnchen
258 m
Narrow gauge railway to Ortmannsdorf
120.540
Mosel
257 
Industrial line to Zwickau
122.790
Oberrothenbach
265 m
125.830
Zwickau-Pölbitz
270 m
Industrial line from Mosel
128.350
Zwickau (Sachs) Hbf
130.950
"7. Oktober" depot
to Falkenstein (Vogtl.)
131.600
Bk Maxhütte
132.830
Lichtentanne (Sachs)
320 m
134.502
Bk Steinpleis
134.930
Steinpleis
310 m
135.626
Steinpleis Viaduct
135.700
Werdau wye (Zwickau separation)
136.260
Werdau wye (Neumark separation)
Source: German railway atlas[1]
Freital Ost junction–Tharandt (freight railway)
Overview
Line number6259
LocaleSaxony
Technical
Line length8.250 km (5.126 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification15 kV/16.7 Hz AC overhead catenary
Operating speed70 km/h (43.5 mph) (maximum)
Route map

from Dresden
5.558
to Tharandt (start of line)
5.680
Freital Ost junction (Bk)
155 m
6.170
6.182
kn change -12 m
6.844
Freital-Potschappel
162 m
narrow gauge line to Nossen and
Niederhermsdorf coal branch line
connecting line to Freital-Hainsberg
connecting line from Freital-Potschappel
10.092
Freital-Hainsberg
187 m
Narrow gauge line to Kurort Kipsdorf
from Freital Ost
13.705
Tharandt
208 m
13.820
(end of line)
to Werdau
Source: German railway atlas[1]

The line was opened in several sections and its first section from Werdau to Zwickau was opened 1845, making it one of the oldest railways in Germany. The Dresden–Tharandt section was completed in 1855, the Chemnitz–Zwickau section followed in 1858, the line was extended from Tharandt to Freiberg in 1862 and the section from Chemnitz to Flöha was opened as part of the line to Annaberg in 1866. The entire line was not open until 1869, when the missing section from Freiberg-Flöha was opened. From then on the railway line developed into an important connection. It continues to be an important part of the so-called Saxon-Franconian trunk line (German: Sachsen-Franken-Magistrale) from Dresden to Nuremberg.

History

 
Albertsbahn ticket from about 1855

The modern Dresden–Werdau line developed from a series of originally independent sections that were built with the support of the Saxon government and eventually became part of the Royal Saxon State Railways. The first section opened on 6 September 1845, as a branch from the Saxon-Bavarian Railway at the modern Werdau wye (Werdau Bogendreieck) junction to Zwickau.

The start of planning for a long-distance railway from Dresden towards Bavaria was the request of mine owners in the Plauen Valley (Plauenscher Grund) of the Weißeritz river for a line to connect their coal mines with Dresden. The request was granted and, on 4 May 1853, the easternmost section of the line from Dresden to Tharandt was opened with branch lines to the mines. The line opened on 18 June 1855[2] as the Albertsbahn (Albert Railway), named after Prince Albert of Saxony.

On 15 November 1858, the Chemnitz–Zwickau section was opened as part of the Riesa–Chemnitz–Zwickau route of the Niedererzgebirgische Staatsbahn (Lower Ore Mountains State Railway).

However, the planned extension from Tharandt to Freiberg turned out to be problematic. At first, the steep slopes between Tharandt and Freiberg were insuperable.[3] Ultimately, a route was selected along the Seerenbach Valley to Klingenberg with a maximum gradient of 1 in 40. Several large viaducts had to be built across the successive valleys of the Colmnitzbach, Bobritzsch and Freiberger Mulde rivers. By the time construction of this line started in 1859, rail engineers had acquired experience with steep haul operations on such inclines as the Schiefe Ebene and the Geislinger Steige. The line was opened to Freiberg on 11 August 1862.

The route of the missing section between Freiberg and Chemnitz was more controversial. A connection through Hainichen had long been favoured. Ultimately, it was decided to build the shorter but more expensive route through Oederan, which had a steep ramp section and required the construction of several large viaducts. Between Flöha and Chemnitz, the line used the route of the Chemnitz–Annaberg railway, which had opened in 1866, and only the installation of a second track was necessary. On 1 April 1869 the Freiberg–Chemnitz section was opened, so that for the first time a connection existed between the eastern and the Western Royal Saxon State Railways in Saxony.[4] As a result, the now completed Dresden–Werdau railway became an important rail link between Silesia and Southern Germany.

On 19 September 1895, a military train and a passenger train collided at Oederan. Ten people died and six were also injured.[5]

Reconstruction of the Chemnitz rail network

In the 1880s, the Chemnitz railway node was no longer able to cope with the increase in traffic, especially freight. In spite of major upgrades at various locations (including the expansion of the Altchemnitz station and the construction of the Kappel freight yard), the construction of a marshalling yard became unavoidable. Finally, various projects were selected, which included construction to the south of the existing workshops. At the same time, the Dresden–Werdau railway was moved north of the workshops. Construction began in 1896, and the marshalling yard was opened in 1902.[6]

Around the turn of the century, road traffic in the city of Chemnitz was growing. As the rail traffic also increased, the numerous level crossings became more and more of a problem. A railway attendant with a warning flag and a bell had to walk in front of the train at Dresdner Platz. Therefore, from January 1903 the Chemnitz–Altchemnitz section was lowered and the section between Altchemnitz and Chemnitz coal yard was raised above street level. In addition, the line was rebuilt with four tracks in these sections. The reconstruction was completed at the end of 1909.[7] Since the Chemnitz–Adorf railway was upgraded to two tracks as far as Einsiedel at the same time, six tracks were now located next to each other on the section between Chemnitz Hauptbahnhof and Chemnitz Süd.

Traffic continued to increase after the end of the First World War. Therefore, quadruplication of the Niederwiesa–Chemnitz–Hilbersdorf section was started in 1915[8] and finally completed in 1924. Since the Hilbersdorf marshalling yard was inadequate, possible solutions were sought. Proposals for another line south or north of the existing main Dresden–Werdau line were not pursued. Instead of a proposal that had gained favour that included a complicated southern detour with three tunnels that were each about 1 km-long, an upgrade of the existing marshalling yard was carried out. Despite this reconstruction, which was completed in 1930, Chemnitz station remained an intractable bottleneck.[9]

Elevation of the line between Dresden and Freital

 
Level crossing at the street of Altplauen around 1910. Dresden-Plauen S-Bahn station is now in the same place on a bridge.

In 1900, the situation on the Dresden–Freital section was similar to that in Chemnitz; the growing road and rail traffic caused more and more problems. Therefore, from 1901 to 1905, the railway was also raised higher, in order to eliminate the level crossings.[10] Around 1910, the tracks on the Dresden HbfDresden-Plauen section and from 1909 to 1912 on the Freital Ost junction–Tharandt section were quadrupled. At the same time, the station facilities were rebuilt. From then on the freight traffic could be separated from the passenger traffic. Because of the First World War, work on a 3 km-long section in between was not carried out beyond preparatory work. The elevation of the tracks took place between 1923 and 1926 on the section between the Dresden-Altstadt exit and Weißeritzbrücke in the vicinity of old Dresden-Plauen station. The old Dresden-Plauen station was closed and replaced by a new building at its current site.

Upgrade of the Zwickau railway lines

In Zwickau, the railway network was also not longer able to cope with traffic by around 1910 as traffic had risen sharply since the 1880s, but the rail infrastructure had hardly changed. At that time, the largest railway freight yard in Saxony had to be fundamentally rebuilt. At the same time, the tracks were to be elevated, as in Chemnitz and Dresden, so as not to obstruct road traffic. This work was delayed by the First World War and actual construction only began after the end of the war. However, this work went very slowly, so the elevation of the lines between Zwickau Pölbitz and Zwickau Hauptbahnhof took place between 1921 and 1925. 11 level crossings were replaced completely. For the most part, the reconstruction works, during which the Hauptbahnhof received a new entrance building, were not completed until the end of the 1930s. Further construction began during the Second World War, but it could not be finished due to personnel and material shortages.[11]

After the Second World War

While large sections of the railway largely survived World War II, numerous railway installations were severely damaged or completely destroyed, especially in the Dresden, Chemnitz and Zwickau areas. In contrast to other lines, however, no major bridges were blown up by the Wehrmacht. However, in 1946, the line was completely dismantled down to one track and numerous platform tracks were dismantled as war reparations. As the ability of the important line to handle traffic was considerably reduced, the second track was restored on some sections in Dresden and Chemnitz by the early 1950s. The second track was restored on the bulk of the route in the 1960s and 1970s, but it was not until the middle of the 1970s that the second track had been completely re-built. Nevertheless, the line did not achieve the same importance as it did before the Second World War, since the division of Germany after 1945 meant that most traffic now ran in the north–south direction.

Electrification

After the re-electrification of the network in Central Germany, the electrification of the so-called Sächsisches Dreieck (Saxon triangle: the Dresden–Werdau, Leipzig–Dresden and Leipzig–Zwickau lines) was one of the most important investment projects of Deutsche Reichsbahn. In addition to significant cost savings in railway operations, this also promised a significant reduction in travel times, particularly as the use of bank engines on the steep slopes on the Tharandt-Klingenberg–Colmnitz and Flöha–Oederan sections would no longer be necessary with electric traction.

Construction work for the electric catenary started in the early 1960s. The construction of the facilities between Freiberg and Werdau was relatively unproblematic. However, the electrification between Dresden and Freiberg, especially around Edle Krone, was more difficult because restricted clearances hindered the construction of the catenary. The most important building project in this section was the widening of the Edle Krone tunnel, since the lowering of the tracks was impossible because of bridges connecting directly to the tunnel. Many catenary masts had to be constructed as special constructions with catenary supports over both tracks. The overhead was opened between 1963 and 1966 in sections starting from Werdau:

Opening Section km
01 October 1963 (Altenburg–) Werdau–Zwickau 44.7
30 May 1965 Zwickau–Karl-Marx-Stadt Hilbersdorf 52.3
26 September 1965 Karl-Marx-Stadt Hilbersdorf–Freiberg 36.2
25 September 1966 Freiberg–Dresden Hbf 42.6

The possible travel time reductions were put into full effect in the winter 1966/67 timetable. Steam-driven express trains needed a total of 55 minutes between Karl-Marx-Stadt Hbf and Freiberg. After the electrification, the running time was reduced to only 35 minutes. Even more significant reductions in travel time for freight trains resulted from the discontinuation of bank engine operations between Flöha and Oederan. The 1300 tonne Dg 7301 locomotives took 61 minutes on the same section compared with 122 minutes before electrification.[12]

Reconstruction between Oederan and Flöha

 
Hetzdorf Viaduct at the beginning of the 1990s

In the mid-1980s, the Hetzdorf Viaduct over the Flöha valley in the distinct of Mittelsachsen, which dated from the opening of that section of the line, had reached the end of its service life. In the final years, crossing the viaduct was only possible at a top speed of 20 km/h, which greatly restricted the section's capacity. Deutsche Reichsbahn eventually designed a straightened route bypassing the old viaduct. The new bridge consists of two prestressed concrete bridges, each 344 metres long, that cross the Hetzbach and Flöha valleys. The construction company VEB Autobahnbaukombinat ("Publicly Owned Operation for motorway construction combine") built the bridges from 1987 onwards using the incremental launch method, for the first time during the construction of a railway bridge in East Germany. The new line was completed and put into operation on 12 May 1992, shortening the connection between Dresden and Chemnitz by about one kilometre.[13][14][15]

The new section is 2,033.9 metres long, 966.1 m shorter than the old route. It has grades of up to 1.68%.[14]

August 2002 floods

 
Among other things, near the Felsenkeller Brewery in the Plauenschengrund, flooded by the Weißeritz in the August 2002 and severely damaged.

The about 25 km-long Dresden–Klingenberg-Colmnitz section was heavily damaged by the 2002 floods on 12 August, especially by the Wild Weißeritz and the Weißeritz and more than 15 km of the line was completely destroyed. The section had previously been extensively renovated and was due to be returned to service on 13 August 2002.[16]

Between Klingenberg-Colmnitz and Dresden, rail replacement bus services were established and long-distance traffic on the Chemnitz–Dresden section was only served by replacement buses. From the autumn of 2003, Tharandt station was served again from Freiberg and services on the remainder of the line were restored on 14 December 2003.[16] During the construction work, the need for protection from future floods was taken into account. Among other things, the bridge abutments were built at a right angle to the direction of flow.[17]

Upgrades since 2010

The seven kilometre section between Hohenstein-Ernstthal and St. Egidien was upgraded from mid-May 2010 to mid-December 2011. Around €38 million was used from an economic stimulus package and from Deutsche Bahn’s own resources.[18][19]

From the beginning of 2010 to December 2013, the approximately 490 m-long underpass running under Dresdner Platz in Chemnitz that is used by the parallel tracks of the Dresden–Werdau and Chemnitz–Adorf railways, was replaced at a cost of €25 million. During the demolition of the old tracks and the new construction, both road and railways were kept open for traffic.

Deutsche Bahn AG is planning to rebuild three rail overpasses in Plauen from 2016 to 2018 and to rebuild Dresden-Plauen station in a different location. The new station will be barrier-free and have a lift. Concrete plans have not yet been completed.[20]

Deutsche Bahn AG is also planning to modernise the Chemnitzer Bahnbogen ("Chemnitz railway arc"), a 2.8 kilometre-long section of the Dresden–Werdau railway in the city of Chemnitz, probably from 2019 to 2022. The planned measures include, among other things, the reconstruction of Chemnitz Süd station, the relocation of Chemnitz Mitte station to a new station at Stollberger Strasse and the reconstruction of tracks, overhead lines, retaining walls and five railway overbridges. In addition to the Chemnitz Viaduct, the bridges included are the crossings of Augustusburger Straße, Bernsdorfer Straße, Reichenhainer Straße and Stollberger Straße. The railway viaduct in Reichsstraße is being refurbished and refilled. The federal government and Deutsche Bahn AG have set aside a total of around €95 million for these measures. The new construction and the reconstruction are to be carried out with rail operations continuing on a single track. The planning approval procedure was initiated in September 2015. If this can be completed by 2018, construction may start by 2019.[21]

Route

 

The route leaves Dresden Hauptbahnhof and runs to a triangular junction (where lines branch off to Dresden-Neustadt) and turns south past the rail museum in the former Dresden-Altstadt depot. From Dresden-Plauen station it runs to Freital through the narrow valley of the Weißeritz (known as the Plauenscher Grund) and crosses Autobahn 17. The standard gauge Windberg Railway (Windbergbahn) formerly branched off between Dresden-Plauen and Freital-Potschappel.

Just south of Freital-Hainsberg, where the 750 mm gauge Weisseritz Valley Railway begins, the line passes the confluence of the Weißeritz’s tributaries: the Red Weißeritz and the Wild Weißeritz. The line follows the Wild Weißeritz through Tharandt to Edle Krone. To the west lies the Tharandt Forest. The line is used by S-Bahn line S3 as far as Tharandt. Starting in Tharandt the line is extremely steep for a main line, with a slope of 1 in 40, sometimes even 1 in 39. In the age of steam, which lasted until the electrification of the line in the mid 1960s, this ramp could only be climbed by the use of locomotives in multiple. This gradient was necessary to climb the Ore Mountain Foreland (Erzgebirgsvorland). After Edle Krone station, the line runs through a 122-metre-long tunnel. In Klingenberg Colmnitz, the line reaches 435 m above sea level, a rise of 228 metres in 11.6 kilometres. This station was once the starting point of the 750 mm gauge railways of the Wilsdruff Network to Frauenstein and Oberdittmannsdorf.

 
Frankenstein Viaduct, built 1868
 
New Hetzdorf Viaduct

Now begins a section with a number of viaducts. The first viaduct spans the Colmnitzbach in Colmnitz. In Niederbobritzsch, a town in the district of Bobritzsch, the line crosses the Bobritzsch river on a 26-metre-high (85 ft) viaduct. After Muldenhütten station, the line crosses the 196 metres-long and 42.8 metres high viaduct over the Freiberger Mulde. At the 40.0 km mark the line reaches Freiberg station. It was formerly a major rail hub, but it is now only the end point for Dresden S-Bahn line S30 peak-hour services and the starting point of the branch line to Holzhau. The line to Holzhau together with the Zellwaldbahn (Zellwald Railway) form the Nossen–Moldava (Moldau) line, which was restored to operation on 5 November 2005. That line branches off to the west of Freiberg station and runs north to Nossen. At this junction, the Dresden–Werdau line passes under federal highway 173 for the first time.

About 1.5 km east of Frankenstein station, in Wegefahrt, the line runs across one of the most impressive railway viaducts of the 19th century, the 348.5-metre-long (1,143 ft) and 39-metre-high (128 ft) Frankenstein viaduct, which crosses the valley of the Striegis. Shortly before Oederan the line passes under highway 173 again. Before Flöha the line connects with the branch line from Marienberg and Olbernhau. Until 1991, the line crossed the Flöha river on the old Hetzdorf Viaduct; it now runs along a new section with two prestressed concrete viaducts. After passing the junction with the Marienberg branch line and another line from Annaberg-Buchholz, the line reaches the town of Flöha and then crosses the Zschopau river. Niederwiesa, the second last stop before Chemnitz Hauptbahnhof for regional trains, is the beginning of a branch line to Hainichen. Chemnitz-Hilbersdorf station used to be the site of an important rail depot and one of the largest marshalling yards in Saxony; it is now closed. After connecting with two lines from the north, the line from Riesa and the line from Leipzig, the Dresden–Werdau line reaches Chemnitz Hauptbahnhof.

 
Beckerbrücke Viaduct in Chemnitz (2016)

After the station, the railway line runs along a wide curve south of the city centre as a direct route through the centre was not possible at the time of the construction.[22] At Chemnitz Süd (south), a line branches off to Aue and to Stollberg. The Dresden–Werdau line turns to the west, running through the suburbs of Chemnitz and then starts to leave the wide basin of the Chemnitz river. Before Chemnitz-Siegmar, the line passes under the A 72. During the time of East Germany, the area west of Chemnitz was in the county of Hohenstein-Ernstthal, which was the most densely populated county in that country. Accordingly, the density of stations in the region is unusually high. After Hohenstein-Ernstthal, the line passes under highway B 180 to reach St. Egidien station, where another line to Stollberg starts. At Glauchau, the Glauchau–Wurzen railway (Mulde Valley Railway) used to branch off, but almost all of it is now closed. At the next station, Glauchau-Schönbörnchen, the line to Gößnitz branches off. The line now turns south and follows the course of the Zwickauer Mulde. The line passes through the town of Mosel, which is the location of a Volkswagen factory, and crosses the four-lane federal highway B 93 (and B 175). After 128 km the line finally reaches Zwickau Hauptbahnhof. The line continues past the disused Zwickau marshalling yard for about five km west to Werdau wye (Werdau Bogendreieck) junction, which enables trains leaving Zwickau to run forward in either direction on the Leipzig–Hof railway, that is both to Leipzig via Werdau and to Hof and Nuremberg via Reichenbach. The line ends here, 135.96 km from Dresden.[23]

Operating points

Dresden Albertbahnhof (51°02′55″N 13°42′55″E / 51.0486°N 13.7152°E / 51.0486; 13.7152)

The line originally started at the Albertbahnhof (Albert station) of the Albertsbahn AG (company). After its nationalisation, the line was integrated into the Dresdner Böhmischen Bahnhof (Dresden Bohemian station, the current main station). Since the spring of 1869, all passenger trains have run from the Bohemian station. From then on, the Albertbahnhof served as a so-called Kohlenbahnhof (coal station) for freight transport only, so that, for example, approximately 500,000 tonnes of coal were handled there annually in around 1900. Gradually, however, the station lost its importance, although in the 1960s, the construction and operation of the Nossenerbrücke cogeneration power station led to a stabilisation of transshipment volumes. After 1990, freight traffic collapsed completely, with the only major transport activity recorded during the construction of the Dresden World Trade Center.[24] All the rail infrastructure has been demolished.

 
Dresden Hauptbahnhof in about 1900

Dresden Hbf (51°02′25″N 13°43′53″E / 51.0403°N 13.7313°E / 51.0403; 13.7313)

As each of the original railway companies had built its own station in Dresden, there was originally no central station was for the transfer of passengers. Nevertheless, passenger trains running towards Werdau started to run from the Bohemian station in 1869, which became increasingly the city's busiest station. When the railway facilities became completely overloaded in the early 1890s, it was decided to make a major change. In addition to the creation of the Dresden-Friedrichstadt station, the construction of a main station (Hauptbahnhof) was one of the central elements. The new station located on the site of the Bohemian station was opened in 1898. The trains coming from the Werdau direction now terminated on the low level terminal tracks.[25] Plans for additional new construction elsewhere were not implemented either before or after the Second World War.

Dresden-Plauen (51°01′47″N 13°42′12″E / 51.0296°N 13.7032°E / 51.0296; 13.7032)

Plauen bei Dresden ("Plauen near Dresden") halt was opened on 18 June 1855 together with the Albertsbahn (Albert Railway) and was located to the left (south-east) of the railway. In 1897, the so-called Alte Bahnhof ("old station") Plauen was opened with the station building located near the right-hand side of the current tracks. Since the station was located quite poorly for the population of Dresden-Plauen, which had now grown to 12,000 people, a new station was opened about 800 m further north in January 1926 and the old station was closed.[26] This halt, opened in 1926, is to be renovated by the middle of 2018.[27]

Freital-Ost (“Freital east”) junction (51°00′58″N 13°40′27″E / 51.016001°N 13.674150°E / 51.016001; 13.674150)

The Windberg Railway starts at the former Block post of Freital-Ost junction on the Dresden–Werdau railway. From 1912, the line branched off the main line to the right and ran parallel with the freight line to Tharandt and then crossed it at the so-called Höllenmaul ("hell’s mouth"). A further railway connection to Freital Ost station only served freight traffic. In 1946, Deutsche Reichsbahn dismantled both branches as war reparations to the Soviet Union. All the rail operations now took place on track 1, which had originally been built as a separate link to Freital-Potschappel station. The Höllenmaul was filled in 1984 and completely demolished during the upgrade of this section of the Dresden–Werdau railway in 2003. The points at Freital-Ost junction were abolished in 2003.[28]

Freital-Potschappel (51°00′48″N 13°39′41″E / 51.0133°N 13.6615°E / 51.0133; 13.6615)

Of the six Freital stations, Freital-Potschappel station is the most important.[29] The Niederhermsdorfer Kohlezweigbahn ("Niederhermsdorf coal branch railway") branched off here to two coal shafts from 1856 onwards. Its route was used in the construction of the 750 mm gauge Potschappel–Wilsdruff railway opened in 1886. Extensive goods and transhipment facilities were built In Potschappel, which were further expanded during the elevation of the line and its quadruplication after 1900.[30]

In 1913, a narrow-gauge connecting track was established, which was used for freight transport and the exchange of rolling stock with the Weißeritz Valley Railway (Weißeritztalbahn). The narrow-gauge line towards Wilsdruff was shut down in 1972, since which the maintenance of Weißeritz Valley Railway rolling stock has only been carried out in Freital-Potschappel.

Freital-Deuben (50°59′57″N 13°38′47″E / 50.9993°N 13.6465°E / 50.9993; 13.6465

The halt has had three different names during its period of operations:

  • until 11 January 1918: Deuben
  • until 30 September 1921: Deuben (Bez Dresden)
  • since 1 October 1921: Freital-Deuben

The halt was opened in 1855 and is located on the border between the two Freital districts of Deuben and Döhlen. The station had a great importance in commuter traffic until the turn of the century due to the founding of the steelworks in Döhlen, also in 1855, where up to 5,000 people were employed.[31] Today services on line S 3 of the Dresden S-Bahn and Dresden–Zwickau Regionalbahn services stop at the station. When Interregio-Express services ran, they also stopped there. With the abandonment of the use of tilting, stopping at the station was abandoned in order to save time.

Freital-Hainsberg (50°59′20″N 13°38′13″E / 50.9890°N 13.6370°E / 50.9890; 13.6370)

 
Freital-Hainsberg station

Freital-Hainsberg station has been the terminus of the narrow-gauge Weißeritz Valley Railway since 1 November 1882. Its present appearance dates from its reconstruction in 1903 to 1912 as a transhipment station between the standard and narrow-gauge railways. In addition to the locomotive depot and the former freight transport infrastructure, there are several sidings. The station was opened on 28 June 1855 and was raised to the status of a station on 1 October 1874. The station has had four different names in its history:

  • until 12 January 1918: Hainsberg
  • until 12 December 1933: Hainsberg (Sa)
  • until 29 September 1965: Hainsberg (Sachs)
  • since 29 September 1965: Freital-Hainsberg

In Freital-Hainsberg is served by services of the S-Bahn line S3 and Regionalbahn line RB30 between Dresden and Zwickau.

Freital-Hainsberg West (50°58′52″N 13°37′22″E / 50.9810°N 13.6227°E / 50.9810; 13.6227)

 
Freital-Hainsberg West station

Freital-Hainsberg West halt was opened on 25 September 1977. It has an island platform and three tracks.

 
Entrance building of Tharandt station

Tharandt (50°58′59″N 13°35′34″E / 50.9830°N 13.5929°E / 50.9830; 13.5929)

Tharandt station, east of the city of Tharandt, was of great importance until electrification in the 1960s. In order to cope with the steep gradient up to Klingenberg-Colmnitz, most of the trains received an additional bank or pilot locomotive. In freight traffic, this procedure was still practiced until the 1990s.

The locomotive depot for the bank locomotives was superfluous after the electrification and was disbanded in September 1966.[32] Until its demolition in the 1990s, it served as a depot of the Dresden Transport Museum.

Today, most services of line S3 of the Dresden S-Bahn terminate in Tharandt and it is also served by the Franken-Sachsen-Express.

 
Edle Krone

Edle Krone (50°57′00″N 13°35′01″E / 50.9500°N 13.5835°E / 50.9500; 13.5835)

Edle Krone halt was opened on 11 August 1862 as Haltestelle Höckendorf and renamed Edle Krone in 1871. The station is in the Wild Weißeritz valley on the southeastern edge of the Tharandt Forest (Tharandter Wald) was reclassified as a station on 1 May 1905, but reverted to a halt on 31 July 1999.

Klingenberg-Colmnitz (50°55′33″N 13°30′03″E / 50.9258°N 13.5007°E / 50.9258; 13.5007)

Klingenberg-Colmnitz was the "mountain station" of the Tharandter Steige. From 1898 to 1972, the 750 mm gauge railways to Frauenstein and to Oberdittmannsdorf began in the station.

Niederbobritzsch (50°54′05″N 13°26′26″E / 50.9013°N 13.4406°E / 50.9013; 13.4406)

Niederbobritzsch halt was opened on 11 August 1862 and was reclassified as a station in 1905. Later the station reverted to being a halt. The station building is still preserved at the site.[33] Since 9 December 2007 it is served by the Dresden S-Bahn in the peaks.

 
Muldenhütten station (2016)

Muldenhütten (50°54′19″N 13°23′20″E / 50.9052°N 13.3888°E / 50.9052; 13.3888) Muldenhütten station was opened as a halt on 8 December 1861. In 1905 the station was reclassified as a station, but it was downgraded to a halt In 2002. Since 9 December 2007, the station has served by the Dresden S-Bahn in the peaks. In the immediate vicinity is the industrial area of Muldenhütten, the oldest still operating industrial site in Germany. The entrance building was demolished in 2004.[34]

 
Freiberg (Sachs) station

Freiberg (Sachs) (50°54′29″N 13°20′40″E / 50.9081°N 13.3444°E / 50.9081; 13.3444)

Freiberg station was opened on 11 August 1862 as the terminus of the line from Dresden, which was extended to Chemnitz in 1869. The construction of the Nossen–Moldava railway (1873/1885) and the branch lines to Halsbrücke, Langenau and Großhartmannsdorf (1890) made Freiberg one of the most important railway junctions in Saxony.

 
Kleinschirma station (2016)

Kleinschirma (50°54′10″N 13°16′54″E / 50.9027°N 13.2817°E / 50.9027; 13.2817)

Kleinschirma halt was inaugurated on 1 March 1869. It is located in the south-west of the village near federal highway 173.

 
Frankenstein station (2016)

Frankenstein (Sachs) (50°54′09″N 13°13′41″E / 50.9024°N 13.2281°E / 50.9024; 13.2281)

The station has had four different names:

  • until 30 April 1903: Frankenstein
  • until 30 June 1911: Frankenstein in Sachsen
  • until 21 December 1933: Frankenstein (Sa)
  • since 22 December 1933: Frankenstein (Sachs)

Although the station lies on the municipality of Oberschöna, the station was named after Frankenstein, which lies about 750 metres awayn now in the municipality of Oederan. In addition to Oberschöna (about one kilometre away), the station also serves Wegefarth. At first Frankenstein was only a halt, but it was reclassified as a station on 1 May 1905. Although initially located on an open field where the Oberschöna–Frankenstein road crossed the line, several businesses were established in the immediate vicinity of the station. Several railway residences were also built near the station. The locality is now named Bahnhof Frankenstein after the station.

Apart from an entrance building, which was built as a typically Saxon rectangular building, a freight shed was built. There was also a loading ramp and a side loading ramp for freight transport. A private siding branched off within the station.[35] The station tracks have now been dismantled except for the two main tracks and a crossover. Access to the outer platform is now via the road level crossing instead of the former station level crossing.[36]

 
Oederan station

Oederan (50°51′26″N 13°10′34″E / 50.8572°N 13.1761°E / 50.8572; 13.1761)

Oederan station was opened on 1 March 1869. Between 1905 and 1930, the name was spelled "Öderan".

 
Falkenau (Sachs) Süd station

Falkenau (Sachs) Süd (50°50′57″N 13°06′32″E / 50.8492°N 13.1090°E / 50.8492; 13.1090)

Falkenau (Sachs) Süd halt was opened on 1 March 1869 as Falkenau station. It has had the following names:

  • until 1911: Falkenau
  • until 1933: Falkenau (Sa)
  • until 1966: Falkenau (Sachs)

As the present name suggests, the station is located in the south of the suburb of Flöha, to which it now belongs. Falkenau (Sachs) Hp halt, which opened in 1928, is located on the Reitzenhain–Flöha railway and is located on the northeast edge of Falkenau.

 
Entrance building of Flöha station, 2008

Flöha (50°51′15″N 13°04′33″E / 50.8541°N 13.0758°E / 50.8541; 13.0758)

At first, Flöha station was only a through station on the Chemnitz–Annaberg railway, opened in 1866. With the building of the Freiberg–Flöha section of the Dresden–Werdau railway, a new station was built to the north-east of the existing station. Since then the entrance building has been a Keilbahnhof ("wedge station"). With the construction of the Reitzenhain–Flöha railway, opened in 1875, another station was built to the northeast by the Chemnitz-Komotauer Eisenbahngesellschaft (Chemnitz-Chomutov Railway Company).[37][38]

The present stately entrance building was built during a large reconstruction of the station in the 1930s.[37] Although the station has been substantially reconstructed, there are still six platform faces available.

 
Niederwiesa station

Niederwiesa (50°51′45″N 13°01′24″E / 50.8626°N 13.0232°E / 50.8626; 13.0232)

Niederwiesa station was opened on 14 May 1866. It has been the terminus of the Roßwein–Niederwiesa railway since 1869. Trains have only operated to Hainichen since 1998. Since the modernisation of this line, it has been part of City-Bahn Chemnitz.

 
Chemnitz-HIlbersdorf station with City-Bahn service (2016)

Chemnitz-Hilbersdorf Hp (50°51′42″N 12°57′12″E / 50.8618°N 12.9534°E / 50.8618; 12.9534)

Chemnitz-Hilbersdorf was first opened as a "halt point" (Haltepunkt) on 15 August 1893. Already after a short time it was reclassified as "halt place" (Haltestelle). This was upgraded with the construction of the marshalling yard to a station (Bahnhof). At the same time, the station was moved to the present location between Chemnitz-Hilbersdorf and Ebersdorf.[39] The station is now classified as a halt point.

Chemnitz-Hilbersdorf (50°51′40″N 12°57′08″E / 50.8612°N 12.9521°E / 50.8612; 12.9521)

The marshalling yard, which was urgently needed to relieve Chemnitz Hauptbahnhof from freight traffic, was built between 1896 and 1902 at the location of the first Hilbersdorf station. In addition to the marshalling yard, which was designed as a hump yard, extensive locomotive maintenance facilities were built, which later developed into the Bahnbetriebswerk Chemnitz-Hilbersdorf.

Since the capacity of the station in the 1920s was no longer sufficient, it was modernised in the late 1920s. A modern marshalling layout was installed. Thus Hilbersdorf was the second-largest marshalling yard in the railway division of Dresden (Reichsbahndirektion Dresden) after Dresden-Friedrichstadt.

After German reunification in 1989/90, freight traffic almost collapsed. Therefore, large parts of the marshalling yard were abandoned and the yard was completely closed in 1996. The Saxon Railway Museum is now housed in the former locomotive depot.[40]


Chemnitz Hbf (50°50′28″N 12°55′53″E / 50.8411°N 12.9314°E / 50.8411; 12.9314)

Today's Chemnitz Hauptbahnhof was built in 1852 as the terminus of the Riesa-Chemnitz route. With the opening of the Chemnitz-Zwickau (1858), Chemnitz-Annaberg (1866), Borna-Chemnitz and Chemnitz–Adorf (1875) lines, it became one of the most important Saxon railway nodes. In addition to passenger traffic, the station was also important in freight transport, as it was the only station in Chemnitz that handled freight until the end of the 1870s. Since the 1990s, its importance has been greatly diminished by the general drop in traffic, loss of long-distance services and the closure of some lines. Freight is no longer handled at the station. The large Chemnitz Hbf locomotive depot (Bahnbetriebswerk), which was later worked jointly with the Chemnitz-Hilbersdorf locomotive depot, still exists today as the Chemnitz locomotive depot.[41]

 
Chemnitz Süd station

Chemnitz Süd (50°49′24″N 12°55′34″E / 50.8233°N 12.9260°E / 50.8233; 12.9260)

The station later called Chemnitz Süd was built in 1875 when the Chemnitz-Aue-Adorfer Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft (Chemnitz–Aue–Adorf Railway Company) established its own station for its Chemnitz–Adorf railway. The company was nationalised one year later, and the trains were then connected to the main station, as were the trains on the Zwönitz–Chemnitz Süd railway, which opened in 1895. Today's station was built during the 1900s during the raising and lowering of sections of the line. For the first time, trains on the Dresden–Werdau line also stopped; there had been no platform on this line before.

Particularly in freight transport, Chemnitz Süd had early significance and its large freight station section was administered as a separate operating point for a time.

Chemnitz Mitte (50°49′35″N 12°54′45″E / 50.8265°N 12.9124°E / 50.8265; 12.9124)

 
Karl-Marx-Stadt-Kappel container yard, 1982

Chemnitz-Kappel (50°49′24″N 12°54′09″E / 50.8234°N 12.9025°E / 50.8234; 12.9025)

The halt had five different names during its period of operations:

  • until 31 July 1882: Chemnitz Kohlenbf
  • until 30 April 1904: Kappel i Sachsen
  • until 30 June 1911: Chemnitz-Kappel (Güterbf)
  • until 9 May 1953: Chemnitz-Kappel
  • until 29 May 1990: Karl-Marx-Stadt-Kappel
  • since 30 May 1990: Chemnitz-Kappel

The 1880 station was opened as Chemnitz Kohlenbahnhof ("Chemnitz coal yard"). This meant that the numerous factories in the west of the city had access to a nearby freight yard. At first, it had been planned to build a yard at Nicolaivorstadt, but since the land required for the construction was much cheaper in Kappel, the yard was built there.[42]

Chemnitz-Kappel was converted into a container depot at the end of the 1960s. The container loading facility went into operation in December 1968 as a separate operating point. The yard was finally closed in 1999.[42] After that, all the tracks have been dismantled so that the area is as run down as the Hilbersdorf yard.

 
Chemnitz-Schönau station

Chemnitz-Schönau (50°49′05″N 12°52′35″E / 50.8181°N 12.8764°E / 50.8181; 12.8764)

The halt has had four different names during its operations:

  • until 31 October 1950: Wanderer-Werke
  • until 9 May 1953: Chemnitz Wanderer-Werke
  • until 29 May 1990: Karl-Marx-Stadt-Schönau
  • since 30 May 1990: Chemnitz-Schönau

The station was opened in 1940, mainly for commuter traffic to the numerous industrial enterprises along this section of the line. Today, the facilities consist of two side platforms, which are connected by a pedestrian bridge.

 
Chemnitz-Siegmar station

Chemnitz-Siegmar (50°48′57″N 12°50′50″E / 50.8158°N 12.8473°E / 50.8158; 12.8473)

The station had four different names during its period of operations:

  • at its opening: Siegmar
  • until 31 October 1950: Siegmar-Schönau
  • until 9 May 1953: Chemnitz-Siegmar
  • until 29 May 1990: Karl-Marx-Stadt-Siegmar
  • since 30 May 1990: Chemnitz-Siegmar

Although the station was opened in 1858, it gained importance during the period of industrialisation in the late 19th century when numerous companies built larger factories in the station area.

 
Grüna (Sachs) (2016) station

Grüna (Sachs) (50°48′41″N 12°47′55″E / 50.8113°N 12.7985°E / 50.8113; 12.7985)

Grüna (Sachs) halt was opened on 15 November 1858. Grüna had a second station between 1897 and 2004 called Grüna (Sachs) ob Bf, which was built on the Limbach–Wüstenbrand and Küchwald–Obergrüna railways. The halt on the Dresden–Werdau railway bore the following names:

  • until 1910: Grüna
  • until 1911: Grüna (Sachsen) Hp
  • until 1933: Grüna (Sa) Hp
  • since 1933: Grüna (Sachs) Hp
 
Wüstenbrand station

Wüstenbrand (50°48′19″N 12°45′23″E / 50.8054°N 12.7565°E / 50.8054; 12.7565)

Wüstenbrand station has existed since the opening of the railway in 1858. At first only the Neuoelsnitz–Wüstenbrand railway of the Chemnitz-Würschnitzer Eisenbahngesellschaft (Chemnitz-Würschnitz Railway Company) connected there. It was later extended to Höhlteich. The Limbach–Wüstenbrand railway was opened in 1897. The latter partly served together with the Küchwald–Obergrüna railway (opened in 1903) as a detour for the Chemnitz–Wüstenbrand section.

All three lines have now been closed, but Wüstenbrand can now be used for overtaking. There are also two freight tracks, which are not currently used.[43]

 
The now demolished entrance building of Hohenstein-Ernstthal with the station forecourt, 2003

Hohenstein-Ernstthal (50°47′54″N 12°42′22″E / 50.7984°N 12.7062°E / 50.7984; 12.7062)

The Hohenstein-Ernstthal–Oelsnitz Tramway, an interurban, had its starting point on the forecourt of Hohenstein-Ernstthal station from 1913 to 1960.

The station was extensively rebuilt in the 2000s. The entrance building, part of which dated from the beginning, has been demolished and replaced by a bus station. There are now only three tracks in the station.

St. Egidien (50°47′21″N 12°37′21″E / 50.7893°N 12.6224°E / 50.7893; 12.6224)

St. Egidien station was opened on 15 November 1858. Since 1879 the station has also been the terminus of the Stollberg–St. Egidien railway, which have been operated by diesel City-Bahn Chemnitz services since its modernisation.

Glauchau (Sachs) (50°49′44″N 12°32′57″E / 50.8288°N 12.5493°E / 50.8288; 12.5493)

Until 1875, Glauchau station was a through station. With the opening of the Glauchau–Wurzen railway, Glauchau also received a locomotive depot, which later became Bahnbetriebswerk Glauchau, which was an independent operating point until the end of 1993.

Glauchau-Schönbörnchen (50°49′18″N 12°30′06″E / 50.8218°N 12.5017°E / 50.8218; 12.5017)

Glauchau-Schönbörnchen halt (until 1931: Schönbörnchen) has existed since 1 November 1885. Previously there had only been a junction with the line to Gößnitz. With the conversion of the station tracks to electronic interlocking, the station, which was temporarily classified as a station (Bahnhof), reverted to being a halt (Haltepunkt, that is it has no sets of points).

 
Mosel station

Mosel (50°47′01″N 12°28′53″E / 50.7837°N 12.4815°E / 50.7837; 12.4815)

Mosel halt has existed since the opening of the line in 1858 and was reclassified as a station on 1 January 1875. With the opening of the 750 mm gauge Mosel–Ortmannsdorf railway, Mosel became a local railway junction in 1885; a previous concession for the construction of a railway through Mülsen by a private company had been cancelled before the beginning of the construction.[44] In 1893, the freight only Zwickau–Crossen–Mosel railway was opened. The narrow gauge railway was closed and dismantled in 1951 and the industrial railway also lost its importance in the 1990s. In addition to the delivery of components to the nearby Volkswagen works, the busy connecting line to this plant also starts in Mosel.

Oberrothenbach (50°45′50″N 12°28′33″E / 50.7639°N 12.4758°E / 50.7639; 12.4758)

Oberrothenbach halt was opened on 1 May 1886 under the administration of Mosel station. It consisted only of two side platforms, a passenger subway and a wooden waiting room built in 1895. The latter was not used from the end of the 1970s and was demolished in 1982.[45]

Zwickau-Pölbitz (50°44′14″N 12°28′47″E / 50.7373°N 12.4796°E / 50.7373; 12.4796)

Pölbitz halt was opened on 1 April 1895. That year, Pölbitz was incorporated into Zwickau. The halt was renamed Zwickau and from 1911 called Zwickau (Sa) Hp (Zwickau Saxony halt). In 1924, it was renamed Zwickau-Pölbitz. As a result of industrialisation, the district of Pölbitz had grown strongly, from then on the halt was used mainly by commuter traffic. During the elevation of the railway tracks in Zwickau, a massive entrance building was built in Pölbitz from 1923 to 1925. Since the halt is no longer staffed, the building is empty.[46]

 
The entrance building of Zwickau Hauptbahnhof, which was opened in 1936

Zwickau (Sachs) Hbf (50°42′52″N 12°28′29″E / 50.7145°N 12.4746°E / 50.7145; 12.4746)

The first Zwickau station was opened in 1845, when a branch line was opened to the Werdau wye. In the 1860s, the station became an important railway junction when the lines from Chemnitz and Schwarzenberg were handed over to traffic.

The Zwickau–Falkenstein railway, opened in 1875, also begins at the Hauptbahnhof, even though initially the Zwickau-Lengenfeld-Falkensteiner Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft opened its station to the southeast of today's Hauptbahnhof. Only two years later a new track alignment was completed and the now nationalised line no longer approached the Hauptbahnhof from the west, instead it ran from the east.

RAW „7. Oktober“ (50°42′24″N 12°26′29″E / 50.7066°N 12.4413°E / 50.7066; 12.4413)

RAW “7. Oktober” halt, which was not open to the public, only served the railway establishments of the marshalling yard and the workshop and was not listed in the timetable. No trains have stopped at the halt since 1997/98 and the infrastructure was dismantled in 2006.

Lichtentanne (Sachs) (50°41′57″N 12°25′10″E / 50.699191°N 12.419308°E / 50.699191; 12.419308)

Lichtentanne (Sachs) station was opened on 1 April 1885. It has had the following names:

  • until 1907: Lichtentanne
  • until 1911: Lichtentanne i Sachsen
  • until 1933: Lichtentanne (Sa)
  • since 1933: Lichtentanne (Sachs)

The former entrance building is no longer in use and is located at the edge of today's halt.

 
Steinpleis halt (2016)

Steinpleis (50°42′32″N 12°23′39″E / 50.708974°N 12.394152°E / 50.708974; 12.394152)

Steinpleis halt was opened on 1 November 1911. It is located south of the village and is the last stop before Werdau wye.

Werdau wye junction (50°42′42″N 12°22′44″E / 50.71162375°N 12.37893105°E / 50.71162375; 12.37893105)

With the completion of the railway line from Leipzig to Werdau (Leipzig–Hof railway) on 6 September 1845, the 8.10 km-long branch to Zwickau was also put into operation. With the further commissioning of the line towards Reichenbach on 31 May 1846, the later wye (Bogendreieck) went into operation as a simple branch line. Construction of the connecting curve began on 25 June 1855 and construction of new main line tracks towards Zwickau began on 15 November 1855. The two new main tracks were opened on 15 November 1858. On 1 January 1856, the twin-track Zwickau–Neumark connecting curve was put into operation at the former Werdau junction, which was now referred to as Bogendreieck Werdau.

As a result of its connection of the Dresden–Werdau and Leipzig–Hof railways, the Werdau wye has a significance that extends beyond Saxony. It is part of the Saxon-Franconian trunk line (Sachsen-Franken-Magistrale) and is included in the plans for the Mid-Germany Railway (Mitte-Deutschland-Verbindung).

Engineering infrastructure

Felskeller tunnel'

Felskeller tunnel was near the first Dresden-Plauen station. The 56-metre-long (184 ft) tunnel had very little cover until 1894/95, when it was removed.

Edle Krone tunnel (50°56′52″N 13°34′57″E / 50.9479°N 13.5824°E / 50.9479; 13.5824)

After the removal of the roofs of the other two tunnels, the 122-metre-long (400 ft) Edle Krone tunnel was the last remaining tunnel on the line. During the electrification of the line in the 1960s, replacing it with a cutting was considered. In the end, the tunnel profile was expanded to create the necessary clearance for the installation of the overhead contact lines.

Traffic

At the timetable change on 30 September 1973, a "dense suburban service" was added on the Dresden–Tharandt section.[47] Since May 1992 these services have been officially marketed as the Dresden S-Bahn.[48] The line to Tharandt was initially designated as S5, but it has been designated as S3 since May 1995. Since December 2007, this line has been extended to Freimberg during working day peaks in the peak direction.

As part of the so-called Saxon-Franconian trunk line, Interregio-Express and InterCity services formerly ran on the Dresden–Werdau line at two or four-hour intervals, but since December 2006, the Franken-Sachsen-Express, running on the Dresden–Hof–Nuremberg has only had the quality of a regional service. These regional express trains operated hourly or two-hourly, depending on the timetable year. In December 2014 this service was replaced by an hourly, electrically-operated Regional-Express service on the Dresden–Hof route.[49]

In addition, numerous Regionalbahn services, particularly between Dresden and Zwickau and between Chemnitz and Flöha (and continuing towards Pockau-Lengefeld and Annaberg-Buchholz).

Since 15 December 2013, the Werdau wye–Zwickau Hbf section has been served by lines S5 and S5X of the S-Bahn Mitteldeutschland.

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  2. ^ Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst (1994). Dresdens Eisenbahn – 1894–1994 (in German). Alba, Düsseldorf. p. 144. ISBN 3-87094-350-5.
  3. ^ Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst. Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz – Schienennetz einer Industrieregion (in German). p. 93.
  4. ^ Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst. Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz – Schienennetz einer Industrieregion (in German). p. 32.
  5. ^ Martin Weltner (2008). Bahn-Katastrophen. Folgenschwere Zugunfälle und ihre Ursachen (in German). Munich. p. 14. ISBN 978-3-7654-7096-7.
  6. ^ Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst (1994). Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz – Schienennetz einer Industrieregion (in German). Alba, Düsseldorf. pp. 45 ff.
  7. ^ Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst (1994). Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz – Schienennetz einer Industrieregion (in German). Alba, Düsseldorf. pp. 89 ff.
  8. ^ Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst (1994). Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz – Schienennetz einer Industrieregion (in German). Alba, Düsseldorf. p. 53.
  9. ^ Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst (1994). Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz – Schienennetz einer Industrieregion (in German). Alba, Düsseldorf. pp. 54 ff.
  10. ^ Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst (1994). Dresdens Eisenbahn – 1894–1994 (in German). Alba, Düsseldorf. p. 148. ISBN 3-87094-350-5.
  11. ^ Norbert Peschke (2010). Bahnhöfe in und um Zwickau – Verkehrsknoten Zwickau (in German). Vol. 1. Fraureuth: Foto & Verlag Jacobi. pp. 22 ff. ISBN 978-3-937228-40-2.
  12. ^ Friedrich Spranger (1966). "Eine Gebirgsbahn wird elektrifiziert". Der Modelleisenbahner (in German). transpress VEB Verlag für Verkehrswesen Berlin (9): 258–261.
  13. ^ Frank Siegesmund. "Neubautrasse bei Hetzdorf". Modelleisenbahner (in German). transpress VEB Verlag für Verkehrswesen Berlin (89): 5.
  14. ^ a b Deutsche Reichsbahn (c. 1992). Neubauabschnitt Hetzdorf an der Sachsenmagistrale Görlitz-Plauen (Vogtl.) (in German). Dresden. p. 37.
  15. ^ Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst. Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz – Schienennetz einer Industrieregion (in German). p. 98.
  16. ^ a b Henning Bösherz (2 February 2004). "Gruß aus Tharandt". ModellEisenBahner (in German): 34–37. ISSN 0026-7422.
  17. ^ Henning Bösherz (11 February 2004). "Gruß aus Tharandt". ModellEisenBahner (in German): 24–28. ISSN 0026-7422.
  18. ^ "DB nimmt erneuerte Streckenabschnitte in Westsachsen in Betrieb" (Press release) (in German). Deutsche Bahn AG. 12 December 2011.
  19. ^ "35 Millionen Euro fließen in Bahnstrecke". Freie Presse (in German). 13 May 2010. Retrieved 6 January 2017.
  20. ^ "Erneuerung von drei Eisenbahnbrücken sowie der Verkehrsstation Dresden-Plauen" (in German). Deutsche Bahn AG. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  21. ^ "Modernisierung der Bahnanlagen im Herzen von Chemnitz – Chemnitzer Bahnbogen" (in German). Deutsche Bahn AG. Retrieved 7 January 2017.
  22. ^ Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst. Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz – Schienennetz einer Industrieregion (in German). p. 88.
  23. ^ "Warum heißt es Dresden-Werdau?". Freie Presse (in German). 4 March 2013. p. 11.
  24. ^ Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst (1994). Dresdens Eisenbahn – 1894–1994. Düsseldorf: Alba. pp. 94 ff. ISBN 3-87094-350-5.
  25. ^ Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst (1994). Dresdens Eisenbahn – 1894–1994 (in German). Düsseldorf: Alba. p. 12. ISBN 3-87094-350-5.
  26. ^ Kurt Kaiß, Matthias Hengst: Dresdens Eisenbahn – 1894–1994, Alba, Düsseldorf 1994, ISBN 3-87094-350-5, S. 145
  27. ^ Annechristin Kleppisch; Linda Barthel (15 May 2014). Lästige Barrieren am Haltepunkt Plauen verschwinden (in German). Sächsische Zeitung. p. 17.
  28. ^ Jürgen Schubert (1993). Die Windbergbahn (in German). Nordhorn: Verlag Kenning. pp. 94f.
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  30. ^ Manfred Weisbrod; Ingo Neidhardt (1997). Sachsen-Report 5 –Gleispläne und Streckengeschichte (in German). Fürstenfeldbruck: Hermann Merker Verlag. p. 68. ISBN 3-89610-014-9.
  31. ^ Manfred Weisbrod; Ingo Neidhardt (1997). Sachsen-Report 5 –Gleispläne und Streckengeschichte (in German). Fürstenfeldbruck: Hermann Merker Verlag. pp. 47 f. ISBN 3-89610-014-9.
  32. ^ Klaus-Jürgen Kühne (2011). Bahnbetriebswerke der DDR – 1949–1993 (in German). Stuttgart: transpress-Verlag. p. 16. ISBN 978-3-613-71401-4.
  33. ^ "Niederbobritzsch" (in German). www.sachsenschiene.net. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
  34. ^ "Muldenhütten" (in German). www.sachsenschiene.net. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
  35. ^ Manfred Weisbrod; Ingo Neidhardt (1997). Sachsen-Report 5 –Gleispläne und Streckengeschichte (in German). Fürstenfeldbruck: Hermann Merker Verlag. p. 39 ff. ISBN 3-89610-014-9.
  36. ^ "Frankenstein (Sachs)" (in German). www.sachsenschiene.net. Retrieved 9 January 2017.
  37. ^ a b Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst. Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz – Schienennetz einer Industrieregion (in German). p. 104.
  38. ^ Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst. Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz – Schienennetz einer Industrieregion (in German). p. 117.
  39. ^ Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst. Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz – Schienennetz einer Industrieregion (in German). p. 93.
  40. ^ Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst. Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz – Schienennetz einer Industrieregion (in German). pp. 45 ff.
  41. ^ Steffen Kluttig (2006). Schienenverbindungen zwischen Chemnitz und Leipzig – Die Eisenbahnstrecken Kieritzsch–Chemnitz und Leipzig–Geithain (in German). Witzschdorf: Bildverlag Böttger. pp. 74 ff. ISBN 3-937496-17-3.
  42. ^ a b Kurt Kaiß, Matthias Hengst: Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz – Schienennetz einer Industrieregion, S. 87
  43. ^ "Track plan for Wüstenbrand station" (PDF). Deutsche Bahn. Retrieved 10 January 2017.
  44. ^ Manfred Weisbrod; Ingo Neidhardt (1997). Sachsen-Report 5 –Gleispläne und Streckengeschichte (in German). Fürstenfeldbruck: Hermann Merker Verlag. p. ;59. ISBN 3-89610-014-9.
  45. ^ Norbert Peschke (2010). Bahnhöfe in und um Zwickau – Verkehrsknoten Zwickau: Band 1 (in German). Fraureuth: Foto & Verlag Jacobi. pp. 119 f. ISBN 978-3-937228-40-2.
  46. ^ Norbert Peschke (2010). Bahnhöfe in und um Zwickau – Verkehrsknoten Zwickau: Band 1 (in German). Fraureuth: Foto & Verlag Jacobi. pp. 121 f. ISBN 978-3-937228-40-2.
  47. ^ "Title not known". S-Bahn News: Sondernewsletter zum Jubiläum (in German). DB Regio Südost: 4. October 2013.
  48. ^ "Title not known". S-Bahn News: Sondernewsletter zum Jubiläum (in German). DB Regio Südost: 9. October 2013.
  49. ^ "Aus für RE-Züge Nürnberg–Dresden, stets Umsteigen in Hof durch Elektrifizierung". Eisenbahn Magazin (in German) (10/2014): 20.

Sources

  • Friedrich Constantin von Beust (1852). Die Eisenbahnlinie von Dresden über Freiberg und Chemnitz nach Zwickau (in German). Freiberg: Verlag Engelhardt. Retrieved 11 January 2017.
  • Peter Beyer (2001). "Das Entstehen der Eisenbahnverbindung zwischen Sachsen-Bayern mit den Großbrücken im Göltzsch- und Elstertal 1836-1851". Sächsische Heimatblätter (in German). 47 (3): 139–155.
  • Heinrich, Rainer (2000). "Die Elektrifizierung des "Sächsischen Dreiecks"". Eisenbahn-Kurier (in German). 4 (337): 42–46. ISSN 0170-5288.
  • Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst (1994). Dresdens Eisenbahn: 1894 – 1994 (in German). Düsseldorf: Alba. ISBN 3-87094-350-5.
  • Kurt Kaiß; Matthias Hengst (1996). Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz – Schienennetz einer Industrieregion (in German). Düsseldorf: Alba. ISBN 3-87094-231-2.
  • Wilhelm Krausch (1849). Projection einer directen Eisenbahn-Verbindung zwischen Dresden, Freiberg und Chemnitz...nebst Zweigbahnen zu den Kohlenwerken links und rechts des Weißeritzthales und nach der Elbe bei Prießnitz (in German). Leipzig.
  • Erich Preuß; Reiner Preuß (1991). Sächsische Staatseisenbahnen (in German). Berlin: transpress Verlagsgesellschaft. pp. 73–78. ISBN 3-344-70700-0.

External links

  •   Media related to Dresden–Werdau railway at Wikimedia Commons
  • "Dresden–Chemnitz–Reichenbach (Vogtl)–Plauen (Vogtl) timetable in 1944" (in German). Retrieved 11 January 2017.
  • "Photographs of tunnel portals" (in German). Tunnelportale. Retrieved 29 November 2010.

dresden, werdau, railway, electrified, double, track, main, line, german, state, saxony, runs, from, dresden, freiberg, chemnitz, zwickau, werdau, where, joins, leipzig, railway, dresden, werdau, wyeoverviewline, number6258, saxon, 6257, saxon, dwchlocalesaxon. The Dresden Werdau railway is an electrified double track main line in the German state of Saxony It runs from Dresden via Freiberg Chemnitz and Zwickau to Werdau wye where it joins the Leipzig Hof railway Dresden Hbf Werdau wyeOverviewLine number6258 Saxon DW 6257 Saxon DWChLocaleSaxony GermanyTerminiDresden HbfWerdau wyeServiceRoute number510 510 3TechnicalLine length136 304 km 84 695 mi Number of tracks2Track gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeMinimum radius213 m 699 ft Electrification15 kV 16 7 Hz AC overhead catenaryOperating speed120 km h 74 6 mph maximum with tilting 160 km h 99 4 mph Maximum incline2 6 Route mapLegendfrom Decin 0 048 Dresden Hbf 117 mto Dresden Neustadt1 10 0 Dresden Altstadt junction Bk from Dresden Altstadt Elbe bank1 500 Dresden Altstadt 120 m2 922 Dresden Plauen since 1926 135 m3 70 0 Dresden Plauen until 1926 139 m0 Felsenkeller Tunnel roof removed in 1895 56 m 3 820 Bk Felsenkeller4 60 0 A 175 528 Freight line to Tharandt see below 5 670 Freital Ost junction Bk 155 m5 717 to Possendorf6 844 Freital Potschappel 162 mNarrow gauge line to Nossen andNiederhermsdorf coal branch line8 736 Freital Deuben 176 m10 092 Freital Hainsberg 187 mNarrow gauge line to Kurort Kipsdorf11 550 Freital Hainsberg West 190 mFreight line from Freital Ost junction13 705 Tharandt 208 m15 920 Bk Breiter Grund18 020 Edle Krone 281 m18 200 Edle Krone Tunnel 122 m Maximum gradient 2 6 1 37 5 21 520 Bk Seerenteich25 369 Klingenberg Colmnitz 436 mNarrow gauge lines to Frauensteinand Mohorn27 450 Colmnitz Viaduct 148 m 30 850 Niederbobritzsch 407 31 250 Niederbobritzsch Viaduct 175 m Ust Niederbobritzsch35 890 Muldenhutten 395 m36 490 Muldenhutten Viaduct 196 m 38 510 Kunstgraben Tunnel 36 m roof removed from Halsbruckefrom Moldava Holzhau40 005 Freiberg Sachs 413 mto Nossen42 30 0 Bk Hospitalwald42 810 Nossen Moldava45 380 Kleinschirma 415 m48 720 Frankenstein Viaduct 349 m 49 819 Frankenstein Sachs 396 m52 240 Bk Kaltes Feld54 380 Bk Memmendorf57 149 Oederan 407 m59 100 Bk Breitenau61 560 Bk Hetzdorf new route 1992 61 897 Hetzbach viaduct 344 m 62 300 Hetzdorf Viaduct 326 m Floha Valley Railway 62 805 Floha viaduct 344 m Floha Valley Railway 63 60064 566 km change 966 m64 750 Falkenau Sachs Sud 310 mfrom Neuhausen and Reitzenhain Marienbergfrom Annaberg Buchholz67 370 Floha 278 m67 625 B 180 level crossing68 079 Zschopau bridge 65 m 70 130 Niederwiesa junction sig box 170 170 B 73 LCfrom Rosswein71 280 Niederwiesa 291 m73 620 Bk Ebersdorf75 50 Bk Chemnitz Hilbersdorf sig box A76 0210 000 km change start of line 6257 0 490 Chemnitz Hilbersdorf 325 m76 520 Chemnitz Hilbersdorf 320 mfrom Kuchwald and Abzw Chemnitz Furth3 09878 600 km change end of line 6257 from Riesafrom Neukieritzsch79 730 Chemnitz Hbf 302 mconnection to Chemnitz tram network81 820 Chemnitz Sud 312 mto Aue and Stollberg82 630 Bk Chemnitz Sud82 850 Chemnitz Mitte 307 m83 480 Chemnitz Kappel 310 m85 530 Chemnitz Schonau 320 m85 900 Bk SchonauB 7288 010 Chemnitz Siegmar 326 m91 250 Gruna Sachs 350 mfrom Limbach and from Kuchwaldto Neuoelsnitz94 310 Wustenbrand former Keilbahnhof 378 m95 907 Bk Oberlungwitz98 230 Hohenstein Ernstthal 345 mInterurban tramway to Oelsnitz98 654 Hohenstein Ernstthal Oelsnitz tramway99 700 Huttengrund viaduct 150 m 101 220 Bk Hermsdorffrom Stollberg Sachs 104 910 St Egidien 283 m107 762 Bk Lobsdorf109 500 Bk NiederlungwitzGlauchau Wurzen railwayfrom Grossbothen112 140 Glauchau Sachs 244 m114 310 Bk Gesau115 990 Glauchau Schonbornchen 258 mto GossnitzNarrow gauge railway to Ortmannsdorf120 540 Mosel 257 Industrial line to Zwickau122 790 Oberrothenbach 265 m125 830 Zwickau Polbitz 270 mIndustrial line from Moselfrom Schwarzenberg Johanngeorgenstadt128 350 Zwickau Sachs Hbf Keilbahnhof 130 950 7 Oktober depotto Falkenstein Vogtl 131 600 Bk Maxhutte132 830 Lichtentanne Sachs 320 m134 502 Bk Steinpleis134 930 Steinpleis 310 m135 626 Steinpleis Viaduct135 700 Werdau wye Zwickau separation to Leipzig136 260 Werdau wye Neumark separation to HofSource German railway atlas 1 Freital Ost junction Tharandt freight railway OverviewLine number6259LocaleSaxonyTechnicalLine length8 250 km 5 126 mi Track gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeElectrification15 kV 16 7 Hz AC overhead catenaryOperating speed70 km h 43 5 mph maximum Route mapLegendfrom Dresden5 558 to Tharandt start of line 5 680 Freital Ost junction Bk 155 m6 1706 182 kn change 12 m6 844 Freital Potschappel 162 mnarrow gauge line to Nossen andNiederhermsdorf coal branch lineconnecting line to Freital Hainsbergconnecting line from Freital Potschappel10 092 Freital Hainsberg 187 mNarrow gauge line to Kurort Kipsdorffrom Freital Ost13 705 Tharandt 208 m13 820 end of line to WerdauSource German railway atlas 1 The line was opened in several sections and its first section from Werdau to Zwickau was opened 1845 making it one of the oldest railways in Germany The Dresden Tharandt section was completed in 1855 the Chemnitz Zwickau section followed in 1858 the line was extended from Tharandt to Freiberg in 1862 and the section from Chemnitz to Floha was opened as part of the line to Annaberg in 1866 The entire line was not open until 1869 when the missing section from Freiberg Floha was opened From then on the railway line developed into an important connection It continues to be an important part of the so called Saxon Franconian trunk line German Sachsen Franken Magistrale from Dresden to Nuremberg Contents 1 History 1 1 Reconstruction of the Chemnitz rail network 1 2 Elevation of the line between Dresden and Freital 1 3 Upgrade of the Zwickau railway lines 1 4 After the Second World War 1 5 Electrification 1 6 Reconstruction between Oederan and Floha 1 7 August 2002 floods 1 8 Upgrades since 2010 2 Route 2 1 Operating points 2 2 Engineering infrastructure 3 Traffic 4 References 4 1 Notes 4 2 Sources 5 External linksHistory Edit Albertsbahn ticket from about 1855 The modern Dresden Werdau line developed from a series of originally independent sections that were built with the support of the Saxon government and eventually became part of the Royal Saxon State Railways The first section opened on 6 September 1845 as a branch from the Saxon Bavarian Railway at the modern Werdau wye Werdau Bogendreieck junction to Zwickau The start of planning for a long distance railway from Dresden towards Bavaria was the request of mine owners in the Plauen Valley Plauenscher Grund of the Weisseritz river for a line to connect their coal mines with Dresden The request was granted and on 4 May 1853 the easternmost section of the line from Dresden to Tharandt was opened with branch lines to the mines The line opened on 18 June 1855 2 as the Albertsbahn Albert Railway named after Prince Albert of Saxony On 15 November 1858 the Chemnitz Zwickau section was opened as part of the Riesa Chemnitz Zwickau route of the Niedererzgebirgische Staatsbahn Lower Ore Mountains State Railway However the planned extension from Tharandt to Freiberg turned out to be problematic At first the steep slopes between Tharandt and Freiberg were insuperable 3 Ultimately a route was selected along the Seerenbach Valley to Klingenberg with a maximum gradient of 1 in 40 Several large viaducts had to be built across the successive valleys of the Colmnitzbach Bobritzsch and Freiberger Mulde rivers By the time construction of this line started in 1859 rail engineers had acquired experience with steep haul operations on such inclines as the Schiefe Ebene and the Geislinger Steige The line was opened to Freiberg on 11 August 1862 The route of the missing section between Freiberg and Chemnitz was more controversial A connection through Hainichen had long been favoured Ultimately it was decided to build the shorter but more expensive route through Oederan which had a steep ramp section and required the construction of several large viaducts Between Floha and Chemnitz the line used the route of the Chemnitz Annaberg railway which had opened in 1866 and only the installation of a second track was necessary On 1 April 1869 the Freiberg Chemnitz section was opened so that for the first time a connection existed between the eastern and the Western Royal Saxon State Railways in Saxony 4 As a result the now completed Dresden Werdau railway became an important rail link between Silesia and Southern Germany On 19 September 1895 a military train and a passenger train collided at Oederan Ten people died and six were also injured 5 Reconstruction of the Chemnitz rail network Edit In the 1880s the Chemnitz railway node was no longer able to cope with the increase in traffic especially freight In spite of major upgrades at various locations including the expansion of the Altchemnitz station and the construction of the Kappel freight yard the construction of a marshalling yard became unavoidable Finally various projects were selected which included construction to the south of the existing workshops At the same time the Dresden Werdau railway was moved north of the workshops Construction began in 1896 and the marshalling yard was opened in 1902 6 Around the turn of the century road traffic in the city of Chemnitz was growing As the rail traffic also increased the numerous level crossings became more and more of a problem A railway attendant with a warning flag and a bell had to walk in front of the train at Dresdner Platz Therefore from January 1903 the Chemnitz Altchemnitz section was lowered and the section between Altchemnitz and Chemnitz coal yard was raised above street level In addition the line was rebuilt with four tracks in these sections The reconstruction was completed at the end of 1909 7 Since the Chemnitz Adorf railway was upgraded to two tracks as far as Einsiedel at the same time six tracks were now located next to each other on the section between Chemnitz Hauptbahnhof and Chemnitz Sud Traffic continued to increase after the end of the First World War Therefore quadruplication of the Niederwiesa Chemnitz Hilbersdorf section was started in 1915 8 and finally completed in 1924 Since the Hilbersdorf marshalling yard was inadequate possible solutions were sought Proposals for another line south or north of the existing main Dresden Werdau line were not pursued Instead of a proposal that had gained favour that included a complicated southern detour with three tunnels that were each about 1 km long an upgrade of the existing marshalling yard was carried out Despite this reconstruction which was completed in 1930 Chemnitz station remained an intractable bottleneck 9 Elevation of the line between Dresden and Freital Edit Level crossing at the street of Altplauen around 1910 Dresden Plauen S Bahn station is now in the same place on a bridge In 1900 the situation on the Dresden Freital section was similar to that in Chemnitz the growing road and rail traffic caused more and more problems Therefore from 1901 to 1905 the railway was also raised higher in order to eliminate the level crossings 10 Around 1910 the tracks on the Dresden Hbf Dresden Plauen section and from 1909 to 1912 on the Freital Ost junction Tharandt section were quadrupled At the same time the station facilities were rebuilt From then on the freight traffic could be separated from the passenger traffic Because of the First World War work on a 3 km long section in between was not carried out beyond preparatory work The elevation of the tracks took place between 1923 and 1926 on the section between the Dresden Altstadt exit and Weisseritzbrucke in the vicinity of old Dresden Plauen station The old Dresden Plauen station was closed and replaced by a new building at its current site Upgrade of the Zwickau railway lines Edit In Zwickau the railway network was also not longer able to cope with traffic by around 1910 as traffic had risen sharply since the 1880s but the rail infrastructure had hardly changed At that time the largest railway freight yard in Saxony had to be fundamentally rebuilt At the same time the tracks were to be elevated as in Chemnitz and Dresden so as not to obstruct road traffic This work was delayed by the First World War and actual construction only began after the end of the war However this work went very slowly so the elevation of the lines between Zwickau Polbitz and Zwickau Hauptbahnhof took place between 1921 and 1925 11 level crossings were replaced completely For the most part the reconstruction works during which the Hauptbahnhof received a new entrance building were not completed until the end of the 1930s Further construction began during the Second World War but it could not be finished due to personnel and material shortages 11 After the Second World War Edit While large sections of the railway largely survived World War II numerous railway installations were severely damaged or completely destroyed especially in the Dresden Chemnitz and Zwickau areas In contrast to other lines however no major bridges were blown up by the Wehrmacht However in 1946 the line was completely dismantled down to one track and numerous platform tracks were dismantled as war reparations As the ability of the important line to handle traffic was considerably reduced the second track was restored on some sections in Dresden and Chemnitz by the early 1950s The second track was restored on the bulk of the route in the 1960s and 1970s but it was not until the middle of the 1970s that the second track had been completely re built Nevertheless the line did not achieve the same importance as it did before the Second World War since the division of Germany after 1945 meant that most traffic now ran in the north south direction Electrification Edit After the re electrification of the network in Central Germany the electrification of the so called Sachsisches Dreieck Saxon triangle the Dresden Werdau Leipzig Dresden and Leipzig Zwickau lines was one of the most important investment projects of Deutsche Reichsbahn In addition to significant cost savings in railway operations this also promised a significant reduction in travel times particularly as the use of bank engines on the steep slopes on the Tharandt Klingenberg Colmnitz and Floha Oederan sections would no longer be necessary with electric traction Construction work for the electric catenary started in the early 1960s The construction of the facilities between Freiberg and Werdau was relatively unproblematic However the electrification between Dresden and Freiberg especially around Edle Krone was more difficult because restricted clearances hindered the construction of the catenary The most important building project in this section was the widening of the Edle Krone tunnel since the lowering of the tracks was impossible because of bridges connecting directly to the tunnel Many catenary masts had to be constructed as special constructions with catenary supports over both tracks The overhead was opened between 1963 and 1966 in sections starting from Werdau Opening Section km0 1 October 1963 Altenburg Werdau Zwickau 44 730 May 1965 Zwickau Karl Marx Stadt Hilbersdorf 52 326 September 1965 Karl Marx Stadt Hilbersdorf Freiberg 36 225 September 1966 Freiberg Dresden Hbf 42 6The possible travel time reductions were put into full effect in the winter 1966 67 timetable Steam driven express trains needed a total of 55 minutes between Karl Marx Stadt Hbf and Freiberg After the electrification the running time was reduced to only 35 minutes Even more significant reductions in travel time for freight trains resulted from the discontinuation of bank engine operations between Floha and Oederan The 1300 tonne Dg 7301 locomotives took 61 minutes on the same section compared with 122 minutes before electrification 12 Reconstruction between Oederan and Floha Edit Hetzdorf Viaduct at the beginning of the 1990s In the mid 1980s the Hetzdorf Viaduct over the Floha valley in the distinct of Mittelsachsen which dated from the opening of that section of the line had reached the end of its service life In the final years crossing the viaduct was only possible at a top speed of 20 km h which greatly restricted the section s capacity Deutsche Reichsbahn eventually designed a straightened route bypassing the old viaduct The new bridge consists of two prestressed concrete bridges each 344 metres long that cross the Hetzbach and Floha valleys The construction company VEB Autobahnbaukombinat Publicly Owned Operation for motorway construction combine built the bridges from 1987 onwards using the incremental launch method for the first time during the construction of a railway bridge in East Germany The new line was completed and put into operation on 12 May 1992 shortening the connection between Dresden and Chemnitz by about one kilometre 13 14 15 The new section is 2 033 9 metres long 966 1 m shorter than the old route It has grades of up to 1 68 14 August 2002 floods Edit Among other things near the Felsenkeller Brewery in the Plauenschengrund flooded by the Weisseritz in the August 2002 and severely damaged The about 25 km long Dresden Klingenberg Colmnitz section was heavily damaged by the 2002 floods on 12 August especially by the Wild Weisseritz and the Weisseritz and more than 15 km of the line was completely destroyed The section had previously been extensively renovated and was due to be returned to service on 13 August 2002 16 Between Klingenberg Colmnitz and Dresden rail replacement bus services were established and long distance traffic on the Chemnitz Dresden section was only served by replacement buses From the autumn of 2003 Tharandt station was served again from Freiberg and services on the remainder of the line were restored on 14 December 2003 16 During the construction work the need for protection from future floods was taken into account Among other things the bridge abutments were built at a right angle to the direction of flow 17 Upgrades since 2010 Edit The seven kilometre section between Hohenstein Ernstthal and St Egidien was upgraded from mid May 2010 to mid December 2011 Around 38 million was used from an economic stimulus package and from Deutsche Bahn s own resources 18 19 From the beginning of 2010 to December 2013 the approximately 490 m long underpass running under Dresdner Platz in Chemnitz that is used by the parallel tracks of the Dresden Werdau and Chemnitz Adorf railways was replaced at a cost of 25 million During the demolition of the old tracks and the new construction both road and railways were kept open for traffic Deutsche Bahn AG is planning to rebuild three rail overpasses in Plauen from 2016 to 2018 and to rebuild Dresden Plauen station in a different location The new station will be barrier free and have a lift Concrete plans have not yet been completed 20 Deutsche Bahn AG is also planning to modernise the Chemnitzer Bahnbogen Chemnitz railway arc a 2 8 kilometre long section of the Dresden Werdau railway in the city of Chemnitz probably from 2019 to 2022 The planned measures include among other things the reconstruction of Chemnitz Sud station the relocation of Chemnitz Mitte station to a new station at Stollberger Strasse and the reconstruction of tracks overhead lines retaining walls and five railway overbridges In addition to the Chemnitz Viaduct the bridges included are the crossings of Augustusburger Strasse Bernsdorfer Strasse Reichenhainer Strasse and Stollberger Strasse The railway viaduct in Reichsstrasse is being refurbished and refilled The federal government and Deutsche Bahn AG have set aside a total of around 95 million for these measures The new construction and the reconstruction are to be carried out with rail operations continuing on a single track The planning approval procedure was initiated in September 2015 If this can be completed by 2018 construction may start by 2019 21 Route Edit Approach to Dresden Hauptbahnhof The route leaves Dresden Hauptbahnhof and runs to a triangular junction where lines branch off to Dresden Neustadt and turns south past the rail museum in the former Dresden Altstadt depot From Dresden Plauen station it runs to Freital through the narrow valley of the Weisseritz known as the Plauenscher Grund and crosses Autobahn 17 The standard gauge Windberg Railway Windbergbahn formerly branched off between Dresden Plauen and Freital Potschappel Just south of Freital Hainsberg where the 750 mm gauge Weisseritz Valley Railway begins the line passes the confluence of the Weisseritz s tributaries the Red Weisseritz and the Wild Weisseritz The line follows the Wild Weisseritz through Tharandt to Edle Krone To the west lies the Tharandt Forest The line is used by S Bahn line S3 as far as Tharandt Starting in Tharandt the line is extremely steep for a main line with a slope of 1 in 40 sometimes even 1 in 39 In the age of steam which lasted until the electrification of the line in the mid 1960s this ramp could only be climbed by the use of locomotives in multiple This gradient was necessary to climb the Ore Mountain Foreland Erzgebirgsvorland After Edle Krone station the line runs through a 122 metre long tunnel In Klingenberg Colmnitz the line reaches 435 m above sea level a rise of 228 metres in 11 6 kilometres This station was once the starting point of the 750 mm gauge railways of the Wilsdruff Network to Frauenstein and Oberdittmannsdorf Frankenstein Viaduct built 1868 New Hetzdorf Viaduct Now begins a section with a number of viaducts The first viaduct spans the Colmnitzbach in Colmnitz In Niederbobritzsch a town in the district of Bobritzsch the line crosses the Bobritzsch river on a 26 metre high 85 ft viaduct After Muldenhutten station the line crosses the 196 metres long and 42 8 metres high viaduct over the Freiberger Mulde At the 40 0 km mark the line reaches Freiberg station It was formerly a major rail hub but it is now only the end point for Dresden S Bahn line S30 peak hour services and the starting point of the branch line to Holzhau The line to Holzhau together with the Zellwaldbahn Zellwald Railway form the Nossen Moldava Moldau line which was restored to operation on 5 November 2005 That line branches off to the west of Freiberg station and runs north to Nossen At this junction the Dresden Werdau line passes under federal highway 173 for the first time About 1 5 km east of Frankenstein station in Wegefahrt the line runs across one of the most impressive railway viaducts of the 19th century the 348 5 metre long 1 143 ft and 39 metre high 128 ft Frankenstein viaduct which crosses the valley of the Striegis Shortly before Oederan the line passes under highway 173 again Before Floha the line connects with the branch line from Marienberg and Olbernhau Until 1991 the line crossed the Floha river on the old Hetzdorf Viaduct it now runs along a new section with two prestressed concrete viaducts After passing the junction with the Marienberg branch line and another line from Annaberg Buchholz the line reaches the town of Floha and then crosses the Zschopau river Niederwiesa the second last stop before Chemnitz Hauptbahnhof for regional trains is the beginning of a branch line to Hainichen Chemnitz Hilbersdorf station used to be the site of an important rail depot and one of the largest marshalling yards in Saxony it is now closed After connecting with two lines from the north the line from Riesa and the line from Leipzig the Dresden Werdau line reaches Chemnitz Hauptbahnhof Beckerbrucke Viaduct in Chemnitz 2016 After the station the railway line runs along a wide curve south of the city centre as a direct route through the centre was not possible at the time of the construction 22 At Chemnitz Sud south a line branches off to Aue and to Stollberg The Dresden Werdau line turns to the west running through the suburbs of Chemnitz and then starts to leave the wide basin of the Chemnitz river Before Chemnitz Siegmar the line passes under the A 72 During the time of East Germany the area west of Chemnitz was in the county of Hohenstein Ernstthal which was the most densely populated county in that country Accordingly the density of stations in the region is unusually high After Hohenstein Ernstthal the line passes under highway B 180 to reach St Egidien station where another line to Stollberg starts At Glauchau the Glauchau Wurzen railway Mulde Valley Railway used to branch off but almost all of it is now closed At the next station Glauchau Schonbornchen the line to Gossnitz branches off The line now turns south and follows the course of the Zwickauer Mulde The line passes through the town of Mosel which is the location of a Volkswagen factory and crosses the four lane federal highway B 93 and B 175 After 128 km the line finally reaches Zwickau Hauptbahnhof The line continues past the disused Zwickau marshalling yard for about five km west to Werdau wye Werdau Bogendreieck junction which enables trains leaving Zwickau to run forward in either direction on the Leipzig Hof railway that is both to Leipzig via Werdau and to Hof and Nuremberg via Reichenbach The line ends here 135 96 km from Dresden 23 Operating points Edit Dresden Albertbahnhof 51 02 55 N 13 42 55 E 51 0486 N 13 7152 E 51 0486 13 7152 The line originally started at the Albertbahnhof Albert station of the Albertsbahn AG company After its nationalisation the line was integrated into the Dresdner Bohmischen Bahnhof Dresden Bohemian station the current main station Since the spring of 1869 all passenger trains have run from the Bohemian station From then on the Albertbahnhof served as a so called Kohlenbahnhof coal station for freight transport only so that for example approximately 500 000 tonnes of coal were handled there annually in around 1900 Gradually however the station lost its importance although in the 1960s the construction and operation of the Nossenerbrucke cogeneration power station led to a stabilisation of transshipment volumes After 1990 freight traffic collapsed completely with the only major transport activity recorded during the construction of the Dresden World Trade Center 24 All the rail infrastructure has been demolished Dresden Hauptbahnhof in about 1900 Dresden Hbf 51 02 25 N 13 43 53 E 51 0403 N 13 7313 E 51 0403 13 7313 Main article Dresden Hauptbahnhof As each of the original railway companies had built its own station in Dresden there was originally no central station was for the transfer of passengers Nevertheless passenger trains running towards Werdau started to run from the Bohemian station in 1869 which became increasingly the city s busiest station When the railway facilities became completely overloaded in the early 1890s it was decided to make a major change In addition to the creation of the Dresden Friedrichstadt station the construction of a main station Hauptbahnhof was one of the central elements The new station located on the site of the Bohemian station was opened in 1898 The trains coming from the Werdau direction now terminated on the low level terminal tracks 25 Plans for additional new construction elsewhere were not implemented either before or after the Second World War Dresden Plauen 51 01 47 N 13 42 12 E 51 0296 N 13 7032 E 51 0296 13 7032 Main article Dresden Plauen railway station Plauen bei Dresden Plauen near Dresden halt was opened on 18 June 1855 together with the Albertsbahn Albert Railway and was located to the left south east of the railway In 1897 the so called Alte Bahnhof old station Plauen was opened with the station building located near the right hand side of the current tracks Since the station was located quite poorly for the population of Dresden Plauen which had now grown to 12 000 people a new station was opened about 800 m further north in January 1926 and the old station was closed 26 This halt opened in 1926 is to be renovated by the middle of 2018 27 Freital Ost Freital east junction 51 00 58 N 13 40 27 E 51 016001 N 13 674150 E 51 016001 13 674150 The Windberg Railway starts at the former Block post of Freital Ost junction on the Dresden Werdau railway From 1912 the line branched off the main line to the right and ran parallel with the freight line to Tharandt and then crossed it at the so called Hollenmaul hell s mouth A further railway connection to Freital Ost station only served freight traffic In 1946 Deutsche Reichsbahn dismantled both branches as war reparations to the Soviet Union All the rail operations now took place on track 1 which had originally been built as a separate link to Freital Potschappel station The Hollenmaul was filled in 1984 and completely demolished during the upgrade of this section of the Dresden Werdau railway in 2003 The points at Freital Ost junction were abolished in 2003 28 Freital Potschappel 51 00 48 N 13 39 41 E 51 0133 N 13 6615 E 51 0133 13 6615 Main article Freital Potschappel station Of the six Freital stations Freital Potschappel station is the most important 29 The Niederhermsdorfer Kohlezweigbahn Niederhermsdorf coal branch railway branched off here to two coal shafts from 1856 onwards Its route was used in the construction of the 750 mm gauge Potschappel Wilsdruff railway opened in 1886 Extensive goods and transhipment facilities were built In Potschappel which were further expanded during the elevation of the line and its quadruplication after 1900 30 In 1913 a narrow gauge connecting track was established which was used for freight transport and the exchange of rolling stock with the Weisseritz Valley Railway Weisseritztalbahn The narrow gauge line towards Wilsdruff was shut down in 1972 since which the maintenance of Weisseritz Valley Railway rolling stock has only been carried out in Freital Potschappel Freital Deuben 50 59 57 N 13 38 47 E 50 9993 N 13 6465 E 50 9993 13 6465The halt has had three different names during its period of operations until 11 January 1918 Deuben until 30 September 1921 Deuben Bez Dresden since 1 October 1921 Freital DeubenThe halt was opened in 1855 and is located on the border between the two Freital districts of Deuben and Dohlen The station had a great importance in commuter traffic until the turn of the century due to the founding of the steelworks in Dohlen also in 1855 where up to 5 000 people were employed 31 Today services on line S 3 of the Dresden S Bahn and Dresden Zwickau Regionalbahn services stop at the station When Interregio Express services ran they also stopped there With the abandonment of the use of tilting stopping at the station was abandoned in order to save time Freital Hainsberg 50 59 20 N 13 38 13 E 50 9890 N 13 6370 E 50 9890 13 6370 Freital Hainsberg station Main article Freital Hainsberg station Freital Hainsberg station has been the terminus of the narrow gauge Weisseritz Valley Railway since 1 November 1882 Its present appearance dates from its reconstruction in 1903 to 1912 as a transhipment station between the standard and narrow gauge railways In addition to the locomotive depot and the former freight transport infrastructure there are several sidings The station was opened on 28 June 1855 and was raised to the status of a station on 1 October 1874 The station has had four different names in its history until 12 January 1918 Hainsberg until 12 December 1933 Hainsberg Sa until 29 September 1965 Hainsberg Sachs since 29 September 1965 Freital HainsbergIn Freital Hainsberg is served by services of the S Bahn line S3 and Regionalbahn line RB30 between Dresden and Zwickau Freital Hainsberg West 50 58 52 N 13 37 22 E 50 9810 N 13 6227 E 50 9810 13 6227 Freital Hainsberg West station Freital Hainsberg West halt was opened on 25 September 1977 It has an island platform and three tracks Entrance building of Tharandt station Tharandt 50 58 59 N 13 35 34 E 50 9830 N 13 5929 E 50 9830 13 5929 Main article Tharandt station Tharandt station east of the city of Tharandt was of great importance until electrification in the 1960s In order to cope with the steep gradient up to Klingenberg Colmnitz most of the trains received an additional bank or pilot locomotive In freight traffic this procedure was still practiced until the 1990s The locomotive depot for the bank locomotives was superfluous after the electrification and was disbanded in September 1966 32 Until its demolition in the 1990s it served as a depot of the Dresden Transport Museum Today most services of line S3 of the Dresden S Bahn terminate in Tharandt and it is also served by the Franken Sachsen Express Edle Krone Edle Krone 50 57 00 N 13 35 01 E 50 9500 N 13 5835 E 50 9500 13 5835 Edle Krone halt was opened on 11 August 1862 as Haltestelle Hockendorf and renamed Edle Krone in 1871 The station is in the Wild Weisseritz valley on the southeastern edge of the Tharandt Forest Tharandter Wald was reclassified as a station on 1 May 1905 but reverted to a halt on 31 July 1999 Klingenberg Colmnitz 50 55 33 N 13 30 03 E 50 9258 N 13 5007 E 50 9258 13 5007 Main article Klingenberg Colmnitz station Klingenberg Colmnitz was the mountain station of the Tharandter Steige From 1898 to 1972 the 750 mm gauge railways to Frauenstein and to Oberdittmannsdorf began in the station Niederbobritzsch 50 54 05 N 13 26 26 E 50 9013 N 13 4406 E 50 9013 13 4406 Niederbobritzsch halt was opened on 11 August 1862 and was reclassified as a station in 1905 Later the station reverted to being a halt The station building is still preserved at the site 33 Since 9 December 2007 it is served by the Dresden S Bahn in the peaks Muldenhutten station 2016 Muldenhutten 50 54 19 N 13 23 20 E 50 9052 N 13 3888 E 50 9052 13 3888 Muldenhutten station was opened as a halt on 8 December 1861 In 1905 the station was reclassified as a station but it was downgraded to a halt In 2002 Since 9 December 2007 the station has served by the Dresden S Bahn in the peaks In the immediate vicinity is the industrial area of Muldenhutten the oldest still operating industrial site in Germany The entrance building was demolished in 2004 34 Freiberg Sachs station Freiberg Sachs 50 54 29 N 13 20 40 E 50 9081 N 13 3444 E 50 9081 13 3444 Main article Freiberg Sachs station Freiberg station was opened on 11 August 1862 as the terminus of the line from Dresden which was extended to Chemnitz in 1869 The construction of the Nossen Moldava railway 1873 1885 and the branch lines to Halsbrucke Langenau and Grosshartmannsdorf 1890 made Freiberg one of the most important railway junctions in Saxony Kleinschirma station 2016 Kleinschirma 50 54 10 N 13 16 54 E 50 9027 N 13 2817 E 50 9027 13 2817 Kleinschirma halt was inaugurated on 1 March 1869 It is located in the south west of the village near federal highway 173 Frankenstein station 2016 Frankenstein Sachs 50 54 09 N 13 13 41 E 50 9024 N 13 2281 E 50 9024 13 2281 The station has had four different names until 30 April 1903 Frankenstein until 30 June 1911 Frankenstein in Sachsen until 21 December 1933 Frankenstein Sa since 22 December 1933 Frankenstein Sachs Although the station lies on the municipality of Oberschona the station was named after Frankenstein which lies about 750 metres awayn now in the municipality of Oederan In addition to Oberschona about one kilometre away the station also serves Wegefarth At first Frankenstein was only a halt but it was reclassified as a station on 1 May 1905 Although initially located on an open field where the Oberschona Frankenstein road crossed the line several businesses were established in the immediate vicinity of the station Several railway residences were also built near the station The locality is now named Bahnhof Frankenstein after the station Apart from an entrance building which was built as a typically Saxon rectangular building a freight shed was built There was also a loading ramp and a side loading ramp for freight transport A private siding branched off within the station 35 The station tracks have now been dismantled except for the two main tracks and a crossover Access to the outer platform is now via the road level crossing instead of the former station level crossing 36 Oederan station Oederan 50 51 26 N 13 10 34 E 50 8572 N 13 1761 E 50 8572 13 1761 Oederan station was opened on 1 March 1869 Between 1905 and 1930 the name was spelled Oderan Falkenau Sachs Sud station Falkenau Sachs Sud 50 50 57 N 13 06 32 E 50 8492 N 13 1090 E 50 8492 13 1090 Falkenau Sachs Sud halt was opened on 1 March 1869 as Falkenau station It has had the following names until 1911 Falkenau until 1933 Falkenau Sa until 1966 Falkenau Sachs As the present name suggests the station is located in the south of the suburb of Floha to which it now belongs Falkenau Sachs Hp halt which opened in 1928 is located on the Reitzenhain Floha railway and is located on the northeast edge of Falkenau Entrance building of Floha station 2008 Floha 50 51 15 N 13 04 33 E 50 8541 N 13 0758 E 50 8541 13 0758 Main article Floha station At first Floha station was only a through station on the Chemnitz Annaberg railway opened in 1866 With the building of the Freiberg Floha section of the Dresden Werdau railway a new station was built to the north east of the existing station Since then the entrance building has been a Keilbahnhof wedge station With the construction of the Reitzenhain Floha railway opened in 1875 another station was built to the northeast by the Chemnitz Komotauer Eisenbahngesellschaft Chemnitz Chomutov Railway Company 37 38 The present stately entrance building was built during a large reconstruction of the station in the 1930s 37 Although the station has been substantially reconstructed there are still six platform faces available Niederwiesa station Niederwiesa 50 51 45 N 13 01 24 E 50 8626 N 13 0232 E 50 8626 13 0232 Niederwiesa station was opened on 14 May 1866 It has been the terminus of the Rosswein Niederwiesa railway since 1869 Trains have only operated to Hainichen since 1998 Since the modernisation of this line it has been part of City Bahn Chemnitz Chemnitz HIlbersdorf station with City Bahn service 2016 Chemnitz Hilbersdorf Hp 50 51 42 N 12 57 12 E 50 8618 N 12 9534 E 50 8618 12 9534 Chemnitz Hilbersdorf was first opened as a halt point Haltepunkt on 15 August 1893 Already after a short time it was reclassified as halt place Haltestelle This was upgraded with the construction of the marshalling yard to a station Bahnhof At the same time the station was moved to the present location between Chemnitz Hilbersdorf and Ebersdorf 39 The station is now classified as a halt point Chemnitz Hilbersdorf 50 51 40 N 12 57 08 E 50 8612 N 12 9521 E 50 8612 12 9521 Main article Chemnitz Hilbersdorf station The marshalling yard which was urgently needed to relieve Chemnitz Hauptbahnhof from freight traffic was built between 1896 and 1902 at the location of the first Hilbersdorf station In addition to the marshalling yard which was designed as a hump yard extensive locomotive maintenance facilities were built which later developed into the Bahnbetriebswerk Chemnitz Hilbersdorf Since the capacity of the station in the 1920s was no longer sufficient it was modernised in the late 1920s A modern marshalling layout was installed Thus Hilbersdorf was the second largest marshalling yard in the railway division of Dresden Reichsbahndirektion Dresden after Dresden Friedrichstadt After German reunification in 1989 90 freight traffic almost collapsed Therefore large parts of the marshalling yard were abandoned and the yard was completely closed in 1996 The Saxon Railway Museum is now housed in the former locomotive depot 40 Chemnitz Hbf 50 50 28 N 12 55 53 E 50 8411 N 12 9314 E 50 8411 12 9314 Main article Chemnitz Hauptbahnhof Today s Chemnitz Hauptbahnhof was built in 1852 as the terminus of the Riesa Chemnitz route With the opening of the Chemnitz Zwickau 1858 Chemnitz Annaberg 1866 Borna Chemnitz and Chemnitz Adorf 1875 lines it became one of the most important Saxon railway nodes In addition to passenger traffic the station was also important in freight transport as it was the only station in Chemnitz that handled freight until the end of the 1870s Since the 1990s its importance has been greatly diminished by the general drop in traffic loss of long distance services and the closure of some lines Freight is no longer handled at the station The large Chemnitz Hbf locomotive depot Bahnbetriebswerk which was later worked jointly with the Chemnitz Hilbersdorf locomotive depot still exists today as the Chemnitz locomotive depot 41 Train shed of Karl Marx Stadt Hauptbahnhof in 1976 Entrance building and forecourt of Chemnitz Hauptbahnhof 2015 Chemnitz Sud station Chemnitz Sud 50 49 24 N 12 55 34 E 50 8233 N 12 9260 E 50 8233 12 9260 Main article Chemnitz Sud station The station later called Chemnitz Sud was built in 1875 when the Chemnitz Aue Adorfer Eisenbahn Gesellschaft Chemnitz Aue Adorf Railway Company established its own station for its Chemnitz Adorf railway The company was nationalised one year later and the trains were then connected to the main station as were the trains on the Zwonitz Chemnitz Sud railway which opened in 1895 Today s station was built during the 1900s during the raising and lowering of sections of the line For the first time trains on the Dresden Werdau line also stopped there had been no platform on this line before Particularly in freight transport Chemnitz Sud had early significance and its large freight station section was administered as a separate operating point for a time Chemnitz Mitte 50 49 35 N 12 54 45 E 50 8265 N 12 9124 E 50 8265 12 9124 Chemnitz Mitte station 2016 Platform for Werdau 2013 Karl Marx Stadt Kappel container yard 1982 Chemnitz Kappel 50 49 24 N 12 54 09 E 50 8234 N 12 9025 E 50 8234 12 9025 The halt had five different names during its period of operations until 31 July 1882 Chemnitz Kohlenbf until 30 April 1904 Kappel i Sachsen until 30 June 1911 Chemnitz Kappel Guterbf until 9 May 1953 Chemnitz Kappel until 29 May 1990 Karl Marx Stadt Kappel since 30 May 1990 Chemnitz KappelThe 1880 station was opened as Chemnitz Kohlenbahnhof Chemnitz coal yard This meant that the numerous factories in the west of the city had access to a nearby freight yard At first it had been planned to build a yard at Nicolaivorstadt but since the land required for the construction was much cheaper in Kappel the yard was built there 42 Chemnitz Kappel was converted into a container depot at the end of the 1960s The container loading facility went into operation in December 1968 as a separate operating point The yard was finally closed in 1999 42 After that all the tracks have been dismantled so that the area is as run down as the Hilbersdorf yard Chemnitz Schonau station Chemnitz Schonau 50 49 05 N 12 52 35 E 50 8181 N 12 8764 E 50 8181 12 8764 The halt has had four different names during its operations until 31 October 1950 Wanderer Werke until 9 May 1953 Chemnitz Wanderer Werke until 29 May 1990 Karl Marx Stadt Schonau since 30 May 1990 Chemnitz SchonauThe station was opened in 1940 mainly for commuter traffic to the numerous industrial enterprises along this section of the line Today the facilities consist of two side platforms which are connected by a pedestrian bridge Chemnitz Siegmar station Chemnitz Siegmar 50 48 57 N 12 50 50 E 50 8158 N 12 8473 E 50 8158 12 8473 The station had four different names during its period of operations at its opening Siegmar until 31 October 1950 Siegmar Schonau until 9 May 1953 Chemnitz Siegmar until 29 May 1990 Karl Marx Stadt Siegmar since 30 May 1990 Chemnitz SiegmarAlthough the station was opened in 1858 it gained importance during the period of industrialisation in the late 19th century when numerous companies built larger factories in the station area Gruna Sachs 2016 station Gruna Sachs 50 48 41 N 12 47 55 E 50 8113 N 12 7985 E 50 8113 12 7985 Gruna Sachs halt was opened on 15 November 1858 Gruna had a second station between 1897 and 2004 called Gruna Sachs ob Bf which was built on the Limbach Wustenbrand and Kuchwald Obergruna railways The halt on the Dresden Werdau railway bore the following names until 1910 Gruna until 1911 Gruna Sachsen Hp until 1933 Gruna Sa Hp since 1933 Gruna Sachs Hp Wustenbrand station Wustenbrand 50 48 19 N 12 45 23 E 50 8054 N 12 7565 E 50 8054 12 7565 Main article Wustenbrand station Wustenbrand station has existed since the opening of the railway in 1858 At first only the Neuoelsnitz Wustenbrand railway of the Chemnitz Wurschnitzer Eisenbahngesellschaft Chemnitz Wurschnitz Railway Company connected there It was later extended to Hohlteich The Limbach Wustenbrand railway was opened in 1897 The latter partly served together with the Kuchwald Obergruna railway opened in 1903 as a detour for the Chemnitz Wustenbrand section All three lines have now been closed but Wustenbrand can now be used for overtaking There are also two freight tracks which are not currently used 43 The now demolished entrance building of Hohenstein Ernstthal with the station forecourt 2003 Hohenstein Ernstthal 50 47 54 N 12 42 22 E 50 7984 N 12 7062 E 50 7984 12 7062 Main article Hohenstein Ernstthal station The Hohenstein Ernstthal Oelsnitz Tramway an interurban had its starting point on the forecourt of Hohenstein Ernstthal station from 1913 to 1960 The station was extensively rebuilt in the 2000s The entrance building part of which dated from the beginning has been demolished and replaced by a bus station There are now only three tracks in the station St Egidien 50 47 21 N 12 37 21 E 50 7893 N 12 6224 E 50 7893 12 6224 Main article Sankt Egidien station St Egidien station was opened on 15 November 1858 Since 1879 the station has also been the terminus of the Stollberg St Egidien railway which have been operated by diesel City Bahn Chemnitz services since its modernisation St Egidien station front view 2016 St Egidien station track side 2016 Non stopping RE service to Dresden in St Egidien station 2016 St Egidien station with an approaching RB service to Zwickau 2016 St Egidien station with RB service to Zwickau 2016 Glauchau Sachs 50 49 44 N 12 32 57 E 50 8288 N 12 5493 E 50 8288 12 5493 Main article Glauchau Sachs station Until 1875 Glauchau station was a through station With the opening of the Glauchau Wurzen railway Glauchau also received a locomotive depot which later became Bahnbetriebswerk Glauchau which was an independent operating point until the end of 1993 Glauchau Schonbornchen 50 49 18 N 12 30 06 E 50 8218 N 12 5017 E 50 8218 12 5017 Glauchau Schonbornchen halt until 1931 Schonbornchen has existed since 1 November 1885 Previously there had only been a junction with the line to Gossnitz With the conversion of the station tracks to electronic interlocking the station which was temporarily classified as a station Bahnhof reverted to being a halt Haltepunkt that is it has no sets of points Glauchau station Glauchau Schonbornchen halt 2016 Glauchau Schonbornchen halt junction to Meerane 2016 Mosel station Mosel 50 47 01 N 12 28 53 E 50 7837 N 12 4815 E 50 7837 12 4815 Main article Mosel station Mosel halt has existed since the opening of the line in 1858 and was reclassified as a station on 1 January 1875 With the opening of the 750 mm gauge Mosel Ortmannsdorf railway Mosel became a local railway junction in 1885 a previous concession for the construction of a railway through Mulsen by a private company had been cancelled before the beginning of the construction 44 In 1893 the freight only Zwickau Crossen Mosel railway was opened The narrow gauge railway was closed and dismantled in 1951 and the industrial railway also lost its importance in the 1990s In addition to the delivery of components to the nearby Volkswagen works the busy connecting line to this plant also starts in Mosel Oberrothenbach 50 45 50 N 12 28 33 E 50 7639 N 12 4758 E 50 7639 12 4758 Oberrothenbach halt was opened on 1 May 1886 under the administration of Mosel station It consisted only of two side platforms a passenger subway and a wooden waiting room built in 1895 The latter was not used from the end of the 1970s and was demolished in 1982 45 Zwickau Polbitz 50 44 14 N 12 28 47 E 50 7373 N 12 4796 E 50 7373 12 4796 Polbitz halt was opened on 1 April 1895 That year Polbitz was incorporated into Zwickau The halt was renamed Zwickau and from 1911 called Zwickau Sa Hp Zwickau Saxony halt In 1924 it was renamed Zwickau Polbitz As a result of industrialisation the district of Polbitz had grown strongly from then on the halt was used mainly by commuter traffic During the elevation of the railway tracks in Zwickau a massive entrance building was built in Polbitz from 1923 to 1925 Since the halt is no longer staffed the building is empty 46 Oberrothenbach halt Zwickau Polbitz halt The entrance building of Zwickau Hauptbahnhof which was opened in 1936 Zwickau Sachs Hbf 50 42 52 N 12 28 29 E 50 7145 N 12 4746 E 50 7145 12 4746 Main article Zwickau Hauptbahnhof The first Zwickau station was opened in 1845 when a branch line was opened to the Werdau wye In the 1860s the station became an important railway junction when the lines from Chemnitz and Schwarzenberg were handed over to traffic The Zwickau Falkenstein railway opened in 1875 also begins at the Hauptbahnhof even though initially the Zwickau Lengenfeld Falkensteiner Eisenbahn Gesellschaft opened its station to the southeast of today s Hauptbahnhof Only two years later a new track alignment was completed and the now nationalised line no longer approached the Hauptbahnhof from the west instead it ran from the east RAW 7 Oktober 50 42 24 N 12 26 29 E 50 7066 N 12 4413 E 50 7066 12 4413 RAW 7 Oktober halt which was not open to the public only served the railway establishments of the marshalling yard and the workshop and was not listed in the timetable No trains have stopped at the halt since 1997 98 and the infrastructure was dismantled in 2006 Lichtentanne Sachs 50 41 57 N 12 25 10 E 50 699191 N 12 419308 E 50 699191 12 419308 Lichtentanne Sachs station was opened on 1 April 1885 It has had the following names until 1907 Lichtentanne until 1911 Lichtentanne i Sachsen until 1933 Lichtentanne Sa since 1933 Lichtentanne Sachs The former entrance building is no longer in use and is located at the edge of today s halt Lichtentanne station approach track from Zwickau 2016 Lichtentanne station from above 2016 S Bahn service in Lichtentanne station 2016 Lichtentanne station old entrance building 2016 Steinpleis halt 2016 Steinpleis 50 42 32 N 12 23 39 E 50 708974 N 12 394152 E 50 708974 12 394152 Steinpleis halt was opened on 1 November 1911 It is located south of the village and is the last stop before Werdau wye Werdau wye junction 50 42 42 N 12 22 44 E 50 71162375 N 12 37893105 E 50 71162375 12 37893105 Main article Werdau wye With the completion of the railway line from Leipzig to Werdau Leipzig Hof railway on 6 September 1845 the 8 10 km long branch to Zwickau was also put into operation With the further commissioning of the line towards Reichenbach on 31 May 1846 the later wye Bogendreieck went into operation as a simple branch line Construction of the connecting curve began on 25 June 1855 and construction of new main line tracks towards Zwickau began on 15 November 1855 The two new main tracks were opened on 15 November 1858 On 1 January 1856 the twin track Zwickau Neumark connecting curve was put into operation at the former Werdau junction which was now referred to as Bogendreieck Werdau As a result of its connection of the Dresden Werdau and Leipzig Hof railways the Werdau wye has a significance that extends beyond Saxony It is part of the Saxon Franconian trunk line Sachsen Franken Magistrale and is included in the plans for the Mid Germany Railway Mitte Deutschland Verbindung Engineering infrastructure Edit Felskeller tunnel Felskeller tunnel was near the first Dresden Plauen station The 56 metre long 184 ft tunnel had very little cover until 1894 95 when it was removed Edle Krone tunnel 50 56 52 N 13 34 57 E 50 9479 N 13 5824 E 50 9479 13 5824 After the removal of the roofs of the other two tunnels the 122 metre long 400 ft Edle Krone tunnel was the last remaining tunnel on the line During the electrification of the line in the 1960s replacing it with a cutting was considered In the end the tunnel profile was expanded to create the necessary clearance for the installation of the overhead contact lines Traffic EditAt the timetable change on 30 September 1973 a dense suburban service was added on the Dresden Tharandt section 47 Since May 1992 these services have been officially marketed as the Dresden S Bahn 48 The line to Tharandt was initially designated as S5 but it has been designated as S3 since May 1995 Since December 2007 this line has been extended to Freimberg during working day peaks in the peak direction As part of the so called Saxon Franconian trunk line Interregio Express and InterCity services formerly ran on the Dresden Werdau line at two or four hour intervals but since December 2006 the Franken Sachsen Express running on the Dresden Hof Nuremberg has only had the quality of a regional service These regional express trains operated hourly or two hourly depending on the timetable year In December 2014 this service was replaced by an hourly electrically operated Regional Express service on the Dresden Hof route 49 In addition numerous Regionalbahn services particularly between Dresden and Zwickau and between Chemnitz and Floha and continuing towards Pockau Lengefeld and Annaberg Buchholz Since 15 December 2013 the Werdau wye Zwickau Hbf section has been served by lines S5 and S5X of the S Bahn Mitteldeutschland References EditNotes Edit a b Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland German railway atlas Schweers Wall 2009 ISBN 978 3 89494 139 0 Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst 1994 Dresdens Eisenbahn 1894 1994 in German Alba Dusseldorf p 144 ISBN 3 87094 350 5 Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz Schienennetz einer Industrieregion in German p 93 Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz Schienennetz einer Industrieregion in German p 32 Martin Weltner 2008 Bahn Katastrophen Folgenschwere Zugunfalle und ihre Ursachen in German Munich p 14 ISBN 978 3 7654 7096 7 Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst 1994 Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz Schienennetz einer Industrieregion in German Alba Dusseldorf pp 45 ff Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst 1994 Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz Schienennetz einer Industrieregion in German Alba Dusseldorf pp 89 ff Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst 1994 Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz Schienennetz einer Industrieregion in German Alba Dusseldorf p 53 Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst 1994 Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz Schienennetz einer Industrieregion in German Alba Dusseldorf pp 54 ff Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst 1994 Dresdens Eisenbahn 1894 1994 in German Alba Dusseldorf p 148 ISBN 3 87094 350 5 Norbert Peschke 2010 Bahnhofe in und um Zwickau Verkehrsknoten Zwickau in German Vol 1 Fraureuth Foto amp Verlag Jacobi pp 22 ff ISBN 978 3 937228 40 2 Friedrich Spranger 1966 Eine Gebirgsbahn wird elektrifiziert Der Modelleisenbahner in German transpress VEB Verlag fur Verkehrswesen Berlin 9 258 261 Frank Siegesmund Neubautrasse bei Hetzdorf Modelleisenbahner in German transpress VEB Verlag fur Verkehrswesen Berlin 89 5 a b Deutsche Reichsbahn c 1992 Neubauabschnitt Hetzdorf an der Sachsenmagistrale Gorlitz Plauen Vogtl in German Dresden p 37 Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz Schienennetz einer Industrieregion in German p 98 a b Henning Bosherz 2 February 2004 Gruss aus Tharandt ModellEisenBahner in German 34 37 ISSN 0026 7422 Henning Bosherz 11 February 2004 Gruss aus Tharandt ModellEisenBahner in German 24 28 ISSN 0026 7422 DB nimmt erneuerte Streckenabschnitte in Westsachsen in Betrieb Press release in German Deutsche Bahn AG 12 December 2011 35 Millionen Euro fliessen in Bahnstrecke Freie Presse in German 13 May 2010 Retrieved 6 January 2017 Erneuerung von drei Eisenbahnbrucken sowie der Verkehrsstation Dresden Plauen in German Deutsche Bahn AG Retrieved 6 January 2016 Modernisierung der Bahnanlagen im Herzen von Chemnitz Chemnitzer Bahnbogen in German Deutsche Bahn AG Retrieved 7 January 2017 Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz Schienennetz einer Industrieregion in German p 88 Warum heisst es Dresden Werdau Freie Presse in German 4 March 2013 p 11 Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst 1994 Dresdens Eisenbahn 1894 1994 Dusseldorf Alba pp 94 ff ISBN 3 87094 350 5 Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst 1994 Dresdens Eisenbahn 1894 1994 in German Dusseldorf Alba p 12 ISBN 3 87094 350 5 Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst Dresdens Eisenbahn 1894 1994 Alba Dusseldorf 1994 ISBN 3 87094 350 5 S 145 Annechristin Kleppisch Linda Barthel 15 May 2014 Lastige Barrieren am Haltepunkt Plauen verschwinden in German Sachsische Zeitung p 17 Jurgen Schubert 1993 Die Windbergbahn in German Nordhorn Verlag Kenning pp 94f Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst 1994 Dresdens Eisenbahn 1894 1994 in German Dusseldorf Alba p 147 ISBN 3 87094 350 5 Manfred Weisbrod Ingo Neidhardt 1997 Sachsen Report 5 Gleisplane und Streckengeschichte in German Furstenfeldbruck Hermann Merker Verlag p 68 ISBN 3 89610 014 9 Manfred Weisbrod Ingo Neidhardt 1997 Sachsen Report 5 Gleisplane und Streckengeschichte in German Furstenfeldbruck Hermann Merker Verlag pp 47 f ISBN 3 89610 014 9 Klaus Jurgen Kuhne 2011 Bahnbetriebswerke der DDR 1949 1993 in German Stuttgart transpress Verlag p 16 ISBN 978 3 613 71401 4 Niederbobritzsch in German www sachsenschiene net Retrieved 9 January 2017 Muldenhutten in German www sachsenschiene net Retrieved 9 January 2017 Manfred Weisbrod Ingo Neidhardt 1997 Sachsen Report 5 Gleisplane und Streckengeschichte in German Furstenfeldbruck Hermann Merker Verlag p 39 ff ISBN 3 89610 014 9 Frankenstein Sachs in German www sachsenschiene net Retrieved 9 January 2017 a b Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz Schienennetz einer Industrieregion in German p 104 Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz Schienennetz einer Industrieregion in German p 117 Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz Schienennetz einer Industrieregion in German p 93 Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz Schienennetz einer Industrieregion in German pp 45 ff Steffen Kluttig 2006 Schienenverbindungen zwischen Chemnitz und Leipzig Die Eisenbahnstrecken Kieritzsch Chemnitz und Leipzig Geithain in German Witzschdorf Bildverlag Bottger pp 74 ff ISBN 3 937496 17 3 a b Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz Schienennetz einer Industrieregion S 87 Track plan for Wustenbrand station PDF Deutsche Bahn Retrieved 10 January 2017 Manfred Weisbrod Ingo Neidhardt 1997 Sachsen Report 5 Gleisplane und Streckengeschichte in German Furstenfeldbruck Hermann Merker Verlag p 59 ISBN 3 89610 014 9 Norbert Peschke 2010 Bahnhofe in und um Zwickau Verkehrsknoten Zwickau Band 1 in German Fraureuth Foto amp Verlag Jacobi pp 119 f ISBN 978 3 937228 40 2 Norbert Peschke 2010 Bahnhofe in und um Zwickau Verkehrsknoten Zwickau Band 1 in German Fraureuth Foto amp Verlag Jacobi pp 121 f ISBN 978 3 937228 40 2 Title not known S Bahn News Sondernewsletter zum Jubilaum in German DB Regio Sudost 4 October 2013 Title not known S Bahn News Sondernewsletter zum Jubilaum in German DB Regio Sudost 9 October 2013 Aus fur RE Zuge Nurnberg Dresden stets Umsteigen in Hof durch Elektrifizierung Eisenbahn Magazin in German 10 2014 20 Sources Edit Friedrich Constantin von Beust 1852 Die Eisenbahnlinie von Dresden uber Freiberg und Chemnitz nach Zwickau in German Freiberg Verlag Engelhardt Retrieved 11 January 2017 Peter Beyer 2001 Das Entstehen der Eisenbahnverbindung zwischen Sachsen Bayern mit den Grossbrucken im Goltzsch und Elstertal 1836 1851 Sachsische Heimatblatter in German 47 3 139 155 Heinrich Rainer 2000 Die Elektrifizierung des Sachsischen Dreiecks Eisenbahn Kurier in German 4 337 42 46 ISSN 0170 5288 Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst 1994 Dresdens Eisenbahn 1894 1994 in German Dusseldorf Alba ISBN 3 87094 350 5 Kurt Kaiss Matthias Hengst 1996 Eisenbahnknoten Chemnitz Schienennetz einer Industrieregion in German Dusseldorf Alba ISBN 3 87094 231 2 Wilhelm Krausch 1849 Projection einer directen Eisenbahn Verbindung zwischen Dresden Freiberg und Chemnitz nebst Zweigbahnen zu den Kohlenwerken links und rechts des Weisseritzthales und nach der Elbe bei Priessnitz in German Leipzig Erich Preuss Reiner Preuss 1991 Sachsische Staatseisenbahnen in German Berlin transpress Verlagsgesellschaft pp 73 78 ISBN 3 344 70700 0 External links Edit Media related to Dresden Werdau railway at Wikimedia Commons Dresden Chemnitz Reichenbach Vogtl Plauen Vogtl timetable in 1944 in German Retrieved 11 January 2017 Photographs of tunnel portals in German Tunnelportale Retrieved 29 November 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dresden Werdau railway amp oldid 1070219704, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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