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Eberswalde–Frankfurt (Oder) railway

The Eberswalde–Frankfurt (Oder) railway is a single-track line in the districts of Barnim and Märkisch-Oderland and the town of Frankfurt (Oder), in the German state of Brandenburg. The section from Eberswalde to Werbig junction is now a branch line, the adjoining section to the south to Frankfurt (Oder) is classified as a main line. The line is about 86 kilometres long and is served by line RB60 of the Niederbarnimer Eisenbahn (NEB).

Eberswalde–Frankfurt (Oder) railway
Overview
OwnerDB Netz
Line number
  • 6758 (Eberswalde–Werbig junction)
  • 6156 (Werbig–Frankfurt (Oder) junction)
LocaleBrandenburg, Germany
Service
Route number209.60
Operator(s)Niederbarnimer Eisenbahn
Technical
Line length86.0 km (53.4 mi)
Number of tracks2 (Booßen–Frankfurt)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Operating speedEberswalde–Werbig: 60 km/h (37.3 mph) (max)
Werbig–Frankfurt (Oder): 100 km/h (62.1 mph) (max)
Route map

45.240
Eberswalde Hbf
B 167
46.700
Rosengrund siding
47.420
Forsthaus junction
from Angermünde
Finow Canal
51.100
Bk Finow Canal
55.170
Niederfinow
58.530
Falkenberg (Mark)
60.260
Lask siding
62.210
Ziegelei siding
From Angermünde
B 167
64.350
Bad Freienwalde (Oder)
68.710
Altranft
71.750
Bk Alt Gaul
from Neurüdnitz
75.510
Wriezen
79.410
Alt Bliesdorf siding
to Friedrichsaue
84.260
Neutrebbin
88.530
Sietzing
93.210
Letschin
To Voßberg
Werbig siding
101.880
Werbig
105.050
Seelow (Mark)
From Fürstenwalde
108.870
Dolgelin
To Golzow
112.650
Libbeninchen
114.800
Carzig
117.665
Schönfließ Dorf
(seasonal halt)
121.460
Bk Mühlgraben
From Küstrin-Kietz (new route)
124.971
Booßen
127.400
Frankfurt (Oder)-Klingetal
formerly Gronenfelde
Frankfurt (Oder) marshalling yard
128.600
Simonsmühle
Bft Frankfurt (Oder) Rbf Fgr
from Küstrin-Kietz (old route)
Paulinenhof
131.110
Frankfurt (Oder)
to Grunow, Guben and Poznań
Source: German railway atlas[1]

Route edit

 
ODEG DMU in Niederfinow station

The line starts at Eberswalde Hauptbahnhof and separates to it north from the Berlin–Szczecin railway and runs to the east. The direct connection from this line towards Szczecin has been dismantled. The line runs parallel with the Finow Canal at first and then swings to the southeast after Niederfinow station. The line runs parallel to the Alte Oder, the westerly outflow of the Oderbruch swamp, through Bad Freienwalde and Wriezen, both former railway junctions, to Werbig station, which is built on two-level as an interchange with the Prussian Eastern Railway. After Werbig it runs south via Seelow to the end of the line at Frankfurt (Oder) station. In Booßen there used to be a junction with the line to Küstrin-Kietz, which was dismantled after World War II.

History edit

 
Eberswalde Hauptbahnhof

The line was built in 1865/66 as a single-track line by the Berlin-Stettin Railway Company (German: Berlin-Stettiner Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft, BStE) and opened between Eberswalde and Wriezen on 15 December 1866 as a branch line. The main purpose of the railway was to promote the development of the Oderbruch. The continuation of the line to Frankfurt, however, was soon required. The implementation of this project was, however, to take another ten years and construction only started as a result of the construction of the parallel Wroclaw–Szczecin railway of the Breslau-Schweidnitz-Freiburg Railway Company (Breslau-Schweidnitz-Freiburger Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft). The latter planned to build its line as a direct link between the Upper Silesian coal basin and the Baltic Sea. Since the BStE expected this would lead to a loss of revenue, it decided to build a largely parallel line west of the Oder using existing sections of the Lower Silesian-Märkisch Railway and the Berlin-Stettin main line. The extension to Frankfurt (Oder) was opened in three sections:

  • 1 July 1876: Wriezen–Letschin
  • 1 January 1877: Letschin–Seelow
  • 15 May 1877: Seelow–Frankfurt (Oder).

Together with the 30 kilometre long Angermünde–Freienwalde line, which was opened on 1 January 1877, this created a second direct railway between Breslau (Wrocław) and Stettin (Szczecin). Although the line linked to existing junctions such as Frankfurt (Oder), it gained importance as an alternative to the line on the east side of the Oder and especially for the carriage of local traffic.

Stations were construction between Bad Freienwalde and Frankfurt on the line in Wriezen, Letschin, Neutrebbin, Letschin, Seelow and Schönfließ. In July 1880, a two-level interchange station was opened at Werbig at the intersection with the Eastern Railway to Berlin and a station was opened in Alt-Ranft. In May 1881, stations were opened in Booßen and Dolgelin and, in 1882, a connecting curve to the Eastern Railway was opened in Werbig for freight. A station was also built in Sietzing in this period. Carzig station was established later and Libbenichen station was built in the 1930s.[2]

After the nationalisation of the BStE in 1879, the entire line was transferred to the Prussian state railways as part of the Royal Division of the Berlin-Stettin Railway (Königlichen Direktion der Berlin-Stettiner Eisenbahn, called Königliche Eisenbahndirektion Stettin from 1905). This led to the duplication of the line between Eberswalde and Freienwalde in 1905.

 
Niederfinow station about 1901

At the beginning of the 20th century, plans were developed to establish a separate marshalling yard because of limited space in Frankfurt station. After much discussion about the location of the new yard, it was eventually decided to build it on the Eberswalde line between Frankfurt and Booßen. The line in this section had to be moved to the east and Booßen station was also moved. Work began on 1 April 1910 and work on the infrastructure was largely completed at the beginning of the First World War. Because many tracks were occupied by the military during the war, its commissioning was delayed to 1917. Connecting lines were built from Rosengarten on the line to Berlin and from Booßen to Wüste Kunersdorf junction near Lebus on the line to Küstrin. The line between Frankfurt and Booßen was duplicated.

After 1920, the line and the railway division of Stettin were absorbed into the railway division (Reichsbahndirektion) of Stettin of Deutsche Reichsbahn.

In 1926, a railcar shuttle service was established between Frankfurt and Booßen, serving in particular the extensive facilities of the marshalling yard. For the service, popularly called the Pendel (pendulum), a separate platform was created in Frankfurt station; it was about the length of a modern tram stop. Table 123d of the 1944/45 timetable included around nine pairs of trains running daily between Berlin, Eberswalde and Wriezen and four pairs of trains running between Wriezen and Frankfurt (Oder). Between the Frankfurt suburb Booßen and Frankfurt (Oder), there were additional suburban trains, which were shown in table 123e as operating almost hourly. The services running to and from Eberswalde did not stop at the three intermediate stations of Paulinenhof, Simonsmühle and Gronenfelde, which were served by the shuttle trains.

During the fighting around Berlin at the end of the Second World War in 1945 the line was in the main combat zone, notably of the Battle of the Seelow Heights. The Wehrmacht operated a special armoured train from Schönfließ. As a result of hostilities, the track was badly damaged and many bridges were destroyed.

Developments after 1945 edit

 
Station building in Frankfurt (Oder)

After the Second World War, the second track between Eberswalde and Bad Freienwalde was removed for reparations. After severe war damage the track had to be rebuilt, as more than half of the bridges were destroyed on many sections. In March 1947, a severe flood caused new damage.

The shuttle train between Frankfurt and Booßen as well as the intermediate stations in Simonsmühle and Paulinenhof were abandoned in 1945 as well as the direct operation of passenger trains between Bad Freienwalde and Berlin via Eberswalde. The declaration of the Oder–Neisse line as the border with Poland, however, meant that the line gained in importance, as it was near the border and was used as a strategic railway. It was also of interest as a possible bypass for the Berlin node. In 1952, Deutsche Reichsbahn built a direct connecting curve of the track to the north in Eberswalde, so as to relieve congestion in Eberswalde station. It was particularly important for freight.

from the 1960s, the line was used by direct express trains from Angermünde via Bad Freienwalde to Frankfurt (Oder), sometimes running further south. Summer holiday trains from Saxony to the Baltic Sea coast also ran on the line. For example, in 1983, the line was served by an express train between Angermünde and Dresden, an express train between Angermünde and Frankfurt (with through coaches from Schwedt) and a summer semi-fast train between Stralsund and Zittau. In addition there six pairs of stopping trains ran over the whole line, with some additional services between Eberswalde and Bad Freienwalde or Wriezen and trains ran between Kietz (now Küstrin-Kietz) and Frankfurt, which following the dismantling of the direct route in 1945 took the Eberswalde line to Booßen.

Since the early 1960s, the line from Eberswalde to the Werbig connecting curve has been classified as only a branch line. The southern part of the route has continued to be classified as a main line and was upgraded to a speed of 100 km/h. At the end of the 1980s, the electrification of the line was considered. The political change in East Germany (Die Wende) and the resulting economic changes ended these considerations. In passenger transport, the two express services were initially retained. In the 1993/1994 timetable, services increased to three express trains from Eberswalde to Frankfurt, stopping at Bad Freienwalde, Wriezen, Werbig and Seelow, with two of them continuing to Dresden. Intermediate stations on the middle part of the line were each served by six pairs of passenger trains. On the outer sections services were denser. In 1994, the service was changed fundamentally. The stops in Sietzing, Dolgelin, Libbenichen, Carzig and Schönfließ Dorf were closed and trains ran over the whole route stopping at the remaining stations every two hours. The trains to Kustrin stopped in Booßen and Frankfurt-Klingethal until 1996.

After 2000, the services to Eberswalde continued to Berlin. The trains ran every hour to Wriezen and every two hours continued to Frankfurt. On the one hand, the former operator, Deutsche Bahn, hoped this would increase passenger numbers, and on the other, this measure was necessary because the direct connection with Berlin via Wriezen on the Wriezen Railway had been closed in 1998. The Regionalbahn service RB 60 was extended to Berlin-Lichtenberg in the meantime as Regional-Express service RE 7, but this was abandoned after a year.

At the timetable change on 12 December 2004, Ostdeutsche Eisenbahn took over the operation of passenger services on the line. For marketing reasons, the service was known as OE 60. Since the timetable change on 9 December 2012, the line has been operated as RB60.[3]

At the timetable change on 14 December 2014 the Niederbarnimer Eisenbahn took over the operation of passengers services on the route, using Stadler Regio-Shuttle RS1 DMUs. Trains run, every hour on weekdays and every two hours on weekends between Eberswalde and Wriezen.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas). Schweers + Wall. 2009. pp. 36–7, 49. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  2. ^ Meyer, Regling. Eisenbahnknoten Frankfurt/ Oder. Das Tor zum Osten (in German). pp. 44/45.
  3. ^ (Press release) (in German). VBB Online. 9 December 2012. Archived from the original on 29 March 2013. Retrieved 30 May 2016.

References edit

  • Dieter Grusenick; Erich Morlok; Horst Regling (1996). Die Berlin-Stettiner Eisenbahn (in German). transpress. ISBN 3-344-71046-X.
  • Lothar Meyer; Horst Regling (2002). Eisenbahnknoten Frankfurt/Oder. Das Tor zum Osten (in German). transpress. ISBN 978-3-613-71126-6.

External links edit

  • "Eberswalde – Wriezen (– Frankfurt (Oder))" (in German). beefland. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
  • "KBS 209.60 Frankfurt/ Oder - Eberswalde - Berlin Lichtenberg" (in German). staehlernestrassen.de. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
  • "KBS 209.60 Frankfurt/ Oder - Eberswalde - Berlin Lichtenberg" (in German). staehlernestrassen.de. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
  • "KBS 209.60 Frankfurt/ Oder - Eberswalde - Berlin Lichtenberg" (in German). staehlernestrassen.de. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
  • "Rangierbahnhof Frankfurt" (in German). Eisenbahnfreunde Frankfurt. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
  • "Bahnhof Booßen" (in German). Eisenbahnfreunde Frankfurt. Retrieved 19 December 2011.

eberswalde, frankfurt, oder, railway, this, article, includes, list, references, related, reading, external, links, sources, remain, unclear, because, lacks, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, octobe. This article includes a list of references related reading or external links but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please help improve this article by introducing more precise citations October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message The Eberswalde Frankfurt Oder railway is a single track line in the districts of Barnim and Markisch Oderland and the town of Frankfurt Oder in the German state of Brandenburg The section from Eberswalde to Werbig junction is now a branch line the adjoining section to the south to Frankfurt Oder is classified as a main line The line is about 86 kilometres long and is served by line RB60 of the Niederbarnimer Eisenbahn NEB Eberswalde Frankfurt Oder railwayOverviewOwnerDB NetzLine number6758 Eberswalde Werbig junction 6156 Werbig Frankfurt Oder junction LocaleBrandenburg GermanyServiceRoute number209 60Operator s Niederbarnimer EisenbahnTechnicalLine length86 0 km 53 4 mi Number of tracks2 Boossen Frankfurt Track gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeOperating speedEberswalde Werbig 60 km h 37 3 mph max Werbig Frankfurt Oder 100 km h 62 1 mph max Route mapLegend From Berlin 45 240 Eberswalde Hbf B 167 Finow Canal to Angermunde 46 700 Rosengrund siding 47 420 Forsthaus junction from Angermunde Finow Canal 51 100 Bk Finow Canal 55 170 Niederfinow 58 530 Falkenberg Mark 60 260 Lask siding 62 210 Ziegelei siding From Angermunde B 167 64 350 Bad Freienwalde Oder 68 710 Altranft 71 750 Bk Alt Gaul from Neurudnitz 75 510 Wriezen to Berlin 79 410 Alt Bliesdorf siding to Friedrichsaue 84 260 Neutrebbin 88 530 Sietzing 93 210 Letschin To Vossberg Werbig siding to Kostrzyn 101 880 Werbig Berlin Kostrzyn 105 050 Seelow Mark From Furstenwalde 108 870 Dolgelin To Golzow 112 650 Libbeninchen 114 800 Carzig 117 665 Schonfliess Dorf seasonal halt 121 460 Bk Muhlgraben From Kustrin Kietz new route 124 971 Boossen from Furstenwalde Spree freight line 127 400 Frankfurt Oder Klingetalformerly Gronenfelde Frankfurt Oder marshalling yard 128 600 Simonsmuhle Bft Frankfurt Oder Rbf Fgr from Kustrin Kietz old route Paulinenhof from Furstenwalde 131 110 Frankfurt Oder to Grunow Guben and Poznan Source German railway atlas 1 Contents 1 Route 2 History 2 1 Developments after 1945 3 Notes 4 References 5 External linksRoute edit nbsp ODEG DMU in Niederfinow station The line starts at Eberswalde Hauptbahnhof and separates to it north from the Berlin Szczecin railway and runs to the east The direct connection from this line towards Szczecin has been dismantled The line runs parallel with the Finow Canal at first and then swings to the southeast after Niederfinow station The line runs parallel to the Alte Oder the westerly outflow of the Oderbruch swamp through Bad Freienwalde and Wriezen both former railway junctions to Werbig station which is built on two level as an interchange with the Prussian Eastern Railway After Werbig it runs south via Seelow to the end of the line at Frankfurt Oder station In Boossen there used to be a junction with the line to Kustrin Kietz which was dismantled after World War II History edit nbsp Eberswalde Hauptbahnhof The line was built in 1865 66 as a single track line by the Berlin Stettin Railway Company German Berlin Stettiner Eisenbahn Gesellschaft BStE and opened between Eberswalde and Wriezen on 15 December 1866 as a branch line The main purpose of the railway was to promote the development of the Oderbruch The continuation of the line to Frankfurt however was soon required The implementation of this project was however to take another ten years and construction only started as a result of the construction of the parallel Wroclaw Szczecin railway of the Breslau Schweidnitz Freiburg Railway Company Breslau Schweidnitz Freiburger Eisenbahn Gesellschaft The latter planned to build its line as a direct link between the Upper Silesian coal basin and the Baltic Sea Since the BStE expected this would lead to a loss of revenue it decided to build a largely parallel line west of the Oder using existing sections of the Lower Silesian Markisch Railway and the Berlin Stettin main line The extension to Frankfurt Oder was opened in three sections 1 July 1876 Wriezen Letschin 1 January 1877 Letschin Seelow 15 May 1877 Seelow Frankfurt Oder Together with the 30 kilometre long Angermunde Freienwalde line which was opened on 1 January 1877 this created a second direct railway between Breslau Wroclaw and Stettin Szczecin Although the line linked to existing junctions such as Frankfurt Oder it gained importance as an alternative to the line on the east side of the Oder and especially for the carriage of local traffic Stations were construction between Bad Freienwalde and Frankfurt on the line in Wriezen Letschin Neutrebbin Letschin Seelow and Schonfliess In July 1880 a two level interchange station was opened at Werbig at the intersection with the Eastern Railway to Berlin and a station was opened in Alt Ranft In May 1881 stations were opened in Boossen and Dolgelin and in 1882 a connecting curve to the Eastern Railway was opened in Werbig for freight A station was also built in Sietzing in this period Carzig station was established later and Libbenichen station was built in the 1930s 2 After the nationalisation of the BStE in 1879 the entire line was transferred to the Prussian state railways as part of the Royal Division of the Berlin Stettin Railway Koniglichen Direktion der Berlin Stettiner Eisenbahn called Konigliche Eisenbahndirektion Stettin from 1905 This led to the duplication of the line between Eberswalde and Freienwalde in 1905 nbsp Niederfinow station about 1901 At the beginning of the 20th century plans were developed to establish a separate marshalling yard because of limited space in Frankfurt station After much discussion about the location of the new yard it was eventually decided to build it on the Eberswalde line between Frankfurt and Boossen The line in this section had to be moved to the east and Boossen station was also moved Work began on 1 April 1910 and work on the infrastructure was largely completed at the beginning of the First World War Because many tracks were occupied by the military during the war its commissioning was delayed to 1917 Connecting lines were built from Rosengarten on the line to Berlin and from Boossen to Wuste Kunersdorf junction near Lebus on the line to Kustrin The line between Frankfurt and Boossen was duplicated After 1920 the line and the railway division of Stettin were absorbed into the railway division Reichsbahndirektion of Stettin of Deutsche Reichsbahn In 1926 a railcar shuttle service was established between Frankfurt and Boossen serving in particular the extensive facilities of the marshalling yard For the service popularly called the Pendel pendulum a separate platform was created in Frankfurt station it was about the length of a modern tram stop Table 123d of the 1944 45 timetable included around nine pairs of trains running daily between Berlin Eberswalde and Wriezen and four pairs of trains running between Wriezen and Frankfurt Oder Between the Frankfurt suburb Boossen and Frankfurt Oder there were additional suburban trains which were shown in table 123e as operating almost hourly The services running to and from Eberswalde did not stop at the three intermediate stations of Paulinenhof Simonsmuhle and Gronenfelde which were served by the shuttle trains During the fighting around Berlin at the end of the Second World War in 1945 the line was in the main combat zone notably of the Battle of the Seelow Heights The Wehrmacht operated a special armoured train from Schonfliess As a result of hostilities the track was badly damaged and many bridges were destroyed Developments after 1945 edit nbsp Station building in Frankfurt Oder After the Second World War the second track between Eberswalde and Bad Freienwalde was removed for reparations After severe war damage the track had to be rebuilt as more than half of the bridges were destroyed on many sections In March 1947 a severe flood caused new damage The shuttle train between Frankfurt and Boossen as well as the intermediate stations in Simonsmuhle and Paulinenhof were abandoned in 1945 as well as the direct operation of passenger trains between Bad Freienwalde and Berlin via Eberswalde The declaration of the Oder Neisse line as the border with Poland however meant that the line gained in importance as it was near the border and was used as a strategic railway It was also of interest as a possible bypass for the Berlin node In 1952 Deutsche Reichsbahn built a direct connecting curve of the track to the north in Eberswalde so as to relieve congestion in Eberswalde station It was particularly important for freight from the 1960s the line was used by direct express trains from Angermunde via Bad Freienwalde to Frankfurt Oder sometimes running further south Summer holiday trains from Saxony to the Baltic Sea coast also ran on the line For example in 1983 the line was served by an express train between Angermunde and Dresden an express train between Angermunde and Frankfurt with through coaches from Schwedt and a summer semi fast train between Stralsund and Zittau In addition there six pairs of stopping trains ran over the whole line with some additional services between Eberswalde and Bad Freienwalde or Wriezen and trains ran between Kietz now Kustrin Kietz and Frankfurt which following the dismantling of the direct route in 1945 took the Eberswalde line to Boossen Since the early 1960s the line from Eberswalde to the Werbig connecting curve has been classified as only a branch line The southern part of the route has continued to be classified as a main line and was upgraded to a speed of 100 km h At the end of the 1980s the electrification of the line was considered The political change in East Germany Die Wende and the resulting economic changes ended these considerations In passenger transport the two express services were initially retained In the 1993 1994 timetable services increased to three express trains from Eberswalde to Frankfurt stopping at Bad Freienwalde Wriezen Werbig and Seelow with two of them continuing to Dresden Intermediate stations on the middle part of the line were each served by six pairs of passenger trains On the outer sections services were denser In 1994 the service was changed fundamentally The stops in Sietzing Dolgelin Libbenichen Carzig and Schonfliess Dorf were closed and trains ran over the whole route stopping at the remaining stations every two hours The trains to Kustrin stopped in Boossen and Frankfurt Klingethal until 1996 After 2000 the services to Eberswalde continued to Berlin The trains ran every hour to Wriezen and every two hours continued to Frankfurt On the one hand the former operator Deutsche Bahn hoped this would increase passenger numbers and on the other this measure was necessary because the direct connection with Berlin via Wriezen on the Wriezen Railway had been closed in 1998 The Regionalbahn service RB 60 was extended to Berlin Lichtenberg in the meantime as Regional Express service RE 7 but this was abandoned after a year At the timetable change on 12 December 2004 Ostdeutsche Eisenbahn took over the operation of passenger services on the line For marketing reasons the service was known as OE 60 Since the timetable change on 9 December 2012 the line has been operated as RB60 3 At the timetable change on 14 December 2014 the Niederbarnimer Eisenbahn took over the operation of passengers services on the route using Stadler Regio Shuttle RS1 DMUs Trains run every hour on weekdays and every two hours on weekends between Eberswalde and Wriezen Notes edit Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland German railway atlas Schweers Wall 2009 pp 36 7 49 ISBN 978 3 89494 139 0 Meyer Regling Eisenbahnknoten Frankfurt Oder Das Tor zum Osten in German pp 44 45 RE bleibt RE OE NE PE wird RB Einheitliche Namen im Eisenbahn Regionalverkehr des VBB Press release in German VBB Online 9 December 2012 Archived from the original on 29 March 2013 Retrieved 30 May 2016 References editDieter Grusenick Erich Morlok Horst Regling 1996 Die Berlin Stettiner Eisenbahn in German transpress ISBN 3 344 71046 X Lothar Meyer Horst Regling 2002 Eisenbahnknoten Frankfurt Oder Das Tor zum Osten in German transpress ISBN 978 3 613 71126 6 External links edit Eberswalde Wriezen Frankfurt Oder in German beefland Retrieved 19 December 2011 KBS 209 60 Frankfurt Oder Eberswalde Berlin Lichtenberg in German staehlernestrassen de Retrieved 19 December 2011 KBS 209 60 Frankfurt Oder Eberswalde Berlin Lichtenberg in German staehlernestrassen de Retrieved 19 December 2011 KBS 209 60 Frankfurt Oder Eberswalde Berlin Lichtenberg in German staehlernestrassen de Retrieved 19 December 2011 Rangierbahnhof Frankfurt in German Eisenbahnfreunde Frankfurt Retrieved 19 December 2011 Bahnhof Boossen in German Eisenbahnfreunde Frankfurt Retrieved 19 December 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eberswalde Frankfurt Oder railway amp oldid 1181959696, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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