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Frankfurt–Göttingen railway

The Frankfurt–Göttingen railway is a continuously double track and electrified main line in Hesse and southern Lower Saxony, Germany. The line was initially built from Bebra towards Fulda by the Kurhessen State Railway. After the Prussian annexation of the Electorate of Hesse as a result of the Austro-Prussian War of 1866, it was completed to Frankfurt as the Frankfurt-Bebra Railway. The line was later extended from Bebra to Göttingen.

Frankfurt–Göttingen
Intercity-Express running over the Main-Neckar Bridge
Overview
Line number
  • 3600
  • 3680 (Frankfurt-Schlachthof–Hanau)
  • 3677 (third track: Wolfgang–Hailer-Meerholz)
  • 3826 (Schlüchtern Ziegenberg–Elm)
  • 3825 (Flieden–Elm)
  • 3828 (third track: Fulda Bronnzell–Fulda)
LocaleHesse and Lower Saxony, Germany
Service
Route number610, 615, 540.1, 611, 613
Technical
Line length240 km (150 mi)
Number of tracks2 (throughout)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification15 kV 16.7 Hz AC Overhead line
Operating speed
  • 200 km/h (120 mph) (maximum)
Route map

km
Frankfurt (Main) Hbf tief
(since 1978)
0.0 000.0
Frankfurt (Main) Hbf
(since 1888)
freight line from Frankfurt main freight yard
1.5 000.0
Main-Neckar Bridge
(junction)
Main-Neckar Bridge
former route of the Main-Neckar Railway
Frankfurt Stresemannallee
3.1 000.0
Frankfurt Süd depot
Frankfurt Stresemannallee Tunnel (213 m)
4.407
Frankfurt (Main) Süd
(formerly Bebraer Bf)
to Hanau (north Main line)
Frankfurt Mühlberg
7.300
Frankfurt-Oberrad
(S-Bahn under discussion)
10.055
Offenbach (Main) Hbf
10.968
Offenbach (Main) Hbf Mitte
(depot)
11.700
Offenbach (Main) Ost
former Offenbach industrial railway
Offenbach port railway
12.900
Offenbach (Main) freight yard
16.000
Mühlheim (Main)
16.776
Mühlheim Ost
(crossover)
Mühlheim-Dietesheim
21.100
Hanau-Steinheim
21.424
Steinheim Main Bridge
21.761
Hanau Mainbrücke
(station part)
from Frankfurt (Main) Süd (north Main line)
planned North Main S-Bahn line
22.974
Hanau south side / Hanau north side
Hanau port railway
0.000 00,000
Hanau Rauschwald
(junction)
1.798 25.284
Wolfgang (Kr Hanau)
30.145
Rodenbach (b Hanau)
33.860
Langenselbold
Hasselbach
37.900
Niedermittlau
41.206
Hailer-Meerholz
44.092
Gelnhausen
47.179
Haitz-Höchst
to Kalbach (planned)
48.209
48.210
missing length 1 m
50.434
Wirtheim
Kalbach–Gelnhausen new line (planned)
narrow-gauge line from Bad Orb
54.791
Wächtersbach
to Birstein
59.200
Kinzig
59.350
59.351
missing length 0.8 m
61.352
Bad Soden-Salmünster
Kinzig
65.4+150
65.5+049
additional length 1 m
68.052
Steinau (Straße)
Kalbach–Gelnhausen new line (planned)
71.206
71.214
missing length 7.6 m
74.345
Schlüchtern
Kalbach–Gelnhausen new line (planned)
76.890
Schlüchtern Ziegenberg
(junction)
Kalbach–Gelnhausen new line (planned)
Schlüchtern Tunnel (3995 m / 3576 m)
(82.1)
Elm
(former route with reversal in Elm until 1914)
Kalbach–Gelnhausen new line (planned)
(86.7)
Distelrasen
(Flieden-Fuldaische Höfe)
82.000
Katzenberg
(crossover)
82.8+320
82.6+070
additional length 50 m
(Grade separated junction)
85.240
92.193
Flieden
(missing length 6 953 m)
93.300
96.300
Fliede
97.152
Neuhof (Kr Fulda)
from Neuhof-Ellers potash mine
98.535
98.600
missing length 64.4 m
99.670
Neuhof Nord
98.300
102.600
Kerzell
101.000
103.000
Fliede
103.800
103.801
missing length 1 m
104.200
105.000
from Würzburg (HSR, grade-separated)
105.655
106.364
Fulda
(former station)
106.578
108.200
Fulda goods yard (W 123)
108.861
Fulda goods yard
110.567
Fulda
112.100
Fulda SFS Nord
to Hannover (HSR, grade-separated)
115.168
Götzenhof
to Wüstensachsen
117.2
00Steinau (Kr Fulda)
120.340
Marbach (Kr Fulda)
127.131
Hünfeld
to Wenigentaft-Mansbach
131.185
Burghaun (Kr Hünfeld)
Burghaun tunnel (238 m)
140.104
Haunetal-Neukirchen
148.004
Oberhaun
Wildeck-Hönebach–Langenschwarz HSL (planned)
from Langenschwarz (planned)
from Niederaula
153.179
Bad Hersfeld
HSL to Wildeck-Hönebach (planned)
former Hersfeld District Railway
156.840
Ludwigsau-Friedlos
160.115
Mecklar
Fulda
163.477
Bebra-Blankenheim
to Bebra marshalling yard
164.245
Lämmerberg
to Bebra marshalling yard
from Bebra marshalling yard
166.552
Bebra
167.400
Bebra Pbf/Rbf Ül
former Braunhäusen tunnel (293 m, until 1963)
175.500
Asmushausen
177.445
Bebra tunnel crossover
Cornberg tunnel (719 m)
178.844
Cornberg
(former station)
182.700
Berneburg
from Sontra-Brodberg industrial area
186.665
Sontra
Sontra
193.744
Hoheneiche
(former station)
Sontra
197.070
Wehretal-Reichensachsen
(reopened 2003)
from Treysa (flying junction)
200.760
Eschwege-Stegmühle
(junction)
201.563
Eschwege West
(station until 2009)
to Eschwege Stadt (formerly to Leinefelde)
202.214
Eschwege-Wehre
(junction)
205.500
Albungen
212.526
Bad Sooden-Allendorf
218.300
Oberrieden
Schürzeberg tunnel (173 m)
220.800
Werleshausen
221.500
Werleshausen Bebenroth
(crossover)
Bebenroth tunnel (930 m / 1030 m)
from Velmeden
227.320
Eichenberg
231 m
228.420
Eichenberg Nordkopf
(junction)
from Arenshausen (until 1884)
233.441
Friedland (Han)
(former station)
238.018
Obernjesa
(station until May 1990)
242.421
Rosdorf
(former station)
244.868
Grone
(junction)
route until 1922
from Duderstadt (narrow gauge)
247.705
Göttingen
Source: German railway atlas[1]

During the division of Germany, it became part of one of the most important German north-south axes in long-distance rail freight and rail passenger transport, the North–South railway. The route continues to be of great importance for traffic, but has been relieved in sections since 1991 by the Hanover–Würzburg high-speed railway. Further new lines are being planned as part of the Aus- und Neubaustrecke Hanau–Würzburg/Fulda–Erfurt ("Hanau-Würzburg/Fulda-Erfurt upgraded and new line") project.

History edit

When railways began to be built in Germany in the nineteenth century, the two largest cities of the Electorate of Hesse (Kurfürstentum Hessen, shortened to Kurhessen), which had been re-established by the Congress of Vienna in 1815, were its capital Kassel and the city of Hanau in its far south. Initially it was not practical to build a railway to connect Kurhessen through the mountainous country between Hanau and Fulda. Instead a railway was established jointly by the three countries of Kurhessen, the Grand Duchy of Hesse and Free City of Frankfurt, and completed between Frankfurt and Kassel in 1852. Meanwhile, the Frankfurt–Hanau railway was opened in 1848 by the Frankfurt-Hanauer Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft (Frankfurt–Hanau Railway Company), allowing a connection between Kassel and Hanau via Frankfurt, although the lines were not physically linked.

In order to reach Hanau through the Kurhessian area, it would be necessary to start from the town of Bebra, which was on the line of the Friedrich-Wilhelms-Nordbahn-Gesellschaft ("Frederick William Northern Railway Company") and could be reached from Kassel. A railway line could be built via Fulda to Hanau. The Kurhessische Staatsbahn ("Kurhessen State Railway") was given the commission to construct the line by a decision of the Kurhessian Estates Assembly (Kurhessische Ständeversammlung) on 19 March 1863.[2][3]

Construction edit

The first section between Bebra and Hersfeld was opened on 22 January 1866.[2] After the annexation of the Electorate of Hesse by Prussia following the Austro-Prussian War in 1866, the project was taken over by Prussia and construction began in the southern section as well. In order not to leave Kurhessian territory, the railway followed the valley of the Haune and not that of the Fulda, which belonged to the Grand Duchy of Hesse. A winding route was accepted for this. The Kingdom of Prussia was able to open the line to Hanau within two years.

As late as 1864, the former Free City of Frankfurt had prevented the line from being continued to Frankfurt and also refused the Frankfurt–Hanau Railway Company permission to use the Frankfurt East–Hanau–Aschaffenburg route, even though it ran through Kurhessian territory. After Prussia had also annexed Frankfurt in the Peace of Prague, trains from Bebra could now run via Hanau station to Frankfurt. However, since this was in the east of Frankfurt and thus far away from the Frankfurt western stations and the lines ending there, the trains were connected to the Main-Neckar station (Main-Neckar-Bahnhof) via the Frankfurt City Link Line from 1869.

Extension to Frankfurt edit

 
Car no. 16, 1./2. class of the Bebra-Hanauer Eisenbahn, about 1869
 
Frankfurt-Sachsenhausen: in front the southern Main route, on the right the North Main line on the Deutschherrn Bridge
 
Steinheim Main Bridge

The North Main connection via the Frankfurt–Hanau Railway Company line had several disadvantages. It meant a detour and bypassed the town of Offenbach am Main, not least because the capacity of the city link line was limited. So there were plans for a southern Main line that would connect with the Frankfurt–Offenbach Local Railway in Offenbach. However, the tracks of the local railway were not designed to handle long-distance railway traffic, so a new long-distance line was built on an embankment, which bypassed the centres of Sachsenhausen and Offenbach to the south. The proposed line ran through the Grand Duchy of Hesse. This section of the new railway line was therefore authorised a state treaty of 12 June 1868.[4] This state treaty determined, among other things, in Article 21, that:

  • all scheduled trains that transport passengers had to stop at the station for Offenbach and
  • at all stops for Steinheim and Mühlheim, at least three trains would stop daily in each direction to arrange passenger traffic to and from the other stations of the Hanau-Frankfurt railway and, as far as practicable, also to and from the connecting railways.[5]

In Hanau, the line could not be routed through the then Hanau station (now Hanau West) as it was not well-located for the location specified for the Main crossing. Instead, Hanau Ost station (now Hanau Hauptbahnhof) was built a little further south-east, at the point where the Frankfurt–Bebra railway crosses the Frankfurt–Hanau Railway Company line to Aschaffenburg.

The opening of the new line was delayed until the completion of the Steinheim Main Bridge. The line was first put into operation to Bebra station (now Frankfurt (Main) Süd station) in Sachsenhausen on 15 November 1873.

In 1874 the new railway was subordinated to the Direction der Bebra-Hanauer Bahn (railway division of the Bebra-Hanau Railway), which was relocated from Kassel to Frankfurt and from 1 April 1874 was called the Königliche Eisenbahn-Direction zu Frankfurt am Main (Royal Railway Division of Frankfurt am Main). On 15 November 1874, the Bebra-Hanauer Eisenbahn (Bebra-Hanau Railway) was renamed the Frankfurt-Bebraer Eisenbahn (Frankfurt-Bebra Railway).

Trains from Sachsenhausen could reach Frankfurt's Main-Neckar station from 1 December 1875.

Opening dates[2]
22 January 1866 BebraBad Hersfeld
1 October 1866 Bad Hersfeld–Hünfeld–Fulda
1 May 1867 Hanau (Ost)Wächtersbach
1 July 1868 Fulda–Neuhof
1 July 1868 Wächtersbach–Steinau (Straße)
15 December 1868 Neuhof–Steinau (Straße) (including the zig zag in Elm station)
15 November 1873 Hanau (Ost)–Frankfurt Bebraer station
1 December 1875 Frankfurt Bebraer station–Frankfurt Main-Neckar station

Extension to Göttingen edit

The section from Friedland (Han) to Göttingen was built in 1867 as part of a connecting line from Arenshausen on the Halle–Hann. Münden railway to the Hanoverian Southern Railway.

After the annexation of Hanover and Kurhessen, the Prussian state railways wanted to connect the Hanoverian Southern Railway and the Frankfurt-Bebra Railway directly. A north–south axis was to be created together with the Elm–Gemünden railway that was planned at the same time. In addition, the also planned, militarily important Kanonenbahn ("Cannons Railway") would have connections to the north (Hannover–Göttingen) and south (Bebra–Hanau). Arenshausen and Witzenhausen were also discussed as connections in the north, but agreement was reached on a link in Friedland and a link with the Halle–Hann. Münden railway in Eichenberg. On 25 March 1872, the Prussian state decided to build a line from Bebra to Friedland and a branch line from Niederhone to Eschwege.[2][6]

The section from Bebra to Niederhone (now Eschwege West) and from there the first section of the Cannons Railway to Eschwege station were opened in 1875. A year later, the Niederhone–Eichenberg–Friedland section followed. In order to cross the watersheds between the Fulda and the Werra near Cornberg and between the Werra and the Leine near Eichenberg, considerable gradients and four tunnels were necessary[7] and the route had many curves.

The direct connection between Friedland and Arenshausen was abandoned in 1884 as the connection via Eichenberg was sufficient.

Development up to the Second World War edit

To connect to the new Central-Bahnhof Frankfurt ("Frankfurt Central Station", now Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof), a new line had to be built from Sachsenhausen to a point about a kilometre further to the south-west. For this purpose, the new Main-Neckar Bridge was built from 1881 and opened on 1 August 1885 initially only for freight traffic. After the closure of the Frankfurt West station and the opening of the Central Station on 18 August 1888, the old line over the old Main-Neckar Bridge (now the Friedensbrücke) was abandoned.

From 1908 to 1910, the railway facilities in Göttingen were redesigned: the tracks were raised, a marshalling yard (that is now closed) was built and the Göttingen–Bodenfelde railway was connected. The railway to Bebra also received a new route from Göttingen to Rosdorf west of Leineberg. Before that, the line separated from the Hanover–Kassel line at Göttingen station and ran almost in a straight line south towards Rosdorf, hence the Eisenbahnstraße ("Railway Street") in the Leineviertel (the area south of Göttingen station on the east bank of the Leine).

The topographic problem was crossing the ridge between Flieden and Schluechtern. With the technical means available at the time when the railway was being built, a tunnel of almost 4 km in length was initially too complex and expensive. Instead, a zig zag was built—with Elm as the zig zag station. Here, all through trains had to change direction, which became increasingly unacceptable with increasing traffic and the connection of the Flieden–Gemünden railway in Elm in 1873. The technology for building longer tunnels was improved at the beginning of the 20th century and, in particular, significantly improved by the dynamite that was now available. The construction of the Schluechtern Tunnel under the Distelrasen range began in 1909. This was completed on 14 February 1914 and went into operation on 1 May.

In 1914, a connecting curve was opened south of Bebra, which enabled journeys from Frankfurt to Leipzig to Berlin without having to change direction in Bebra. So it is called the Berliner Kurve ("Berlin curve").

The regional traffic volume in the sparsely populated region north of Fulda was low. The branch lines that branched off did not increase traffic much. The Bad Hersfeld–Treysa railway was opened from Bad Hersfeld in 1906. Some of it is still used for freight transport. The Hersfeld Kreisbahn (Hersfeld District Railway) also branched off in Bad Hersfeld from 1912 to 1993. In Hünfeld there was a connection via Eiterfeld to Vacha. From Götzenhof it was possible to travel through the northern Rhön to Hilders from 1889 to 1986.

In 1939, four pairs of Durchgangszug (express trains with corridor coaches) ran between Göttingen and Bebra each day, while twelve expresses ran on the neighbouring Main–Weser Railway between Kassel and Frankfurt.

During the Second World War, the strategically important line was the target of Allied air raids, notably on 4 December 1944 near Schluechtern and Gelnhausen.[8]

Division of Germany edit

Since 1866, national borders between Eichenberg and Bebra had been irrelevant. That changed in 1945 when Germany was divided into occupation zones. A section about four kilometers long near Werleshausen south of Eichenberg ran through the Soviet occupation zone. In order to ease this situation, an exchange of territories was agreed in the Wanfried Agreement in 1945. After the agreement was concluded, the participating officers exchanged flasks of whisky and vodka, and from then on the railway line was known jokingly in German as the Whisky-Wodka-Linie.[9]

As a result of the new border, the line was consistently in the area of the Western Allies and thus completely on the territory of the later Federal Republic. All eastbound routes from Eichenberg (Halle–Hann. Münden railway) and Eschwege (Kanonenbahn, several branch lines) were interrupted by the border.

Until the Second World War, it was mainly used for traffic on the Frankfurt–Leipzig route. Due to the division of Germany, this east–west traffic came to a standstill—apart from transit and interzone trains, which now operated with a change of locomotive and direction of travel in Bebra. As a result, the main traffic direction shifted to north–south, from Hanover and Hamburg to Frankfurt and also via the Flieden–Gemünden railway towards Bavaria. The latter axis became an important connection in the Federal Republic, known as the North–South railway. In the summer of 1989, 37 long-distance trains ran between Göttingen and Bebra per day in each direction.

In order to be able to handle the traffic, the line was upgraded. As early as the 1950s, more powerful signal boxes were built, which enabled "track change operations" (safe operations in either direction on either track) on the inclines before Cornberg and Eichenberg. The commissioning of track change operations from Bebra to Cornberg took place on 17 October 1951.[10]

On 30 September 1961, the electrified line between Hanau and Fulda was ceremonially opened for operation as the first electrified section of the north–south line., the 4000th electrified kilometre in the Deutsche Bundesbahn network had been celebrated near Wächtersbach in September 1961.[11] A total of around 3,000 catenary masts, 250 kilometres of catenary and a traction current line with several hundred high-voltage pylons were erected, which connected the Aschaffenburg power station with the new Flieden substation. In addition to several bridges that were rebuilt to create the necessary clearance, the porous vault of the Schluechtern tunnel had to be renovated.

By 1963 the remaining sections were electrified. To make room for the overhead line, the Braunhausen tunnel was converted into a cutting, and the tracks in the other tunnels were lowered.

Many smaller stations were abandoned so that the local trains that stopped would not impede the intercity trains. This happened at Obernjesa in 1989.

Development and new construction edit

Hanover–Würzburg high-speed line edit

As early as the 1960s, it became clear that the entire North–South railway was too congested and too slow to adequately handle long-distance traffic. At Eichenberg, the curves only allow 90 km/h, at Bebra only 70 km/h. This led to the planning and construction of the Hanover–Würzburg high-speed railway, which took over the high-speed long-distance traffic on the north–south axis between Göttingen and Fulda in 1991. Freight trains, night trains and regional services stayed on the old line.

In the course of the discussion about connecting Fulda to the new Hanover–Würzburg line, it was considered in the first half of the 1970s that the new line would bypass Fulda and only provide links to the existing line to the north and south of Fulda.[12] Later it was decided that the line would pass through Fulda instead. During the construction phase of the new line, the connection of the Frankfurt–Göttingen line to the Fulda junction was changed. Since then, both southbound tracks have left the junction next to each other before the new track towards Würzburg crosses the track towards Frankfurt at the southern flying junction. In addition, a centrally-located flying junction was built, which provides a grade-separated connection to the eastern track of the line from Frankfurt with the platform next to the station building of Fulda station (track 1).[13]

Hanau–Fulda upgrade project edit

The upgrade of the line was already part of the development program for the Deutsche Bundesbahn network presented in 1970.[14] In the Federal Transport Routes Plan (Bundesverkehrswegeplan) of 1973, the Flieden–Frankfurt am Main section was listed as one of eight planned upgrade routes in the field of railways.[15] The route was no longer included in the 1976 coordinated investment program for federal transport routes up to 1985. The available investment funds would thus be concentrated on the six upgraded lines and the two new lines that had been started at this time.[14] The development project was also not included in the Federal Transport Routes Plan 1980.[16] As early as the mid-1980s, the line was considered to be congested and the operational quality was very unsatisfactory in some sections.[17]

In mid-1984, the Bundesbahn division (Bundesbahndirektion) in Frankfurt am Main began investigating how to update the Federal Transport Route Plan. An iterative procedure was to be used to identify sections of the route that would allow the greatest possible reduction in travel time by means of small upgrade steps and pieces of new infrastructure. An upgrade allowing a speed of 200 km/h was aimed at. For the individual sections of the Kinzig Valley Railway, the investigation showed very different costs due to variable topographies and structures. This resulted in a package of measures worth DM 460m (1984 prices). Depending on the train design, a travel time reduction of six to nine minutes should be achieved on the 103-kilometer section compared to the travel time of an Intercity train of 54 minutes in 1985.[14] The line capacity would be increased by around fifty trains per day and direction.[18] A joint investigation of the Kinzig Valley route and the Riedbahn (Mannheim–Frankfurt railway) commissioned by the Federal Ministry of Transport resulted in a benefit–cost ratio of 15. With a total investment of DM 960m (1983 prices[18]), an annual contribution to the net results of the Bundesbahn of DM 256m per year was expected.[14] The section between Fulda and Frankfurt was estimated to cost DM 460m.[18] These results led to the project being listed in the "urgent needs" of the Federal Transport Routes Plan 1985.[18] The measure was to be implemented as quickly as possible and essentially completed in 1991 for the start of ICE traffic.[14]

Immediately after the Federal Transport Route Plan was approved in 1985, the Bundesbahn began planning the development project.[19] As part of the preliminary planning completed in 1986, it was intended to create three 200 km/h high-speed sections with a total length of 55 kilometres: between Hanau-Wolfgang and Gelnhausen-Höchst, north of Wächtersbach and between the Flieden and Fulda areas. Between the southern and the middle high-speed section, the line should be able to be operated at 170 km/h. The lowest target speed of 110 km/h would be reached in Hanau-Wolfgang and Schluechtern. Major line improvements for the project were planned in Kerzell, Neuhof, Bad Soden-Salmünster and Wirtheim, with smaller works in Wächtersbach and Gelnhausen. Five passing tracks were to be built and five more were to be extended. In addition, six new signal boxes and four new platform edges were to be built. Five signal boxes and a total of 41 bridges were to be rebuilt and the entire route equipped with the Linienzugbeeinflussung train control system.[17]

An audit by the Deutsche Bundesbahn headquarters showed that the specified budget of DM 460m would be exceeded by DM 72m. The upgrade targets were therefore reduced. By reducing the upgrade target in the section between Bad Soden-Salmünster and Haitz-Höchst from 200 or 170 km/h to 160 or 150 km/h, DM 65m would be saved with a reduced travel time gain of 0.7 minutes. In addition, an overtaking track south of Gelnhausen and a transfer point with a total cost of around DM 5m were to be dispensed with.[18]

The planning from 1988 envisaged expanding the Wolfgang–Gelnhausen section to three tracks to enable 200 km/h operations by 1991. An extension of the three-track development to Wächtersbach was taken into account in the planning.[18] The Neuhof–Fulda section was to follow by 1994.[20] DM 66 million of an estimated DM 460m was spent between 1986 and 1989.[21]

After the state of Hesse had requested a spatial planning procedure for the three-track expansion from Hanau to Gelnhausen and the line improvements at Kerzell and Neuhof on 1 December 1986, there were delays. By the end of 1988, the expansion target that had been aimed for up to 1991 had been reduced to an approximately 12-kilometer high-speed section between Rodenbach and Hailer-Meerholz.[22] By then, all spatial planning procedures, with the exception of the Neuhof section, had been completed and most of the planning approval procedures had been initiated.[23] In 1989, the last of four spatial planning procedures for the Neuhof area was completed. 65 individual measures were planned along the 103 kilometres of the route. At the end of 1989, 13 projects were under construction.[24]

The official start of upgrade was marked by the symbolic driving of a first pile by the then Hessian State Secretary for Economic Affairs, Dieter Posch, on 27 September 1989 in Steinau an der Straße.[25] According to the planning status of 1989, the approximately 25-kilometre-long section between Hanau-Wolfgang and Gelnhausen-Höchst and the approximately 15-kilometre section between Flieden and the southern outskirts of Fulda were intended to be upgraded to 200 km/h. In the course of the decision on the future of the Schluechtern tunnel, an extension of the northern high-speed section by a further 8 kilometres to the south would also be examined. Along the rest of the route, 120 to 160 km/h would be possible. Drops in line speeds after completion of the upgrade were planned for Hanau-Wolfgang (90 km/h) and Schluechtern (100 km/h). Including the elimination of level crossings, around 120 individual measures were planned.[14] After completion of the upgrade measures, speeds of 200 km/h would be possible on around 37 kilometres of track.[25] Together with the upgrade of the Mannheim–Frankfurt railway, the journey time between Fulda and Mannheim was initially to be reduced by seven minutes for the start of ICE operations (1991) and by 15 minutes compared to the initial situation by 1995.[19]

The development work began in 1987; completion was planned (in 1991) for 1994. The construction of the Schluechtern Tunnel was the most important sub-project. The second stage was originally to be completed by the time the Hanover–Würzburg and Mannheim–Stuttgart high-speed lines were fully operational (1991). There were delays in the planning approval process, especially when removing the 20[22] level crossings.[26]

In 1990, it was planned to spend DM 610m within six years, of which DM 150m would be financed by other parties to eliminate level crossings. Half of the DB investment costs of DM 460m would serve to increase capacity and increase performance.[19] The third track between Hanau and Gelnhausen alone was estimated to cost DM 179m.[19]

By the beginning of 1991, four of the 25 planning approval sections had been completed, 13 were under construction, five were in the planning approval process and three were in planning.[26] As of 1990, the overall project was to be completed in the second half of the 1990s.[27]

When scheduled ICE operations began on 2 June 1991, the high-speed section (200 km/h) between Hanau-Wolfgang and Hailer-Meerholz was put into operation.[28] In addition, the Bronnzell–Flieden, Ahl–Wächtersbach and Wirtheim–Niedermittlau sections have since been authorised to be operated at 160 km/h.[26][29] By the end of 1991, a total of DM 281m had been invested out of an estimated DM 630m (1 January 1991 prices).[30]

In 1992, the line was one of the five lines that were primarily to be equipped with CIR-ELKE high-performance signalling blocks.[31]

On 22 May 1993, the third track between Hanau and Hailer-Meerholz (19 kilometres) went into operation. Like the parallel tracks in this section, it is largely designed for speeds of 200 km/h. A total of DM 230m were invested in the four-year three-track upgrade, combined with upgrading the existing tracks for 200 km/h, including around DM 150m for the third track.[32][33] A total of around 200,000 cubic metres of earth were removed and temporarily stored. The strength of some of the subsoil had to be reinforced.[33]

Frankfurt–Hanau S-Bahn line edit

The construction of the Frankfurt Schlachthof–Hanau railway via Offenbach at the end of the 20th century also affected a large part of the existing track infrastructure. Since then, the platforms of Offenbach Ost station have only been served by the S-Bahn, while the old main line was relocated to a new route to the north of, and parallel with, the old line.

At the former Steinheim (Main) station, the entrance building to the south of the old line was demolished and an outside platform was built on the north side of the new S-Bahn line.

The entrance building of the former Mühlheim (Main) station built in 1873 has been preserved as a cultural monument. The platform close to the entrance building was closed. The trains on the main line pass now through without stopping. An island platform was retained for the double-track S-Bahn line.

After German reunification edit

 
Construction site of autobahn 66 in the area of the Neuhof station (2010)
 
A Regionalbahn train from Wächtersbach to Frankfurt makes an unscheduled stop on platform 3 of Niedermittlau station. The bridge of the bypass from Gründau to Niedermittlau can be seen in the background.

After 1945, the Halle–Hann. Münden railway was interrupted at the Inner German border, which was abolished in July 1990. The line reopened east of Eichenberg at the same time. In 1998, a connecting curve was built north-east of Eichenberg, which enables direct journeys from Göttingen to Heilbad Heiligenstadt. It thus resumed the function of the Arenshausen–Friedland railway, which had been abandoned in 1884.

On 2 February 1995, scheduled use of double-decker coaches began on the line between Hanau and Fulda, half funded by Deutsche Bahn and half by the state of Hesse (from funds from the Municipal Transport Financing Act).[34]

With the possibility of being able to overtake regional trains "on the fly" as a result of the establishment of bidirectional track operations, longer waiting times in the stations could be avoided. The travel time on the 55-kilometre Wächtersbach–Frankfurt line fell by up to 18 minutes; the number of working-day regional trains was increased from 87 to 91 when it went into operation.

From 2007, DB Netz built the new Schluechtern tunnel, which initially went into operation on two tracks in April 2011, and then renovated the old tunnel. At the beginning of 2014, the old tunnel was returned to operation, but as a single track. The second tunnel was reduced to one track by June 2014; since then, one track has been available for each direction. The permissible speed in this section was increased from 110 km/h to 140 km/h and then to 160 km/h as part of the renovation.

During the construction of the Autobahn 66 (Neuhof–Eichenzell), the line in the Neuhof area was rerouted over a 3.3-kilometre section. The line speed in the station area was increased from 130 km/h to 160 km/h. The estimated cost (as of 2006) was €56 m.[35][36] Commissioning took place in stages up to the end of 2011.

Between 2010 and 2013, a new 1030 metre-long new building was drilled next to the Bebenroth tunnel and the previous tunnel was renovated. Since then, both tubes have only contained one track.[37]

The Fulda–Bebra section was upgraded as part of the Fulda–Erfurt axis for the use of the eddy current brakes (for ICE 3 sets).[38]

In December 2015, a bridge was built over the railway line in Niedermittlau, replacing the former level crossing.[39]

In 2018, DB Netz set up electronic interlockings in Bad Hersfeld and Haunetal-Neukirchen.[40] The Haunetal electronic interlocking, with a control centre in Bad Hersfeld, went into operation on 25 March 2019. It controls a roughly 25 km section between Mecklar and Burghaun.[41]

At the end of December 2019, the Gelnhausen flood bridge was renewed, and temporary bridges that had been used for several years were upgraded. This meant that Gelnhausen station could once again be used at 160 km/h.[42] The temporary bridges could be operated at 90 km/h.

On 9 April 2021, an electronic interlocking was put into operation in Flieden.

In July 2020, the Federal Railway Authority approved the construction of an electronic control centre in Wirtheim.[43]

Hanau-Würzburg/Fulda-Erfurt construction project edit

After German reunification—even before the completion of the previous development project—due to the expected increase in traffic in the early 1990s, a partial four-track upgrade between Hanau and Fulda was examined.[26] The traffic forecast for the Federal Transport Routes Plan 1992 provided for 36 long-distance passenger and 104 freight trains per day and direction for the year 2010 on the upgraded line. In mid-1994, Deutsche Bahn expected 38 long-distance passenger trains and 25 freight trains. The segregation of fast and slow traffic (Network 21) was not yet taken into account.[44]

In addition, since the 1990s there have been considerations about building a new line for high-speed traffic. One solution that was discussed was the Mottgers Spange ("Mottgers clasp"), a new line that would have branched out from the existing line at Wächtersbach and merged into the high-speed line between Hanover and Würzburg at Mottgers in the Sinntal. The higher speeds could have reduced the travel times from Frankfurt to Fulda and to Würzburg by around ten minutes each. In addition, the little-used section of the Hanover-Würzburg high-speed line between Fulda and Würzburg would have been more heavily used. In the meantime, a "Nordspessart variant" was also considered as an alternative, which in fact largely corresponded to the Mottgers Spange.[45]

A spatial sensitivity analysis from 2002 resulted in two possible solutions: a four-track upgrade between Hanau and Gelnhausen with a new line from Gelnhausen (Mottgers-Spange) and a four-track upgrade and a new Hanau-Gelnhausen-Fulda line with an additional Hanau–Aschaffenburg–Nantenbach (–Würzburg) upgrade. Based on this, Deutsche Bahn had developed a preliminary plan for the comparison of variants and included it in the spatial planning process. The necessary rebuilding of Hanau station would not have been part of the project.[46]

In the Federal Transport Routes Plan 2030, an upgraded Hanau-Gelnhausen line and a new Gelnhausen-Fulda line are listed as "urgent needs".[47] With more than 300 trains a day in freight, regional and long-distance traffic, the Fulda–Bebra section is also largely utilised, so a new route for the Fulda–Erfurt line is also part of the planning.

In January 2013, Deutsche Bahn and the Hessian Ministry of Transport announced that they would start further planning and that a project would be set up in the following months to develop the transport and operational tasks. Affected municipalities and citizens would be involved in the planning at an early stage.[48]

Hanau–Gelnhausen line upgrade edit

According to the planning status of 2009, the third track would first be extended beyond Hailer-Meerholz station to Gelnhausen. A four-track development would be kept open as an option.[46] Around 2014, a continuous four-track development between Hanau and Gelnhausen was planned. The Darmstadt Regional Council decided not to initiate a regional planning procedure. Deutsche Bahn hoped to begin an upgrade around 2020.[49]

It is planned to run the tracks for long-distance traffic on the inside and the tracks for local traffic on the outside. The design speed is 230 km/h.[50] In May 2017, the preliminary planning for the upgrade section was completed and construction is scheduled to start in 2025.[51] However, in order for the development to begin at all, the Gelnhausen electronic control centre (ESTW) must be built and the existing level crossings must be removed. The ESTW is scheduled to go into operation in October 2023.[52] The project is divided into seven planning approval sections. The eastern section between Gelnhausen Ost and Langenselbold Ost is scheduled to go into operation in 2030, and the remaining section to Hanau in 2036.[53]

Gelnhausen–Kalbach new line edit

 
Map of the Hanau–Würzburg/Fulda project with variants of the Gelnhausen–Fulda new line. The current preferred variant is Variant IV with the eastern bypass of the Kinzig reservoir.

In contrast to the Hanau–Gelnhausen section, a "spatial planning procedure" (Raumordnungsverfahren) is required for the section north of Gelnhausen to Fulda, which ends with a state planning assessment of spatial compatibility. In addition to application option IV, option VII was also proposed by DB Netz during the regional planning procedure.[54] Parallel to the regional planning process, exploratory drilling for the construction of the line began in July 2020.[55]

Option IV, which was introduced by Deutsche Bahn as the preferred option in the upcoming spatial planning procedure, is to be built largely in a tunnel between Gelnhausen and Mittelkalbach. A 10 km long railway tunnel is planned between Schlüchtern and Mittelkalbach, which does not cross the land ridge on the shortest route from south to north (option V), but runs from Schlüchtern over a longer distance from west to east via the district of Rückers to Mittelkalbach. The planned connection to the high-speed line between Hanover and Würzburg would be in Mittelkalbach and a link to the existing line north of Schlüchtern is planned.

The municipalities of Bad Soden-Salmünster, Schlüchtern, Steinau and Kalbach, which were severely affected by option IV, have rejected this option.[56][57]

Fulda–Bebra(–Gerstungen) edit

 
Search area for the Fulda–Gerstungen upgrade and new build project and upgrade of the existing Eisenach–Erfurt line

As part of the planning process, spatial planning for the course of a relief route has been underway since mid-2018, which will enable a direct link from Fulda to the line to Erfurt near Gerstungen.[58]

Long-distance railway tunnel and the German integrated timetable edit

The planned Frankfurt long-distance railway tunnel, which is to run through Frankfurt in a west–east direction and which will make it possible for long-distance trains to operate through Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof without changing direction there, may exit the Hanau line at Offenbach. However, the exact course of the tunnel has not yet been determined.

To solve an expected bottleneck at the southern Main connection of the long-distance railway tunnel, an additional double-track line between Offenbach West and the north side of Hanau station operated at up to 200 km/h is assumed in the third expert draft of the proposed German integrated regular-interval timetable. The estimated cost of this work is €2.1b at 2015 prices.[59][60] If a two-pronged eastern connection of the long-distance railway tunnel (to the lines north and south of the Main) is adopted, this new line will not be necessary.[59]

Other plans edit

Rosdorf station is to be reopened for passenger trains. This was agreed between the State of Lower Saxony, Landesnahverkehrsgesellschaft Niedersachsen (Lower Saxony Regional Transport Association) and Deutsche Bahn on 28 March 2019.[61]

Route edit

The line runs south and parallel to the Main from Frankfurt to Hanau, then on the northern slope of the Kinzig valley, traverses the Hessian ridge and from there runs to Fulda.

From Fulda, the line continues north to Bad Hersfeld. Although both towns are on the Fulda, a route along the Haune was chosen in order not to leave the territory of the Electorate of Hesse. At the time the line was built, part of the Fulda valley belonged to the Grand Duchy of Hesse. In order to get from Fulda to the Haune valley, the mountain ridge between the two river valleys near Steinau, north-east of Fulda, had to be negotiated 0ver a complex line with a drop of fifty metres in altitude.[62] The Burghaun tunnel was built near Burghaun to avoid a narrow valley east of the Haune. From Bad Hersfeld, where the Haune flows into the Fulda, the line runs back through the Fulda valley to Bebra.

The line leaves Bebra station in a loop and heads northeast into the Solz valley and then into a side valley to Braunhausen. From there, the valley of the Bebra was originally reached through the Braunhausen tunnel, which was converted into a cutting in 1962. The line then follows the route of the Bebra to the Cornberg tunnel, which passes through the ridge of land between the Bebra and the Cornberger Wasser; this is the watershed between Fulda and Werra. Along the Cornberger Wasser, the Sontra and the Wehre, the line descends to Eschwege-Niederhone, where the valley of the Werra is reached. The line continues north through this, with a loop of the Werra being shortened by the Schürzeberg tunnel. At Werleshausen, the line separates from the Werra and runs through the Bebenroth tunnel to Eichenberg. From there, the line descends into the valley of the Leine, which it follows to Göttingen.

Train control edit

A 16-kilometre section between Hanau and Gelnhausen (line kilometers 24.8-40.3) is equipped with the Linienzugbeeinflussung cab signalling and train protection system, has three tracks and can be operated at up to 200 km/h. The rest of the line has two tracks and can be operated at up to 160 km/h.

Between Frankfurt Hbf and Hanau Hbf and between Haitz-Höchst and Flieden, the line is also equipped with the ZUB 262 speed control for tilting technology system, since there are curves in the area of Wirtheim, Wächtersbach and between Bad Soden-Salmünster and Flieden, some of which only have a maximum speed of 130 km/h (only 110 km/h between Bad Soden-Salmünster and Schlüchtern). With the introduction of ICE T sets on ICE route 50, the journey time should be reduced. Operating at high speeds (tilting technology) was not used for several years because of technical problems on the sets. From the end of 2022, all trains on route 50 are capable of using tilting again, but the travel time gains from the tilting technology only serve to reduce delays and are not included in the regular timetable.[63]

Operations edit

In 1993, around 300 trains ran daily on the section between Gelnhausen and Hanau.[33] In about 2006, around 175 trains per day ran in each direction on the section between Flieden and Fulda. Of this, 23 percent was accounted for by long-distance passenger traffic, 18 percent by local passenger traffic and 59 percent by freight traffic.[36] During peak passenger traffic, up to nine trains per hour and direction (five long-distance, four local trains) ran.

In 2015, 250 to 300 trains traveled the line every day.[64]

The section between Hailer-Meerholz and Fulda was declared an overloaded railway on 30 September 2008.[64][50] Since 2011, freight trains have been switched to other lines whenever possible. From December 2019, no additional train paths for passenger transport would be accepted between 6 a.m. and 10 p.m. that went beyond the concept of the 2018 working timetable. Two relief infrastructure measures were to be implemented in 2020 and 2021, which was intended exclusively to improve operational quality.[50] An updated plan to increase railway capacity for the section was presented in 2021.[65]

Between Hanau and Flieden there are about 60 freight trains per day and direction, between Flieden and Fulda there are about 110 (as of 2015). Due to the congestion, the majority of freight traffic runs separately from passenger traffic at night between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m.[66]

The transport demand on the route is expected to increase by 25 percent in long-distance traffic by 2025 and by 53 percent in freight traffic (as of 2017).[67]

Long-distance services edit

The line between Frankfurt and Aschaffenburg is the line with the most Intercity-Express trains in Germany, with nine ICE services running at least every two hours.

With the opening of the Hanover–Würzburg high-speed railway in 1991, the Fulda–Göttingen line lost the InterCity trains that ran between Hanover and Frankfurt or Würzburg. On the other hand, with the fall of the Inner German border in 1989, east–west long-distance traffic continued to be handled on the existing line and traffic levels increased. It has handled Intercity services every 120 minutes since 1992 and ICE services have run every 120 minutes since 2000 on the Dresden–Leipzig–Erfurt–Eisenach–Frankfurt line and individual Intercity trains run as relief trains. Since the 2017/2018 timetable change and the full commissioning of the new Erfurt–Leipzig/Halle high-speed railway, ICE route 11 has also been running from Munich via Stuttgart, Mannheim, Frankfurt, Fulda, Erfurt and Leipzig to Berlin. There is also night train service on the line consisting of ÖBB NightJet trains and the (now suspended) Paris–Moscow night train.

Service Route Frequency
ICE 11 Berlin – Leipzig – Erfurt – Fulda – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Munich 120 min
ICE 12 Berlin – Braunschweig – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Fulda – Hanau – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel SBB (– Interlaken Ost) 120 min
ICE 13 Berlin – Braunschweig – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Fulda – Frankfurt Süd – Frankfurt Airport 120 min
ICE 15 (Binz – Stralsund –) Berlin – Halle – Erfurt – Frankfurt (– Darmstadt – Stuttgart) 120 min
ICE 20 (Kiel –) Hamburg – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Basel SBB (– Zürich – Chur) 120 min
ICE 22 (Kiel –) Hamburg – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Frankfurt – Frankfurt Airport – Stuttgart 120 min
ICE 41 (Dortmund –) Essen – Duisburg – Köln Messe/Deutz Frankfurt Airport – Frankfurt – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Munich (– Garmisch-Partenkirchen) 060 min
ICE 50 Dresden – Leipzig – Erfurt – Bad Hersfeld Fulda – Frankfurt – Frankfurt Airport – Wiesbaden (or Darmstadt – Mannheim – Kaiserslautern – Saarbrücken) 120 min
ICE 91 (Dortmund – Duisburg/Wuppertal – Cologne – Koblenz – Frankfurt Airport –) Frankfurt – Hanau – Nuremberg – Passau – Vienna 120 min

Regional services edit

Frankfurt–Hanau–Fulda edit

There are three Regional-Express services and one Regionalbahn service. The trains of the Rhine-Main S-Bahn use the mostly parallel Frankfurt Schlachthof–Hanau railway. The following trains operate in local rail passenger transport:

Service Route Frequency
RE 50 Frankfurt – Frankfurt Süd Offenbach – Hanau – Wächtersbach – Schlüchtern – Fulda 060 min
RB 51 Frankfurt – Frankfurt Süd – Offenbach – Hanau – Gelnhausen – Wächtersbach (– Bad Soden-Salmünster) 060 min
RE 55 Frankfurt – Frankfurt Süd – Offenbach – Hanau – Aschaffenburg – Würzburg (– Nuremberg) 120 min
RE 85 Frankfurt – Frankfurt Süd – Offenbach – Hanau – Groß-Umstadt Wiebelsbach Erbach 120 min

Most trains on the RE50 and RB51 consist of a class 114 locomotive with 5 double-deck cars and a double-deck control car. Relief trains with a class 114 and 3 double-deck cars and a double-deck control car also run several times a day.

A new transport contract for regional transport between Frankfurt and Fulda was tendered in July 2021[68] and awarded to DB Regio AG in 2022. The contract runs from 14 December 2025 to 8 December 2040 and should cover 3.2 million train kilometres per year.[69] New rolling stock of Alstom Coradia Stream HC, which are equipped with free WLAN and power points, are to be used. The journey time between Frankfurt and Fulda is to be reduced by 8 minutes.[70][71]

Fulda–Bebra edit

Local transport has been operated by Cantus Verkehrsgesellschaft since 10 December 2006. The RB5 of the Nordhessischer Verkehrsverbund (NVV) runs every hour between Fulda and Kassel. In addition, the RE5 has been running between Bad Hersfeld and Kassel since 13 December 2020, also hourly. Some DB Regio regional express train pairs run from Bebra to Frankfurt and back during the peak hour under the designations "RE5" or "RE50".

Bebra–Göttingen edit

In passenger transport, Cantus Verkehrsgesellschaft runs hourly with Stadler Stadler Flirt sets between Göttingen, Eschwege and Bebra as RB 87 of the NVV.

When the timetable changed on 13 December 2009, the Nordhessischer Verkehrsverbund put the line between Eschwege West and Eschwege Stadt) back into operation under its own control and modernised it. A connecting curve to the route of the former Kanonenbahn was built north and south of Eschwege West station. This bypasses Eschwege West station, which therefore no longer has any scheduled passenger services. Eschwege-Niederhone station was also built.

Gallery edit

References edit

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frankfurt, göttingen, railway, continuously, double, track, electrified, main, line, hesse, southern, lower, saxony, germany, line, initially, built, from, bebra, towards, fulda, kurhessen, state, railway, after, prussian, annexation, electorate, hesse, result. The Frankfurt Gottingen railway is a continuously double track and electrified main line in Hesse and southern Lower Saxony Germany The line was initially built from Bebra towards Fulda by the Kurhessen State Railway After the Prussian annexation of the Electorate of Hesse as a result of the Austro Prussian War of 1866 it was completed to Frankfurt as the Frankfurt Bebra Railway The line was later extended from Bebra to Gottingen Frankfurt GottingenIntercity Express running over the Main Neckar BridgeOverviewLine number3600 3680 Frankfurt Schlachthof Hanau 3677 third track Wolfgang Hailer Meerholz 3826 Schluchtern Ziegenberg Elm 3825 Flieden Elm 3828 third track Fulda Bronnzell Fulda LocaleHesse and Lower Saxony GermanyServiceRoute number610 615 540 1 611 613TechnicalLine length240 km 150 mi Number of tracks2 throughout Track gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeElectrification15 kV 16 7 Hz AC Overhead lineOperating speed200 km h 120 mph maximum Route mapLegend km from Frankfurt South S Bahn Frankfurt Main Hbf tief since 1978 0 0 000 0 Frankfurt Main Hbf since 1888 Homburg Railway to Frankfurt West Main Lahn Railway to Frankfurt Hochst Main Railway to Frankfurt Stadion Main Weser Railway to Giessen freight line from Frankfurt main freight yard Taunus Railway to Frankfurt Hochst 1 5 000 0 Main Neckar Bridge junction Main Neckar Bridge Main Neckar Railway to Heidelberg from Frankfurt Main Louisa S Bahn line from Darmstadt former route of the Main Neckar Railway Frankfurt Stresemannallee 3 1 000 0 Frankfurt Sud depot Frankfurt Stresemannallee Tunnel 213 m Main Railway from Frankfurt Stadion 4 407 Frankfurt Main Sud formerly Bebraer Bf to Frankfurt Main Hbf tief S Bahn to Hanau north Main line from Frankfurt Main Schlachthof S Bahn Frankfurt Muhlberg Local Railway from Frankfurt Sachsenhausen 7 300 Frankfurt Oberrad S Bahn under discussion to Offenbach Local Railway to Offenbach Marktplatz S Bahn 10 055 Offenbach Main Hbf 10 968 Offenbach Main Hbf Mitte depot from Offenbach Marktplatz S Bahn 11 700 Offenbach Main Ost former Offenbach industrial railway to Offenbach Bieber S Bahn Offenbach port railway 12 900 Offenbach Main freight yard 16 000 Muhlheim Main 16 776 Muhlheim Ost crossover Muhlheim Dietesheim flying junction 21 100 Hanau Steinheim 21 424 Steinheim Main Bridge 21 761 Hanau Mainbrucke station part from Frankfurt Main Sud north Main line planned North Main S Bahn line 22 974 Hanau south side Hanau north side Hanau port railway to Eberbach to Aschaffenburg 0 000 00 000 Hanau Rauschwald junction to Friedberg 1 798 25 284 Wolfgang Kr Hanau 30 145 Rodenbach b Hanau 33 860 Langenselbold Hasselbach 37 900 Niedermittlau 41 206 Hailer Meerholz from Giessen 44 092 Gelnhausen Kinzig 47 179 Haitz Hochst to Kalbach planned 48 20948 210 missing length 1 m 50 434 Wirtheim Kalbach Gelnhausen new line planned narrow gauge line from Bad Orb 54 791 Wachtersbach to Birstein 59 200 Kinzig 59 35059 351 missing length 0 8 m 61 352 Bad Soden Salmunster Kinzig 65 4 15065 5 0 49 additional length 1 m 68 052 Steinau Strasse Kalbach Gelnhausen new line planned 71 20671 214 missing length 7 6 m 74 345 Schluchtern Kalbach Gelnhausen new line planned 76 890 Schluchtern Ziegenberg junction Kalbach Gelnhausen new line planned Schluchtern Tunnel 3995 m 3576 m from Gemunden 82 1 Elm former route with reversal in Elm until 1914 Kalbach Gelnhausen new line planned 86 7 Distelrasen Flieden Fuldaische Hofe 82 000 Katzenberg crossover 82 8 32082 6 0 70 additional length 50 m Grade separated junction 85 24092 193 Flieden missing length 6 953 m 93 300 Fliede 96 300 Fliede 97 152 Neuhof Kr Fulda from Neuhof Ellers potash mine 98 53598 600 missing length 64 4 m 99 670 Neuhof Nord 98 300 Fliede Hanover Wurzburg HSR Dollbach 102 600 Kerzell 101 000 Fliede 103 000 Fliede 103 800103 801 missing length 1 m 104 200 Fliede 105 000 Fulda from Wurzburg HSR grade separated 105 655 from Gersfeld 106 364 Fulda former station 106 578 VzG line 3828 flying junction 108 200 Fulda goods yard W 123 108 861 Fulda goods yard 110 567 Fulda to Giessen 112 100 Fulda SFS Nord to Hannover HSR grade separated 115 168 Gotzenhof to Wustensachsen 117 2 00 Steinau Kr Fulda 120 340 Marbach Kr Fulda 127 131 Hunfeld to Wenigentaft Mansbach 131 185 Burghaun Kr Hunfeld Burghaun tunnel 238 m 140 104 Haunetal Neukirchen 148 004 Oberhaun Wildeck Honebach Langenschwarz HSL planned Fulda from Langenschwarz planned from Niederaula 153 179 Bad Hersfeld HSL to Wildeck Honebach planned former Hersfeld District Railway 156 840 Ludwigsau Friedlos 160 115 Mecklar Fulda 163 477 Bebra Blankenheim to Bebra marshalling yard to Fassdorf 164 245 Lammerberg to Bebra marshalling yard from Halle from Bebra marshalling yard 166 552 Bebra 167 400 Bebra Pbf Rbf Ul to Baunatal Guntershausen former Braunhausen tunnel 293 m until 1963 175 500 Asmushausen 177 445 Bebra tunnel crossover Cornberg tunnel 719 m 178 844 Cornberg former station 182 700 Berneburg Sontra from Sontra Brodberg industrial area 186 665 Sontra Sontra 193 744 Hoheneiche former station Sontra Wehre 197 070 Wehretal Reichensachsen reopened 2003 from Treysa flying junction 200 760 Eschwege Stegmuhle junction 201 563 Eschwege West station until 2009 to Eschwege Stadt formerly to Leinefelde 202 214 Eschwege Wehre junction 205 500 Albungen 212 526 Bad Sooden Allendorf 218 300 Oberrieden Schurzeberg tunnel 173 m Werra 220 800 Werleshausen 221 500 Werleshausen Bebenroth crossover Bebenroth tunnel 930 m 1030 m from Velmeden from Hann Munden 227 320 Eichenberg 231 m to Halle 228 420 Eichenberg Nordkopf junction HesseLower Saxony from Arenshausen until 1884 233 441 Friedland Han former station 238 018 Obernjesa station until May 1990 242 421 Rosdorf former station 244 868 Grone junction from Wurzburg HSL from Kassel Leine route until 1922 from Duderstadt narrow gauge 247 705 Gottingen to Bodenfelde to Hannover HSL to Hannover Source German railway atlas 1 During the division of Germany it became part of one of the most important German north south axes in long distance rail freight and rail passenger transport the North South railway The route continues to be of great importance for traffic but has been relieved in sections since 1991 by the Hanover Wurzburg high speed railway Further new lines are being planned as part of the Aus und Neubaustrecke Hanau Wurzburg Fulda Erfurt Hanau Wurzburg Fulda Erfurt upgraded and new line project Contents 1 History 1 1 Construction 1 2 Extension to Frankfurt 1 3 Extension to Gottingen 1 4 Development up to the Second World War 1 5 Division of Germany 1 6 Development and new construction 1 6 1 Hanover Wurzburg high speed line 1 6 2 Hanau Fulda upgrade project 1 6 3 Frankfurt Hanau S Bahn line 1 7 After German reunification 1 8 Hanau Wurzburg Fulda Erfurt construction project 1 8 1 Hanau Gelnhausen line upgrade 1 8 2 Gelnhausen Kalbach new line 1 8 3 Fulda Bebra Gerstungen 1 9 Long distance railway tunnel and the German integrated timetable 1 10 Other plans 2 Route 3 Train control 4 Operations 4 1 Long distance services 4 2 Regional services 4 2 1 Frankfurt Hanau Fulda 4 2 2 Fulda Bebra 4 2 3 Bebra Gottingen 5 Gallery 6 ReferencesHistory editWhen railways began to be built in Germany in the nineteenth century the two largest cities of the Electorate of Hesse Kurfurstentum Hessen shortened to Kurhessen which had been re established by the Congress of Vienna in 1815 were its capital Kassel and the city of Hanau in its far south Initially it was not practical to build a railway to connect Kurhessen through the mountainous country between Hanau and Fulda Instead a railway was established jointly by the three countries of Kurhessen the Grand Duchy of Hesse and Free City of Frankfurt and completed between Frankfurt and Kassel in 1852 Meanwhile the Frankfurt Hanau railway was opened in 1848 by the Frankfurt Hanauer Eisenbahn Gesellschaft Frankfurt Hanau Railway Company allowing a connection between Kassel and Hanau via Frankfurt although the lines were not physically linked In order to reach Hanau through the Kurhessian area it would be necessary to start from the town of Bebra which was on the line of the Friedrich Wilhelms Nordbahn Gesellschaft Frederick William Northern Railway Company and could be reached from Kassel A railway line could be built via Fulda to Hanau The Kurhessische Staatsbahn Kurhessen State Railway was given the commission to construct the line by a decision of the Kurhessian Estates Assembly Kurhessische Standeversammlung on 19 March 1863 2 3 Construction edit The first section between Bebra and Hersfeld was opened on 22 January 1866 2 After the annexation of the Electorate of Hesse by Prussia following the Austro Prussian War in 1866 the project was taken over by Prussia and construction began in the southern section as well In order not to leave Kurhessian territory the railway followed the valley of the Haune and not that of the Fulda which belonged to the Grand Duchy of Hesse A winding route was accepted for this The Kingdom of Prussia was able to open the line to Hanau within two years As late as 1864 the former Free City of Frankfurt had prevented the line from being continued to Frankfurt and also refused the Frankfurt Hanau Railway Company permission to use the Frankfurt East Hanau Aschaffenburg route even though it ran through Kurhessian territory After Prussia had also annexed Frankfurt in the Peace of Prague trains from Bebra could now run via Hanau station to Frankfurt However since this was in the east of Frankfurt and thus far away from the Frankfurt western stations and the lines ending there the trains were connected to the Main Neckar station Main Neckar Bahnhof via the Frankfurt City Link Line from 1869 Extension to Frankfurt edit nbsp Car no 16 1 2 class of the Bebra Hanauer Eisenbahn about 1869 nbsp Frankfurt Sachsenhausen in front the southern Main route on the right the North Main line on the Deutschherrn Bridge nbsp Steinheim Main Bridge The North Main connection via the Frankfurt Hanau Railway Company line had several disadvantages It meant a detour and bypassed the town of Offenbach am Main not least because the capacity of the city link line was limited So there were plans for a southern Main line that would connect with the Frankfurt Offenbach Local Railway in Offenbach However the tracks of the local railway were not designed to handle long distance railway traffic so a new long distance line was built on an embankment which bypassed the centres of Sachsenhausen and Offenbach to the south The proposed line ran through the Grand Duchy of Hesse This section of the new railway line was therefore authorised a state treaty of 12 June 1868 4 This state treaty determined among other things in Article 21 that all scheduled trains that transport passengers had to stop at the station for Offenbach and at all stops for Steinheim and Muhlheim at least three trains would stop daily in each direction to arrange passenger traffic to and from the other stations of the Hanau Frankfurt railway and as far as practicable also to and from the connecting railways 5 In Hanau the line could not be routed through the then Hanau station now Hanau West as it was not well located for the location specified for the Main crossing Instead Hanau Ost station now Hanau Hauptbahnhof was built a little further south east at the point where the Frankfurt Bebra railway crosses the Frankfurt Hanau Railway Company line to Aschaffenburg The opening of the new line was delayed until the completion of the Steinheim Main Bridge The line was first put into operation to Bebra station now Frankfurt Main Sud station in Sachsenhausen on 15 November 1873 In 1874 the new railway was subordinated to the Direction der Bebra Hanauer Bahn railway division of the Bebra Hanau Railway which was relocated from Kassel to Frankfurt and from 1 April 1874 was called the Konigliche Eisenbahn Direction zu Frankfurt am Main Royal Railway Division of Frankfurt am Main On 15 November 1874 the Bebra Hanauer Eisenbahn Bebra Hanau Railway was renamed the Frankfurt Bebraer Eisenbahn Frankfurt Bebra Railway Trains from Sachsenhausen could reach Frankfurt s Main Neckar station from 1 December 1875 Opening dates 2 22 January 1866 Bebra Bad Hersfeld 1 October 1866 Bad Hersfeld Hunfeld Fulda 1 May 1867 Hanau Ost Wachtersbach 1 July 1868 Fulda Neuhof 1 July 1868 Wachtersbach Steinau Strasse 15 December 1868 Neuhof Steinau Strasse including the zig zag in Elm station 15 November 1873 Hanau Ost Frankfurt Bebraer station 1 December 1875 Frankfurt Bebraer station Frankfurt Main Neckar station Extension to Gottingen edit The section from Friedland Han to Gottingen was built in 1867 as part of a connecting line from Arenshausen on the Halle Hann Munden railway to the Hanoverian Southern Railway After the annexation of Hanover and Kurhessen the Prussian state railways wanted to connect the Hanoverian Southern Railway and the Frankfurt Bebra Railway directly A north south axis was to be created together with the Elm Gemunden railway that was planned at the same time In addition the also planned militarily important Kanonenbahn Cannons Railway would have connections to the north Hannover Gottingen and south Bebra Hanau Arenshausen and Witzenhausen were also discussed as connections in the north but agreement was reached on a link in Friedland and a link with the Halle Hann Munden railway in Eichenberg On 25 March 1872 the Prussian state decided to build a line from Bebra to Friedland and a branch line from Niederhone to Eschwege 2 6 The section from Bebra to Niederhone now Eschwege West and from there the first section of the Cannons Railway to Eschwege station were opened in 1875 A year later the Niederhone Eichenberg Friedland section followed In order to cross the watersheds between the Fulda and the Werra near Cornberg and between the Werra and the Leine near Eichenberg considerable gradients and four tunnels were necessary 7 and the route had many curves The direct connection between Friedland and Arenshausen was abandoned in 1884 as the connection via Eichenberg was sufficient Development up to the Second World War edit To connect to the new Central Bahnhof Frankfurt Frankfurt Central Station now Frankfurt Main Hauptbahnhof a new line had to be built from Sachsenhausen to a point about a kilometre further to the south west For this purpose the new Main Neckar Bridge was built from 1881 and opened on 1 August 1885 initially only for freight traffic After the closure of the Frankfurt West station and the opening of the Central Station on 18 August 1888 the old line over the old Main Neckar Bridge now the Friedensbrucke was abandoned From 1908 to 1910 the railway facilities in Gottingen were redesigned the tracks were raised a marshalling yard that is now closed was built and the Gottingen Bodenfelde railway was connected The railway to Bebra also received a new route from Gottingen to Rosdorf west of Leineberg Before that the line separated from the Hanover Kassel line at Gottingen station and ran almost in a straight line south towards Rosdorf hence the Eisenbahnstrasse Railway Street in the Leineviertel the area south of Gottingen station on the east bank of the Leine The topographic problem was crossing the ridge between Flieden and Schluechtern With the technical means available at the time when the railway was being built a tunnel of almost 4 km in length was initially too complex and expensive Instead a zig zag was built with Elm as the zig zag station Here all through trains had to change direction which became increasingly unacceptable with increasing traffic and the connection of the Flieden Gemunden railway in Elm in 1873 The technology for building longer tunnels was improved at the beginning of the 20th century and in particular significantly improved by the dynamite that was now available The construction of the Schluechtern Tunnel under the Distelrasen range began in 1909 This was completed on 14 February 1914 and went into operation on 1 May In 1914 a connecting curve was opened south of Bebra which enabled journeys from Frankfurt to Leipzig to Berlin without having to change direction in Bebra So it is called the Berliner Kurve Berlin curve The regional traffic volume in the sparsely populated region north of Fulda was low The branch lines that branched off did not increase traffic much The Bad Hersfeld Treysa railway was opened from Bad Hersfeld in 1906 Some of it is still used for freight transport The Hersfeld Kreisbahn Hersfeld District Railway also branched off in Bad Hersfeld from 1912 to 1993 In Hunfeld there was a connection via Eiterfeld to Vacha From Gotzenhof it was possible to travel through the northern Rhon to Hilders from 1889 to 1986 In 1939 four pairs of Durchgangszug express trains with corridor coaches ran between Gottingen and Bebra each day while twelve expresses ran on the neighbouring Main Weser Railway between Kassel and Frankfurt During the Second World War the strategically important line was the target of Allied air raids notably on 4 December 1944 near Schluechtern and Gelnhausen 8 Division of Germany edit Since 1866 national borders between Eichenberg and Bebra had been irrelevant That changed in 1945 when Germany was divided into occupation zones A section about four kilometers long near Werleshausen south of Eichenberg ran through the Soviet occupation zone In order to ease this situation an exchange of territories was agreed in the Wanfried Agreement in 1945 After the agreement was concluded the participating officers exchanged flasks of whisky and vodka and from then on the railway line was known jokingly in German as the Whisky Wodka Linie 9 As a result of the new border the line was consistently in the area of the Western Allies and thus completely on the territory of the later Federal Republic All eastbound routes from Eichenberg Halle Hann Munden railway and Eschwege Kanonenbahn several branch lines were interrupted by the border Until the Second World War it was mainly used for traffic on the Frankfurt Leipzig route Due to the division of Germany this east west traffic came to a standstill apart from transit and interzone trains which now operated with a change of locomotive and direction of travel in Bebra As a result the main traffic direction shifted to north south from Hanover and Hamburg to Frankfurt and also via the Flieden Gemunden railway towards Bavaria The latter axis became an important connection in the Federal Republic known as the North South railway In the summer of 1989 37 long distance trains ran between Gottingen and Bebra per day in each direction In order to be able to handle the traffic the line was upgraded As early as the 1950s more powerful signal boxes were built which enabled track change operations safe operations in either direction on either track on the inclines before Cornberg and Eichenberg The commissioning of track change operations from Bebra to Cornberg took place on 17 October 1951 10 On 30 September 1961 the electrified line between Hanau and Fulda was ceremonially opened for operation as the first electrified section of the north south line the 4000th electrified kilometre in the Deutsche Bundesbahn network had been celebrated near Wachtersbach in September 1961 11 A total of around 3 000 catenary masts 250 kilometres of catenary and a traction current line with several hundred high voltage pylons were erected which connected the Aschaffenburg power station with the new Flieden substation In addition to several bridges that were rebuilt to create the necessary clearance the porous vault of the Schluechtern tunnel had to be renovated By 1963 the remaining sections were electrified To make room for the overhead line the Braunhausen tunnel was converted into a cutting and the tracks in the other tunnels were lowered Many smaller stations were abandoned so that the local trains that stopped would not impede the intercity trains This happened at Obernjesa in 1989 Development and new construction edit Hanover Wurzburg high speed line edit As early as the 1960s it became clear that the entire North South railway was too congested and too slow to adequately handle long distance traffic At Eichenberg the curves only allow 90 km h at Bebra only 70 km h This led to the planning and construction of the Hanover Wurzburg high speed railway which took over the high speed long distance traffic on the north south axis between Gottingen and Fulda in 1991 Freight trains night trains and regional services stayed on the old line In the course of the discussion about connecting Fulda to the new Hanover Wurzburg line it was considered in the first half of the 1970s that the new line would bypass Fulda and only provide links to the existing line to the north and south of Fulda 12 Later it was decided that the line would pass through Fulda instead During the construction phase of the new line the connection of the Frankfurt Gottingen line to the Fulda junction was changed Since then both southbound tracks have left the junction next to each other before the new track towards Wurzburg crosses the track towards Frankfurt at the southern flying junction In addition a centrally located flying junction was built which provides a grade separated connection to the eastern track of the line from Frankfurt with the platform next to the station building of Fulda station track 1 13 Hanau Fulda upgrade project edit The upgrade of the line was already part of the development program for the Deutsche Bundesbahn network presented in 1970 14 In the Federal Transport Routes Plan Bundesverkehrswegeplan of 1973 the Flieden Frankfurt am Main section was listed as one of eight planned upgrade routes in the field of railways 15 The route was no longer included in the 1976 coordinated investment program for federal transport routes up to 1985 The available investment funds would thus be concentrated on the six upgraded lines and the two new lines that had been started at this time 14 The development project was also not included in the Federal Transport Routes Plan 1980 16 As early as the mid 1980s the line was considered to be congested and the operational quality was very unsatisfactory in some sections 17 In mid 1984 the Bundesbahn division Bundesbahndirektion in Frankfurt am Main began investigating how to update the Federal Transport Route Plan An iterative procedure was to be used to identify sections of the route that would allow the greatest possible reduction in travel time by means of small upgrade steps and pieces of new infrastructure An upgrade allowing a speed of 200 km h was aimed at For the individual sections of the Kinzig Valley Railway the investigation showed very different costs due to variable topographies and structures This resulted in a package of measures worth DM 460m 1984 prices Depending on the train design a travel time reduction of six to nine minutes should be achieved on the 103 kilometer section compared to the travel time of an Intercity train of 54 minutes in 1985 14 The line capacity would be increased by around fifty trains per day and direction 18 A joint investigation of the Kinzig Valley route and the Riedbahn Mannheim Frankfurt railway commissioned by the Federal Ministry of Transport resulted in a benefit cost ratio of 15 With a total investment of DM 960m 1983 prices 18 an annual contribution to the net results of the Bundesbahn of DM 256m per year was expected 14 The section between Fulda and Frankfurt was estimated to cost DM 460m 18 These results led to the project being listed in the urgent needs of the Federal Transport Routes Plan 1985 18 The measure was to be implemented as quickly as possible and essentially completed in 1991 for the start of ICE traffic 14 Immediately after the Federal Transport Route Plan was approved in 1985 the Bundesbahn began planning the development project 19 As part of the preliminary planning completed in 1986 it was intended to create three 200 km h high speed sections with a total length of 55 kilometres between Hanau Wolfgang and Gelnhausen Hochst north of Wachtersbach and between the Flieden and Fulda areas Between the southern and the middle high speed section the line should be able to be operated at 170 km h The lowest target speed of 110 km h would be reached in Hanau Wolfgang and Schluechtern Major line improvements for the project were planned in Kerzell Neuhof Bad Soden Salmunster and Wirtheim with smaller works in Wachtersbach and Gelnhausen Five passing tracks were to be built and five more were to be extended In addition six new signal boxes and four new platform edges were to be built Five signal boxes and a total of 41 bridges were to be rebuilt and the entire route equipped with the Linienzugbeeinflussung train control system 17 An audit by the Deutsche Bundesbahn headquarters showed that the specified budget of DM 460m would be exceeded by DM 72m The upgrade targets were therefore reduced By reducing the upgrade target in the section between Bad Soden Salmunster and Haitz Hochst from 200 or 170 km h to 160 or 150 km h DM 65m would be saved with a reduced travel time gain of 0 7 minutes In addition an overtaking track south of Gelnhausen and a transfer point with a total cost of around DM 5m were to be dispensed with 18 The planning from 1988 envisaged expanding the Wolfgang Gelnhausen section to three tracks to enable 200 km h operations by 1991 An extension of the three track development to Wachtersbach was taken into account in the planning 18 The Neuhof Fulda section was to follow by 1994 20 DM 66 million of an estimated DM 460m was spent between 1986 and 1989 21 After the state of Hesse had requested a spatial planning procedure for the three track expansion from Hanau to Gelnhausen and the line improvements at Kerzell and Neuhof on 1 December 1986 there were delays By the end of 1988 the expansion target that had been aimed for up to 1991 had been reduced to an approximately 12 kilometer high speed section between Rodenbach and Hailer Meerholz 22 By then all spatial planning procedures with the exception of the Neuhof section had been completed and most of the planning approval procedures had been initiated 23 In 1989 the last of four spatial planning procedures for the Neuhof area was completed 65 individual measures were planned along the 103 kilometres of the route At the end of 1989 13 projects were under construction 24 The official start of upgrade was marked by the symbolic driving of a first pile by the then Hessian State Secretary for Economic Affairs Dieter Posch on 27 September 1989 in Steinau an der Strasse 25 According to the planning status of 1989 the approximately 25 kilometre long section between Hanau Wolfgang and Gelnhausen Hochst and the approximately 15 kilometre section between Flieden and the southern outskirts of Fulda were intended to be upgraded to 200 km h In the course of the decision on the future of the Schluechtern tunnel an extension of the northern high speed section by a further 8 kilometres to the south would also be examined Along the rest of the route 120 to 160 km h would be possible Drops in line speeds after completion of the upgrade were planned for Hanau Wolfgang 90 km h and Schluechtern 100 km h Including the elimination of level crossings around 120 individual measures were planned 14 After completion of the upgrade measures speeds of 200 km h would be possible on around 37 kilometres of track 25 Together with the upgrade of the Mannheim Frankfurt railway the journey time between Fulda and Mannheim was initially to be reduced by seven minutes for the start of ICE operations 1991 and by 15 minutes compared to the initial situation by 1995 19 The development work began in 1987 completion was planned in 1991 for 1994 The construction of the Schluechtern Tunnel was the most important sub project The second stage was originally to be completed by the time the Hanover Wurzburg and Mannheim Stuttgart high speed lines were fully operational 1991 There were delays in the planning approval process especially when removing the 20 22 level crossings 26 In 1990 it was planned to spend DM 610m within six years of which DM 150m would be financed by other parties to eliminate level crossings Half of the DB investment costs of DM 460m would serve to increase capacity and increase performance 19 The third track between Hanau and Gelnhausen alone was estimated to cost DM 179m 19 By the beginning of 1991 four of the 25 planning approval sections had been completed 13 were under construction five were in the planning approval process and three were in planning 26 As of 1990 the overall project was to be completed in the second half of the 1990s 27 When scheduled ICE operations began on 2 June 1991 the high speed section 200 km h between Hanau Wolfgang and Hailer Meerholz was put into operation 28 In addition the Bronnzell Flieden Ahl Wachtersbach and Wirtheim Niedermittlau sections have since been authorised to be operated at 160 km h 26 29 By the end of 1991 a total of DM 281m had been invested out of an estimated DM 630m 1 January 1991 prices 30 In 1992 the line was one of the five lines that were primarily to be equipped with CIR ELKE high performance signalling blocks 31 On 22 May 1993 the third track between Hanau and Hailer Meerholz 19 kilometres went into operation Like the parallel tracks in this section it is largely designed for speeds of 200 km h A total of DM 230m were invested in the four year three track upgrade combined with upgrading the existing tracks for 200 km h including around DM 150m for the third track 32 33 A total of around 200 000 cubic metres of earth were removed and temporarily stored The strength of some of the subsoil had to be reinforced 33 Frankfurt Hanau S Bahn line edit The construction of the Frankfurt Schlachthof Hanau railway via Offenbach at the end of the 20th century also affected a large part of the existing track infrastructure Since then the platforms of Offenbach Ost station have only been served by the S Bahn while the old main line was relocated to a new route to the north of and parallel with the old line At the former Steinheim Main station the entrance building to the south of the old line was demolished and an outside platform was built on the north side of the new S Bahn line The entrance building of the former Muhlheim Main station built in 1873 has been preserved as a cultural monument The platform close to the entrance building was closed The trains on the main line pass now through without stopping An island platform was retained for the double track S Bahn line After German reunification edit nbsp Construction site of autobahn 66 in the area of the Neuhof station 2010 nbsp A Regionalbahn train from Wachtersbach to Frankfurt makes an unscheduled stop on platform 3 of Niedermittlau station The bridge of the bypass from Grundau to Niedermittlau can be seen in the background After 1945 the Halle Hann Munden railway was interrupted at the Inner German border which was abolished in July 1990 The line reopened east of Eichenberg at the same time In 1998 a connecting curve was built north east of Eichenberg which enables direct journeys from Gottingen to Heilbad Heiligenstadt It thus resumed the function of the Arenshausen Friedland railway which had been abandoned in 1884 On 2 February 1995 scheduled use of double decker coaches began on the line between Hanau and Fulda half funded by Deutsche Bahn and half by the state of Hesse from funds from the Municipal Transport Financing Act 34 With the possibility of being able to overtake regional trains on the fly as a result of the establishment of bidirectional track operations longer waiting times in the stations could be avoided The travel time on the 55 kilometre Wachtersbach Frankfurt line fell by up to 18 minutes the number of working day regional trains was increased from 87 to 91 when it went into operation From 2007 DB Netz built the new Schluechtern tunnel which initially went into operation on two tracks in April 2011 and then renovated the old tunnel At the beginning of 2014 the old tunnel was returned to operation but as a single track The second tunnel was reduced to one track by June 2014 since then one track has been available for each direction The permissible speed in this section was increased from 110 km h to 140 km h and then to 160 km h as part of the renovation During the construction of the Autobahn 66 Neuhof Eichenzell the line in the Neuhof area was rerouted over a 3 3 kilometre section The line speed in the station area was increased from 130 km h to 160 km h The estimated cost as of 2006 was 56 m 35 36 Commissioning took place in stages up to the end of 2011 Between 2010 and 2013 a new 1030 metre long new building was drilled next to the Bebenroth tunnel and the previous tunnel was renovated Since then both tubes have only contained one track 37 The Fulda Bebra section was upgraded as part of the Fulda Erfurt axis for the use of the eddy current brakes for ICE 3 sets 38 In December 2015 a bridge was built over the railway line in Niedermittlau replacing the former level crossing 39 In 2018 DB Netz set up electronic interlockings in Bad Hersfeld and Haunetal Neukirchen 40 The Haunetal electronic interlocking with a control centre in Bad Hersfeld went into operation on 25 March 2019 It controls a roughly 25 km section between Mecklar and Burghaun 41 At the end of December 2019 the Gelnhausen flood bridge was renewed and temporary bridges that had been used for several years were upgraded This meant that Gelnhausen station could once again be used at 160 km h 42 The temporary bridges could be operated at 90 km h On 9 April 2021 an electronic interlocking was put into operation in Flieden In July 2020 the Federal Railway Authority approved the construction of an electronic control centre in Wirtheim 43 Hanau Wurzburg Fulda Erfurt construction project edit After German reunification even before the completion of the previous development project due to the expected increase in traffic in the early 1990s a partial four track upgrade between Hanau and Fulda was examined 26 The traffic forecast for the Federal Transport Routes Plan 1992 provided for 36 long distance passenger and 104 freight trains per day and direction for the year 2010 on the upgraded line In mid 1994 Deutsche Bahn expected 38 long distance passenger trains and 25 freight trains The segregation of fast and slow traffic Network 21 was not yet taken into account 44 In addition since the 1990s there have been considerations about building a new line for high speed traffic One solution that was discussed was the Mottgers Spange Mottgers clasp a new line that would have branched out from the existing line at Wachtersbach and merged into the high speed line between Hanover and Wurzburg at Mottgers in the Sinntal The higher speeds could have reduced the travel times from Frankfurt to Fulda and to Wurzburg by around ten minutes each In addition the little used section of the Hanover Wurzburg high speed line between Fulda and Wurzburg would have been more heavily used In the meantime a Nordspessart variant was also considered as an alternative which in fact largely corresponded to the Mottgers Spange 45 A spatial sensitivity analysis from 2002 resulted in two possible solutions a four track upgrade between Hanau and Gelnhausen with a new line from Gelnhausen Mottgers Spange and a four track upgrade and a new Hanau Gelnhausen Fulda line with an additional Hanau Aschaffenburg Nantenbach Wurzburg upgrade Based on this Deutsche Bahn had developed a preliminary plan for the comparison of variants and included it in the spatial planning process The necessary rebuilding of Hanau station would not have been part of the project 46 In the Federal Transport Routes Plan 2030 an upgraded Hanau Gelnhausen line and a new Gelnhausen Fulda line are listed as urgent needs 47 With more than 300 trains a day in freight regional and long distance traffic the Fulda Bebra section is also largely utilised so a new route for the Fulda Erfurt line is also part of the planning In January 2013 Deutsche Bahn and the Hessian Ministry of Transport announced that they would start further planning and that a project would be set up in the following months to develop the transport and operational tasks Affected municipalities and citizens would be involved in the planning at an early stage 48 Hanau Gelnhausen line upgrade edit According to the planning status of 2009 the third track would first be extended beyond Hailer Meerholz station to Gelnhausen A four track development would be kept open as an option 46 Around 2014 a continuous four track development between Hanau and Gelnhausen was planned The Darmstadt Regional Council decided not to initiate a regional planning procedure Deutsche Bahn hoped to begin an upgrade around 2020 49 It is planned to run the tracks for long distance traffic on the inside and the tracks for local traffic on the outside The design speed is 230 km h 50 In May 2017 the preliminary planning for the upgrade section was completed and construction is scheduled to start in 2025 51 However in order for the development to begin at all the Gelnhausen electronic control centre ESTW must be built and the existing level crossings must be removed The ESTW is scheduled to go into operation in October 2023 52 The project is divided into seven planning approval sections The eastern section between Gelnhausen Ost and Langenselbold Ost is scheduled to go into operation in 2030 and the remaining section to Hanau in 2036 53 Gelnhausen Kalbach new line edit nbsp Map of the Hanau Wurzburg Fulda project with variants of the Gelnhausen Fulda new line The current preferred variant is Variant IV with the eastern bypass of the Kinzig reservoir In contrast to the Hanau Gelnhausen section a spatial planning procedure Raumordnungsverfahren is required for the section north of Gelnhausen to Fulda which ends with a state planning assessment of spatial compatibility In addition to application option IV option VII was also proposed by DB Netz during the regional planning procedure 54 Parallel to the regional planning process exploratory drilling for the construction of the line began in July 2020 55 Option IV which was introduced by Deutsche Bahn as the preferred option in the upcoming spatial planning procedure is to be built largely in a tunnel between Gelnhausen and Mittelkalbach A 10 km long railway tunnel is planned between Schluchtern and Mittelkalbach which does not cross the land ridge on the shortest route from south to north option V but runs from Schluchtern over a longer distance from west to east via the district of Ruckers to Mittelkalbach The planned connection to the high speed line between Hanover and Wurzburg would be in Mittelkalbach and a link to the existing line north of Schluchtern is planned The municipalities of Bad Soden Salmunster Schluchtern Steinau and Kalbach which were severely affected by option IV have rejected this option 56 57 Fulda Bebra Gerstungen edit nbsp Search area for the Fulda Gerstungen upgrade and new build project and upgrade of the existing Eisenach Erfurt line As part of the planning process spatial planning for the course of a relief route has been underway since mid 2018 which will enable a direct link from Fulda to the line to Erfurt near Gerstungen 58 Long distance railway tunnel and the German integrated timetable edit The planned Frankfurt long distance railway tunnel which is to run through Frankfurt in a west east direction and which will make it possible for long distance trains to operate through Frankfurt Main Hauptbahnhof without changing direction there may exit the Hanau line at Offenbach However the exact course of the tunnel has not yet been determined To solve an expected bottleneck at the southern Main connection of the long distance railway tunnel an additional double track line between Offenbach West and the north side of Hanau station operated at up to 200 km h is assumed in the third expert draft of the proposed German integrated regular interval timetable The estimated cost of this work is 2 1b at 2015 prices 59 60 If a two pronged eastern connection of the long distance railway tunnel to the lines north and south of the Main is adopted this new line will not be necessary 59 Other plans edit Rosdorf station is to be reopened for passenger trains This was agreed between the State of Lower Saxony Landesnahverkehrsgesellschaft Niedersachsen Lower Saxony Regional Transport Association and Deutsche Bahn on 28 March 2019 61 Route editThe line runs south and parallel to the Main from Frankfurt to Hanau then on the northern slope of the Kinzig valley traverses the Hessian ridge and from there runs to Fulda From Fulda the line continues north to Bad Hersfeld Although both towns are on the Fulda a route along the Haune was chosen in order not to leave the territory of the Electorate of Hesse At the time the line was built part of the Fulda valley belonged to the Grand Duchy of Hesse In order to get from Fulda to the Haune valley the mountain ridge between the two river valleys near Steinau north east of Fulda had to be negotiated 0ver a complex line with a drop of fifty metres in altitude 62 The Burghaun tunnel was built near Burghaun to avoid a narrow valley east of the Haune From Bad Hersfeld where the Haune flows into the Fulda the line runs back through the Fulda valley to Bebra The line leaves Bebra station in a loop and heads northeast into the Solz valley and then into a side valley to Braunhausen From there the valley of the Bebra was originally reached through the Braunhausen tunnel which was converted into a cutting in 1962 The line then follows the route of the Bebra to the Cornberg tunnel which passes through the ridge of land between the Bebra and the Cornberger Wasser this is the watershed between Fulda and Werra Along the Cornberger Wasser the Sontra and the Wehre the line descends to Eschwege Niederhone where the valley of the Werra is reached The line continues north through this with a loop of the Werra being shortened by the Schurzeberg tunnel At Werleshausen the line separates from the Werra and runs through the Bebenroth tunnel to Eichenberg From there the line descends into the valley of the Leine which it follows to Gottingen Train control editA 16 kilometre section between Hanau and Gelnhausen line kilometers 24 8 40 3 is equipped with the Linienzugbeeinflussung cab signalling and train protection system has three tracks and can be operated at up to 200 km h The rest of the line has two tracks and can be operated at up to 160 km h Between Frankfurt Hbf and Hanau Hbf and between Haitz Hochst and Flieden the line is also equipped with the ZUB 262 speed control for tilting technology system since there are curves in the area of Wirtheim Wachtersbach and between Bad Soden Salmunster and Flieden some of which only have a maximum speed of 130 km h only 110 km h between Bad Soden Salmunster and Schluchtern With the introduction of ICE T sets on ICE route 50 the journey time should be reduced Operating at high speeds tilting technology was not used for several years because of technical problems on the sets From the end of 2022 all trains on route 50 are capable of using tilting again but the travel time gains from the tilting technology only serve to reduce delays and are not included in the regular timetable 63 Operations editIn 1993 around 300 trains ran daily on the section between Gelnhausen and Hanau 33 In about 2006 around 175 trains per day ran in each direction on the section between Flieden and Fulda Of this 23 percent was accounted for by long distance passenger traffic 18 percent by local passenger traffic and 59 percent by freight traffic 36 During peak passenger traffic up to nine trains per hour and direction five long distance four local trains ran In 2015 250 to 300 trains traveled the line every day 64 The section between Hailer Meerholz and Fulda was declared an overloaded railway on 30 September 2008 64 50 Since 2011 freight trains have been switched to other lines whenever possible From December 2019 no additional train paths for passenger transport would be accepted between 6 a m and 10 p m that went beyond the concept of the 2018 working timetable Two relief infrastructure measures were to be implemented in 2020 and 2021 which was intended exclusively to improve operational quality 50 An updated plan to increase railway capacity for the section was presented in 2021 65 Between Hanau and Flieden there are about 60 freight trains per day and direction between Flieden and Fulda there are about 110 as of 2015 Due to the congestion the majority of freight traffic runs separately from passenger traffic at night between 10 p m and 6 a m 66 The transport demand on the route is expected to increase by 25 percent in long distance traffic by 2025 and by 53 percent in freight traffic as of 2017 67 Long distance services edit The line between Frankfurt and Aschaffenburg is the line with the most Intercity Express trains in Germany with nine ICE services running at least every two hours With the opening of the Hanover Wurzburg high speed railway in 1991 the Fulda Gottingen line lost the InterCity trains that ran between Hanover and Frankfurt or Wurzburg On the other hand with the fall of the Inner German border in 1989 east west long distance traffic continued to be handled on the existing line and traffic levels increased It has handled Intercity services every 120 minutes since 1992 and ICE services have run every 120 minutes since 2000 on the Dresden Leipzig Erfurt Eisenach Frankfurt line and individual Intercity trains run as relief trains Since the 2017 2018 timetable change and the full commissioning of the new Erfurt Leipzig Halle high speed railway ICE route 11 has also been running from Munich via Stuttgart Mannheim Frankfurt Fulda Erfurt and Leipzig to Berlin There is also night train service on the line consisting of OBB NightJet trains and the now suspended Paris Moscow night train Service Route Frequency ICE 11 Berlin Leipzig Erfurt Fulda Frankfurt Mannheim Stuttgart Munich 120 min ICE 12 Berlin Braunschweig Kassel Wilhelmshohe Fulda Hanau Frankfurt Mannheim Karlsruhe Basel SBB Interlaken Ost 120 min ICE 13 Berlin Braunschweig Kassel Wilhelmshohe Fulda Frankfurt Sud Frankfurt Airport 120 min ICE 15 Binz Stralsund Berlin Halle Erfurt Frankfurt Darmstadt Stuttgart 120 min ICE 20 Kiel Hamburg Kassel Wilhelmshohe Frankfurt Mannheim Karlsruhe Basel SBB Zurich Chur 120 min ICE 22 Kiel Hamburg Kassel Wilhelmshohe Frankfurt Frankfurt Airport Stuttgart 120 min ICE 41 Dortmund Essen Duisburg Koln Messe Deutz Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt Wurzburg Nuremberg Munich Garmisch Partenkirchen 0 60 min ICE 50 Dresden Leipzig Erfurt Bad Hersfeld Fulda Frankfurt Frankfurt Airport Wiesbaden or Darmstadt Mannheim Kaiserslautern Saarbrucken 120 min ICE 91 Dortmund Duisburg Wuppertal Cologne Koblenz Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt Hanau Nuremberg Passau Vienna 120 min Regional services edit Frankfurt Hanau Fulda edit There are three Regional Express services and one Regionalbahn service The trains of the Rhine Main S Bahn use the mostly parallel Frankfurt Schlachthof Hanau railway The following trains operate in local rail passenger transport Service Route Frequency RE 50 Frankfurt Frankfurt Sud Offenbach Hanau Wachtersbach Schluchtern Fulda 0 60 min RB 51 Frankfurt Frankfurt Sud Offenbach Hanau Gelnhausen Wachtersbach Bad Soden Salmunster 0 60 min RE 55 Frankfurt Frankfurt Sud Offenbach Hanau Aschaffenburg Wurzburg Nuremberg 120 min RE 85 Frankfurt Frankfurt Sud Offenbach Hanau Gross Umstadt Wiebelsbach Erbach 120 min Most trains on the RE50 and RB51 consist of a class 114 locomotive with 5 double deck cars and a double deck control car Relief trains with a class 114 and 3 double deck cars and a double deck control car also run several times a day A new transport contract for regional transport between Frankfurt and Fulda was tendered in July 2021 68 and awarded to DB Regio AG in 2022 The contract runs from 14 December 2025 to 8 December 2040 and should cover 3 2 million train kilometres per year 69 New rolling stock of Alstom Coradia Stream HC which are equipped with free WLAN and power points are to be used The journey time between Frankfurt and Fulda is to be reduced by 8 minutes 70 71 Fulda Bebra edit Local transport has been operated by Cantus Verkehrsgesellschaft since 10 December 2006 The RB5 of the Nordhessischer Verkehrsverbund NVV runs every hour between Fulda and Kassel In addition the RE5 has been running between Bad Hersfeld and Kassel since 13 December 2020 also hourly Some DB Regio regional express train pairs run from Bebra to Frankfurt and back during the peak hour under the designations RE5 or RE50 Bebra Gottingen edit In passenger transport Cantus Verkehrsgesellschaft runs hourly with Stadler Stadler Flirt sets between Gottingen Eschwege and Bebra as RB 87 of the NVV When the timetable changed on 13 December 2009 the Nordhessischer Verkehrsverbund put the line between Eschwege West and Eschwege Stadt back into operation under its own control and modernised it A connecting curve to the route of the former Kanonenbahn was built north and south of Eschwege West station This bypasses Eschwege West station which therefore no longer has any scheduled passenger services Eschwege Niederhone station was also built Gallery edit nbsp Platforms of Bebra station in the early 1990s nbsp Manually operated level crossing in Oberhaun nbsp Intercity Express at Hunfeld level crossing nbsp Fulda station entrance buildingReferences edit Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland German railway atlas Schweers Wall 2017 pp 55 66 67 77 78 151 153 ISBN 978 3 89494 146 8 a b c d Handbuch der deutschen Eisenbahnstrecken Eroffnungsdaten 1835 1935 Streckenlangen Konzessionen Eigentumsverhaltnisse Handbook of the German railway lines Opening dates 1835 1935 route lengths concessions ownership in German Horst Werner Dumjahn 1985 ISBN 3 921426 29 4 originally published by Deutsche Reichsbahn in identical form in 1935 Parliamentary debates no 26 Kurhessische Landtags Verhandlungen in German 19 March 1863 via Bavarian State Library Announcement of the state treaty concluded between Hesse and Prussia for the construction of a railway from Offenbach to Hanau on 12 June 1868 announced on 31 August 1868 Grossherzoglich Hessisches Regierungsblatt in German 50 991 999 18 September 1868 via Munich Digitization Center Article 21 of the state treaty between Hesse and Prussia for the construction of a railway from Offenbach to Hanau regarding the state treaty dated 12 June 1868 Grossherzoglich Hessisches Regierungsblatt in German 50 997 18 September 1868 via Munich Digitization Center Gesetz Sammlung fur die Koniglich Preussischen Staaten 1872 in German pp 288 f Retrieved 13 April 2023 via Bavarian State Library Brill Lothar Bilder der Strecke 3600 KBS 613 610 KBS 202 192 in German Tunnelportale Retrieved 13 April 2023 Stahl Hans Gunter 2015 Der Luftkrieg uber dem Raum Hanau 1939 1945 Hanauer Geschichtsblatter in German Hanau p 220 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Juretzko Werner I The Whisky Vodka Line Agreement of Wanfried 1945 Coldwarhistory Retrieved 13 April 2023 Sockel Bericht uber den einseitigen Gleiswechselbetrieb von Bebra nach Cornberg Eisenbahntechnik in German 11 Yearbook 5 Beginn der Elektrifizierung der Nord Sud Strecke Die Bundesbahn in German 35 22 1069 1072 1961 ISSN 0007 5876 Niedermeyer S March 1975 Neubaustrecke Hannover Gemunden Variantenvergleich Fulda Hessisch Bayerische Landesgrenze Km 210 250 in German Ingenieur Geologisches Institut pp 1 4 112 annex K 2 a Goebel Dieter Marten Klaus 1984 Die Neubaustrecke im Bahnhof Fulda Planung und Realisierung der Kreuzungsbauwerke Mitte und Nord Die Bundesbahn in German 60 10 739 746 ISSN 0007 5876 a b c d e f Wolbing Manfred 1987 Die Ausbaustrecke Fulda Frankfurt M ein Baustein im Hochgeschwindigkeitsnetz des Jahres 2000 Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau in German 36 7 8 483 493 ISSN 0013 2845 ZDB ID 240040 6 Block Rudiger 1991 Auf neuen Wegen Die Neubaustrecken der Deutschen Bundesbahn Eisenbahn Kurier in German 21 Special Hochgeschwindigkeitsverkehr 30 35 Woelker Christian 1980 Bundesverkehrswegeplan 80 Die Schiene holt auf In Vaerst Wolfgang Koch Peter eds Jahrbuch des Eisenbahnwesens in German Vol 31 Darmstadt Hestra Verlag pp 30 36 ISBN 3 7771 0160 5 a b Hauck Michael Wolbing Manfred 1986 Ausbaumassnahmen im Korridor Fulda Frankfurt Main Mannheim Die Bundesbahn in German 62 10 785 788 a b c d e f Hoelke Wolfgang Holtmann Bernhard 1988 Betriebliche Infrastrukturplanung bei der Ausbaustrecke Fulda Frankfurt M Mannheim Der Eisenbahningenieur in German 39 8 357 355 a b c d Hauck Michael Wolbing Manfred Vollmer Klaus 1990 Ein Stuck Zukunft Die Bundesbahn in German 66 3 287f ISSN 0007 5876 Aus und Neubaustrecken in Hessen Eisenbahn Kurier in German 12 45 1988 Bundesverkehrswegeplan 1985 Stand der Realisierung Anlage zum Sachstandsbericht Bundesverkehrswegeplan 1985 und Gesamtdeutscher Verkehrswegeplan in German Bonn Der Bundesminister fur Verkehr 2 October 1990 p 6 a b Hauck Michael Wolbing Manfred 1988 Die Beseitigung von Bahnubergangen auf den Ausbaustrecken Fulda Frankfurt und Frankfurt Mannheim Die Bundesbahn in German 64 11 1109 1113 ISSN 0007 5876 Jahresruckblick 1988 Die Bundesbahn in German 65 1 61 1989 ISSN 0007 5876 Jahresruckblick 1989 Die Bundesbahn in German 66 1 83 1990 ISSN 0007 5876 a b Auftakt fur die Ausbaustrecke Fulda Frankfurt Main Die Bahn Informiert in German 5 12 1989 a b c d Block Rudiger 1991 ICE Rennbahn Die Neubaustrecken Eisenbahn Kurier in German 21 Special Hochgeschwindigkeitsverkehr 36 45 Linkerhagner Wilhelm 1990 Bundesverkehrswegeplanung 85 Die Bundesbahn in German 66 10 933 936 ISSN 0007 5876 Mit kleinen Schritten schneller Die Bahn Informiert in German 4 14 September 1991 ZDB ID 2003143 9 Jahresruckblick 1990 Die Bundesbahn in German 67 1 131f 1991 ISSN 0007 5876 Weber Hans Peter Rebentisch Michael 1992 Der Bundesverkehrswegeplan 1992 fur den Bereich Schiene Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau in German 41 7 8 448 456 ISSN 0013 2845 Debuschewitz Peter 1992 Das Projekt CIR ELKE Die Deutsche Bahn in German 68 7 717 722 ISSN 0007 5876 Gelnhausen Hanau nun auf drei Gleisen Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau in German 42 7 8 430 1993 ISSN 0013 2845 a b c Gelnhausen Hanau nun auf drei Gleisen Die Deutsche Bahn in German 7 8 591 1993 ISSN 0007 5876 Doppelstockwagen auf der Strecke Frankfurt Fulda Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau in German 44z 3 129 1995 ISSN 0013 2845 Spatenstich in Neuhof fur neue A66 und Bahnstrecke Press release in German Deutsche Bahn 6 October 2005 Archived from the original on 1 November 2009 Retrieved 16 April 2023 a b Schmidt Uwe Wenzel Sven 2006 Ausbaustrecke Fulda Frankfurt Main Linienverbesserung Neuhof Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau in German Yearbook 55 47 56 ISSN 0013 2845 Pictures of the two tunnels in the bottom third of the page Daubitz Andre de Gavarelli Frank Schenkel Marcus 2015 Ein Grossprojekt auf der Zielgeraden Die Neubaustrecke zwischen Erfurt und Leipzig Halle Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau in German 64 12 33 42 ISSN 0013 2845 Freie Fahrt zur Autobahn in German Retrieved 16 April 2023 Bauprojekt Haunetal ESTW in German Deutsche Bahn Archived from the original on 8 November 2018 Retrieved 16 April 2023 KBS 610 Fulda Kassel Drehscheibe in German 295 81 2019 ISSN 0934 2230 ZDB ID 1283841 x Hessen Bahn Report in German 2 54 56 March 2020 ISSN 0178 4528 Plangenehmigung gemass 18 Abs 1 AEG i V m 74 Abs 6 VwVfG fur das Vorhaben ABS Hanau Gelnhausen ESTW A Wirtheim in der Gemeinde Wirtheim im Main Kinzig Kreis PDF Bahn km 50 300 bis 50 480 der Strecke 3600 Frankfurt Gottingen in German Eisenbahn Bundesamt 24 July 2020 Archived from the original PDF on 6 August 2020 Retrieved 16 April 2023 Deutscher Bundestag ed 10 August 1995 Antwort der Bundesregierung auf eine kleine Anfrage Einsparungsmoglichkeiten durch neuartige Trassierung von Schienenwegen fur den Hochgeschwindigkeitsverkehr unter Berucksichtigung der Neigezugtechnik PDF Drucksache in German 13 2130 Retrieved 16 April 2023 Pro Spessart Nur Nachteile fur die Region bei Trasse durch den Nordspessart Fuldaer Zeitung in German 20 September 2015 Retrieved 16 April 2023 a b Frankfurt RheinMainplus Das Projekt Der Eisenbahnknoten Die Schieneninfrastruktur PDF in German Deutsche Bahn AG 2009 pp 16f Archived from the original PDF on 23 January 2013 Retrieved 16 April 2023 32 page brochure with status as of June 2009 Projektinformationssystem PRINS zum Bundesverkehrswegeplan 2030 in German Bundesministerium fur Verkehr und digitale Infrastruktur Retrieved 16 April 2023 Deutsche Bahn und Hessisches Verkehrsministerium informieren zum aktuellen Projektstand Umfassende Burgerbeteiligung sichergestellt in German Hessisches Ministerium fur Wirtschaft Verkehr und Landesentwicklung 30 January 2013 Archived from the original on 16 March 2023 Retrieved 16 April 2023 Strecke nach Fulda als Jahrhundertprojekt Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in German No 29 4 February 2014 p 33 ISSN 0174 4909 Archived from the original on 2014 03 06 Retrieved 17 April 2023 a b c Plan zur Erhohung der Schienenwegkapazitat PEK fur den als uberlastet erklarten Schienenweg Hailer Meerholz Fulda Strecke 3600 PDF in German DB Netz 2018 05 24 Archived from the original PDF on 23 April 2021 Retrieved 18 April 2023 Vorzugsvariante fur Neubaustrecke Gelnhausen Fulda steht fest Eisenbahn Revue International in German 10 544 September 2018 ISSN 1421 2811 Ausbaustrecke Hanau Gelnhausen in German DB Netz Retrieved 17 April 2023 19 Dialogforum 04 05 2020 Online PDF hanau wuerzburg fulda de ABS NBS Hanau Fulda in German DB Netz 4 May 2020 p 8 Retrieved 17 April 2023 Ausbau Neubau Schienenstrecken in German Regierungsprasidium Kassel Retrieved 17 April 2023 Hessen Baugrunduntersuchung fur neue Bahnstrecke zwischen Gelnhausen und Fulda Lok Report in German Lokomotive Fachbuchhandlung 5 August 2020 Retrieved 17 April 2023 Geplanter Bahnausbau Vier Kommunen sprechen sich gegen Variante IV aus Osthessen News in German 22 October 2020 Retrieved 17 April 2023 Viel Kritik seitens der betroffenen Kommunen Bahnstrecke Hanau Wurzburg Fulda Jetzt aussern sich die Burgermeister Osthessen News in German 4 October 2021 Retrieved 17 April 2023 Warum das Projekt so wichtig ist fulda gerstungen de in German DB Netz Archived from the original on 25 October 2020 Retrieved 17 April 2023 a b Infrastrukturliste Bewertung Massnahmen des Planfalls Deutschlandtakt laufende Nummer 44 des Unterabschnitts 2 Vorhaben des Potentiellen Bedarfs des Bedarfsplans der Bundesschienenwege PDF in German SMA und Partner Federal Ministry for Digital and Transport 17 August 2021 p 10 Retrieved 17 April 2023 Deutschlandtakt Bewertung Infrastrukturmassnahmen fur den 3 Gutachterentwurf PDF in German Intraplan Consult TTS TRIMODE Transport Solutions 17 August 2021 p 2 Retrieved 17 April 2023 Reaktivierung von Stationen in German Lower Saxony Archived from the original on 30 March 2019 Retrieved 17 April 2023 Klee Wolfgang 1990 Bebra Elm Nord Sud Eine Hauptstrecke im Wandel der Zeit in German Stuttgart Motorbuch Verlag pp 65ff Drehscheibe Online Foren 01 News ICE Linie 50 kann wieder bogenschnell fahren in German Retrieved 17 April 2023 a b Ausbau Neubaustrecke Hanau Wurzburg Fulda PDF in German DB Netz AG 20 January 2015 p 2 Archived from the original PDF on 5 April 2015 Retrieved 18 April 2023 Plan zur Erhohung der Schienenwegkapazitat PEK fur den als uberlastet erklarten Schienenweg Hailer Meerholz Fulda Strecke 3600 PDF fahrweg dbnetze com in German DB Netz 14 October 2021 Retrieved 18 April 2023 Martin Rosenbohm 2015 Betriebssimulation fur die Strecke Frankfurt Main Hanau Fulda Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau 64 4 29 33 ISSN 0013 2845 Schienen fur kunftige Generationen Main Post in German 8 5 February 2017 Deutschland Hofheim am Taunus Offentlicher Schienentransport offentliche Schienenbeforderung Tenders Electronic Daily in German Document 2021 S 142 378067 26 July 2021 Retrieved 18 April 2021 Leistungsbeschreibung Vergabe 2026 Kinzigtal Teilnetz Kinzigtal PDF vergabe rmv de in German Nordhessischer Verkehrsverbund Rhein Main Verkehrsverbund 22 July 2021 Anlage 2 Mindestanforderungen an Fahrzeuge PDF vergabe rmv de in German 22 July 2021 Fahrzeit im Regio Zug zwischen Frankfurt und Fulda verkurzt sich um acht Minuten Fuldaer Zeitung in German 11 February 2022 Retrieved 18 April 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frankfurt Gottingen railway amp oldid 1190404003, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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