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Mannheim Hauptbahnhof

Mannheim Hauptbahnhof (German for Mannheim central station) is a railway station in Mannheim in the German state of Baden-Württemberg. It is the second largest traffic hub in southwestern Germany after Stuttgart Hauptbahnhof, with 658 trains a day, including 238 long-distance trains. It is also a key station in the Rhine-Neckar S-Bahn. 100,000 passengers embark, disembark or transfer between trains at the station each day.[4] The station was modernised in 2001. It is classified by Deutsche Bahn as a category 2 station.[1]

Mannheim Hauptbahnhof
Through station
General information
LocationWilly-Brandt-Platz 17
68161 Mannheim
Mannheim, Baden-Württemberg
Germany
Coordinates49°28′47″N 8°28′11″E / 49.47972°N 8.46972°E / 49.47972; 8.46972
Owned byDeutsche Bahn
Operated by
Line(s)
Platforms11 (1–5 and 7–12)
Other information
Station code3925
DS100 codeRM
Category2[1]
IATA: MHJ[2]
Fare zoneVRN: 94[3]
Websitewww.bahnhof.de
History
Opened1840; 183 years ago (1840)
Passengers
100,000 daily[4]
Services
Preceding station DB Fernverkehr Following station
Frankfurt (Main) Hbf ICE 11 Stuttgart Hbf
Karlsruhe Hbf ICE 12 Frankfurt (Main) Hbf
Frankfurt (Main) Hbf ICE 20 Karlsruhe Hbf
towards Chur
Frankfurt Airport ICE 22 Stuttgart Hbf
Terminus
Heidelberg Hbf
Frankfurt Airport ICE 42 Stuttgart Hbf
towards München Hbf
Frankfurt Airport ICE 43 Karlsruhe Hbf
towards Basel SBB
Mainz Hbf
towards Köln Hbf
ICE 45 Heidelberg Hbf
Frankfurt Airport
towards Dortmund Hbf
ICE 47 Stuttgart Hbf
Terminus
Frankfurt (Main) Hbf
Terminus
ICE/TGV 82 Kaiserslautern Hbf
towards Paris Est
ICE/TGV 84 Karlsruhe Hbf
towards Marseille
Mainz Hbf IC/EC 32 Heidelberg Hbf
Worms Hbf IC 35 Stuttgart Hbf
Terminus
Karlsruhe Hbf
towards Konstanz
Mainz Hbf IC 43 Karlsruhe Hbf
Neustadt IC 62 Stuttgart Hbf
towards Graz Hbf
Preceding station DB Regio Mitte Following station
Ludwigshafen (Rhein) Mitte
towards Koblenz Hbf
RE 1
Südwest-Express
Terminus
Ludwigshafen (Rhein) Mitte RE 14
Südwest-Express
Ladenburg RE 60
Mannheim-Waldhof RE 70
Neu-Edingen/Friedrichsfeld RB 67
Preceding station Following station
Terminus RE 10a Heidelberg Hbf
RE 10b
Preceding station Rhine-Neckar S-Bahn Following station
Ludwigshafen (Rhein) Mitte S1 Mannheim ARENA/Maimarkt
towards Osterburken
Ludwigshafen (Rhein) Mitte S2 Mannheim ARENA/Maimarkt
Ludwigshafen (Rhein) Mitte
towards Germersheim
S3 Mannheim ARENA/Maimarkt
S4 Mannheim ARENA/Maimarkt
towards Bruchsal
Ludwigshafen (Rhein) Mitte
towards Mainz Hbf
S6 Mannheim ARENA/Maimarkt
towards Bensheim
Mannheim-Käfertal
towards Biblis
S8 Terminus
Mannheim-Handelshafen S9 Mannheim-Neckarau
towards Groß‑Rohrheim
Mannheim-Luzenberg S39 Terminus
Location
Mannheim
Location in Baden-Württemberg
Mannheim
Location in Germany
Mannheim
Location in Europe

Layout

The station is located on the southern edge of central Mannheim. In November 2001, the station was comprehensively redeveloped with a modern shopping and service centre.

Travellers reach the platforms via escalators and lifts in the wings of the entrance hall, which lead to a northern and a southern subway under the tracks. The routes to the platforms have been upgraded to make them accessible for the disabled. Lifts, escalators and a direction system for the visually impaired enable all travellers to reach the trains without assistance. The lifts are to be found in the northern subway while the escalators are located in the southern subway.

There is a Deutsche Bahn lounge for first class passengers and frequent travellers.

Since 1897 the station has had a Bahnhofsmission (“station mission”, a charity established at some major German railway stations that is mainly staffed by volunteers) on platform 1, which among other things helps mobility-impaired tourists.

The station forecourt has stops for several tram and bus lines of Rhein-Neckar-Verkehr (the public transport operator of the Rhine-Neckar region), the Rhein-Haardt Bahn (RHB, an interurban running to the west), the Oberrheinische Eisenbahn (OEG, an interurban running to the east and the northeast) and the bus lines of Busverkehr Rhein-Neckar (a subsidiary of Deutsche Bahn, operating over a large region centred on Mannheim). The central bus station adjacent to the southern end of platform 1 is served by long-distance buses and an airport shuttle service, as well as non-scheduled bus services.

The entrance building continues the line of buildings on the bank of the Rhine southeast from Mannheim Palace. Its central axis faces the Kaiserring, the south-eastern inner-city ring road.

History

 
The original station, about 1840
 
Station forecourt 1925

The original station of the Badische Hauptbahn (Baden mainline) from Heidelberg, opened in 1840, was a terminal station at the current Tattersall tram stop to the north of the current station. Plans for a bridge over the Rhine to Ludwigshafen (now the Konrad Adenauer Bridge), however, soon made it necessary to move the station.[5]

The station building, some of which still survives, was built between 1871 and 1876. From around 1900, consideration was given to extending or relocating the station. In 1915 it was decided to expand the existing station. In 1927, the front of the station was demolished and rebuilt 10 m (32 ft 10 in) closer to the street, doubling the area of the station. During this restructuring, there was debate on whether the facade should be restored to its original form. Ultimately, it was rebuilt in a simplified form. Due to the substantial destruction during World War II and the subsequent reconstruction of the facade it was simplified again and rebuilt without decorative elements, but reminiscent of its previous form.

In the summer 1939 timetable the station is shown as having 94 arriving and departing regular long-distance trains per day. Deutsche Reichsbahn ranked it as the 14th most congested node of its network.[6]

Between 1977 and 1982 a new relay interlocking system (class SpDrS60) was installed, replacing the electro-mechanical interlocking at the eastern end of the station and three push button interlockings in the rest of the station area. In the mid-1980s, the new signal box controlled 74 km (46 mi) of line with 721 appliances (including 250 sets of points and derails as well as 66 main signals).[7]

On 2 June 1985, the Western Entrance to the Riedbahn (Ried Railway) to Mannheim was opened. This avoided the need for trains running from Frankfurt via Mannheim to Stuttgart and Karlsruhe to reverse in Mannheim Hauptbahnhof.[8]

With a total of 269 arrivals and departures of scheduled long-distance trains each day in Mannheim Hauptbahnhof in the timetable for the summer of 1989, it was the tenth most important node in the Deutsche Bundesbahn network.[9] With 308 such arrivals and departures each day in the timetable for the summer of 1996, it had become the sixth most important node in the Deutsche Bahn network.[10]

In 1995, a parking garage was built under the station forecourt and the station building was comprehensively renovated and redesigned between 1999 and 2001. The platform-side buildings were extended and had their symmetry restored, while the entrance hall received a glass dome. The blend of tradition and modernism is considered successful.

With 332 arrivals and departures in the 2004 timetable, the station had become the fifth most important node in the Deutsche Bahn network.[11]

On 18 July 2007, the new central bus station was officially opened adjacent to the station. The nine parking bays used by long-distance buses operated from the bus station are currently served by more than 30 bus routes, according to the operator, Mannheimer Parkhausbetriebe GmbH.[12]

Train collision in 2014

 
Accident site on 2 August 2014

On 1 August 2014, a freight train passing through Mannheim Hauptbahnhof crashed into the side of long-distance passenger train EuroCity 216 (from Graz to Saarbrücken) when both trains entered the station. Five cars of the EuroCity derailed, two of which overturned; two freight cars and the freight locomotive also derailed. Of the 250 passengers on the EuroCity, 34 were injured, plus four seriously (as stated in the EUB report; numbers vary among sources). Investigators determined that the freight train had failed to heed a main signal which commanded 'halt' (a red light). This happened because the driver assumed to not have reached the station yet, so he expected the signals to be on the left side, like the previous ones; but in stations, signals are placed to the right. Therefore, he took the "proceed" signal for the EuroCity as meant for him. When he passed the main signal at danger, the PZB safety system was triggered and forced the freight train to stop immediately. Instead of contacting the train controller for instructions, which is mandatory, the driver restarted the train on his own. He assumed that the PZB action was due to the missing acknowledgement of the distant signal ('expect halt') at the same location, but even then permission to continue must be asked for. He then passed two more signals ("Schutzsignale") at danger (red 'halt' aspect, not guarded by PZB) and hit the EuroCity. The accident caused a damage of 2.3 million Euros.[13] In September 2016, the driver was convicted for intentionally endangering railway operations and for bodily injury caused by negligence, because he had continued after the forced braking without permission from the traffic controller. He received six months in prison on probation and 100 hours of community service.[14][15]

Planned developments

 
Track field
 
Mannheim Hauptbahnhof at night

The station lies is at the junction of lines from Stuttgart, Basel, Saarbrücken and Frankfurt. The Mannheim-Stuttgart high-speed rail line was completed in 1991 and it is planned to build a high-speed line to Frankfurt. Deutsche Bahn had sought to establish a by-pass of the city through the Rheinauer Wald (forest) to the east of the city, including a complex junction in the Pfingstberg Tunnel. This would have substantially reduced the number of long-distance trains serving Mannheim, leading to massive resistance from the city and the region. As a result, Deutsche Bahn dropped this plan for the time being in 2006.

Extensive changes at the railway tracks of the main station are planned over a three-year construction period. Construction was supposed to have started in late 2007, but had not begun by early 2010. Among other things, a new platform is to be built for the Rhine-Neckar S-Bahn for approximately €50 million.[16] In addition, regional and long-distance traffic are to be largely segregated, with regional trains being operated in the future on the four tracks closest to the station building and long-distance traffic operating on the more distant tracks.

As part of an urban development project called Mannheim 21 on land on the south side of the station, there are plans to convert the most southerly underpass under the platforms, now used as a baggage tunnel, into a third platform access route and extend it to the Lindenhof; it would not connect to the station building, but would instead connect to the bus station. The current southern underpass, which runs under the middle of the platforms, is frequently overloaded by pedestrian traffic.

Due to the increasing number of passengers using the station forecourt at the interchanges to public transport (currently around 52,000 daily) an upgrade of the Hauptbahnhof tram/light rail stop is proposed. Two versions are discussed: option 1, which includes four new platforms laid across the axis of the whole Kaiserring, is preferred by the city council. Option 2 would add one track and one platform to the existing stop. Rhein-Neckar-Verkehr (Rhine-Neckar Transport) favours option 2 because it would be more practicable, being less expensive and faster to build.[17][18]

Operational usage

 
ICE 1 in Mannheim Hauptbahnhof

Each day DB operates 238 long-distance trains, 265 regional trains and 155 S-Bahn trains through the station (as of 2009).[4]

Long distance trains

Due to its convenient position, many long-distance lines connect in Mannheim, with overlapping routes creating services at 60-minute intervals on several routes. Various high-speed routes bring major cities in Germany and in neighboring countries within a few hours away and thus provide an alternative to air travel.

Line Route Frequency
ICE 11 BerlinLeipzigErfurtFrankfurt (Main)MannheimStuttgartUlmAugsburgMunich (– Innsbruck) 2 hour intervals
ICE 12 Berlin – Brunswick – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Frankfurt (Main) – MannheimKarlsruheFreiburgBasel (– ZürichInterlaken-Ost) 2 hour intervals
ICE 15 Berlin – Halle – Erfurt – Frankfurt – Darmstadt – Mannheim – Kaiserslautern – Saarbrücken 1 train pair
ICE 20 (Kiel –) HamburgHanover – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Frankfurt (Main) – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Freiburg – Basel (– Zürich – Interlaken-Ost) 2 hour intervals
ICE 22 (Kiel –) Hamburg – Hanover – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Frankfurt (Main) – Frankfurt AirportMannheim – Stuttgart 2 hour intervals
ICE 42 (Hamburg – Bremen –) DortmundDuisburgCologneSiegburg/Bonn – Frankfurt Airport – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Ulm – Augsburg – München 2 hour intervals
ICE 43 (Amsterdam – Duisburg –) or (Hanover – Dortmund – Wuppertal –) Cologne – Siegburg/Bonn – Frankfurt Airport – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Freiburg – Basel 2 hour intervals
ICE 45 Cologne – Cologne/Bonn AirportMontabaurLimburg SüdWiesbadenMainzMannheimHeidelberg – Stuttgart Individual services
ICE 47 Dortmund – Duisburg – Köln Messe/Deutz Frankfurt Airport – Mannheim – Stuttgart 2 hour intervals
ICE/TGV 82 Frankfurt (Main) – Mannheim – Kaiserslautern – Saarbrücken – Paris Est 2 hour intervals
ICE/TGV 84 Marseille - Aix TGV - Avignon TGV - Lyon-Part-Dieu - Mâcon-Ville - Besançon Franche-Comté - Belfort-Montbéliard - Mulhouse - Strasbourg - Baden-Baden - Karlsruhe - Mannheim - Frankfurt 1 train pair
ECE 85 Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Freiburg – Basel – Lucerne – Bellinzona – Monza – Milan 1 train pair
EC 32 (Berlin – Hanover –) Dortmund or (Münster –) Essen – Duisburg – Köln – Koblenz – Mannheim – Stuttgart (– Reutlingen – Tübingen) or (– Ulm – Augsburg – Munich – Salzburg – Klagenfurt) or (– Ulm – Friedrichshafen – Innsbruck) or (– Ulm – Kempten – Oberstdorf) 2 hour intervals
IC 35 Norddeich Mole – Münster – Duisburg – Köln – Koblenz – Mannheim – Stuttgart or Karlsruhe – Konstanz Individual services
EC 43 Hamburg-Altona – Hamburg – BremenOsnabrückMünster – Dortmund – Bochum – Essen – Duisburg – Düsseldorf – Cologne  – Bonn – Koblenz – Mainz – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Baden-Baden – Freiburg – Basel – Zürich / Interlaken Ost 2 train pairs daily
EC/IC/RJ 62 Saarbrücken – Homburg (Saar) – Mannheim – Heidelberg – Stuttgart – Ulm – Augsburg – Munich – Rosenheim – Salzburg – Graz 1 train pair
EN Zürich – Basel – Freiburg (Breisgau) – Karlsruhe – Mannheim – Frankfurt Süd – Halle – Berlin – Hamburg 1 train pair

Regional services

Line Route Interval
RE 1 Mannheim – Ludwigshafen Mitte Neustadt – Kaiserslautern – Homburg – Saarbrücken – Trier – Koblenz 2 hours
RE 9 MannheimSchwetzingenHockenheim – Waghäusel – Graben-Neudorf – Karlsruhe Some trains in the peak
RE 10a Mannheim – Heidelberg – Eberbach – Mosbach-Neckarelz – Bad Friedrichshall Heilbronn 2 hours
RE 10b Mannheim – Heidelberg – Sinsheim – Bad Friedrichshall – Heilbronn 2 hours
RE 14 Mannheim – Ludwigshafen Mitte – Worms – Mainz 2 hours
RE 40 Mannheim – Heidelberg – Wiesloch-WalldorfBruchsal – Karlsruhe – Freudenstadt 1 train pair
RE 60 MannheimWeinheimBensheimDarmstadt – Frankfurt 2 hours
RB 67 Mannheim – Neu-Edingen/Friedrichsfeld – Weinheim – Bensheim – Darmstadt – Frankfurt Some trains
RE 70 MannheimBiblis – Gernsheim – Frankfurt 1 hour
RE 73 Mannheim – Heidelberg – Wiesloch-Walldorf – Bruchsal – Karlsruhe Some trains

Rhine-Neckar S-Bahn

The Rhine-Neckar S-Bahn is the backbone of transport in the Rhine-Neckar region. In December 2003, a 290 km S-Bahn network was put into operation. Further expansion of the S-Bahn network has been agreed on in 2008, but after several delays, the new lines are expected to start in 2020.[19][20]

Line Route Frequency
S1 Homburg (Saar)–Osterburken
HomburgKaiserslauternNeustadt (Weinstraße)SchifferstadtLudwigshafenMannheimHeidelbergNeckargemündEberbachMosbachOsterburken
60 minute intervals
S2 Kaiserslautern–Eberbach (–Mosbach Baden)
Kaiserslautern – Neustadt (Weinstraße) – Schifferstadt – Ludwigshafen – Mannheim – Heidelberg – Neckargemünd – Eberbach (– Mosbach Baden)
60 minute intervals
S3 Germersheim–Karlsruhe
GermersheimSpeyer – Schifferstadt – Ludwigshafen – Mannheim – Heidelberg – Wiesloch-WalldorfBruchsalKarlsruhe
60 minute intervals
S4 Germersheim–Bruchsal
Germersheim – Speyer – Schifferstadt – Ludwigshafen – Mannheim – Heidelberg – Wiesloch-Walldorf – Bruchsal
60 minute intervals
S6 (Bensheim –) Mannheim – Ludwigshafen – Frankenthal – Worms – Mainz 30 minute intervals
(60 minutes from/to Bensheim)
S9 Karlsruhe – Blankenloch – Graben-Neudorf – Waghäusel – Hockenheim – Schwetzingen – Mhm-Rheinau –

Mannheim Hbf – Mhm-Neckarstadt or Mhm-Neuostheim – Mhm-Waldhof – Ladenburg – Bürstadt – Biblis – Groß-Rohrheim

60 minute intervals
30 minutes (Karlsruhe–Graben in peak)
30 min (Graben–Mannheim)
S39 Mannheim-Waldhof – Mannheim (– Heidelberg – Karlsruhe) Individual services

Interurban trams

In the station forecourt is the stop of the metre gauge trams of the Rhein-Neckar-Verkehr (RNV), served by line 4 of the Rhein-Haardtbahn (RHB) and line 5 of the Oberrheinische Eisenbahn (OEG) two interurban tramways, running over the tracks of Manheim's tram company (the MVV Verkehr AG) within the city limits.

Line Route Frequency
4 Heddesheim/Käfertal – MannheimOggersheim/Bad Dürkheim (RHB) 10-minute intervals
5 WeinheimMannheim – Heidelberg – Weinheim (OEG) 10-minute intervals

Gallery

References

  1. ^ a b "Stationspreisliste 2023" [Station price list 2023] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 28 November 2022. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  2. ^ Airport information for Mannheim Hauptbahnhof at Transport Search website.
  3. ^ "Wabenplan" (PDF). Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Neckar. February 2021. Retrieved 21 February 2021.
  4. ^ a b c (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Archived from the original on 30 September 2011. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  5. ^ "Hauptbahnhof Mannheim, Empfangsgebäude" (in German). Rhein-Neckar-Industriekultur. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  6. ^ Ralph Seidel (2005). Der Einfluss veränderter Raumbedingungen auf Netzgestalt und Frequenz im Schienenpersonenfernverkehr Deutschlands (in German). p. 27(Dissertation of the University of Leipzig){{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  7. ^ Erich Fein (1984). "Die neuen Eisenbhanbauten im Raum Mannheim im Rahmen der Einführung der Westlichen Riedbahn und der Neubaustrecke Mannheim–Stuttgart". In DB-Bahnbauzentrale Frankfurt/M. (ed.). Eisenbahnbau für das 21. Jahrhundert: Streckenausbau bei der Deutschen Bundesbahn (in German). Frankfurt am Main. pp. 52–62.
  8. ^ Winfried Hanslmeier (1987). "Baumaßnahmen der Ausbaustrecken". In Knut Reimers, Wilhelm Linkerhägner (ed.). Wege in die Zukunft. Neubau- und Ausbaustrecken der Deutschen Bundesbahn (in German). Darmstadt: Hestra. pp. 208–218. ISBN 3-7771-0200-8.
  9. ^ Ralph Seidel (2005). Der Einfluss veränderter Raumbedingungen auf Netzgestalt und Frequenz im Schienenpersonenfernverkehr Deutschlands (in German). p. 46(Dissertation of the University of Leipzig){{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  10. ^ Ralph Seidel (2005). Der Einfluss veränderter Raumbedingungen auf Netzgestalt und Frequenz im Schienenpersonenfernverkehr Deutschlands (in German). p. 62(Dissertation of the University of Leipzig){{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  11. ^ Ralph Seidel (2005). Der Einfluss veränderter Raumbedingungen auf Netzgestalt und Frequenz im Schienenpersonenfernverkehr Deutschlands (in German). p. 100(Dissertation of the University of Leipzig){{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  12. ^ (in German). Mannheimer Parkhausbetribe GmbH. 13 February 2008. Archived from the original on 9 May 2008. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  13. ^ [Train collision, 1 August 2014, Mannheim main station] (PDF) (in German). EUB official report. 23 September 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 October 2015. Retrieved 18 February 2017.
  14. ^ "Lokführer zu Bewährungsstrafe verurteilt" [Train driver receives sentence on probation] (in German). Mannheimer Morgen (newspaper). 28 September 2016. Retrieved 18 February 2017.
  15. ^ "Unfall-Lokführer bekommt Bewährungsstrafe" [Accident engineer receives sentence on probation] (in German). Südwestrundfunk. 28 September 2016. Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  16. ^ (in German). Mannheimer Morgen. 22 March 2007. Archived from the original on 29 July 2009. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  17. ^ "Engpass im Liniennetz der RNV" (in German). Mannheimer Morgen. 3 April 2009. Archived from the original on 4 September 2012. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  18. ^ "AUT träumt von teurer Lösung" (in German). Mannheimer Morgen. 8 April 2009. Archived from the original on 6 September 2012. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  19. ^ "S-Bahn-Verspätung ärgert Bürger und Politiker" [S-Bahn delay annoys citizens and politicians] (in German). Mannheimer Morgen. 27 May 2016. Retrieved 28 January 2017.
  20. ^ "S-Bahn-Züge rollen mit einem weiteren Jahr Verspätung an" [S-Bahn trains rolling with a delay of another year] (in German). Mannheimer Morgen. 22 December 2016. Retrieved 28 January 2017.

External links

  • (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Archived from the original on 27 April 2012. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  • "Track plan of Mannheim Hbf" (PDF; 271,8 KB) (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Retrieved 8 December 2011.

mannheim, hauptbahnhof, german, mannheim, central, station, railway, station, mannheim, german, state, baden, württemberg, second, largest, traffic, southwestern, germany, after, stuttgart, hauptbahnhof, with, trains, including, long, distance, trains, also, s. Mannheim Hauptbahnhof German for Mannheim central station is a railway station in Mannheim in the German state of Baden Wurttemberg It is the second largest traffic hub in southwestern Germany after Stuttgart Hauptbahnhof with 658 trains a day including 238 long distance trains It is also a key station in the Rhine Neckar S Bahn 100 000 passengers embark disembark or transfer between trains at the station each day 4 The station was modernised in 2001 It is classified by Deutsche Bahn as a category 2 station 1 Mannheim HauptbahnhofThrough stationGeneral informationLocationWilly Brandt Platz 1768161 MannheimMannheim Baden WurttembergGermanyCoordinates49 28 47 N 8 28 11 E 49 47972 N 8 46972 E 49 47972 8 46972Owned byDeutsche BahnOperated byDB Netz DB Station amp ServiceLine s Western line to Frankfurt Mannheim Stuttgart high speed rail line Rhine Valley Railway Mannheim Saarbrucken railway Riedbahn Rhine RailwayPlatforms11 1 5 and 7 12 Other informationStation code3925DS100 codeRMCategory2 1 IATA MHJ 2 Fare zoneVRN 94 3 Websitewww bahnhof deHistoryOpened1840 183 years ago 1840 Passengers100 000 daily 4 ServicesPreceding station DB Fernverkehr Following stationFrankfurt Main Hbftowards Berlin Gesundbrunnen ICE 11 Stuttgart Hbftowards Innsbruck HbfKarlsruhe Hbftowards Interlaken Ost ICE 12 Frankfurt Main Hbftowards Berlin OstbahnhofFrankfurt Main Hbftowards Hamburg Altona ICE 20 Karlsruhe Hbftowards ChurFrankfurt Airporttowards Kiel Hbf Neumunster Hamburg Altona or Oldenburg Hbf ICE 22 Stuttgart HbfTerminusHeidelberg Hbftowards Stuttgart HbfFrankfurt Airporttowards Hamburg Altona or Dortmund Hbf ICE 42 Stuttgart Hbftowards Munchen HbfFrankfurt Airporttowards Hamburg Altona or Amsterdam Centraal ICE 43 Karlsruhe Hbftowards Basel SBBMainz Hbftowards Koln Hbf ICE 45 Heidelberg Hbftowards Stuttgart HbfFrankfurt Airporttowards Dortmund Hbf ICE 47 Stuttgart HbfTerminusFrankfurt Main HbfTerminus ICE TGV 82 Kaiserslautern Hbftowards Paris EstICE TGV 84 Karlsruhe Hbftowards MarseilleMainz Hbftowards Dortmund Hbf or Essen Hbf IC EC 32 Heidelberg Hbftowards Klagenfurt Hbf Innsbruck Hbf Oberstdorf or Tubingen HbfWorms Hbftowards Norddeich Mole IC 35 Stuttgart HbfTerminusKarlsruhe Hbftowards KonstanzMainz Hbftowards Hamburg Altona IC 43 Karlsruhe Hbftowards Zurich HB or Interlaken OstNeustadttowards Saarbrucken Hbf IC 62 Stuttgart Hbftowards Graz HbfPreceding station DB Regio Mitte Following stationLudwigshafen Rhein Mittetowards Koblenz Hbf RE 1Sudwest Express TerminusLudwigshafen Rhein Mittetowards Frankfurt Main Hbf RE 14Sudwest ExpressLadenburgtowards Frankfurt Main Hbf RE 60Mannheim Waldhoftowards Frankfurt Main Hbf RE 70Neu Edingen Friedrichsfeldtowards Frankfurt Main Hbf RB 67Preceding station Following stationTerminus RE 10a Heidelberg Hbftowards Tubingen HbfRE 10bPreceding station Rhine Neckar S Bahn Following stationLudwigshafen Rhein Mittetowards Homburg Saar Hbf S1 Mannheim ARENA Maimarkttowards OsterburkenLudwigshafen Rhein Mittetowards Kaiserslautern Hbf S2 Mannheim ARENA Maimarkttowards Mosbach Baden Ludwigshafen Rhein Mittetowards Germersheim S3 Mannheim ARENA Maimarkttowards Karlsruhe HbfS4 Mannheim ARENA Maimarkttowards BruchsalLudwigshafen Rhein Mittetowards Mainz Hbf S6 Mannheim ARENA Maimarkttowards BensheimMannheim Kafertaltowards Biblis S8 TerminusMannheim Handelshafentowards Karlsruhe Hbf S9 Mannheim Neckarautowards Gross RohrheimMannheim Luzenbergtowards Mannheim Waldhof S39 TerminusLocationMannheimLocation in Baden WurttembergShow map of Baden WurttembergMannheimLocation in GermanyShow map of GermanyMannheimLocation in EuropeShow map of Europe Contents 1 Layout 2 History 2 1 Train collision in 2014 3 Planned developments 4 Operational usage 4 1 Long distance trains 4 2 Regional services 4 3 Rhine Neckar S Bahn 4 4 Interurban trams 5 Gallery 6 References 7 External linksLayout EditThe station is located on the southern edge of central Mannheim In November 2001 the station was comprehensively redeveloped with a modern shopping and service centre Travellers reach the platforms via escalators and lifts in the wings of the entrance hall which lead to a northern and a southern subway under the tracks The routes to the platforms have been upgraded to make them accessible for the disabled Lifts escalators and a direction system for the visually impaired enable all travellers to reach the trains without assistance The lifts are to be found in the northern subway while the escalators are located in the southern subway There is a Deutsche Bahn lounge for first class passengers and frequent travellers Since 1897 the station has had a Bahnhofsmission station mission a charity established at some major German railway stations that is mainly staffed by volunteers on platform 1 which among other things helps mobility impaired tourists The station forecourt has stops for several tram and bus lines of Rhein Neckar Verkehr the public transport operator of the Rhine Neckar region the Rhein Haardt Bahn RHB an interurban running to the west the Oberrheinische Eisenbahn OEG an interurban running to the east and the northeast and the bus lines of Busverkehr Rhein Neckar a subsidiary of Deutsche Bahn operating over a large region centred on Mannheim The central bus station adjacent to the southern end of platform 1 is served by long distance buses and an airport shuttle service as well as non scheduled bus services The entrance building continues the line of buildings on the bank of the Rhine southeast from Mannheim Palace Its central axis faces the Kaiserring the south eastern inner city ring road History Edit The original station about 1840 Station forecourt 1925The original station of the Badische Hauptbahn Baden mainline from Heidelberg opened in 1840 was a terminal station at the current Tattersall tram stop to the north of the current station Plans for a bridge over the Rhine to Ludwigshafen now the Konrad Adenauer Bridge however soon made it necessary to move the station 5 The station building some of which still survives was built between 1871 and 1876 From around 1900 consideration was given to extending or relocating the station In 1915 it was decided to expand the existing station In 1927 the front of the station was demolished and rebuilt 10 m 32 ft 10 in closer to the street doubling the area of the station During this restructuring there was debate on whether the facade should be restored to its original form Ultimately it was rebuilt in a simplified form Due to the substantial destruction during World War II and the subsequent reconstruction of the facade it was simplified again and rebuilt without decorative elements but reminiscent of its previous form In the summer 1939 timetable the station is shown as having 94 arriving and departing regular long distance trains per day Deutsche Reichsbahn ranked it as the 14th most congested node of its network 6 Between 1977 and 1982 a new relay interlocking system class SpDrS60 was installed replacing the electro mechanical interlocking at the eastern end of the station and three push button interlockings in the rest of the station area In the mid 1980s the new signal box controlled 74 km 46 mi of line with 721 appliances including 250 sets of points and derails as well as 66 main signals 7 On 2 June 1985 the Western Entrance to the Riedbahn Ried Railway to Mannheim was opened This avoided the need for trains running from Frankfurt via Mannheim to Stuttgart and Karlsruhe to reverse in Mannheim Hauptbahnhof 8 With a total of 269 arrivals and departures of scheduled long distance trains each day in Mannheim Hauptbahnhof in the timetable for the summer of 1989 it was the tenth most important node in the Deutsche Bundesbahn network 9 With 308 such arrivals and departures each day in the timetable for the summer of 1996 it had become the sixth most important node in the Deutsche Bahn network 10 In 1995 a parking garage was built under the station forecourt and the station building was comprehensively renovated and redesigned between 1999 and 2001 The platform side buildings were extended and had their symmetry restored while the entrance hall received a glass dome The blend of tradition and modernism is considered successful With 332 arrivals and departures in the 2004 timetable the station had become the fifth most important node in the Deutsche Bahn network 11 On 18 July 2007 the new central bus station was officially opened adjacent to the station The nine parking bays used by long distance buses operated from the bus station are currently served by more than 30 bus routes according to the operator Mannheimer Parkhausbetriebe GmbH 12 Train collision in 2014 Edit Accident site on 2 August 2014On 1 August 2014 a freight train passing through Mannheim Hauptbahnhof crashed into the side of long distance passenger train EuroCity 216 from Graz to Saarbrucken when both trains entered the station Five cars of the EuroCity derailed two of which overturned two freight cars and the freight locomotive also derailed Of the 250 passengers on the EuroCity 34 were injured plus four seriously as stated in the EUB report numbers vary among sources Investigators determined that the freight train had failed to heed a main signal which commanded halt a red light This happened because the driver assumed to not have reached the station yet so he expected the signals to be on the left side like the previous ones but in stations signals are placed to the right Therefore he took the proceed signal for the EuroCity as meant for him When he passed the main signal at danger the PZB safety system was triggered and forced the freight train to stop immediately Instead of contacting the train controller for instructions which is mandatory the driver restarted the train on his own He assumed that the PZB action was due to the missing acknowledgement of the distant signal expect halt at the same location but even then permission to continue must be asked for He then passed two more signals Schutzsignale at danger red halt aspect not guarded by PZB and hit the EuroCity The accident caused a damage of 2 3 million Euros 13 In September 2016 the driver was convicted for intentionally endangering railway operations and for bodily injury caused by negligence because he had continued after the forced braking without permission from the traffic controller He received six months in prison on probation and 100 hours of community service 14 15 Planned developments Edit Track field Mannheim Hauptbahnhof at nightThe station lies is at the junction of lines from Stuttgart Basel Saarbrucken and Frankfurt The Mannheim Stuttgart high speed rail line was completed in 1991 and it is planned to build a high speed line to Frankfurt Deutsche Bahn had sought to establish a by pass of the city through the Rheinauer Wald forest to the east of the city including a complex junction in the Pfingstberg Tunnel This would have substantially reduced the number of long distance trains serving Mannheim leading to massive resistance from the city and the region As a result Deutsche Bahn dropped this plan for the time being in 2006 Extensive changes at the railway tracks of the main station are planned over a three year construction period Construction was supposed to have started in late 2007 but had not begun by early 2010 Among other things a new platform is to be built for the Rhine Neckar S Bahn for approximately 50 million 16 In addition regional and long distance traffic are to be largely segregated with regional trains being operated in the future on the four tracks closest to the station building and long distance traffic operating on the more distant tracks As part of an urban development project called Mannheim 21 on land on the south side of the station there are plans to convert the most southerly underpass under the platforms now used as a baggage tunnel into a third platform access route and extend it to the Lindenhof it would not connect to the station building but would instead connect to the bus station The current southern underpass which runs under the middle of the platforms is frequently overloaded by pedestrian traffic Due to the increasing number of passengers using the station forecourt at the interchanges to public transport currently around 52 000 daily an upgrade of the Hauptbahnhof tram light rail stop is proposed Two versions are discussed option 1 which includes four new platforms laid across the axis of the whole Kaiserring is preferred by the city council Option 2 would add one track and one platform to the existing stop Rhein Neckar Verkehr Rhine Neckar Transport favours option 2 because it would be more practicable being less expensive and faster to build 17 18 Operational usage Edit ICE 1 in Mannheim HauptbahnhofEach day DB operates 238 long distance trains 265 regional trains and 155 S Bahn trains through the station as of 2009 4 Long distance trains Edit Due to its convenient position many long distance lines connect in Mannheim with overlapping routes creating services at 60 minute intervals on several routes Various high speed routes bring major cities in Germany and in neighboring countries within a few hours away and thus provide an alternative to air travel Line Route FrequencyICE 11 Berlin Leipzig Erfurt Frankfurt Main Mannheim Stuttgart Ulm Augsburg Munich Innsbruck 2 hour intervalsICE 12 Berlin Brunswick Kassel Wilhelmshohe Frankfurt Main Mannheim Karlsruhe Freiburg Basel Zurich Interlaken Ost 2 hour intervalsICE 15 Berlin Halle Erfurt Frankfurt Darmstadt Mannheim Kaiserslautern Saarbrucken 1 train pairICE 20 Kiel Hamburg Hanover Kassel Wilhelmshohe Frankfurt Main Mannheim Karlsruhe Freiburg Basel Zurich Interlaken Ost 2 hour intervalsICE 22 Kiel Hamburg Hanover Kassel Wilhelmshohe Frankfurt Main Frankfurt Airport Mannheim Stuttgart 2 hour intervalsICE 42 Hamburg Bremen Dortmund Duisburg Cologne Siegburg Bonn Frankfurt Airport Mannheim Stuttgart Ulm Augsburg Munchen 2 hour intervalsICE 43 Amsterdam Duisburg or Hanover Dortmund Wuppertal Cologne Siegburg Bonn Frankfurt Airport Mannheim Karlsruhe Freiburg Basel 2 hour intervalsICE 45 Cologne Cologne Bonn Airport Montabaur Limburg Sud Wiesbaden Mainz Mannheim Heidelberg Stuttgart Individual servicesICE 47 Dortmund Duisburg Koln Messe Deutz Frankfurt Airport Mannheim Stuttgart 2 hour intervalsICE TGV 82 Frankfurt Main Mannheim Kaiserslautern Saarbrucken Paris Est 2 hour intervalsICE TGV 84 Marseille Aix TGV Avignon TGV Lyon Part Dieu Macon Ville Besancon Franche Comte Belfort Montbeliard Mulhouse Strasbourg Baden Baden Karlsruhe Mannheim Frankfurt 1 train pairECE 85 Frankfurt Mannheim Karlsruhe Freiburg Basel Lucerne Bellinzona Monza Milan 1 train pairEC 32 Berlin Hanover Dortmund or Munster Essen Duisburg Koln Koblenz Mannheim Stuttgart Reutlingen Tubingen or Ulm Augsburg Munich Salzburg Klagenfurt or Ulm Friedrichshafen Innsbruck or Ulm Kempten Oberstdorf 2 hour intervalsIC 35 Norddeich Mole Munster Duisburg Koln Koblenz Mannheim Stuttgart or Karlsruhe Konstanz Individual servicesEC 43 Hamburg Altona Hamburg Bremen Osnabruck Munster Dortmund Bochum Essen Duisburg Dusseldorf Cologne Bonn Koblenz Mainz Mannheim Karlsruhe Baden Baden Freiburg Basel Zurich Interlaken Ost 2 train pairs dailyEC IC RJ 62 Saarbrucken Homburg Saar Mannheim Heidelberg Stuttgart Ulm Augsburg Munich Rosenheim Salzburg Graz 1 train pairEN Zurich Basel Freiburg Breisgau Karlsruhe Mannheim Frankfurt Sud Halle Berlin Hamburg 1 train pairRegional services Edit Line Route IntervalRE 1 Mannheim Ludwigshafen Mitte Neustadt Kaiserslautern Homburg Saarbrucken Trier Koblenz 2 hoursRE 9 Mannheim Schwetzingen Hockenheim Waghausel Graben Neudorf Karlsruhe Some trains in the peakRE 10a Mannheim Heidelberg Eberbach Mosbach Neckarelz Bad Friedrichshall Heilbronn 2 hoursRE 10b Mannheim Heidelberg Sinsheim Bad Friedrichshall Heilbronn 2 hoursRE 14 Mannheim Ludwigshafen Mitte Worms Mainz 2 hoursRE 40 Mannheim Heidelberg Wiesloch Walldorf Bruchsal Karlsruhe Freudenstadt 1 train pairRE 60 Mannheim Weinheim Bensheim Darmstadt Frankfurt 2 hoursRB 67 Mannheim Neu Edingen Friedrichsfeld Weinheim Bensheim Darmstadt Frankfurt Some trainsRE 70 Mannheim Biblis Gernsheim Frankfurt 1 hourRE 73 Mannheim Heidelberg Wiesloch Walldorf Bruchsal Karlsruhe Some trainsRhine Neckar S Bahn Edit The Rhine Neckar S Bahn is the backbone of transport in the Rhine Neckar region In December 2003 a 290 km S Bahn network was put into operation Further expansion of the S Bahn network has been agreed on in 2008 but after several delays the new lines are expected to start in 2020 19 20 Line Route FrequencyS1 Homburg Saar OsterburkenHomburg Kaiserslautern Neustadt Weinstrasse Schifferstadt Ludwigshafen Mannheim Heidelberg Neckargemund Eberbach Mosbach Osterburken 60 minute intervalsS2 Kaiserslautern Eberbach Mosbach Baden Kaiserslautern Neustadt Weinstrasse Schifferstadt Ludwigshafen Mannheim Heidelberg Neckargemund Eberbach Mosbach Baden 60 minute intervalsS3 Germersheim KarlsruheGermersheim Speyer Schifferstadt Ludwigshafen Mannheim Heidelberg Wiesloch Walldorf Bruchsal Karlsruhe 60 minute intervalsS4 Germersheim BruchsalGermersheim Speyer Schifferstadt Ludwigshafen Mannheim Heidelberg Wiesloch Walldorf Bruchsal 60 minute intervalsS6 Bensheim Mannheim Ludwigshafen Frankenthal Worms Mainz 30 minute intervals 60 minutes from to Bensheim S9 Karlsruhe Blankenloch Graben Neudorf Waghausel Hockenheim Schwetzingen Mhm Rheinau Mannheim Hbf Mhm Neckarstadt or Mhm Neuostheim Mhm Waldhof Ladenburg Burstadt Biblis Gross Rohrheim 60 minute intervals30 minutes Karlsruhe Graben in peak 30 min Graben Mannheim S39 Mannheim Waldhof Mannheim Heidelberg Karlsruhe Individual servicesInterurban trams Edit In the station forecourt is the stop of the metre gauge trams of the Rhein Neckar Verkehr RNV served by line 4 of the Rhein Haardtbahn RHB and line 5 of the Oberrheinische Eisenbahn OEG two interurban tramways running over the tracks of Manheim s tram company the MVV Verkehr AG within the city limits Line Route Frequency4 Heddesheim Kafertal Mannheim Oggersheim Bad Durkheim RHB 10 minute intervals5 Weinheim Mannheim Heidelberg Weinheim OEG 10 minute intervalsGallery Edit The digital display in the lobby Variotram at the station forecourt of Mannheim HauptbahnhofReferences Edit a b Stationspreisliste 2023 Station price list 2023 PDF in German DB Station amp Service 28 November 2022 Retrieved 14 December 2022 Airport information for Mannheim Hauptbahnhof at Transport Search website Wabenplan PDF Verkehrsverbund Rhein Neckar February 2021 Retrieved 21 February 2021 a b c Service und Einkaufen am Sudrand der Mannheimer City in German Deutsche Bahn Archived from the original on 30 September 2011 Retrieved 8 December 2011 Hauptbahnhof Mannheim Empfangsgebaude in German Rhein Neckar Industriekultur Retrieved 8 December 2011 Ralph Seidel 2005 Der Einfluss veranderter Raumbedingungen auf Netzgestalt und Frequenz im Schienenpersonenfernverkehr Deutschlands in German p 27 Dissertation of the University of Leipzig a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link Erich Fein 1984 Die neuen Eisenbhanbauten im Raum Mannheim im Rahmen der Einfuhrung der Westlichen Riedbahn und der Neubaustrecke Mannheim Stuttgart In DB Bahnbauzentrale Frankfurt M ed Eisenbahnbau fur das 21 Jahrhundert Streckenausbau bei der Deutschen Bundesbahn in German Frankfurt am Main pp 52 62 Winfried Hanslmeier 1987 Baumassnahmen der Ausbaustrecken In Knut Reimers Wilhelm Linkerhagner ed Wege in die Zukunft Neubau und Ausbaustrecken der Deutschen Bundesbahn in German Darmstadt Hestra pp 208 218 ISBN 3 7771 0200 8 Ralph Seidel 2005 Der Einfluss veranderter Raumbedingungen auf Netzgestalt und Frequenz im Schienenpersonenfernverkehr Deutschlands in German p 46 Dissertation of the University of Leipzig a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link Ralph Seidel 2005 Der Einfluss veranderter Raumbedingungen auf Netzgestalt und Frequenz im Schienenpersonenfernverkehr Deutschlands in German p 62 Dissertation of the University of Leipzig a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link Ralph Seidel 2005 Der Einfluss veranderter Raumbedingungen auf Netzgestalt und Frequenz im Schienenpersonenfernverkehr Deutschlands in German p 100 Dissertation of the University of Leipzig a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link Ziele in ganz Europa ab Mannheims neuem Busbahnhof press release in German Mannheimer Parkhausbetribe GmbH 13 February 2008 Archived from the original on 9 May 2008 Retrieved 8 December 2011 Zugkollision 01 08 2014 Mannheim Hbf Train collision 1 August 2014 Mannheim main station PDF in German EUB official report 23 September 2015 Archived from the original PDF on 10 October 2015 Retrieved 18 February 2017 Lokfuhrer zu Bewahrungsstrafe verurteilt Train driver receives sentence on probation in German Mannheimer Morgen newspaper 28 September 2016 Retrieved 18 February 2017 Unfall Lokfuhrer bekommt Bewahrungsstrafe Accident engineer receives sentence on probation in German Sudwestrundfunk 28 September 2016 Retrieved 12 March 2017 Fur den Hauptbahnhof haben wir lange gekampft in German Mannheimer Morgen 22 March 2007 Archived from the original on 29 July 2009 Retrieved 8 December 2011 Engpass im Liniennetz der RNV in German Mannheimer Morgen 3 April 2009 Archived from the original on 4 September 2012 Retrieved 8 December 2011 AUT traumt von teurer Losung in German Mannheimer Morgen 8 April 2009 Archived from the original on 6 September 2012 Retrieved 8 December 2011 S Bahn Verspatung argert Burger und Politiker S Bahn delay annoys citizens and politicians in German Mannheimer Morgen 27 May 2016 Retrieved 28 January 2017 S Bahn Zuge rollen mit einem weiteren Jahr Verspatung an S Bahn trains rolling with a delay of another year in German Mannheimer Morgen 22 December 2016 Retrieved 28 January 2017 External links Edit Deutsche Bahn portal to Mannheim Hauptbahnhof in German Deutsche Bahn Archived from the original on 27 April 2012 Retrieved 8 December 2011 Track plan of Mannheim Hbf PDF 271 8 KB in German Deutsche Bahn Retrieved 8 December 2011 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mannheim Hauptbahnhof Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mannheim Hauptbahnhof amp oldid 1167623574, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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