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Munich–Garmisch-Partenkirchen railway

The Munich–Garmisch-Partenkirchen railway is a single track, electrified main line railway in the southern part of the German state of Bavaria. It runs from Munich via Starnberg and Murnau to Garmisch-Partenkirchen. The first part of it was opened in 1854 and is one of the oldest lines in Germany.

Munich–Garmisch-Partenkirchen railway
Munich–Garmisch-Partenkirchen railway
Overview
Line number5504
5540 (S-Bahn Hauptbahnhof–Gauting)
LocaleBavaria, Germany
Service
Route number
  • 960 (Munich–Innsbruck)
  • 999.6 (S 6 Munich–Tutzing)
Technical
Line length100.6 km (62.5 mi)
Number of tracks2: München–Tutzing and Murnau–Hechendorf
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification15 kV/16.7 Hz AC overhead catenary
Operating speed140 km/h (87.0 mph) (max)
Route map

München Hbf
to northern track group
2.0
München-Neuhausen
(junction)
Sendling link
7.4
Munich Pasing
527 m
8.9
Munich-Westkreuz
530 m
11.3
Lochham
12.4
Gräfelfing
548 m
14.1
Planegg
556 m
15.8
Stockdorf
to Germering tank farm
18.9
Gauting
584 m
23.7
Mühlthal (Oberbay)
(until 2004)
621 m
26.7
Starnberg Nord
(since 2001)
27.9
Starnberg
587 m
32.7
Possenhofen
630 m
34.8
Feldafing
648 m
39.6
Tutzing
teminus
612 m
41.6
Unterzeismering junction
43.7
Diemendorf
(closed for passengers 1984)
622 m
48.9
Wilzhofen
(closed for passengers 1984)
565 m
53.5
Weilheim (Oberbay)
561 m
57.3
Polling
(closed for passengers 1984)
566 m
62.0
Huglfing
595 m
69.3
Uffing am Staffelsee
666 m
74.9
Murnau
692 m
77.9
Hechendorf
(closed for passengers 1984)
81.1
Ohlstadt
636 m
from Werdenfels gravel quarry
(dismantled in 2007)
85.4
Eschenlohe
636 m
91.9
Oberau
653 m
95.8
Farchant
671 m
100.6
Garmisch-Partenkirchen
708 m
Source: German railway atlas[1]

On 3 June 2022 in the Burgrain train derailment, a regional train derailed on a single track curve at Burgrain [de], north of Garmisch-Partenkirchen station.

Route edit

 
Signal box near Mühlthal
 
Flying junction near Murnau

The line runs for 7.4 km from the Starnberg wing of Munich Hauptbahnhof to Munich-Pasing station. The route to Tutzing runs parallel to S-Bahn line S6. North and south of Starnberg the line follows the shore of Lake Starnberg, where the Alps can be seen. The S-Bahn line ends in Tutzing. The single-track, electrified Kochelsee line branches off to the southeast to Kochel. South of Tutzing the line leaves the shore. At Weilheim, the Ammersee line joins from the northwest and the Weilheim–Peißenberg line diverges to the southwest. The line continues to the region around Lake Staffel and Murnau, where it runs under the overpass of the Ammergau line to Oberammergau. At Ohlstadt the line enters the tourism-dominated Alpine region. The end of the line is reached at Garmisch-Partenkirchen station, where the line continues as the Mittenwald line with views of Karwendel and Wetterstein. Alternatively, the Außerfern line and Zugspitz line connect with other alpine destinations.

History edit

Construction to Starnberg edit

The line from the Starnberg Station in Munich via Pasing to Planegg was built in accordance with an agreement of 5 November 1853 between the Royal Bavarian State Railways (German: Königlich Bayerische Staats-Eisenbahnen; K.Bay.Sts.B.) and the architect Ulrich Himbsel and opened on 21 May 1854. Between Munich and Pasing the line was duplicated and shared with the Munich-Augsburg Railway Company. The line was extended to Gauting on 16 July, to Mühlthal on 16 September and to Starnberg on 28 November 1854. On 1 January 1862 the line was purchased by the Bavarian government, which had previously leased and operated it.

Munich–Peißenberg Railway edit

The continuation of the line from Starnberg, was built and operated by the town of Weilheim under a concession. The line was extended to Tutzing on 1 July 1865 and via Weilheim to Unterpeißenberg (on the modern Weilheim–Peißenberg line) on 1 February 1866. It was later extended to Schongau. The line was used for the transport of lignite mined in Peißenberg and Penzberg.

Weilheim–Murnau local railway edit

On 8 May 1874 the Murnau Reichstag deputy Emmeran Kottmüller founded a railway committee with the aim of building a Vizinalbahn (literally a "local railway", a railway built by a local community with a state subsidy under a Bavarian law of 1869) from Weilheim to Murnau. The business community of Murnau and the surrounding communities raised enough capital to bring the proposal before the Bavarian parliament in the autumn of 1875 and it was approved on 10 July 1876. The line was opened on 15 May 1879. In 1898 the line was upgraded to allow a maximum speed of 30 km/h.

In 1898, the Ammersee line was opened connecting with the Munich–Garmisch-Partenkirchen line in Weilheim.

Murnau–Garmisch-Partenkirchen edit

The line was continued to the south by a private railway company, Lokalbahn AG (LAG), which was granted a concession by the then still independent town of Partenkirchen on 23 September 1888 to build and operate a local railway from Murnau. The 25.7 km-long single-track line was opened after a construction period of only 9.5 months on 25 July 1889. The station was located in Partenkirchen from the beginning and was renamed Garmisch-Partenkirchen, when the two municipalities were merged in 1935. Through coaches operated from the beginning from Munich and in 1900 the first Munich-Garmisch–Partenkirchen express was introduced. At the turn of the 20th century plans to build a railway line between Garmisch-Partenkirchen and Innsbruck were advanced and on 22 November 1904 a treaty was signed by Bavaria and Austria. On the Bavarian side construction and operations would be performed by the K.Bay.Sts.B. The LAG was not willing to pay for the necessary upgrade of its route from Murnau to Garmisch-Partenkirchen and it entered into negotiations with the K.Bay.Sts.B. This ended with K.Bay.Sts.B.'s purchase of the LAG's infrastructure on 1 January 1908 for 3.5 million gold marks and the subsequent upgrade of the line. In 1911/1912 the current Garmisch-Partenkirchen station was built west of the Partnach river.

Electrification edit

The Mittenwald Railway from Innsbruck to Garmisch, which was completed in 1912, was from the beginning planned as an electrified line, but electrical operations from Garmisch to the Austrian border were delayed to 25 April 1913 because the power station and deliveries of locomotives were not complete. About a month later, electrical operations were extended to Murnau. It was not until 1924, with the commissioning of the Walchensee Hydroelectric Power Station, that the long-standing electrification plans were completed. On 3 December 1924, electrical services commenced on the Garmisch-Murnau route and on 5 January 1925 they were extended to Weilheim. On 16 February electrical services continued to Starnberg and on the night of 19/20 February 1925 the first electric train made a test run to Munich Hauptbahnhof. On 21 February the first electrically hauled train–an express–ran to Munich from Garmisch and after 23 February all passenger trains on the route operated electrically. The commissioning of electrification between Murnau and Munich therefore only required 45 days in total.

Track doubling edit

In 1933 the Garmisch-Murnau line was reclassified as a main line. The line had to be upgraded for the 1936 Winter Olympics to be held in Garmisch-Partenkirchen. Since the Murnau–Garmisch section was built as a local railway, it needed to be upgraded in a short period of time. The section had especially sharp bends and weak bridges. There were more problems on the Hechendorf-Murnau section, including a 2.6% grade, which sometimes required trains had to be so assisted by pusher locomotives. This involved complex movements with the pusher locomotive having to return to the bottom of the steep section on the single track section. For these reasons, on 26 and 27 March 1935 the management board of Deutsche Reichsbahn (German Railways) agreed to the duplication of the Huglfing–Hechendorf section. The upgrade would need to be completed by the beginning of winter 1935 in order to be ready for the 1936 Winter Olympics. In addition to the second track, the original track has been improved, curves had to be widened and the stations at Huglfing, Uffing, Murnau and Hechendorf had to be upgraded considerably. On 18 December 1935 the upgraded section was put back into service, although this required large structures such as a six-metre-high bridge over Highway 2 and the reconstruction of the bridge where the Oberammergau line crosses the line in Murnau. The second track in the Huglfing-Murnau section was dismantled in 1942 and 1943 as a result of the war. Ballast and sleepers from the line were used in the conversion of the Oberammergau line to the standard German electrical system in 1954. The Murnau–Hechendorf section is still operated as two lines. The upgrading of the line in 1935 increased the line speed between Tutzing and Murnau from 80 to 110 km/h and between Murnau and Garmisch-Partenkirchen from 55 to 80 km/h.

From 1980 edit

 
Ohlstadt station

In the early 1980s the Diemendorf, Wilzhofen, Polling, Hechendorf and Farchant stations had low patronage and in June 1984 they were closed together with the Planegg and Gauting stations, which, however, continued to be served by the Munich S-Bahn. Wilzhofen, Polling and Farchant were preserved as crossing loops, but in Diemendorf the second track was dismantled in 1996. Since 1982, there has been an hourly service on the route. In peak times services run at 30-minute intervals.

In 1985, Deutsche Bundesbahn established its first electronic interlocking in Murnau. For three years it was operated in parallel with the existing signal box to gain experience. On 29 November 1988 it took over full control of the operation. On 28 November 2008, however, control of this section of the line was taken over by the Garmisch electronic interlocking.

Operations edit

 
Oberau station (2009)

Trains edit

The Garmisch-Partenkirchen line is served by Bombardier Talent 2 Regionalbahn trains. They run every hour with extra trains in the peak hour, stopping at Munich-Pasing, Tutzing and all stations south of Tutzing. The journey takes about 85 minutes, and most services continue to Innsbruck. Additionally, some Intercity-Express trains run on Saturdays and Sundays, taking about 90 minutes, some continuing to Innsbruck. No scheduled freight services operate on the line.

Accident edit

On 3 June 2022, a double decker regional train had derailed at a curve near Loisachauen in the Burgrain district of Garmisch-Partenkirchen, while it was traveling north between Garmisch-Partenkirchen station and Farchant station. Five people were killed: a 13-year-old boy from the Garmisch-Partenkirchen district, a 51-year-old woman from Wiesbaden, a 70-year-old woman from the Munich district and two female refugees, aged 30 and 39, from Ukraine who had fled the war in their homeland. Additionally 68 passengers were injured, with 16 of them being serious.[2][3][4][5]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas). Schweers + Wall. 2009. pp. 107, 115, 164–67. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  2. ^ "Garmisch-Partenkirchen: Polizei korrigiert Zahl der Verletzten auf fast 70". Der Spiegel (in German). 2022-06-13. ISSN 2195-1349. Retrieved 2023-02-03.
  3. ^ "Zugunglück bei Garmisch-Partenkirchen: Alle Vermisstenfälle aufgeklärt". Der Spiegel (in German). 2022-06-05. ISSN 2195-1349. Retrieved 2023-02-03.
  4. ^ "Bavaria train crash: At least four killed in German rail accident". BBC News. 2022-06-03. Retrieved 2023-02-03.
  5. ^ "German train crash death toll rises to five". The Observer. Agence France-Presse. 2022-06-04. ISSN 0029-7712. Retrieved 2023-02-03.

References edit

  • Rossberg, Ralf Roman (2008). "Gebirgs-Zug. Die Strecke München–Mittenwald–Innsbruck (Mountain railway. The Munich-Mittenwald-Innsbruck line)". Eisenbahn-magazin (in German) (6): 28–32.
  • Blath, Peter (2005). Schienenverkehr im Werdenfelser Land - Ausgabe 2005 über 200 historische Aufnahmen (Railways in the Werdenfels country - 200 historic photographs) (in German). Erfurt: Sutton. ISBN 3-89702-886-7.
  • Dumjahn, Horst-Werner (1984). Handbuch der deutschen Eisenbahnstrecken; Eröffnungsdaten 1835–1935. (Handbook of German railway lines, opening dates 1835-1935) (in German). Mainz: Dumjahn. ISBN 3-921426-29-4Reprint of 1935 Reichsbahn publication{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)

47°29′30″N 11°05′49″E / 47.4918°N 11.0970°E / 47.4918; 11.0970

munich, garmisch, partenkirchen, railway, single, track, electrified, main, line, railway, southern, part, german, state, bavaria, runs, from, munich, starnberg, murnau, garmisch, partenkirchen, first, part, opened, 1854, oldest, lines, germany, overviewline, . The Munich Garmisch Partenkirchen railway is a single track electrified main line railway in the southern part of the German state of Bavaria It runs from Munich via Starnberg and Murnau to Garmisch Partenkirchen The first part of it was opened in 1854 and is one of the oldest lines in Germany Munich Garmisch Partenkirchen railwayMunich Garmisch Partenkirchen railwayOverviewLine number5504 5540 S Bahn Hauptbahnhof Gauting LocaleBavaria GermanyServiceRoute number960 Munich Innsbruck 999 6 S 6 Munich Tutzing TechnicalLine length100 6 km 62 5 mi Number of tracks2 Munchen Tutzing and Murnau HechendorfTrack gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeElectrification15 kV 16 7 Hz AC overhead catenaryOperating speed140 km h 87 0 mph max Route mapLegendMunchen Hbfto northern track groupto Holzkirchen2 0 Munchen Neuhausen junction South Ringto Regensburgto Ingolstadtto AugsburgS Bahn mainline from Munich EastSendling link7 4 Munich Pasing 527 mto Augsburg and Buchloe8 9 Munich Westkreuz 530 mto Herrsching11 3 Lochham12 4 Grafelfing 548 m14 1 Planegg 556 m15 8 Stockdorfto Germering tank farm18 9 Gauting 584 m23 7 Muhlthal Oberbay until 2004 621 m26 7 Starnberg Nord since 2001 27 9 Starnberg 587 m32 7 Possenhofen 630 m34 8 Feldafing 648 m39 6 Tutzing teminus 612 m41 6 Unterzeismering junctionto Kochel am See43 7 Diemendorf closed for passengers 1984 622 m48 9 Wilzhofen closed for passengers 1984 565 mfrom Geltendorf53 5 Weilheim Oberbay 561 mto Peissenberg57 3 Polling closed for passengers 1984 566 m62 0 Huglfing 595 m69 3 Uffing am Staffelsee 666 m74 9 Murnau 692 mAmmergau Railway to Oberammergau77 9 Hechendorf closed for passengers 1984 A 9581 1 Ohlstadt 636 mfrom Werdenfels gravel quarry dismantled in 2007 85 4 Eschenlohe 636 m91 9 Oberau 653 m95 8 Farchant 671 m100 6 Garmisch Partenkirchen 708 mZugspitze RailwayAusserfern Railway to KemptenMittenwald Railway to InnsbruckSource German railway atlas 1 On 3 June 2022 in the Burgrain train derailment a regional train derailed on a single track curve at Burgrain de north of Garmisch Partenkirchen station Contents 1 Route 2 History 2 1 Construction to Starnberg 2 2 Munich Peissenberg Railway 2 3 Weilheim Murnau local railway 2 4 Murnau Garmisch Partenkirchen 2 5 Electrification 2 6 Track doubling 2 7 From 1980 3 Operations 3 1 Trains 4 Accident 5 Notes 6 ReferencesRoute edit nbsp Signal box near Muhlthal nbsp Flying junction near MurnauThe line runs for 7 4 km from the Starnberg wing of Munich Hauptbahnhof to Munich Pasing station The route to Tutzing runs parallel to S Bahn line S6 North and south of Starnberg the line follows the shore of Lake Starnberg where the Alps can be seen The S Bahn line ends in Tutzing The single track electrified Kochelsee line branches off to the southeast to Kochel South of Tutzing the line leaves the shore At Weilheim the Ammersee line joins from the northwest and the Weilheim Peissenberg line diverges to the southwest The line continues to the region around Lake Staffel and Murnau where it runs under the overpass of the Ammergau line to Oberammergau At Ohlstadt the line enters the tourism dominated Alpine region The end of the line is reached at Garmisch Partenkirchen station where the line continues as the Mittenwald line with views of Karwendel and Wetterstein Alternatively the Ausserfern line and Zugspitz line connect with other alpine destinations History editConstruction to Starnberg edit The line from the Starnberg Station in Munich via Pasing to Planegg was built in accordance with an agreement of 5 November 1853 between the Royal Bavarian State Railways German Koniglich Bayerische Staats Eisenbahnen K Bay Sts B and the architect Ulrich Himbsel and opened on 21 May 1854 Between Munich and Pasing the line was duplicated and shared with the Munich Augsburg Railway Company The line was extended to Gauting on 16 July to Muhlthal on 16 September and to Starnberg on 28 November 1854 On 1 January 1862 the line was purchased by the Bavarian government which had previously leased and operated it Munich Peissenberg Railway edit The continuation of the line from Starnberg was built and operated by the town of Weilheim under a concession The line was extended to Tutzing on 1 July 1865 and via Weilheim to Unterpeissenberg on the modern Weilheim Peissenberg line on 1 February 1866 It was later extended to Schongau The line was used for the transport of lignite mined in Peissenberg and Penzberg Weilheim Murnau local railway edit On 8 May 1874 the Murnau Reichstag deputy Emmeran Kottmuller founded a railway committee with the aim of building a Vizinalbahn literally a local railway a railway built by a local community with a state subsidy under a Bavarian law of 1869 from Weilheim to Murnau The business community of Murnau and the surrounding communities raised enough capital to bring the proposal before the Bavarian parliament in the autumn of 1875 and it was approved on 10 July 1876 The line was opened on 15 May 1879 In 1898 the line was upgraded to allow a maximum speed of 30 km h In 1898 the Ammersee line was opened connecting with the Munich Garmisch Partenkirchen line in Weilheim Murnau Garmisch Partenkirchen edit The line was continued to the south by a private railway company Lokalbahn AG LAG which was granted a concession by the then still independent town of Partenkirchen on 23 September 1888 to build and operate a local railway from Murnau The 25 7 km long single track line was opened after a construction period of only 9 5 months on 25 July 1889 The station was located in Partenkirchen from the beginning and was renamed Garmisch Partenkirchen when the two municipalities were merged in 1935 Through coaches operated from the beginning from Munich and in 1900 the first Munich Garmisch Partenkirchen express was introduced At the turn of the 20th century plans to build a railway line between Garmisch Partenkirchen and Innsbruck were advanced and on 22 November 1904 a treaty was signed by Bavaria and Austria On the Bavarian side construction and operations would be performed by the K Bay Sts B The LAG was not willing to pay for the necessary upgrade of its route from Murnau to Garmisch Partenkirchen and it entered into negotiations with the K Bay Sts B This ended with K Bay Sts B s purchase of the LAG s infrastructure on 1 January 1908 for 3 5 million gold marks and the subsequent upgrade of the line In 1911 1912 the current Garmisch Partenkirchen station was built west of the Partnach river Electrification edit The Mittenwald Railway from Innsbruck to Garmisch which was completed in 1912 was from the beginning planned as an electrified line but electrical operations from Garmisch to the Austrian border were delayed to 25 April 1913 because the power station and deliveries of locomotives were not complete About a month later electrical operations were extended to Murnau It was not until 1924 with the commissioning of the Walchensee Hydroelectric Power Station that the long standing electrification plans were completed On 3 December 1924 electrical services commenced on the Garmisch Murnau route and on 5 January 1925 they were extended to Weilheim On 16 February electrical services continued to Starnberg and on the night of 19 20 February 1925 the first electric train made a test run to Munich Hauptbahnhof On 21 February the first electrically hauled train an express ran to Munich from Garmisch and after 23 February all passenger trains on the route operated electrically The commissioning of electrification between Murnau and Munich therefore only required 45 days in total Track doubling edit In 1933 the Garmisch Murnau line was reclassified as a main line The line had to be upgraded for the 1936 Winter Olympics to be held in Garmisch Partenkirchen Since the Murnau Garmisch section was built as a local railway it needed to be upgraded in a short period of time The section had especially sharp bends and weak bridges There were more problems on the Hechendorf Murnau section including a 2 6 grade which sometimes required trains had to be so assisted by pusher locomotives This involved complex movements with the pusher locomotive having to return to the bottom of the steep section on the single track section For these reasons on 26 and 27 March 1935 the management board of Deutsche Reichsbahn German Railways agreed to the duplication of the Huglfing Hechendorf section The upgrade would need to be completed by the beginning of winter 1935 in order to be ready for the 1936 Winter Olympics In addition to the second track the original track has been improved curves had to be widened and the stations at Huglfing Uffing Murnau and Hechendorf had to be upgraded considerably On 18 December 1935 the upgraded section was put back into service although this required large structures such as a six metre high bridge over Highway 2 and the reconstruction of the bridge where the Oberammergau line crosses the line in Murnau The second track in the Huglfing Murnau section was dismantled in 1942 and 1943 as a result of the war Ballast and sleepers from the line were used in the conversion of the Oberammergau line to the standard German electrical system in 1954 The Murnau Hechendorf section is still operated as two lines The upgrading of the line in 1935 increased the line speed between Tutzing and Murnau from 80 to 110 km h and between Murnau and Garmisch Partenkirchen from 55 to 80 km h From 1980 edit nbsp Ohlstadt stationIn the early 1980s the Diemendorf Wilzhofen Polling Hechendorf and Farchant stations had low patronage and in June 1984 they were closed together with the Planegg and Gauting stations which however continued to be served by the Munich S Bahn Wilzhofen Polling and Farchant were preserved as crossing loops but in Diemendorf the second track was dismantled in 1996 Since 1982 there has been an hourly service on the route In peak times services run at 30 minute intervals In 1985 Deutsche Bundesbahn established its first electronic interlocking in Murnau For three years it was operated in parallel with the existing signal box to gain experience On 29 November 1988 it took over full control of the operation On 28 November 2008 however control of this section of the line was taken over by the Garmisch electronic interlocking Operations edit nbsp Oberau station 2009 Trains edit The Garmisch Partenkirchen line is served by Bombardier Talent 2 Regionalbahn trains They run every hour with extra trains in the peak hour stopping at Munich Pasing Tutzing and all stations south of Tutzing The journey takes about 85 minutes and most services continue to Innsbruck Additionally some Intercity Express trains run on Saturdays and Sundays taking about 90 minutes some continuing to Innsbruck No scheduled freight services operate on the line Accident editMain article Burgrain train derailment On 3 June 2022 a double decker regional train had derailed at a curve near Loisachauen in the Burgrain district of Garmisch Partenkirchen while it was traveling north between Garmisch Partenkirchen station and Farchant station Five people were killed a 13 year old boy from the Garmisch Partenkirchen district a 51 year old woman from Wiesbaden a 70 year old woman from the Munich district and two female refugees aged 30 and 39 from Ukraine who had fled the war in their homeland Additionally 68 passengers were injured with 16 of them being serious 2 3 4 5 Notes edit Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland German railway atlas Schweers Wall 2009 pp 107 115 164 67 ISBN 978 3 89494 139 0 Garmisch Partenkirchen Polizei korrigiert Zahl der Verletzten auf fast 70 Der Spiegel in German 2022 06 13 ISSN 2195 1349 Retrieved 2023 02 03 Zugungluck bei Garmisch Partenkirchen Alle Vermisstenfalle aufgeklart Der Spiegel in German 2022 06 05 ISSN 2195 1349 Retrieved 2023 02 03 Bavaria train crash At least four killed in German rail accident BBC News 2022 06 03 Retrieved 2023 02 03 German train crash death toll rises to five The Observer Agence France Presse 2022 06 04 ISSN 0029 7712 Retrieved 2023 02 03 References edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Munich Garmisch Partenkirchen railway Rossberg Ralf Roman 2008 Gebirgs Zug Die Strecke Munchen Mittenwald Innsbruck Mountain railway The Munich Mittenwald Innsbruck line Eisenbahn magazin in German 6 28 32 Blath Peter 2005 Schienenverkehr im Werdenfelser Land Ausgabe 2005 uber 200 historische Aufnahmen Railways in the Werdenfels country 200 historic photographs in German Erfurt Sutton ISBN 3 89702 886 7 Dumjahn Horst Werner 1984 Handbuch der deutschen Eisenbahnstrecken Eroffnungsdaten 1835 1935 Handbook of German railway lines opening dates 1835 1935 in German Mainz Dumjahn ISBN 3 921426 29 4Reprint of 1935 Reichsbahn publication a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link 47 29 30 N 11 05 49 E 47 4918 N 11 0970 E 47 4918 11 0970 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Munich Garmisch Partenkirchen railway amp oldid 1212407188, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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