fbpx
Wikipedia

Neustadt (Weinstraße) Hauptbahnhof

Neustadt (Weinstr) Hauptbahnhof – called Neustadt a/d. Haardt until 1935 and from 1945 until 1950[4] – is the central station of in the city of Neustadt in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate. In addition to the Hauptbahnhof, Rhine-Neckar S-Bahn services stop at Neustadt (Weinstr) Böbig halt (Haltepunkt). Mußbach station and Neustadt (Weinstr) halt, opened on 19 November 2013, are also located in Neustadt.

Neustadt (Weinstraße) Hauptbahnhof
Through station
General information
LocationBahnhofsplatz 6, Neustadt an der Weinstraße, Rhineland-Palatinate
Germany
Coordinates49°21′00″N 8°08′26″E / 49.35°N 8.140556°E / 49.35; 8.140556
Line(s)
Platforms6
Other information
Station code4454[1]
DS100 codeRN[2]
IBNR8000275
Category2[1]
Fare zoneVRN: 132[3]
Websitewww.bahnhof.de
History
Opened11 June 1847
Previous namesNeustadt a/d. Haardt
Services
Preceding station DB Regio Mitte Following station
Kaiserslautern Hbf
towards Koblenz Hbf
RE 1
Südwest-Express
Ludwigshafen (Rhein) Mitte
towards Mannheim Hbf
Hochspeyer RE 6 Landau (Pfalz) Hbf
Terminus RB 45 Neustadt-Böbig
towards Monsheim
RB 51 Neustadt (Weinstr) Süd
RB 53 Neustadt (Weinstr) Süd
towards Wissembourg
Preceding station Rhine-Neckar S-Bahn Following station
Lambrecht (Pfalz) S1 Neustadt-Böbig
towards Osterburken
Lambrecht (Pfalz) S2 Neustadt-Böbig
Location
Neustadt (Weinstraße) Hauptbahnhof
Location in Rhineland-Palatinate
Neustadt (Weinstraße) Hauptbahnhof
Location in Germany
Neustadt (Weinstraße) Hauptbahnhof
Location in Europe

The station was opened on 11 June 1847 as the terminus of the first section of the Palatine Ludwig Railway (Pfälzische Ludwigsbahn) from Rheinschanze (now: Ludwigshafen am Rhein) to Bexbach; this was opened over its full length two years later and now largely forms the Mannheim–Saarbrücken railway. With the opening of the Palatine Maximilian Railway (Pfälzischen Maximiliansbahn) to Wissembourg in 1855 and the Palatine Northern Railway (Pfälzische Nordbahn), built from 1865 to 1873, to Monsheim, it developed into a railway junction and also became a stop for long-distance trains. Since the 2000s, however, its importance for long-distance traffic has fallen. Since 2003, it has also been integrated into the network of the Rhine-Neckar S-Bahn. In addition, its entrance building is under heritage protection.[5]

Location edit

Neustadt Hauptbahnhof is centrally located within Neustadt. The inner city adjoins it to the north and the Saalbau, an events and conference centre, is nearby. To the south of the railway station is the Hambacher Höhe (Hambach heights). Crossing the line to the west of the station is the German Wine Route (Deutsche Weinstraße), which winds through this area through an S-shaped curve. Immediately east of the facilities serving passengers, the railway crosses a bridge over Landauer Straße, which also forms part of federal highway 39; Bahnhofstraße (railway street) branches off it and later rejoins it. To the east, past the freight yard, is the historical district of Branchweiler.

The station is located at line-kilometre 77.203. The zero point for the kilometrage is between Bexbach and Neunkirchen on the former BavariaPrussia national border.[6][7]

Railway lines edit

The Mannheim–Saarbrücken railway, which developed out of the Palatine Ludwig, comes from the northeast. It reaches Neustadt Hauptbahnhof over a drawn out S-curve, which takes it pass the freight facilities and Neustadt-Böbig halt. Beyond the Hauptbahnhof, it runs to the west or northwest along the Speyerbach through the Palatinate Forest (Pfälzerwald) towards Saarbrücken, passing the suburbs of Afrikaviertel and Schöntal.

The Maximilian Railway branches in the east from the line to Mannheim immediately after the crossing over federal road 39 and runs immediately along a long curve to the south towards Wissembourg. The Palatine Northern Railway starts in the northern station area and runs to the Neustadt-Böbig halt parallel with the line to Mannheim and continues via Bad Dürkheim and Grünstadt to Monsheim. The narrow gauge Palatine Overland Railway (Pfälzer Oberlandbahn), which existed between 1912 and 1955, began in the station forecourt (Bahnhofsvorplatz) and crossed the standard-gauge tracks a bridge it shared with the German Wine Route and passed through several wine-growing villages to Landau.

History edit

Connection to the rail network (1835–1849) edit

Originally it had been planned to build a railway running north-south in the then Bavarian Circle of the Rhine (Rheinkreis). However, it was agreed to first build a railway running east-west, which was to be used primarily for transporting coal from the Saar district (now part of the Saarland) to the Rhine. Two options were discussed for the general route through Kaiserslautern, as the development of a route through the Palatinate Forest (Pfälzerwald) proved to be complicated. At first the responsible engineers considered a route through the Dürkheim valley. However, this proved impractical because its side valleys were too low, and above all the climb to Frankenstein would have been too high steep. It would have required stationary steam engines and rope haulage to overcome the differences in altitude.[8] For this reason, they chose an option through the Neustadt valley, which would also be difficult to climb according to expert opinion, but would be feasible and, in contrast to the Dürkheim valley, would avoid the need for stationary steam engines.[9] At the same time, plans were also being made to build a railway line from Mainz to Neustadt, but these did not proceed.[10]

The tracks were laid between Rheinschanze and Neustadt from April 1846. Neustadt station’s entrance building was completed at the same time; this was built in the Italianate style. The section was finally opened on 11 June 1847. The opening train, which began in Ludwigshafen, was hauled by the locomotive Haardt, which was numbered 1.[11] The celebrations on site included music and cannon fire. On the platform were the state commissioner of Neustadt and some other subordinate officials; the president of the Palatinate region gave a speech. The return trip, in which these officials also took part, set off at 1 pm.[12]

The completion of the Neustadt–Frankenstein section was especially delayed by difficulties in acquiring the land needed and the difficult topography. For example, ten tunnels had to be built through hills and foothills.[13] The opening ceremony finally took place on 25 August 1849.[14]

Development of the Palatine Maximilian Railway (1849–1860) edit

 
Neustadt station in the foreground with the original entrance building in around 1860

At the same time as the Ludwig Railway was being built, plans were developed for a north-south link within the Palatinate. It was debated as to whether a route through the hills from Neustadt via Landau to Wissembourg (Alsace) or a route near the Rhine via Speyer, Germersheim and Wörth was more urgent and desirable. The military especially preferred a route on the edge of the Palatinate Forest. However, the political events of 1848 caused the project to come to a standstill.[15]

In January 1850, a brochure appeared in Neustadt (then called Neustadt an der Haardt) that promoted a route via Landau to Wissembourg (German: Weißenburg) and argued that the line should serve the larger townships rather than those immediately alongside the Rhine among other things. The decision finally went in favour of a line through the hills in 1852, after reports and investigations had been launched the previous year. On 3 November 1852, the Bavarian king, Maximilian II allowed its construction to proceed, by approving the creation of a joint-stock company that launched the project.[16]

The Neustadt–Landau was opened on 18 July 1855 and the Landau–Wissembourg section followed on 26 November 1855. This meant that Neustadt was the third railway junction within the Palatinate, after Schifferstadt (1847) and Ludwigshafen, formerly Rheinschanze (1853).

Origin of the Palatine Northern Railway (1860–1873) edit

 
Neustadt station towards the end of the 1860s

In 1860, a local committee promoted the construction of a railway from Neustadt an der Weinstraße via Bad Dürkheim to Frankenthal. Above all, the factories in Dürkheim would benefit from a railway line. Although such a route would run parallel to the Palatine Maximilian Railway and the Mainz–Ludwigshafen railway, the proponents were optimistic that the planned route would be preferred due to its greater scenic appeal.[17]

The corresponding petition, however, met with no response since difficulties with the Palatine Ludwig Railway Company (Pfälzische Ludwigsbahn-Gesellschaft) were feared. For this reason, agreement was reached on 25 January 1862 that only a local railway would be built between Neustadt and Dürkheim.[18] The construction of the new railway line required major reconstruction measures, which cost 218,000 gulden. As a result of this project, the existing entrance building also had to be replaced, since the railway had gradually become congested and the station had to be extended. Neustadt was given a larger building, which was located somewhat further east and was equipped with a platform canopy.[19] In addition, the station received a goods shed as well as an engine shed with nine stalls. The tracks were extended to a total length of 1.8 kilometres and Landauer Straße, which had previously crossed the railway tracks on the level, was reconstructed through an underpass.[20]

The opening of the branch line to Dürkheim followed on 6 March 1865. It was extended to the Rhenish Hesse town of Monsheim on 20 July 1873 after the GrünstadtMonsheim section had already been opened in March of the same year.

Further development (1873–1960) edit

 
Steam train in Neustadt Hauptbahnhof

In 1875, the station became the site of a state telegraph office.[21] In 1887, a curve was opened connecting the line from Schifferstadt towards the line to Neustadt (Maximilian Railway); this meant that freight trains from the east no longer had to reverse in the station.[22][23] The station received ticket gates on 15 October 1906.[24]

The station, together with the rest of the Palatinate rail network, became part of the Palatine Ludwig Railway Company (Pfälzische Ludwigsbahn-Gesellschaft) on 1 January 1909. From 16 December 1912 onwards, the so-called Palatine Overland Railway (Pfälzer Oberlandbahn) ran from the station forecourt as an interurban, first as far as Edenkoben and from 13 January 1913 to Landau. Its purpose was to link several places between Neustadt and Landau, which had not been connected to the Maximilian Railway. At the beginning of the First World War, a total of 401 trains passed through the station from 2 to 18 August.[25] 40 trains ran from Mannheim daily; 20 of them continued to Saarbrücken, the remaining ones ran on to the Maximilian Railway in Neustadt.[26] After Germany had lost the war and the French military had marched in, the Maximilian Railway south of Maikammer-Kirrweiler was blockaded for passenger traffic on 1 December 1918, but it was reopened three days later.[27]

The station was integrated into the newly founded Reichsbahndirektion Ludwigshafen (railway division of Ludwigshafen). During the dissolution of the railway division of Ludwigshafen on 1 April 1937, it was transferred to the railway division of Mainz.[28]

In the two world wars the station was hardly affected. After the Second World War, it became part of the Bundesbahndirektion Mainz (Deutsche Bundesbahn division of Mainz), which had succeeded the Reichsbahndirektion Mainz. In the 1950s, the Palatine Overland Railway was shut down. The railway station was redesigned and modernised in 1960.[20]

Developments since 1960 edit

Since the main line from Mannheim had always had a great significance for long-distance traffic to Saarbrücken, it was gradually electrified, starting in 1960. The Saarbrücken–Homburg section could be operated electrically on 8 March 1960. The Homburg–Kaiserslautern followed on 18 May 1961 and from 12 March 1964 the entire line was electrically operated. The electrification of the last section was delayed mainly because of the numerous tunnels between Kaiserslautern and Neustadt that had to be enlarged. For the opening, a special service of the Rheingold ran along the route.[29]

The electrification work meant that this section was temporarily operated over only a single track and in one place trains could run at 40 km/h at most; as a result of the limited capacity several freight trains were directed over the Landau–Rohrbach railway and the Zeller Valley Railway (Zellertalbahn) towards Worms.[30]

On 1 August 1971, the station came under the jurisdiction of the railway division of Karlsruhe.[31] In 2003, the station was modernised, including the raising of the platform, in preparation for its integration in the Rhine-Neckar S-Bahn. Since then services on lines S1 (Homburg–Osterburken and S2 (Kaiserslautern–Mosbach) stop at the station.

The signalling technology within the station was also subsequently modernised. With the installation of the new electronic interlocking on 23 March 1998, the wye, which had allowed a bypass around the station since 1887, lost its eastern leg; since then, trains can no longer run directly towards Ludwigshafen, but instead they have to reverse in the station.[32] In addition, an additional electronic interlocking of the Alcatel El L90 type[33] has gradually taken over the regional railway network of the Palatinate and neighboring Rhinehesse since the 2000s. For example, Landau Hauptbahnhof as well as the stations of Edenkoben and Godramstein came under the control of the Neustadt electronic interlocking and Winden station was added one year later.[34]

Infrastructure edit

 
Overview of the Hauptbahnhof

Entrance building edit

The monument-protected entrance building, which was completed in 1866, together with its annexes, is built in the Neoclassical style in sections that are two and a half or three storeys high. It has a mansard roof and a façade, which can be classified stylistically as Renaissance Revival.[5]

Reiterstellwerk edit

In the eastern part of the station there has been a signal box since 1920 that was built with a decoration in the Heimatstil ("home style") that has the appearance of equestrian headwear. It was designed by the Reichsbahn architect Grunwald and it is now heritage listed.[5] A dispatcher and two assistants were employed in it, but it was closed by the end of the millennium.[35]

Platforms and tracks edit

The three platforms of the main station are located on five through tracks and one dead-end track. Tracks 1, 2, 3 and 4 are used by trains of the Mannheim–Saarbrücken route and track 5 is used by trains that run on the Maximilian Railway. Track 1a is a dead-end track, which is used for Palatine Northern Railway services.

Platforms
Track Usable length Height Current use
1 216/50 m 76/38 cm S-Bahn services on the OsterburkenHomburg (Saar) route
2 388/47 m 76/38 cm Trains on the MannheimSaarbrücken route
3 388/47 m 76/38 cm Trains on the Saarbrücken–Mannheim route
4 286/24 m 76/38 cm S-Bahn services on the (Saar)–Osterburken route
5 286/24 m 76/38 cm Regionalbahn and Regional-Express services to Karlsruhe and Wissembourg
1a 125 m 76 cm Regionalbahn services to Freinsheim and Grünstadt

Neustadt (Weinstr) Böbig halt edit

The halt (Haltepunkt) of Neustadt (Weinstr) Böbig is, in addition to the platforms described above, another stop within the precincts of Neustädter Hauptbahnhof. This consists of two platforms with three platform tracks and is located on the Mannheim–Saarbrücken and the Neustadt (Weinstr)–Monsheim railways.

When in 1969, the "school centre" of Böbig was built on the northeast edge of Neustadt not far from the junction of the Mannheim–Saarbrücken railway and the Palatine Northern Railway, the buses running there could hardly cope with the student traffic. On the initiative of the then teacher and later VRN official, Werner Schreiner, the Neustadt-Böbig halt was opened in 1974. This station allowed a large part of the student transport to be transferred from buses to rail.[36] Since 1995, it has been expanded, modernised and the platform has been raised. It has been served since 2003 by trains of the Rhine-Neckar S-Bahn, both those on line S1 (Homburg–Osterburken) and line S2 (Kaiserslautern–Mosbach).

Platforms
Track Usable length Height Current use
1 216/50 m 76/38 cm S-Bahn services on the Mannheim–Kaiserslautern–Homburg route and Regionalbahn services on the Neustadt–Freinsheim–Grünstadt route
2 216/50 m 76/38 cm S-Bahn services on the Homburg–Kaiserslautern–Mannheim route
3 216/50 m 76/38 cm Avoiding track for trains on the Saarbrücken–Mannheim route

Locomotive depot and railway museum edit

A locomotive shed with a total length of 80 metres, a turntable and a two-storey building, which functioned as a workshop and office, were opened with the commissioning of the Palatine Ludwig Railway between Ludwigshafen and Neustadt on 11 June 1847.[37] It became an independent operating branch in 1869.[38] It was closed bit by bit around 1960 during the electrification of the Mannheim–Saarbrücken railway.

The locomotive shed from the construction period of the Ludwigsbahn now houses the DGEG-Eisenbahnmuseum Neustadt/Weinstraße, which in the meantime has also taken over the newer locomotive sheds to provide more storage areas.

Operations edit

Long distance services edit

Already in 1853, there were through passenger trains of the MainzParis route. In 1854 there were three pairs of trains per day between the two cities; a trip between Mainz and Paris lasted around 17 hours.[39] With the completion of the Nahe Valley Railway, which was opened in stages by the Rhine-Nahe Railway Company (Rhein-Nahe Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft). In 1860, this connection was lost as the trains to Paris no longer ran through Neunkirchen.[40]

After the completion of the Alsenz Valley Railway, the station also developed into a major intercity hub, giving the city an international reputation.[41] From 1880, long-distance traffic increased significantly and extended to the Netherlands.[42] A direct connection from Ludwigshafen to Alsace had emerged in 1876 in the form of the Schifferstadt–Wörth and Wörth–Strasbourg lines, but, because they were single-track, most of the long-distance trains from Frankfurt went via the Maximilian Railway and therefore always had to reverse in Neustadt with the locomotive running around. Some coaches were coupled there with coaches from the Alsenz Valley Railway, while the other part of the train continued westwards over the Ludwig Railway.

After the First World War, the north-south traffic lost importance, as a result of which the station became more and more important for east-west traffic. From the 1990s, the station was served by InterRegio services before this type of service was abandoned a decade later. In 1993, Deutsche Bundesbahn had plans to run all Intercity and EuroCity services through Neustadt without stopping. However, it was persuaded to drop this idea.[43] Nevertheless, the Neustadt Hauptbahnhof lost its importance for long-distance traffic, so now it is served by only a few services.

Line Route Frequency
ICE 15 BerlinHalleErfurt – Frankfurt (Main) – Darmstadt – Mannheim - Neustadt – Kaiserslautern – Saarbrücken 1 train pair
IC/EC 62 Saarbrücken – Homburg – Neustadt – Mannheim – HeidelbergStuttgart (– UlmMunichRosenheimSalzburgGraz) 2 train pairs

Local services edit

 
Regional-Express operated by class 612 diesel multiple unit in Neustädt station on its way to Karlsruhe

A total of 8,017 persons used the line during its first month of operations.[44] After the opening of the Northern Railway in 1873, passenger trains often continued to go past Monsheim for several decades to Marnheim on the Langmeil–Monsheim railway.[45][46] In the summer of 1914, the local traffic trains on the Alsenz Valley, instead of running to Kaiserslautern, ran on the Bad Münster–Neustadt route, requiring a reversal in Hochspeyer station.[47]

After the First World War, local services to the south rarely continued to Wissembourg. After 1930 only one train ran from Neustadt to Wissembourg. In the opposite direction, there was no service between the two towns that did not require a change of trains.[48] A similar picture emerged after the Second World War. There were not, with a few exceptions, direct services from Wissembourg, which was again the French border station, to Neustadt; instead a change in Landau was required.[49] The traffic towards Wörth and Karlsruhe increased in importance because of the loss of traffic on the southern section of the Maximilian Railway which crosses the German-French border. On the Northern Railway there was now no direct services to Monsheim; instead, a change in Grünstadt and sometimes in Freinsheim was necessary, as within the northern part of Bad Dürkheim district, traffic flows towards Ludwigshafen and Frankenthal.

 
Line map of the Rhine-Neckar S-Bahn
Line Route Line name KBS Operator
RE 1 Mannheim – Neustadt – Kaiserslautern – Saarbrücken – TrierKoblenz SÜWEX 670 DB Regio Mitte
RE 6 (Kaiserslautern –) NeustadtLandau (Pfalz)Winden (Pfalz)Wörth (Rhein)Karlsruhe Neustadt–Wissembourg railway 676 DB Regio Mitte
RB 45 NeustadtBad DürkheimFreinsheimGrünstadt (– Monsheim) Palatine Northern Railway 667 DB Regio Mitte
RB 49 Ludwigshafen BASF – Ludwigshafen – NeustadtKaiserslautern / GermersheimWörth (Rhein) BASF works services 670
677
DB Regio Mitte
RB 51 Neustadt – Landau (Pfalz) – Winden – Karlsruhe Palatine Maximilian Railway 676 DB Regio Mitte
RB 53 Neustadt – Landau (Pfalz) – Winden – Wissembourg Palatine Ludwig Railway 679 DB Regio Mitte
S1 HomburgKaiserslauternNeustadtMannheim – Mosbach – Osterburken Rhine-Neckar S-Bahn 665.1-2 DB Regio Mitte
S2 Kaiserslautern – Neustadt – Mannheim – Mosbach Rhine-Neckar S-Bahn 665.1-2 DB Regio Mitte

On Sundays and public holidays from May to October, the excursion train Bundenthaler runs to the destinations of Bundenthal-Rumbach/Pirmasens. The train splits in Hinterweidenthal Ost. The excursion trains Weinstraßen-Express and Elsass-Express also run to Wissembourg. The Rheintal-Express runs via Bad Kreuznach and Bingen (Rhein) Hbf to Koblenz.

Freight edit

Before the completion of the Ludwig Railway, the station served as a transhipment station for freight from Ludwigshafen for two years.[50] Since the original freight-handling facilities had become increasingly congested, the Palatinate Railway (Pfälzische Eisenbahnen) bought sites in 1881 in the "Gewitalwiesen" and "Hölzel" areas, in order to build a new freight yard there.[51] The Internationale Baumaschinenfabrik (IBAG) company also had a connecting track in this area.[48] In the 1980s, the functions of the stations of Bad Dürkheim, Deidesheim, Edenkoben, Frankenstein (Pfalz), Lambrecht (Pfalz), Maikammer-Kirrweiler, Mußbach, Wachenheim and Weidenthal were no longer independent freight depots and were now sub-depots of Neustadt Hauptbahnhof. Therefore, Übergabezüge (goods exchange trains) connected to the surrounding stations.[52]

Sources edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Stationspreisliste 2024" [Station price list 2024] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 24 April 2023. Retrieved 29 November 2023.
  2. ^ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2009/2010 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  3. ^ "Wabenplan" (PDF). Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Neckar. February 2021. Retrieved 21 February 2021.
  4. ^ "Die Bahnhöfe der Königlich Bayerischen Staatseisenbahnen – linksrheinisch (bayerische Pfalz) – Maikammer bis Oppau" (in German). kbaystb.de. Retrieved 14 April 2017.
  5. ^ a b c "Nachrichtliches Verzeichnis der Kulturdenkmäler – Kreisfreie Stadt Neustadt an der Weinstraße" (PDF; 1.4 MB) (in German). denkmallisten.gdke-rlp.de. Retrieved 14 April 2017.
  6. ^ "113 - (ehem. preuß.-pfälz. Grenze b. Bexbach 0,0) - Homburg (Saar) Hbf 8,37 - Kaiserslautern Hbf 43,70 - Neustadt (Weinstr) Hbf 77,21 - Ludwigshafen (Rhein) Hbf 106,535 (kommend)/105,613 (gehend) - Landesgrenze Pfalz/Hessen km 125,10 = km 0,0 - Worms 3,21 - Mainz Hbf 49,09" (in German). klauserbeck.de. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  7. ^ "Die Kursbuchstrecke 670 – Streckenverlauf -- Kilometrierung" (in German). kbs-670.de. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  8. ^ Werner Schreiner (2010). Paul Camille von Denis. Europäischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). pp. 104f.
  9. ^ Heinz Sturm (2005). Die pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). pp. 67f.
  10. ^ Heinz Sturm (2005). Die pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 84.
  11. ^ Gerhard Hitschler; Marcus Klein; Thomas Gierth (2010). Die Fahrzeuge und Anlagen des Eisenbahnmuseums Neustadt an der Weinstraße – Der Museumsführer (in German). p. 11.
  12. ^ Heinz Sturm (2005). Die pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 87ff.
  13. ^ Heinz Sturm (2005). Die pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 85ff.
  14. ^ Heinz Sturm (2005). Die pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 96.
  15. ^ Michael Heilmann; Werner Schreiner (2005). 150 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt–Straßburg (in German). p. 15.
  16. ^ Michael Heilmann; Werner Schreiner (2005). 150 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt–Straßburg (in German). pp. 15ff.
  17. ^ Heinz Sturm (2005). Die pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 169.
  18. ^ Heinz Sturm (2005). Die pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 169f.
  19. ^ Michael Heilmann; Werner Schreiner (2005). 150 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt–Straßburg (in German). p. 16.
  20. ^ a b Modell- und Eisenbahnclub Landau in der Pfalz e. V. (1980). 125 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt/Weinstr.–Landau/Pfalz (in German). p. 79.
  21. ^ 125 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt/Weinstr.–Landau/Pfalz (in German). Modell- und Eisenbahnclub Landau in der Pfalz e. V. 1980. p. 47.
  22. ^ Albert Mühl (1982). Die Pfalzbahn (in German). p. 116.
  23. ^ Michael Heilmann; Werner Schreiner (2005). 150 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt–Straßburg (in German). pp. 27ff.
  24. ^ Heinz Sturm (2005). Die pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 265.
  25. ^ Werner Schreiner (2010). Paul Camille von Denis. Europäischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 122.
  26. ^ Albert Mühl (1982). Die Pfalzbahn (in German). p. 145.
  27. ^ Werner Schreiner (2010). Paul Camille von Denis. Europäischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 126.
  28. ^ Fritz Engbarth (2007). Von der Ludwigsbahn zum Integralen Taktfahrplan – 160 Jahre Eisenbahn in der Pfalz (in German). p. 13.
  29. ^ Fritz Engbarth (2007). Von der Ludwigsbahn zum Integralen Taktfahrplan – 160 Jahre Eisenbahn in der Pfalz (in German). p. 23f.
  30. ^ Klaus Detlef Holzborn (1993). Eisenbahn-Reviere Pfalz (in German). pp. 88f.
  31. ^ Fritz Engbarth (2007). Von der Ludwigsbahn zum Integralen Taktfahrplan – 160 Jahre Eisenbahn in der Pfalz (in German). p. 28.
  32. ^ Michael Heilmann; Werner Schreiner (2005). 150 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt-Straßburg (in German). p. 145.
  33. ^ Walter Jonas (2001). "Vorwort". Elektronische Stellwerke bedienen (in German). Bahn Fachverlag. p. 8. ISBN 9783980800204. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  34. ^ Fritz Engbarth (2007). Von der Ludwigsbahn zum Integralen Taktfahrplan – 160 Jahre Eisenbahn in der Pfalz (in German). p. 27.
  35. ^ Werner Schreiner (2010). Paul Camille von Denis. Europäischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 139.
  36. ^ Fritz Engbarth (2007). Von der Ludwigsbahn zum Integralen Taktfahrplan - 160 Jahre Eisenbahn in der Pfalz (2007) (in German). p. 61.
  37. ^ Gerhard Hitschler; Marcus Klein; Thomas Gierth (2010). Die Fahrzeuge und Anlagen des Eisenbahnmuseums Neustadt an der Weinstraße – Der Museumsführer (in German). p. 9.
  38. ^ Fritz Engbarth (2007). Von der Ludwigsbahn zum Integralen Taktfahrplan – 160 Jahre Eisenbahn in der Pfalz (in German). p. 10.
  39. ^ Heinz Sturm (2005). Die pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 141.
  40. ^ Albert Mühl (1982). Die Pfalzbahn (in German). pp. 11f.
  41. ^ Werner Schreiner (2010). Paul Camille von Denis. Europäischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 119.
  42. ^ Michael Heilmann; Werner Schreiner (2005). 150 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt-Straßburg (in German). pp. 26f.
  43. ^ Werner Schreiner (2010). Paul Camille von Denis. Europäischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 157.
  44. ^ Werner Schreiner (2010). Paul Camille von Denis. Europäischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 80.
  45. ^ Heinz Sturm (2005). Die pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 205.
  46. ^ Albert Mühl (1982). Die Pfalzbahn (in German). p. 141.
  47. ^ Ulrich Hauth (2011). Von der Nahe in die Ferne. Zur Geschichte der Eisenbahnen in der Nahe-Hunsrück-Region (in German). p. 164.
  48. ^ a b Werner Schreiner (2010). Paul Camille von Denis. Europäischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 134.
  49. ^ Michael Heilmann; Werner Schreiner (2005). 150 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt-Straßburg (in German). pp. 70 ff.
  50. ^ Heinz Sturm (2005). Die pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 95.
  51. ^ Werner Schreiner (2010). Paul Camille von Denis. Europäischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfälzischen Eisenbahnen (in German). p. 118.
  52. ^ Michael Heilmann; Werner Schreiner (2005). 150 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt-Straßburg (in German). p. 103.

Further reading edit

  • "Track plan" (PDF) (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Retrieved 16 April 2017.

neustadt, weinstraße, hauptbahnhof, neustadt, weinstr, hauptbahnhof, called, neustadt, haardt, until, 1935, from, 1945, until, 1950, central, station, city, neustadt, german, state, rhineland, palatinate, addition, hauptbahnhof, rhine, neckar, bahn, services, . Neustadt Weinstr Hauptbahnhof called Neustadt a d Haardt until 1935 and from 1945 until 1950 4 is the central station of in the city of Neustadt in the German state of Rhineland Palatinate In addition to the Hauptbahnhof Rhine Neckar S Bahn services stop at Neustadt Weinstr Bobig halt Haltepunkt Mussbach station and Neustadt Weinstr halt opened on 19 November 2013 are also located in Neustadt Neustadt Weinstrasse HauptbahnhofThrough stationGeneral informationLocationBahnhofsplatz 6 Neustadt an der Weinstrasse Rhineland PalatinateGermanyCoordinates49 21 00 N 8 08 26 E 49 35 N 8 140556 E 49 35 8 140556Line s Mannheim Saarbrucken km 77 2 KBS 665 1 665 2 670 Neustadt Weinstr Wissembourg km 0 02 KBS 676 Neustadt Weinstr Monsheim km 1 8 KBS 667 Neustadt Weinstr Landau km 0 0 closed Platforms6Other informationStation code4454 1 DS100 codeRN 2 IBNR8000275Category2 1 Fare zoneVRN 132 3 Websitewww bahnhof deHistoryOpened11 June 1847Previous namesNeustadt a d HaardtServicesPreceding station DB Regio Mitte Following stationKaiserslautern Hbftowards Koblenz Hbf RE 1Sudwest Express Ludwigshafen Rhein Mittetowards Mannheim HbfHochspeyertowards Kaiserslautern Hbf RE 6 Landau Pfalz Hbftowards Karlsruhe HbfTerminus RB 45 Neustadt Bobigtowards MonsheimRB 51 Neustadt Weinstr Sudtowards Karlsruhe HbfRB 53 Neustadt Weinstr Sudtowards WissembourgPreceding station Rhine Neckar S Bahn Following stationLambrecht Pfalz towards Homburg Saar Hbf S1 Neustadt Bobigtowards OsterburkenLambrecht Pfalz towards Kaiserslautern Hbf S2 Neustadt Bobigtowards Mosbach Baden LocationNeustadt Weinstrasse HauptbahnhofLocation in Rhineland PalatinateShow map of Rhineland PalatinateNeustadt Weinstrasse HauptbahnhofLocation in GermanyShow map of GermanyNeustadt Weinstrasse HauptbahnhofLocation in EuropeShow map of EuropeThe station was opened on 11 June 1847 as the terminus of the first section of the Palatine Ludwig Railway Pfalzische Ludwigsbahn from Rheinschanze now Ludwigshafen am Rhein to Bexbach this was opened over its full length two years later and now largely forms the Mannheim Saarbrucken railway With the opening of the Palatine Maximilian Railway Pfalzischen Maximiliansbahn to Wissembourg in 1855 and the Palatine Northern Railway Pfalzische Nordbahn built from 1865 to 1873 to Monsheim it developed into a railway junction and also became a stop for long distance trains Since the 2000s however its importance for long distance traffic has fallen Since 2003 it has also been integrated into the network of the Rhine Neckar S Bahn In addition its entrance building is under heritage protection 5 Contents 1 Location 1 1 Railway lines 2 History 2 1 Connection to the rail network 1835 1849 2 2 Development of the Palatine Maximilian Railway 1849 1860 2 3 Origin of the Palatine Northern Railway 1860 1873 2 4 Further development 1873 1960 2 5 Developments since 1960 3 Infrastructure 3 1 Entrance building 3 2 Reiterstellwerk 3 3 Platforms and tracks 3 4 Neustadt Weinstr Bobig halt 3 5 Locomotive depot and railway museum 4 Operations 4 1 Long distance services 4 2 Local services 4 3 Freight 5 Sources 5 1 References 5 2 Further readingLocation editNeustadt Hauptbahnhof is centrally located within Neustadt The inner city adjoins it to the north and the Saalbau an events and conference centre is nearby To the south of the railway station is the Hambacher Hohe Hambach heights Crossing the line to the west of the station is the German Wine Route Deutsche Weinstrasse which winds through this area through an S shaped curve Immediately east of the facilities serving passengers the railway crosses a bridge over Landauer Strasse which also forms part of federal highway 39 Bahnhofstrasse railway street branches off it and later rejoins it To the east past the freight yard is the historical district of Branchweiler The station is located at line kilometre 77 203 The zero point for the kilometrage is between Bexbach and Neunkirchen on the former Bavaria Prussia national border 6 7 Railway lines edit The Mannheim Saarbrucken railway which developed out of the Palatine Ludwig comes from the northeast It reaches Neustadt Hauptbahnhof over a drawn out S curve which takes it pass the freight facilities and Neustadt Bobig halt Beyond the Hauptbahnhof it runs to the west or northwest along the Speyerbach through the Palatinate Forest Pfalzerwald towards Saarbrucken passing the suburbs of Afrikaviertel and Schontal The Maximilian Railway branches in the east from the line to Mannheim immediately after the crossing over federal road 39 and runs immediately along a long curve to the south towards Wissembourg The Palatine Northern Railway starts in the northern station area and runs to the Neustadt Bobig halt parallel with the line to Mannheim and continues via Bad Durkheim and Grunstadt to Monsheim The narrow gauge Palatine Overland Railway Pfalzer Oberlandbahn which existed between 1912 and 1955 began in the station forecourt Bahnhofsvorplatz and crossed the standard gauge tracks a bridge it shared with the German Wine Route and passed through several wine growing villages to Landau History editConnection to the rail network 1835 1849 edit Originally it had been planned to build a railway running north south in the then Bavarian Circle of the Rhine Rheinkreis However it was agreed to first build a railway running east west which was to be used primarily for transporting coal from the Saar district now part of the Saarland to the Rhine Two options were discussed for the general route through Kaiserslautern as the development of a route through the Palatinate Forest Pfalzerwald proved to be complicated At first the responsible engineers considered a route through the Durkheim valley However this proved impractical because its side valleys were too low and above all the climb to Frankenstein would have been too high steep It would have required stationary steam engines and rope haulage to overcome the differences in altitude 8 For this reason they chose an option through the Neustadt valley which would also be difficult to climb according to expert opinion but would be feasible and in contrast to the Durkheim valley would avoid the need for stationary steam engines 9 At the same time plans were also being made to build a railway line from Mainz to Neustadt but these did not proceed 10 The tracks were laid between Rheinschanze and Neustadt from April 1846 Neustadt station s entrance building was completed at the same time this was built in the Italianate style The section was finally opened on 11 June 1847 The opening train which began in Ludwigshafen was hauled by the locomotive Haardt which was numbered 1 11 The celebrations on site included music and cannon fire On the platform were the state commissioner of Neustadt and some other subordinate officials the president of the Palatinate region gave a speech The return trip in which these officials also took part set off at 1 pm 12 The completion of the Neustadt Frankenstein section was especially delayed by difficulties in acquiring the land needed and the difficult topography For example ten tunnels had to be built through hills and foothills 13 The opening ceremony finally took place on 25 August 1849 14 Development of the Palatine Maximilian Railway 1849 1860 edit nbsp Neustadt station in the foreground with the original entrance building in around 1860At the same time as the Ludwig Railway was being built plans were developed for a north south link within the Palatinate It was debated as to whether a route through the hills from Neustadt via Landau to Wissembourg Alsace or a route near the Rhine via Speyer Germersheim and Worth was more urgent and desirable The military especially preferred a route on the edge of the Palatinate Forest However the political events of 1848 caused the project to come to a standstill 15 In January 1850 a brochure appeared in Neustadt then called Neustadt an der Haardt that promoted a route via Landau to Wissembourg German Weissenburg and argued that the line should serve the larger townships rather than those immediately alongside the Rhine among other things The decision finally went in favour of a line through the hills in 1852 after reports and investigations had been launched the previous year On 3 November 1852 the Bavarian king Maximilian II allowed its construction to proceed by approving the creation of a joint stock company that launched the project 16 The Neustadt Landau was opened on 18 July 1855 and the Landau Wissembourg section followed on 26 November 1855 This meant that Neustadt was the third railway junction within the Palatinate after Schifferstadt 1847 and Ludwigshafen formerly Rheinschanze 1853 Origin of the Palatine Northern Railway 1860 1873 edit nbsp Neustadt station towards the end of the 1860sIn 1860 a local committee promoted the construction of a railway from Neustadt an der Weinstrasse via Bad Durkheim to Frankenthal Above all the factories in Durkheim would benefit from a railway line Although such a route would run parallel to the Palatine Maximilian Railway and the Mainz Ludwigshafen railway the proponents were optimistic that the planned route would be preferred due to its greater scenic appeal 17 The corresponding petition however met with no response since difficulties with the Palatine Ludwig Railway Company Pfalzische Ludwigsbahn Gesellschaft were feared For this reason agreement was reached on 25 January 1862 that only a local railway would be built between Neustadt and Durkheim 18 The construction of the new railway line required major reconstruction measures which cost 218 000 gulden As a result of this project the existing entrance building also had to be replaced since the railway had gradually become congested and the station had to be extended Neustadt was given a larger building which was located somewhat further east and was equipped with a platform canopy 19 In addition the station received a goods shed as well as an engine shed with nine stalls The tracks were extended to a total length of 1 8 kilometres and Landauer Strasse which had previously crossed the railway tracks on the level was reconstructed through an underpass 20 The opening of the branch line to Durkheim followed on 6 March 1865 It was extended to the Rhenish Hesse town of Monsheim on 20 July 1873 after the Grunstadt Monsheim section had already been opened in March of the same year Further development 1873 1960 edit nbsp Steam train in Neustadt HauptbahnhofIn 1875 the station became the site of a state telegraph office 21 In 1887 a curve was opened connecting the line from Schifferstadt towards the line to Neustadt Maximilian Railway this meant that freight trains from the east no longer had to reverse in the station 22 23 The station received ticket gates on 15 October 1906 24 The station together with the rest of the Palatinate rail network became part of the Palatine Ludwig Railway Company Pfalzische Ludwigsbahn Gesellschaft on 1 January 1909 From 16 December 1912 onwards the so called Palatine Overland Railway Pfalzer Oberlandbahn ran from the station forecourt as an interurban first as far as Edenkoben and from 13 January 1913 to Landau Its purpose was to link several places between Neustadt and Landau which had not been connected to the Maximilian Railway At the beginning of the First World War a total of 401 trains passed through the station from 2 to 18 August 25 40 trains ran from Mannheim daily 20 of them continued to Saarbrucken the remaining ones ran on to the Maximilian Railway in Neustadt 26 After Germany had lost the war and the French military had marched in the Maximilian Railway south of Maikammer Kirrweiler was blockaded for passenger traffic on 1 December 1918 but it was reopened three days later 27 The station was integrated into the newly founded Reichsbahndirektion Ludwigshafen railway division of Ludwigshafen During the dissolution of the railway division of Ludwigshafen on 1 April 1937 it was transferred to the railway division of Mainz 28 In the two world wars the station was hardly affected After the Second World War it became part of the Bundesbahndirektion Mainz Deutsche Bundesbahn division of Mainz which had succeeded the Reichsbahndirektion Mainz In the 1950s the Palatine Overland Railway was shut down The railway station was redesigned and modernised in 1960 20 Developments since 1960 edit Since the main line from Mannheim had always had a great significance for long distance traffic to Saarbrucken it was gradually electrified starting in 1960 The Saarbrucken Homburg section could be operated electrically on 8 March 1960 The Homburg Kaiserslautern followed on 18 May 1961 and from 12 March 1964 the entire line was electrically operated The electrification of the last section was delayed mainly because of the numerous tunnels between Kaiserslautern and Neustadt that had to be enlarged For the opening a special service of the Rheingold ran along the route 29 The electrification work meant that this section was temporarily operated over only a single track and in one place trains could run at 40 km h at most as a result of the limited capacity several freight trains were directed over the Landau Rohrbach railway and the Zeller Valley Railway Zellertalbahn towards Worms 30 On 1 August 1971 the station came under the jurisdiction of the railway division of Karlsruhe 31 In 2003 the station was modernised including the raising of the platform in preparation for its integration in the Rhine Neckar S Bahn Since then services on lines S1 Homburg Osterburken and S2 Kaiserslautern Mosbach stop at the station The signalling technology within the station was also subsequently modernised With the installation of the new electronic interlocking on 23 March 1998 the wye which had allowed a bypass around the station since 1887 lost its eastern leg since then trains can no longer run directly towards Ludwigshafen but instead they have to reverse in the station 32 In addition an additional electronic interlocking of the Alcatel El L90 type 33 has gradually taken over the regional railway network of the Palatinate and neighboring Rhinehesse since the 2000s For example Landau Hauptbahnhof as well as the stations of Edenkoben and Godramstein came under the control of the Neustadt electronic interlocking and Winden station was added one year later 34 Infrastructure edit nbsp Overview of the HauptbahnhofEntrance building edit The monument protected entrance building which was completed in 1866 together with its annexes is built in the Neoclassical style in sections that are two and a half or three storeys high It has a mansard roof and a facade which can be classified stylistically as Renaissance Revival 5 Reiterstellwerk edit In the eastern part of the station there has been a signal box since 1920 that was built with a decoration in the Heimatstil home style that has the appearance of equestrian headwear It was designed by the Reichsbahn architect Grunwald and it is now heritage listed 5 A dispatcher and two assistants were employed in it but it was closed by the end of the millennium 35 Platforms and tracks edit The three platforms of the main station are located on five through tracks and one dead end track Tracks 1 2 3 and 4 are used by trains of the Mannheim Saarbrucken route and track 5 is used by trains that run on the Maximilian Railway Track 1a is a dead end track which is used for Palatine Northern Railway services Platforms Track Usable length Height Current use1 216 50 m 76 38 cm S Bahn services on the Osterburken Homburg Saar route2 388 47 m 76 38 cm Trains on the Mannheim Saarbrucken route3 388 47 m 76 38 cm Trains on the Saarbrucken Mannheim route4 286 24 m 76 38 cm S Bahn services on the Saar Osterburken route5 286 24 m 76 38 cm Regionalbahn and Regional Express services to Karlsruhe and Wissembourg1a 125 m 76 cm Regionalbahn services to Freinsheim and GrunstadtNeustadt Weinstr Bobig halt edit The halt Haltepunkt of Neustadt Weinstr Bobig is in addition to the platforms described above another stop within the precincts of Neustadter Hauptbahnhof This consists of two platforms with three platform tracks and is located on the Mannheim Saarbrucken and the Neustadt Weinstr Monsheim railways When in 1969 the school centre of Bobig was built on the northeast edge of Neustadt not far from the junction of the Mannheim Saarbrucken railway and the Palatine Northern Railway the buses running there could hardly cope with the student traffic On the initiative of the then teacher and later VRN official Werner Schreiner the Neustadt Bobig halt was opened in 1974 This station allowed a large part of the student transport to be transferred from buses to rail 36 Since 1995 it has been expanded modernised and the platform has been raised It has been served since 2003 by trains of the Rhine Neckar S Bahn both those on line S1 Homburg Osterburken and line S2 Kaiserslautern Mosbach Platforms Track Usable length Height Current use1 216 50 m 76 38 cm S Bahn services on the Mannheim Kaiserslautern Homburg route and Regionalbahn services on the Neustadt Freinsheim Grunstadt route2 216 50 m 76 38 cm S Bahn services on the Homburg Kaiserslautern Mannheim route3 216 50 m 76 38 cm Avoiding track for trains on the Saarbrucken Mannheim routeLocomotive depot and railway museum edit Main article Neustadt Weinstrasse Railway Museum A locomotive shed with a total length of 80 metres a turntable and a two storey building which functioned as a workshop and office were opened with the commissioning of the Palatine Ludwig Railway between Ludwigshafen and Neustadt on 11 June 1847 37 It became an independent operating branch in 1869 38 It was closed bit by bit around 1960 during the electrification of the Mannheim Saarbrucken railway The locomotive shed from the construction period of the Ludwigsbahn now houses the DGEG Eisenbahnmuseum Neustadt Weinstrasse which in the meantime has also taken over the newer locomotive sheds to provide more storage areas Operations editLong distance services edit Already in 1853 there were through passenger trains of the Mainz Paris route In 1854 there were three pairs of trains per day between the two cities a trip between Mainz and Paris lasted around 17 hours 39 With the completion of the Nahe Valley Railway which was opened in stages by the Rhine Nahe Railway Company Rhein Nahe Eisenbahn Gesellschaft In 1860 this connection was lost as the trains to Paris no longer ran through Neunkirchen 40 After the completion of the Alsenz Valley Railway the station also developed into a major intercity hub giving the city an international reputation 41 From 1880 long distance traffic increased significantly and extended to the Netherlands 42 A direct connection from Ludwigshafen to Alsace had emerged in 1876 in the form of the Schifferstadt Worth and Worth Strasbourg lines but because they were single track most of the long distance trains from Frankfurt went via the Maximilian Railway and therefore always had to reverse in Neustadt with the locomotive running around Some coaches were coupled there with coaches from the Alsenz Valley Railway while the other part of the train continued westwards over the Ludwig Railway After the First World War the north south traffic lost importance as a result of which the station became more and more important for east west traffic From the 1990s the station was served by InterRegio services before this type of service was abandoned a decade later In 1993 Deutsche Bundesbahn had plans to run all Intercity and EuroCity services through Neustadt without stopping However it was persuaded to drop this idea 43 Nevertheless the Neustadt Hauptbahnhof lost its importance for long distance traffic so now it is served by only a few services Line Route FrequencyICE 15 Berlin Halle Erfurt Frankfurt Main Darmstadt Mannheim Neustadt Kaiserslautern Saarbrucken 1 train pairIC EC 62 Saarbrucken Homburg Neustadt Mannheim Heidelberg Stuttgart Ulm Munich Rosenheim Salzburg Graz 2 train pairsLocal services edit nbsp Regional Express operated by class 612 diesel multiple unit in Neustadt station on its way to KarlsruheA total of 8 017 persons used the line during its first month of operations 44 After the opening of the Northern Railway in 1873 passenger trains often continued to go past Monsheim for several decades to Marnheim on the Langmeil Monsheim railway 45 46 In the summer of 1914 the local traffic trains on the Alsenz Valley instead of running to Kaiserslautern ran on the Bad Munster Neustadt route requiring a reversal in Hochspeyer station 47 After the First World War local services to the south rarely continued to Wissembourg After 1930 only one train ran from Neustadt to Wissembourg In the opposite direction there was no service between the two towns that did not require a change of trains 48 A similar picture emerged after the Second World War There were not with a few exceptions direct services from Wissembourg which was again the French border station to Neustadt instead a change in Landau was required 49 The traffic towards Worth and Karlsruhe increased in importance because of the loss of traffic on the southern section of the Maximilian Railway which crosses the German French border On the Northern Railway there was now no direct services to Monsheim instead a change in Grunstadt and sometimes in Freinsheim was necessary as within the northern part of Bad Durkheim district traffic flows towards Ludwigshafen and Frankenthal nbsp Line map of the Rhine Neckar S BahnLine Route Line name KBS OperatorRE 1 Mannheim Neustadt Kaiserslautern Saarbrucken Trier Koblenz SUWEX 670 DB Regio MitteRE 6 Kaiserslautern Neustadt Landau Pfalz Winden Pfalz Worth Rhein Karlsruhe Neustadt Wissembourg railway 676 DB Regio MitteRB 45 Neustadt Bad Durkheim Freinsheim Grunstadt Monsheim Palatine Northern Railway 667 DB Regio MitteRB 49 Ludwigshafen BASF Ludwigshafen Neustadt Kaiserslautern Germersheim Worth Rhein BASF works services 670677 DB Regio MitteRB 51 Neustadt Landau Pfalz Winden Karlsruhe Palatine Maximilian Railway 676 DB Regio MitteRB 53 Neustadt Landau Pfalz Winden Wissembourg Palatine Ludwig Railway 679 DB Regio MitteS1 Homburg Kaiserslautern Neustadt Mannheim Mosbach Osterburken Rhine Neckar S Bahn 665 1 2 DB Regio MitteS2 Kaiserslautern Neustadt Mannheim Mosbach Rhine Neckar S Bahn 665 1 2 DB Regio MitteOn Sundays and public holidays from May to October the excursion train Bundenthaler runs to the destinations of Bundenthal Rumbach Pirmasens The train splits in Hinterweidenthal Ost The excursion trains Weinstrassen Express and Elsass Express also run to Wissembourg The Rheintal Express runs via Bad Kreuznach and Bingen Rhein Hbf to Koblenz Freight edit Before the completion of the Ludwig Railway the station served as a transhipment station for freight from Ludwigshafen for two years 50 Since the original freight handling facilities had become increasingly congested the Palatinate Railway Pfalzische Eisenbahnen bought sites in 1881 in the Gewitalwiesen and Holzel areas in order to build a new freight yard there 51 The Internationale Baumaschinenfabrik IBAG company also had a connecting track in this area 48 In the 1980s the functions of the stations of Bad Durkheim Deidesheim Edenkoben Frankenstein Pfalz Lambrecht Pfalz Maikammer Kirrweiler Mussbach Wachenheim and Weidenthal were no longer independent freight depots and were now sub depots of Neustadt Hauptbahnhof Therefore Ubergabezuge goods exchange trains connected to the surrounding stations 52 Sources editReferences edit a b Stationspreisliste 2024 Station price list 2024 PDF in German DB Station amp Service 24 April 2023 Retrieved 29 November 2023 Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland German railway atlas 2009 2010 ed Schweers Wall 2009 ISBN 978 3 89494 139 0 Wabenplan PDF Verkehrsverbund Rhein Neckar February 2021 Retrieved 21 February 2021 Die Bahnhofe der Koniglich Bayerischen Staatseisenbahnen linksrheinisch bayerische Pfalz Maikammer bis Oppau in German kbaystb de Retrieved 14 April 2017 a b c Nachrichtliches Verzeichnis der Kulturdenkmaler Kreisfreie Stadt Neustadt an der Weinstrasse PDF 1 4 MB in German denkmallisten gdke rlp de Retrieved 14 April 2017 113 ehem preuss pfalz Grenze b Bexbach 0 0 Homburg Saar Hbf 8 37 Kaiserslautern Hbf 43 70 Neustadt Weinstr Hbf 77 21 Ludwigshafen Rhein Hbf 106 535 kommend 105 613 gehend Landesgrenze Pfalz Hessen km 125 10 km 0 0 Worms 3 21 Mainz Hbf 49 09 in German klauserbeck de Retrieved 15 April 2017 Die Kursbuchstrecke 670 Streckenverlauf Kilometrierung in German kbs 670 de Retrieved 15 April 2017 Werner Schreiner 2010 Paul Camille von Denis Europaischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German pp 104f Heinz Sturm 2005 Die pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German pp 67f Heinz Sturm 2005 Die pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 84 Gerhard Hitschler Marcus Klein Thomas Gierth 2010 Die Fahrzeuge und Anlagen des Eisenbahnmuseums Neustadt an der Weinstrasse Der Museumsfuhrer in German p 11 Heinz Sturm 2005 Die pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 87ff Heinz Sturm 2005 Die pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 85ff Heinz Sturm 2005 Die pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 96 Michael Heilmann Werner Schreiner 2005 150 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt Strassburg in German p 15 Michael Heilmann Werner Schreiner 2005 150 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt Strassburg in German pp 15ff Heinz Sturm 2005 Die pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 169 Heinz Sturm 2005 Die pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 169f Michael Heilmann Werner Schreiner 2005 150 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt Strassburg in German p 16 a b Modell und Eisenbahnclub Landau in der Pfalz e V 1980 125 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt Weinstr Landau Pfalz in German p 79 125 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt Weinstr Landau Pfalz in German Modell und Eisenbahnclub Landau in der Pfalz e V 1980 p 47 Albert Muhl 1982 Die Pfalzbahn in German p 116 Michael Heilmann Werner Schreiner 2005 150 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt Strassburg in German pp 27ff Heinz Sturm 2005 Die pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 265 Werner Schreiner 2010 Paul Camille von Denis Europaischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 122 Albert Muhl 1982 Die Pfalzbahn in German p 145 Werner Schreiner 2010 Paul Camille von Denis Europaischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 126 Fritz Engbarth 2007 Von der Ludwigsbahn zum Integralen Taktfahrplan 160 Jahre Eisenbahn in der Pfalz in German p 13 Fritz Engbarth 2007 Von der Ludwigsbahn zum Integralen Taktfahrplan 160 Jahre Eisenbahn in der Pfalz in German p 23f Klaus Detlef Holzborn 1993 Eisenbahn Reviere Pfalz in German pp 88f Fritz Engbarth 2007 Von der Ludwigsbahn zum Integralen Taktfahrplan 160 Jahre Eisenbahn in der Pfalz in German p 28 Michael Heilmann Werner Schreiner 2005 150 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt Strassburg in German p 145 Walter Jonas 2001 Vorwort Elektronische Stellwerke bedienen in German Bahn Fachverlag p 8 ISBN 9783980800204 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Fritz Engbarth 2007 Von der Ludwigsbahn zum Integralen Taktfahrplan 160 Jahre Eisenbahn in der Pfalz in German p 27 Werner Schreiner 2010 Paul Camille von Denis Europaischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 139 Fritz Engbarth 2007 Von der Ludwigsbahn zum Integralen Taktfahrplan 160 Jahre Eisenbahn in der Pfalz 2007 in German p 61 Gerhard Hitschler Marcus Klein Thomas Gierth 2010 Die Fahrzeuge und Anlagen des Eisenbahnmuseums Neustadt an der Weinstrasse Der Museumsfuhrer in German p 9 Fritz Engbarth 2007 Von der Ludwigsbahn zum Integralen Taktfahrplan 160 Jahre Eisenbahn in der Pfalz in German p 10 Heinz Sturm 2005 Die pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 141 Albert Muhl 1982 Die Pfalzbahn in German pp 11f Werner Schreiner 2010 Paul Camille von Denis Europaischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 119 Michael Heilmann Werner Schreiner 2005 150 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt Strassburg in German pp 26f Werner Schreiner 2010 Paul Camille von Denis Europaischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 157 Werner Schreiner 2010 Paul Camille von Denis Europaischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 80 Heinz Sturm 2005 Die pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 205 Albert Muhl 1982 Die Pfalzbahn in German p 141 Ulrich Hauth 2011 Von der Nahe in die Ferne Zur Geschichte der Eisenbahnen in der Nahe Hunsruck Region in German p 164 a b Werner Schreiner 2010 Paul Camille von Denis Europaischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 134 Michael Heilmann Werner Schreiner 2005 150 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt Strassburg in German pp 70 ff Heinz Sturm 2005 Die pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 95 Werner Schreiner 2010 Paul Camille von Denis Europaischer Verkehrspionier und Erbauer der pfalzischen Eisenbahnen in German p 118 Michael Heilmann Werner Schreiner 2005 150 Jahre Maximiliansbahn Neustadt Strassburg in German p 103 Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Neustadt Weinstrasse Hauptbahnhof Track plan PDF in German Deutsche Bahn Retrieved 16 April 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Neustadt Weinstrasse Hauptbahnhof amp oldid 1185005923, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.