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Wikipedia

S-Bahn

The S-Bahn is the name of hybrid urban-suburban rail systems serving a metropolitan region in German-speaking countries. Some of the larger S-Bahn systems provide service similar to rapid transit systems, while smaller ones often resemble commuter or even regional rail. The term derives from Schnellbahn, Stadtbahn or Stadtschnellbahn.

Schema comparing rapid transit (left) with S-Bahn (right). Note the dual role of the S-Bahn with many branches from the suburbs combining to serve a busy corridor in the central area comparable with a rapid-transit system. The actual layouts vary by city, and several have rapid transit like the left image
Part of Berlin Stadtbahn. The tracks on the right belong to the S-Bahn network and the trains stop at the Hackescher Markt station, while the other two tracks are for other train types, which do not stop at this station.

Similar systems in Switzerland are known as S-Bahn as well. In Belgium it is known as S-Trein (Flemish) or Train S (French). In Belgium there are S-Trains in the five largest cities: Brussels, Antwerp, Liège, Ghent and Charleroi. In Denmark, they are known as S-tog [ˈesˌtsʰɔˀw], in the Czech Republic as Esko or S-lines.

Characteristics

There is no complete definition of an S-Bahn system. S-Bahn are, where they exist, the most local type of railway stopping at all existing stations inside and around a city, while other mainline trains only call at major stations. They are slower than mainline railways but usually serve as fast crosstown services within the city. The Copenhagen S-tog for example goes up to 120 kilometres per hour (75 mph), faster than most urban heavy rail and mass transit. S-Bahn trains generally serve the hinterland of a certain city, rather than connecting different cities, although in high population density areas a few exceptions from this exist. A good example of such an exception is the Rhine-Ruhr S-Bahn, which interconnects the cities, towns and suburbs of the Ruhr, a large urban agglomeration, not unlike the large network of regional trains which also serve the area. Most S-Bahn systems are entirely built on older local railways, or in some cases parallel to an existing dual track railway. Most use existing local mainline railway trackage, but a few branches and lines can be purpose-built S-Bahn lines.[1][2] S-Bahn trains typically use overhead lines or a third rail for traction power. In Hamburg both methods are used, depending on which line is powered.[3]

In smaller S-Bahn systems and suburban sections of larger ones, trains typically share tracks with other rail traffic, with the Berlin S-Bahn, Hamburg S-Bahn and Copenhagen S-train being notable exceptions. Busy S-Bahn corridors sometimes have sections of exclusive trackage of their own but parallel to mainline railways. Many of the larger S-Bahn systems will also have central corridors of exclusive trackage that individual suburban branches feed into, creating a high frequency trunk corridor. In many cases, the central corridor is a dedicated underground line in the city centre with close stop spacing and a high frequency, similar to metro systems, created from the combined interlining of the multiple branches. A good example of this is the Berliner Stadtbahn in the Berlin's S-Bahn, which is regarded as a tourist attraction.[4] However, in more lightly used sections outside the city centre, S-Bahn services commonly share tracks with other trains.

Further out from the central parts of a city the individual services branch off into lines where the distances between stations can exceed 5 km, similar to commuter rail. This allows the S-Bahn to serve a dual transport purpose: local transport within a city centre and suburban transport between central boroughs of larger cities, and to suburbs. Frequencies vary wildly between systems with short headways in the core sections of large networks to headways of over 20 minutes in remote sections of the network, late at night and/or on Sundays and in smaller systems. The rolling stock typically used for S-Bahn systems reflects its hybrid purpose. The interior is designed for short journeys with provision for standing passengers but may have more space allocated to larger and more numerous seats. Integration with other local transport for ticketing, connectivity and easy interchange between lines or other system like metros is typical for the S-Bahn. Where both S-Bahn and metro exist, the number of interchange stations between the two systems is substantial with metro tickets being valid on S-Bahn services, and vice versa. The S-Bahn Mitteldeutschland constitutes the main local railway system for Leipzig but also connects to Halle, where a few stations are located. The Rostock S-Bahn is an example of a smaller S-Bahn system.

Etymology

Germany, Austria and Switzerland

The name S-Bahn is an abbreviation for the German "Stadtschnellbahn" (meaning "city rapid railway") and was introduced in December 1930 in Berlin. The name was introduced at the time of the reconstruction of the suburban commuter train tracks— the first section to be electrified was a section of the Berlin–Stettin railway from Berlin Nordbahnhof to Bernau bei Berlin station in 1924, leading to the formation of the Berlin S-Bahn.[5]

The main line Berliner Stadtbahn (English: City railway of Berlin) was electrified with a 750 volt third rail in 1928 (some steam trains ran until 1929) and the circle line Berliner Ringbahn was electrified in 1929. The electrification continued on the radial suburban railway tracks along with changing the timetable of the train system into a rapid transit model with no more than 20 minutes headway per line where a number of lines overlapped on the main line. The system peaked during the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin to a train schedule below 2 minutes.[5]

The idea of heavy rail rapid transit was not unique to Berlin. Hamburg had an electric railway between the central station ("Hauptbahnhof") and Altona which opened in 1906 and in 1934 the system adopted the S-Bahn label from Berlin.[citation needed] The same year in Denmark, Copenhagen's S-tog opened its first line. In Austria, Vienna had its Stadtbahn main line electrified in 1908 and also introduced the term Schnellbahn ("rapid railway") in 1954 for its planned commuter railway network (which started operations in 1962). The S-Bahn label was sometimes used as well, but the name was only switched to S-Bahn Wien in 2005.[citation needed] As for Munich, a first breaking ground for an S-Bahn-like rapid transport system, executed by the Nazi government of Adolf Hitler, took place in 1938 in Lindwurmstrasse near what is now Goetheplatz underground station (line U6). Said system was supposed to run through tunnels in downtown areas. The planning process mainly consisted of the bundling and interconnecting of existing suburban and local railways, plus the construction of a few new lines. Plans and construction work - including the building shell of Goetheplatz station - came to a very early halt during World War II and were not pursued in its aftermath. Very extensive nowadays, Munich's existing S-Bahn-System, together with the first two U-Bahn lines, began to operate prior to the 1972 Summer Olympics only.

The term S-Bahn was until 14 March 2012 a registered wordmark of Deutsche Bahn, where at the request of a transportation association the Federal Patent Court of Germany ordered the wordmark to be removed from the records of the German Patent and Trade Mark Office.[6] Prior to the said event Deutsche Bahn collected a royalty of 0.4 cents per train kilometer for the usage of the said term.

Denmark

 
Vesterport S-train station has three entrances. This is the main one.
 
Vesterport station is located below street level, but is not under ground. Other trains do not stop here, solely S-trains. Compare with picture of Berlin's S-Bahn above. Same concept.
 
Svanemøllen Station, main entrance

The "S" stood for "station". Just before the opening of the first line in the Copenhagen S-train network, the newspaper Politiken on 17 February 1934 held a competition about the name, which in Danish became known as Den elektriske enquete or "The electrical survey" (as the Copenhagen S-trains would become the first electrical railways in Denmark). But since an "S" already was put up at all the stations, weeks before the survey, the result became S-tog which means "S-train".[7] This was also just a few years after the S-trains had opened in Berlin and Hamburg. Today the Copenhagen S-trains uses six lines and serves 86 stations, 32 of them are located inside the (quite tiny) municipality borders. Each line uses 6 t.p.h (trains per hour) in each direction, with exception of the (yellow) F-line. The F-line has departures in each direction every five minutes, or 12 t.p.h. service .[8]

History

Germany

Early steam services

In 1882, the growing number of steam-powered trains around Berlin prompted the Prussian State Railway to construct separate rail tracks for suburban traffic.[citation needed] The Berliner Stadtbahn connected Berlin's eight intercity rail stations which were spread throughout the city (all but the Stettiner Bahnhof which today is a pure S-Bahn station known as Berlin Nordbahnhof; as the city Stettin today is Polish city Szczecin). A lower rate[clarification needed] for the newly founded Berliner Stadt-, Ring- und Vorortbahn (Berlin City, Circular and Suburban Rail) was introduced on 1 October 1891. This rate and the growing succession of trains made the short-distance service stand out from other railways.[citation needed]

The second suburban railway was the Hamburg-Altonaer Stadt- und Vorortbahn connecting Hamburg with Altona and Blankenese. The Altona office of the Prussian State Railway established the electric powered railway in 1906.[9]

Electricity

 
The Hamburg S-Bahn third rail system

The beginning of the 20th century saw the first electric trains, which in Germany operated at 15,000 V on overhead lines. The Berliner Stadt-, Ring- und Vorortbahn instead implemented direct current multiple units running on 750 V from a third rail. In 1924, the first electrified route went into service. The third rail was chosen because it made both the modifications of the rail tracks (especially in tunnels and under bridges) and the side-by-side use of electric and steam trains easier.[9]

To set it apart from the subterranean U-Bahn, the term S-Bahn replaced Stadt-, Ring- und Vorortbahn in 1930.[citation needed]

The Hamburg service had established an alternating current line in 1907 with the use of multiple units with slam doors. In 1940 a new system with 1200 V DC third rail and modern electric multiple units with sliding doors was integrated on this line (on the same tracks). The old system with overhead wire remained up to 1955. The other lines of the network still used steam and later Diesel power. In 1934, the Hamburg-Altonaer Stadt- und Vorortbahn was renamed as S-Bahn.[citation needed]

Comparable systems

 
S-Bahn networks in Austria
 
A class 4020 EMU on Vienna S-Bahn line S40
 
Schematic map of Copenhagen S-train
 
Map of the Nuremberg S-Bahn network
 
Map of the Munich S-Bahn network
 
Map of S-Bahn networks in Germany

Austria

 

The oldest and largest S-Bahn system in Austria is the Vienna S-Bahn, which predominantly uses non exclusive rails tracks outside of Vienna. It was established in 1962, although it was usually referred to as Schnellbahn until 2005. The white "S" on a blue circle used as the logo is said to reflect the layout of the central railway line in Vienna. However, it has now been changed for a more stylized version that is used all through Austria, except Salzburg. The rolling stock was blue for a long time, reflecting the logo colour, but red is used uniformly for nearly all local traffic today.

 

In 2004, the Salzburg S-Bahn went into service as the first Euroregion S-Bahn, crossing the border to the neighbouring towns of Freilassing and Berchtesgaden in Bavaria. The network is served by three corporations: the Berchtesgadener Land Bahn (BLB)(S4), the Austrian Federal Railways (German: Österreichischen Bundesbahn / ÖBB)(S2 and S3) and the Salzburger Lokalbahn (SLB)(S1 and S11) and . The Salzburg S-Bahn logo is only different one, it is a white S on a light blue circle.

In 2006 the regional train line in the Rhine Valley in the state of Vorarlberg has been renamed to S-Bahn Vorarlberg. It is a three lines network, operated by the Montafonerbahn and the ÖBB.

The S-Bahn Steiermark has been inaugurated in December 2007 in Styria, built to connect its capital city Graz with the rest of the metropolitan area, currently the following lines are active: S1, S11, S3, S31, S5, S51, S6, S61, S7, S8 and S9. The network is operated by three railway companies: the Graz-Köflacher Bahn (GKB) (lines: S6, S61 and S7), the ÖBB (lines: S1, S3, S5, S51, S8 and S9) and the Steiermärkische Landesbahnen (StB) (lines: S11 and S31).

In December 2007 as well the Tyrol S-Bahn opened, running from Hall in Tirol in the east to Innsbruck Central Station and Telfs in the west and from Innsbruck to Steinach am Brenner. Class 4024 EMUs are used as rolling stock on this network.

In 2010 the S-Bahn Kärnten was opened in the state of Carinthia and currently consists of 4 lines operated by ÖBB.

The youngest network is the S-Bahn Oberösterreich in the Greater Linz area of the state of Upper Austria, which was inaugurated in December 2016. It is a 5 line system operated by Stern und Hafferl and the ÖBB.

Belgium

 

The suburban railways of Brussels are being integrated into the Brussels Regional Express Network (French: Réseau Express Régional Bruxellois, RER; Dutch: Gewestelijk ExpresNet, GEN), which is identified by the letter S across both languages.[10] In 2018, the S-train was also introduced in Antwerp, Ghent, Liège and Charleroi.[11]

Czech Republic

 

In the Czech Republic, integrated commuter rail systems exist in Prague[12] and Moravian-Silesian Region. Both systems are called Esko, which is how S letter is usually called in Czech. Esko Prague has been operating since 9 December 2007 as a part of the Prague Integrated Transport system. Esko Moravian-Silesian Region began operating on 14 December 2008 as a part of the ODIS Integrated Transport system serving the Moravian-Silesian Region. Both systems are primarily operated by České dráhy. Several shorter lines are operated by other companies.

Denmark

 

Copenhagen S-train connects the city centre, other inner and outer boroughs and suburbs with each other. The average distance between stations is 2.0 km, shorter in the city core and inner boroughs, longer at the end of lines that serve suburbs. Of the 86 stations, 32 are located within the central parts of the city. Some stations are located around 40 km from Copenhagen city centre. For this reason the fares vary depending on distances. One-day-passes which tourist buy are valid only in the most central parts of the S-train system. Weekdays each line have departures every 10th minute with exception for the F-line, which departures every fifth minute. Where several lines use the same branches, up to around 30 trains per hour (in each direction) service exists. On Sundays the seven lines are reduced to four lines, but all stations are served at least every 10th minute. The three railway stations at Amager have a local service that equals the S-trains'.

The Copenhagen Metro opened in 2002 as a complement to the already existing S-train system. Copenhagen's S-train system is the only one in the country. Outside Denmark, in cities where both exist, is it far from unusual that a metro system later has been complemented with S-trains. The branch towards Køge (the southernmost S-train station in Copenhagen's S-network) has a rather unique history, as it was built in the 1970s where no previous railway ever had existed.

Germany

 

The trains of the Berlin and Hamburg S-Bahn systems ran on separate tracks from the beginning. When other cities started implementing their systems in the 1960s, they mostly had to use the existing intercity rail tracks, and they still more or less use such tracks.

The central intercity stations of Frankfurt, Leipzig, Munich and Stuttgart are terminal stations, so all four cities have monocentric S-Bahn networks. The S-Bahn trains use a tunnel under the central station and the city centre.

The high number of large cities in the Ruhr area promotes a polycentric network connecting all cities and suburbs. The S-Bahn Rhein-Ruhr, as it is called, features few tunnels, and its routes are longer than those of other networks. The Ruhr S-Bahn is the only S-Bahn network to be run by more than one corporation in Germany, and the Salzburg S-Bahn holds a similar distinction in Austria. Most Swiss S-Bahn systems are multi-corporation networks, however.

Most German S-Bahn networks have a unique ticket system, separated from the Deutsche Bahn rates, instead connected to the city ticket system used for U-bahns and local buses. The S-Bahn of Hanover, however, operates under five different rates due to its large expanse.

One S-Bahn system is no longer in operation: the Erfurt S-Bahn which operated from 1976 until 1993 and was an 8.6 km (5.3 mi) single-line system which consisted of four stations from Erfurt Central Station to Erfurt Berliner Straße station in the then newly built northern suburbs of Erfurt.

There are several S-Bahn or S-Bahn-like systems in planning, such as the Danube-Iller S-Bahn and the Augsburg S-Bahn. The S-Bahn system in Lübeck is under discussion (see network plan).

The Stadtbahn Karlsruhe (a tram-train network) uses the green "S" logo, but does not refer to itself as S-Bahn. The blue U-Bahn logo is not used either, due to the lack of subterranean lines.

Despite its name, the Ortenau S-Bahn (Offenburg) is a Regionalbahn service.

The following networks are currently in operation:

S-Bahn Area of Responsibility Authority Opened Lines Kilometrage Rolling Stock Company Expiry of contract
Berlin S-Bahn Berlin, Potsdam VBB 1924 16 331 km 480, 481/482, 483/484, 485 S-Bahn Berlin GmbH 2017
Breisgau-S-Bahn Freiburg im Breisgau RVF 1997[A] 7 050 km Alstom Coradia Continental, Stadler Regio-Shuttle RS1 DB Regio AG (electric), SWEG (diesel)
Bremen S-Bahn Bremen, Bremerhaven, Oldenburg VBN 2010 4 270 km Alstom Coradia Continental NordWestBahn 2021
Dresden S-Bahn Dresden VVO 1992 3 128 km 143 + Doppelstockwagen, 146.0 + Doppelstockwagen DB Regio Südost 2027
Hamburg S-Bahn Hamburg HVV 1934 6 144 km 472, 474, 490 DB Regio AG 2033
Hannover S-Bahn Hannover, Paderborn, Hildesheim, Minden GVH, nph 2000 9 (+ 1) 385 km 424, 425 DB Regio Nord 2020
Mitteldeutschland S-Bahn Leipzig, Halle (Saale), Zwickau, Bitterfeld, Wurzen, Borna MDV, VBB, VMS, VVO 2013 10 802 km Bombardier Talent 2, 143 + Doppelstockwagen DB Regio Südost 2025/2030
Mittelelbe S-Bahn Magdeburg marego 1974 1 130 km 425 DB Regio Südost 2028
Munich S-Bahn Munich MVV 1972 8 434 km 423, 420 DB Regio AG 2017
Nürnberg S-Bahn Nürnberg, Ansbach, Bamberg, Erlangen, Fürth, Schwabach VGN 1987 6 320 km 425, Coradia Continental, Talent 2 DB Regio Bayern 2030
Ortenau-S-Bahn Offenburg, Straßburg TGO 1998 4 170 km Stadler Regio-Shuttle RS1 SWEG
Rhine-Main S-Bahn Frankfurt am Main, Wiesbaden, Mainz, Darmstadt, Offenbach am Main RMV 1978 9 303 km 423, 430 DB Regio AG 2029,
2036
RheinNeckar S-Bahn Mannheim, Karlsruhe, Ludwigshafen am Rhein, Heidelberg, Kaiserslautern VRN, KVV, HNV, saarVV 2003 7 370 km 425 DB Regio Südwest 2017,
2033
Rhein-Ruhr S-Bahn
(Ruhrschnellverkehr)
S-Bahn Köln
Ruhrgebiet (esp. Duisburg, Essen, Bochum, Dortmund)
Rheinland (Köln, Düsseldorf, Wuppertal, Bonn)
VRR

VRS
1967
(1932)
1975
14 717 km 143 + x-Wagen, 420, 422, 423, Bombardier Talent, Alstom Coradia LINT, Alstom Coradia Continental DB Regio NRW, Regiobahn, Abellio Rail NRW
Rostock S-Bahn Rostock VVW 1974 3 091 km Bombardier Talent 2 DB Regio Nordost 2024
Stuttgart S-Bahn Stuttgart, Waiblingen, Esslingen, Ludwigsburg, Böblingen VVS 1978 7 215 km 423, 430 DB Regio AG 2028
  1. ^ first electric services started 2019.

Switzerland and Liechtenstein

S-Bahn is also used in the German-speaking part of Switzerland. While French publications of those networks translate it as RER, the line numbers are still prefixed with an S (e.g., as S2), except for the Léman Express, which uses the prefix "L" (e.g., as L2). S-Bahn-style services in the Italian and Romansh speaking parts of Switzerland also use the "S" prefix, although in Italian such networks are called rete celere (lit. fast network) instead of S-Bahn.

 
 
S-Bahn networks of Swiss urban areas (in 2006)
 
S-Bahn Zurich EMU in Rüti
 
S-Bahn Liechtenstein (currently adjourned)

The oldest network in Switzerland is the Bern S-Bahn, which was established in stages from 1974 onward and has adopted the term S-Bahn since 1995. It is also the only one in Switzerland to use a coloured "S" logo. In 1990, the Zürich S-Bahn, went into service. As of 2022, this network comprises 32 services, covering a large area in Switzerland (and parts of southern Germany). Further S-Bahn services were set up in the course of the Bahn 2000 initiative in Central Switzerland (a collaborative network of S-Bahn Luzern and Stadtbahn Zug), and Eastern Switzerland (S-Bahn St. Gallen).

The Basel trinational S-Bahn services the Basel metropolitan area, thus providing cross-border transportation into both France and Germany. A tunnel connecting Basel's two large intercity stations (Basel Badischer Bahnhof and Basel SBB) is planned as Herzstück Regio-S-Bahn Basel (lit. heart-piece Regio-S-Bahn Basel).

An international S-Bahn network also existsts across the Swiss-Italian border, in the Swiss Canton of Ticino and the Italian state of Lombardy. Services are operated by Treni Regionali Ticino Lombardia (TILO), a joint venture between Italian railway company Trenord and Swiss Federal Railways (SBB CFF FFS).

The RER Vaud of Lausanne and the Léman Express of Geneva serve the area around Lake Geneva (fr. Lac Léman). The Léman express network expands across the Swiss-French border. It is the largest cross-country S-Bahn network of Europe.[13] Léman express was launched in December 2019 and is operated by Swiss Federal Railways (SBB CFF FFS) and SNCF.

Another transborder network for the Lake Constance (Bodensee) area, connecting up to four nations, is under discussion. This network would extend across the German states Baden-Württemberg and Bavaria, the Austrian state Vorarlberg, the Principality of Liechtenstein (S-Bahn FL.A.CH), and the Swiss cantons of Appenzell Ausserrhoden, Appenzell Innerrhoden, Schaffhausen, St. Gallen and Thurgau. Possible names are Bodensee-S-Bahn and Alpenrhein-Bahn. Presently, an hourly service, S3 of Vorarlberg S-Bahn (ÖBB), connects Bregenz (A) with St. Margrethen (CH), and a less frequent service (S2) operates between Feldkirch (A), Schaan (FL) and Buchs SG (CH).[14] The S14 and S44 services of S-Bahn St. Gallen both connect Konstanz (D) with Kreuzlingen and Weinfelden (both CH), and since 2022, some S7 services continue from Rorschach (CH) to Bregenz and Lindau-Reutin (D).[15] Additional transborder services are planned. The future of S-Bahn Liechtenstein is uncertain since a voter referendum in 2020.[16]

The Chur S-Bahn provides services around Chur, the capital of the alpine Canton of Graubünden (Grisons) in south-eastern Switzerland.

The Aargau S-Bahn is a small network that services stations in the cantons of Aargau, Lucerne and Bern.

The RER Fribourg is an S-Bahn-style service centered at Fribourg/Freiburg and Bulle in the Canton of Fribourg, and extending into the cantons of Neuchâtel and Vaud.

Two unnumbered S-Bahn services (designated only with an "S"), one between Schaffhausen and Erzingen (D), running on railway tracks owned by Deutsche Bahn (DB), and one between Schaffhausen and Jestetten (D), opened in 2013. They are operated by SBB GmbH and THURBO, respectively. Since December 2022, the Schaffhausen–Singen am Hohentwiel line is also serviced by SBB GmbH[17] (Schaffhausen S-Bahn [de]).

Additionally, there are services designated "S" that are not part of any formal S-Bahn network. These include the S20, S21, and S22 operated by Swiss Federal Railways in Solothurn or the S27 operated by Südostbahn (SOB) between Siebnen-Wangen and Ziegelbrücke.

Swiss S-Bahn services are operated mostly by the Swiss Federal Railways (SBB CFF FFS) but also by private railway companies, such as Appenzeller Bahnen (AB), BLS AG, Forchbahn (FB), Regionalverkehr Bern-Solothurn (RBS), Rhätische Bahn (RhB), Sihltal Zürich Uetliberg Bahn (SZU), Südostbahn (SOB) or Zentralbahn (ZB).

Rail transport in Switzerland, including S-Bahn systems, is noteworthy for its coordination between services due to the clock-face schedule. Due to the proximity of the various S-Bahn systems in Switzerland, services of one network often offer connections to services of neighboring networks. S-Bahn services are used by commuters and tourists (some services call nearby tourist attractions, such as the Rhine Falls or the Swiss Museum of Transport).

See also

References

  1. ^ An example of this is the Køgebugt or Køge-Bay railway at Copenhagen, built 1971 to 1983 . Archived from the original on 3 February 2005. Retrieved 16 May 2005.
  2. ^ "S-train tunnel at Hamburg between Central Station and Altona 1967-1979". S-bahn-galerie.de. Retrieved 24 October 2021.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 March 2019. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
  4. ^ "Geschichte und Geschichten rund um die Berliner S-Bahn". Stadtschnellbahn-berlin.de.
  5. ^ a b "Geschichte und Geschichten rund um die Berliner S-Bahn". Stadtschnellbahn-berlin.de. Retrieved 24 October 2021.
  6. ^ Beschluss Bundespatentgericht vom 14. März 2012. Juris.bundespatentgericht.de, Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  7. ^ John Poulsen: S-bane 1934-2009 side 47
  8. ^ (PDF). Dsb.dk. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 February 2017. Retrieved 24 October 2021.
  9. ^ a b See picture of Berliner Stadtbahn by Hackescher Markt S-Bahn station, the third rail is clearly seen between the two S-Bahn tracks. Original name of that station was "Börse", or "the Stock Market" (which now is located in Frankfurt am Main)
  10. ^ Alan Hope (15 September 2015). "NMBS releases details of S-train express network". Flanders Today.
  11. ^ "S-trein: Reis eenvoudig door de stad | NMBS". Belgiantrain.be. Retrieved 24 October 2021.
  12. ^ "Prague Train Map - Prague, Czech Republic". Expats.cz for Jobs in Prague - Prague Real Estate in the Czech Republic. 14 July 2014. Retrieved 1 May 2019.
  13. ^ htr.ch: https://www.htr.ch/story/tourismus/einweihungsfeiern-fuer-groesste-grenzueberschreitende-s-bahn-europas-25128.html
  14. ^ "S-Bahn Vorarlberg [German language]". oebb.at. Retrieved 12 December 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  15. ^ "THURBO FahrplanNetzkarte 2023" (PDF). THURBO. 11 December 2022. Retrieved 12 December 2022.
  16. ^ ORF.at: https://vorarlberg.orf.at/stories/3064562/
  17. ^ SBB GmbH website: https://www.sbb-deutschland.de/strecken-und-tarife/s-bahn-schaffhausen/

External links

  •   Media related to S-Bahn at Wikimedia Commons

bahn, train, redirects, here, other, uses, train, disambiguation, name, hybrid, urban, suburban, rail, systems, serving, metropolitan, region, german, speaking, countries, some, larger, systems, provide, service, similar, rapid, transit, systems, while, smalle. S train redirects here For other uses see S Train disambiguation The S Bahn is the name of hybrid urban suburban rail systems serving a metropolitan region in German speaking countries Some of the larger S Bahn systems provide service similar to rapid transit systems while smaller ones often resemble commuter or even regional rail The term derives from Schnellbahn Stadtbahn or Stadtschnellbahn Schema comparing rapid transit left with S Bahn right Note the dual role of the S Bahn with many branches from the suburbs combining to serve a busy corridor in the central area comparable with a rapid transit system The actual layouts vary by city and several have rapid transit like the left image Part of Berlin Stadtbahn The tracks on the right belong to the S Bahn network and the trains stop at the Hackescher Markt station while the other two tracks are for other train types which do not stop at this station Similar systems in Switzerland are known as S Bahn as well In Belgium it is known as S Trein Flemish or Train S French In Belgium there are S Trains in the five largest cities Brussels Antwerp Liege Ghent and Charleroi In Denmark they are known as S tog ˈesˌtsʰɔˀw in the Czech Republic as Esko or S lines Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Etymology 2 1 Germany Austria and Switzerland 2 2 Denmark 3 History 3 1 Germany 3 1 1 Early steam services 3 1 2 Electricity 4 Comparable systems 4 1 Austria 4 2 Belgium 4 3 Czech Republic 4 4 Denmark 4 5 Germany 4 6 Switzerland and Liechtenstein 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksCharacteristics EditThere is no complete definition of an S Bahn system S Bahn are where they exist the most local type of railway stopping at all existing stations inside and around a city while other mainline trains only call at major stations They are slower than mainline railways but usually serve as fast crosstown services within the city The Copenhagen S tog for example goes up to 120 kilometres per hour 75 mph faster than most urban heavy rail and mass transit S Bahn trains generally serve the hinterland of a certain city rather than connecting different cities although in high population density areas a few exceptions from this exist A good example of such an exception is the Rhine Ruhr S Bahn which interconnects the cities towns and suburbs of the Ruhr a large urban agglomeration not unlike the large network of regional trains which also serve the area Most S Bahn systems are entirely built on older local railways or in some cases parallel to an existing dual track railway Most use existing local mainline railway trackage but a few branches and lines can be purpose built S Bahn lines 1 2 S Bahn trains typically use overhead lines or a third rail for traction power In Hamburg both methods are used depending on which line is powered 3 In smaller S Bahn systems and suburban sections of larger ones trains typically share tracks with other rail traffic with the Berlin S Bahn Hamburg S Bahn and Copenhagen S train being notable exceptions Busy S Bahn corridors sometimes have sections of exclusive trackage of their own but parallel to mainline railways Many of the larger S Bahn systems will also have central corridors of exclusive trackage that individual suburban branches feed into creating a high frequency trunk corridor In many cases the central corridor is a dedicated underground line in the city centre with close stop spacing and a high frequency similar to metro systems created from the combined interlining of the multiple branches A good example of this is the Berliner Stadtbahn in the Berlin s S Bahn which is regarded as a tourist attraction 4 However in more lightly used sections outside the city centre S Bahn services commonly share tracks with other trains Further out from the central parts of a city the individual services branch off into lines where the distances between stations can exceed 5 km similar to commuter rail This allows the S Bahn to serve a dual transport purpose local transport within a city centre and suburban transport between central boroughs of larger cities and to suburbs Frequencies vary wildly between systems with short headways in the core sections of large networks to headways of over 20 minutes in remote sections of the network late at night and or on Sundays and in smaller systems The rolling stock typically used for S Bahn systems reflects its hybrid purpose The interior is designed for short journeys with provision for standing passengers but may have more space allocated to larger and more numerous seats Integration with other local transport for ticketing connectivity and easy interchange between lines or other system like metros is typical for the S Bahn Where both S Bahn and metro exist the number of interchange stations between the two systems is substantial with metro tickets being valid on S Bahn services and vice versa The S Bahn Mitteldeutschland constitutes the main local railway system for Leipzig but also connects to Halle where a few stations are located The Rostock S Bahn is an example of a smaller S Bahn system Etymology EditGermany Austria and Switzerland Edit The name S Bahn is an abbreviation for the German Stadtschnellbahn meaning city rapid railway and was introduced in December 1930 in Berlin The name was introduced at the time of the reconstruction of the suburban commuter train tracks the first section to be electrified was a section of the Berlin Stettin railway from Berlin Nordbahnhof to Bernau bei Berlin station in 1924 leading to the formation of the Berlin S Bahn 5 The main line Berliner Stadtbahn English City railway of Berlin was electrified with a 750 volt third rail in 1928 some steam trains ran until 1929 and the circle line Berliner Ringbahn was electrified in 1929 The electrification continued on the radial suburban railway tracks along with changing the timetable of the train system into a rapid transit model with no more than 20 minutes headway per line where a number of lines overlapped on the main line The system peaked during the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin to a train schedule below 2 minutes 5 The idea of heavy rail rapid transit was not unique to Berlin Hamburg had an electric railway between the central station Hauptbahnhof and Altona which opened in 1906 and in 1934 the system adopted the S Bahn label from Berlin citation needed The same year in Denmark Copenhagen s S tog opened its first line In Austria Vienna had its Stadtbahn main line electrified in 1908 and also introduced the term Schnellbahn rapid railway in 1954 for its planned commuter railway network which started operations in 1962 The S Bahn label was sometimes used as well but the name was only switched to S Bahn Wien in 2005 citation needed As for Munich a first breaking ground for an S Bahn like rapid transport system executed by the Nazi government of Adolf Hitler took place in 1938 in Lindwurmstrasse near what is now Goetheplatz underground station line U6 Said system was supposed to run through tunnels in downtown areas The planning process mainly consisted of the bundling and interconnecting of existing suburban and local railways plus the construction of a few new lines Plans and construction work including the building shell of Goetheplatz station came to a very early halt during World War II and were not pursued in its aftermath Very extensive nowadays Munich s existing S Bahn System together with the first two U Bahn lines began to operate prior to the 1972 Summer Olympics only The term S Bahn was until 14 March 2012 a registered wordmark of Deutsche Bahn where at the request of a transportation association the Federal Patent Court of Germany ordered the wordmark to be removed from the records of the German Patent and Trade Mark Office 6 Prior to the said event Deutsche Bahn collected a royalty of 0 4 cents per train kilometer for the usage of the said term Denmark Edit Vesterport S train station has three entrances This is the main one Vesterport station is located below street level but is not under ground Other trains do not stop here solely S trains Compare with picture of Berlin s S Bahn above Same concept Svanemollen Station main entrance The S stood for station Just before the opening of the first line in the Copenhagen S train network the newspaper Politiken on 17 February 1934 held a competition about the name which in Danish became known as Den elektriske enquete or The electrical survey as the Copenhagen S trains would become the first electrical railways in Denmark But since an S already was put up at all the stations weeks before the survey the result became S tog which means S train 7 This was also just a few years after the S trains had opened in Berlin and Hamburg Today the Copenhagen S trains uses six lines and serves 86 stations 32 of them are located inside the quite tiny municipality borders Each line uses 6 t p h trains per hour in each direction with exception of the yellow F line The F line has departures in each direction every five minutes or 12 t p h service 8 History EditGermany Edit Early steam services Edit In 1882 the growing number of steam powered trains around Berlin prompted the Prussian State Railway to construct separate rail tracks for suburban traffic citation needed The Berliner Stadtbahn connected Berlin s eight intercity rail stations which were spread throughout the city all but the Stettiner Bahnhof which today is a pure S Bahn station known as Berlin Nordbahnhof as the city Stettin today is Polish city Szczecin A lower rate clarification needed for the newly founded Berliner Stadt Ring und Vorortbahn Berlin City Circular and Suburban Rail was introduced on 1 October 1891 This rate and the growing succession of trains made the short distance service stand out from other railways citation needed The second suburban railway was the Hamburg Altonaer Stadt und Vorortbahn connecting Hamburg with Altona and Blankenese The Altona office of the Prussian State Railway established the electric powered railway in 1906 9 Electricity Edit The Hamburg S Bahn third rail system The beginning of the 20th century saw the first electric trains which in Germany operated at 15 000 V on overhead lines The Berliner Stadt Ring und Vorortbahn instead implemented direct current multiple units running on 750 V from a third rail In 1924 the first electrified route went into service The third rail was chosen because it made both the modifications of the rail tracks especially in tunnels and under bridges and the side by side use of electric and steam trains easier 9 To set it apart from the subterranean U Bahn the term S Bahn replaced Stadt Ring und Vorortbahn in 1930 citation needed The Hamburg service had established an alternating current line in 1907 with the use of multiple units with slam doors In 1940 a new system with 1200 V DC third rail and modern electric multiple units with sliding doors was integrated on this line on the same tracks The old system with overhead wire remained up to 1955 The other lines of the network still used steam and later Diesel power In 1934 the Hamburg Altonaer Stadt und Vorortbahn was renamed as S Bahn citation needed Comparable systems Edit S Bahn networks in Austria A Siemens Desiro Mainline EMU of the Vienna S Bahn A class 4020 EMU on Vienna S Bahn line S40 Schematic map of Copenhagen S train Map of the Nuremberg S Bahn network Map of the Munich S Bahn network Map of S Bahn networks in Germany Austria Edit The oldest and largest S Bahn system in Austria is the Vienna S Bahn which predominantly uses non exclusive rails tracks outside of Vienna It was established in 1962 although it was usually referred to as Schnellbahn until 2005 The white S on a blue circle used as the logo is said to reflect the layout of the central railway line in Vienna However it has now been changed for a more stylized version that is used all through Austria except Salzburg The rolling stock was blue for a long time reflecting the logo colour but red is used uniformly for nearly all local traffic today In 2004 the Salzburg S Bahn went into service as the first Euroregion S Bahn crossing the border to the neighbouring towns of Freilassing and Berchtesgaden in Bavaria The network is served by three corporations the Berchtesgadener Land Bahn BLB S4 the Austrian Federal Railways German Osterreichischen Bundesbahn OBB S2 and S3 and the Salzburger Lokalbahn SLB S1 and S11 and The Salzburg S Bahn logo is only different one it is a white S on a light blue circle In 2006 the regional train line in the Rhine Valley in the state of Vorarlberg has been renamed to S Bahn Vorarlberg It is a three lines network operated by the Montafonerbahn and the OBB The S Bahn Steiermark has been inaugurated in December 2007 in Styria built to connect its capital city Graz with the rest of the metropolitan area currently the following lines are active S1 S11 S3 S31 S5 S51 S6 S61 S7 S8 and S9 The network is operated by three railway companies the Graz Koflacher Bahn GKB lines S6 S61 and S7 the OBB lines S1 S3 S5 S51 S8 and S9 and the Steiermarkische Landesbahnen StB lines S11 and S31 In December 2007 as well the Tyrol S Bahn opened running from Hall in Tirol in the east to Innsbruck Central Station and Telfs in the west and from Innsbruck to Steinach am Brenner Class 4024 EMUs are used as rolling stock on this network In 2010 the S Bahn Karnten was opened in the state of Carinthia and currently consists of 4 lines operated by OBB The youngest network is the S Bahn Oberosterreich in the Greater Linz area of the state of Upper Austria which was inaugurated in December 2016 It is a 5 line system operated by Stern und Hafferl and the OBB Belgium Edit The suburban railways of Brussels are being integrated into the Brussels Regional Express Network French Reseau Express Regional Bruxellois RER Dutch Gewestelijk ExpresNet GEN which is identified by the letter S across both languages 10 In 2018 the S train was also introduced in Antwerp Ghent Liege and Charleroi 11 Czech Republic Edit In the Czech Republic integrated commuter rail systems exist in Prague 12 and Moravian Silesian Region Both systems are called Esko which is how S letter is usually called in Czech Esko Prague has been operating since 9 December 2007 as a part of the Prague Integrated Transport system Esko Moravian Silesian Region began operating on 14 December 2008 as a part of the ODIS Integrated Transport system serving the Moravian Silesian Region Both systems are primarily operated by Ceske drahy Several shorter lines are operated by other companies Denmark Edit Copenhagen S train connects the city centre other inner and outer boroughs and suburbs with each other The average distance between stations is 2 0 km shorter in the city core and inner boroughs longer at the end of lines that serve suburbs Of the 86 stations 32 are located within the central parts of the city Some stations are located around 40 km from Copenhagen city centre For this reason the fares vary depending on distances One day passes which tourist buy are valid only in the most central parts of the S train system Weekdays each line have departures every 10th minute with exception for the F line which departures every fifth minute Where several lines use the same branches up to around 30 trains per hour in each direction service exists On Sundays the seven lines are reduced to four lines but all stations are served at least every 10th minute The three railway stations at Amager have a local service that equals the S trains The Copenhagen Metro opened in 2002 as a complement to the already existing S train system Copenhagen s S train system is the only one in the country Outside Denmark in cities where both exist is it far from unusual that a metro system later has been complemented with S trains The branch towards Koge the southernmost S train station in Copenhagen s S network has a rather unique history as it was built in the 1970s where no previous railway ever had existed Germany Edit The trains of the Berlin and Hamburg S Bahn systems ran on separate tracks from the beginning When other cities started implementing their systems in the 1960s they mostly had to use the existing intercity rail tracks and they still more or less use such tracks The central intercity stations of Frankfurt Leipzig Munich and Stuttgart are terminal stations so all four cities have monocentric S Bahn networks The S Bahn trains use a tunnel under the central station and the city centre The high number of large cities in the Ruhr area promotes a polycentric network connecting all cities and suburbs The S Bahn Rhein Ruhr as it is called features few tunnels and its routes are longer than those of other networks The Ruhr S Bahn is the only S Bahn network to be run by more than one corporation in Germany and the Salzburg S Bahn holds a similar distinction in Austria Most Swiss S Bahn systems are multi corporation networks however Most German S Bahn networks have a unique ticket system separated from the Deutsche Bahn rates instead connected to the city ticket system used for U bahns and local buses The S Bahn of Hanover however operates under five different rates due to its large expanse One S Bahn system is no longer in operation the Erfurt S Bahn which operated from 1976 until 1993 and was an 8 6 km 5 3 mi single line system which consisted of four stations from Erfurt Central Station to Erfurt Berliner Strasse station in the then newly built northern suburbs of Erfurt There are several S Bahn or S Bahn like systems in planning such as the Danube Iller S Bahn and the Augsburg S Bahn The S Bahn system in Lubeck is under discussion see network plan The Stadtbahn Karlsruhe a tram train network uses the green S logo but does not refer to itself as S Bahn The blue U Bahn logo is not used either due to the lack of subterranean lines Despite its name the Ortenau S Bahn Offenburg is a Regionalbahn service The following networks are currently in operation S Bahn Area of Responsibility Authority Opened Lines Kilometrage Rolling Stock Company Expiry of contractBerlin S Bahn Berlin Potsdam VBB 1924 16 331 km 480 481 482 483 484 485 S Bahn Berlin GmbH 2017Breisgau S Bahn Freiburg im Breisgau RVF 1997 A 7 0 50 km Alstom Coradia Continental Stadler Regio Shuttle RS1 DB Regio AG electric SWEG diesel Bremen S Bahn Bremen Bremerhaven Oldenburg VBN 2010 4 270 km Alstom Coradia Continental NordWestBahn 2021Dresden S Bahn Dresden VVO 1992 3 128 km 143 Doppelstockwagen 146 0 Doppelstockwagen DB Regio Sudost 2027Hamburg S Bahn Hamburg HVV 1934 6 144 km 472 474 490 DB Regio AG 2033Hannover S Bahn Hannover Paderborn Hildesheim Minden GVH nph 2000 9 1 385 km 424 425 DB Regio Nord 2020Mitteldeutschland S Bahn Leipzig Halle Saale Zwickau Bitterfeld Wurzen Borna MDV VBB VMS VVO 2013 10 802 km Bombardier Talent 2 143 Doppelstockwagen DB Regio Sudost 2025 2030Mittelelbe S Bahn Magdeburg marego 1974 1 130 km 425 DB Regio Sudost 2028Munich S Bahn Munich MVV 1972 8 434 km 423 420 DB Regio AG 2017Nurnberg S Bahn Nurnberg Ansbach Bamberg Erlangen Furth Schwabach VGN 1987 6 320 km 425 Coradia Continental Talent 2 DB Regio Bayern 2030Ortenau S Bahn Offenburg Strassburg TGO 1998 4 170 km Stadler Regio Shuttle RS1 SWEGRhine Main S Bahn Frankfurt am Main Wiesbaden Mainz Darmstadt Offenbach am Main RMV 1978 9 303 km 423 430 DB Regio AG 2029 2036RheinNeckar S Bahn Mannheim Karlsruhe Ludwigshafen am Rhein Heidelberg Kaiserslautern VRN KVV HNV saarVV 2003 7 370 km 425 DB Regio Sudwest 2017 2033Rhein Ruhr S Bahn Ruhrschnellverkehr S Bahn Koln Ruhrgebiet esp Duisburg Essen Bochum Dortmund Rheinland Koln Dusseldorf Wuppertal Bonn VRRVRS 1967 1932 1975 14 717 km 143 x Wagen 420 422 423 Bombardier Talent Alstom Coradia LINT Alstom Coradia Continental DB Regio NRW Regiobahn Abellio Rail NRWRostock S Bahn Rostock VVW 1974 3 0 91 km Bombardier Talent 2 DB Regio Nordost 2024Stuttgart S Bahn Stuttgart Waiblingen Esslingen Ludwigsburg Boblingen VVS 1978 7 215 km 423 430 DB Regio AG 2028 first electric services started 2019 Switzerland and Liechtenstein Edit S Bahn is also used in the German speaking part of Switzerland While French publications of those networks translate it as RER the line numbers are still prefixed with an S e g as S2 except for the Leman Express which uses the prefix L e g as L2 S Bahn style services in the Italian and Romansh speaking parts of Switzerland also use the S prefix although in Italian such networks are called rete celere lit fast network instead of S Bahn S Bahn networks of Swiss urban areas in 2006 S Bahn Zurich EMU in Ruti S Bahn Liechtenstein currently adjourned The oldest network in Switzerland is the Bern S Bahn which was established in stages from 1974 onward and has adopted the term S Bahn since 1995 It is also the only one in Switzerland to use a coloured S logo In 1990 the Zurich S Bahn went into service As of 2022 this network comprises 32 services covering a large area in Switzerland and parts of southern Germany Further S Bahn services were set up in the course of the Bahn 2000 initiative in Central Switzerland a collaborative network of S Bahn Luzern and Stadtbahn Zug and Eastern Switzerland S Bahn St Gallen The Basel trinational S Bahn services the Basel metropolitan area thus providing cross border transportation into both France and Germany A tunnel connecting Basel s two large intercity stations Basel Badischer Bahnhof and Basel SBB is planned as Herzstuck Regio S Bahn Basel lit heart piece Regio S Bahn Basel An international S Bahn network also existsts across the Swiss Italian border in the Swiss Canton of Ticino and the Italian state of Lombardy Services are operated by Treni Regionali Ticino Lombardia TILO a joint venture between Italian railway company Trenord and Swiss Federal Railways SBB CFF FFS The RER Vaud of Lausanne and the Leman Express of Geneva serve the area around Lake Geneva fr Lac Leman The Leman express network expands across the Swiss French border It is the largest cross country S Bahn network of Europe 13 Leman express was launched in December 2019 and is operated by Swiss Federal Railways SBB CFF FFS and SNCF Another transborder network for the Lake Constance Bodensee area connecting up to four nations is under discussion This network would extend across the German states Baden Wurttemberg and Bavaria the Austrian state Vorarlberg the Principality of Liechtenstein S Bahn FL A CH and the Swiss cantons of Appenzell Ausserrhoden Appenzell Innerrhoden Schaffhausen St Gallen and Thurgau Possible names are Bodensee S Bahn and Alpenrhein Bahn Presently an hourly service S3 of Vorarlberg S Bahn OBB connects Bregenz A with St Margrethen CH and a less frequent service S2 operates between Feldkirch A Schaan FL and Buchs SG CH 14 The S14 and S44 services of S Bahn St Gallen both connect Konstanz D with Kreuzlingen and Weinfelden both CH and since 2022 some S7 services continue from Rorschach CH to Bregenz and Lindau Reutin D 15 Additional transborder services are planned The future of S Bahn Liechtenstein is uncertain since a voter referendum in 2020 16 The Chur S Bahn provides services around Chur the capital of the alpine Canton of Graubunden Grisons in south eastern Switzerland The Aargau S Bahn is a small network that services stations in the cantons of Aargau Lucerne and Bern The RER Fribourg is an S Bahn style service centered at Fribourg Freiburg and Bulle in the Canton of Fribourg and extending into the cantons of Neuchatel and Vaud Two unnumbered S Bahn services designated only with an S one between Schaffhausen and Erzingen D running on railway tracks owned by Deutsche Bahn DB and one between Schaffhausen and Jestetten D opened in 2013 They are operated by SBB GmbH and THURBO respectively Since December 2022 the Schaffhausen Singen am Hohentwiel line is also serviced by SBB GmbH 17 Schaffhausen S Bahn de Additionally there are services designated S that are not part of any formal S Bahn network These include the S20 S21 and S22 operated by Swiss Federal Railways in Solothurn or the S27 operated by Sudostbahn SOB between Siebnen Wangen and Ziegelbrucke Swiss S Bahn services are operated mostly by the Swiss Federal Railways SBB CFF FFS but also by private railway companies such as Appenzeller Bahnen AB BLS AG Forchbahn FB Regionalverkehr Bern Solothurn RBS Rhatische Bahn RhB Sihltal Zurich Uetliberg Bahn SZU Sudostbahn SOB or Zentralbahn ZB Rail transport in Switzerland including S Bahn systems is noteworthy for its coordination between services due to the clock face schedule Due to the proximity of the various S Bahn systems in Switzerland services of one network often offer connections to services of neighboring networks S Bahn services are used by commuters and tourists some services call nearby tourist attractions such as the Rhine Falls or the Swiss Museum of Transport See also EditCommuter rail U Bahn Urban rail transit Train categories in Europe List of suburban and commuter rail systemsReferences Edit An example of this is the Kogebugt or Koge Bay railway at Copenhagen built 1971 to 1983 Banedanmark Dansk jernbanehistorie Archived from the original on 3 February 2005 Retrieved 16 May 2005 S train tunnel at Hamburg between Central Station and Altona 1967 1979 S bahn galerie de Retrieved 24 October 2021 Geschichte der S Bahn Hamburg S Bahn Galerie de Archived from the original on 28 March 2019 Retrieved 31 March 2016 Geschichte und Geschichten rund um die Berliner S Bahn Stadtschnellbahn berlin de a b Geschichte und Geschichten rund um die Berliner S Bahn Stadtschnellbahn berlin de Retrieved 24 October 2021 Beschluss Bundespatentgericht vom 14 Marz 2012 Juris bundespatentgericht de Retrieved 14 April 2013 John Poulsen S bane 1934 2009 side 47 Siden blev desvaerre ikke fundet PDF Dsb dk Archived from the original PDF on 15 February 2017 Retrieved 24 October 2021 a b See picture of Berliner Stadtbahn by Hackescher Markt S Bahn station the third rail is clearly seen between the two S Bahn tracks Original name of that station was Borse or the Stock Market which now is located in Frankfurt am Main Alan Hope 15 September 2015 NMBS releases details of S train express network Flanders Today S trein Reis eenvoudig door de stad NMBS Belgiantrain be Retrieved 24 October 2021 Prague Train Map Prague Czech Republic Expats cz for Jobs in Prague Prague Real Estate in the Czech Republic 14 July 2014 Retrieved 1 May 2019 htr ch https www htr ch story tourismus einweihungsfeiern fuer groesste grenzueberschreitende s bahn europas 25128 html S Bahn Vorarlberg German language oebb at Retrieved 12 December 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link THURBO FahrplanNetzkarte 2023 PDF THURBO 11 December 2022 Retrieved 12 December 2022 ORF at https vorarlberg orf at stories 3064562 SBB GmbH website https www sbb deutschland de strecken und tarife s bahn schaffhausen External links Edit Media related to S Bahn at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title S Bahn amp oldid 1128287338, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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