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Iron Rhine

The Iron Rhine or Steel Rhine (Dutch: IJzeren Rijn; German: Eiserner Rhein) is a partially nonoperational freight railway connecting the port of Antwerp (Belgium) and Mönchengladbach (Germany) by way of Neerpelt and the Dutch towns of Weert and Roermond.

Iron Rhine
Overview
Line number2524
Service
Route number485, 487
Technical
Line length123.2 kilometres (76.6 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)
Route map

km
0.0
Rheydt
Köln–Mönchengladbach railway
to Köln
Krefeld–Rheydt railway
to Helenabrunn
Rheydt Yard
2.2
3.5
Wickrath
5.2
Mönchengladbach-Günhoven
7.4
Mönchengladbach-Rheindahlen
9.5
Mönchengladbach-Genhausen
12.8
Wegberg
16.1
18.1
Arsbeck
20.1
Dalheim
Jülich–Dalheim railway to Jülich
21.3
102.2
101.6
Vlodrop
94.6
Herkenbosch
88.6
Roermond
81.3
Haelen
77.0
Baexem-Heythuysen
73.0
Kelpen
Wessem-Nederweert Canal
64.0
Weert
55.0
Budel
54.0
31.7
30.9
Hamont
27.4
Sint-Huibrechts-Lille
Winterslag–Eindhoven railway
to Eindhoven
22.8
Neerpelt
Winterslag–Eindhoven railway
to Winterslag
21.5
Overpelt
18.6
Overpelt-Werkplaatsen
13.8
Lommel
10.7
Lommel-Werkplaatsen
8.7
Balen-Werkplaatsen
4.7
Balen-Wezel
Dessel-Kwaadmechelen Canal
2.9
Gompel
52.0
Mol
49.2
Millegem
42.8
Geel
39.8
Larum
36.7
Olen
30.7
Herentals
29.1
Herentals-Canal
Herentals–Aarschot railway
to Aarschot
26.8
Wolfstee
24.6
Bouwel
19.0
Nijlen
15.5
Kessel
13.8
Lisp
Line 16 to Aarschot
12.0
Lier
8.1
Boshoek
6.6
Vos
5.6
Boechout
4.5
Liersebaan
3.0
Krijgsbaan
2.3
Mortsel
0.0
Antwerpen-Berchem
km
Iron Rhine

The Treaty of London between the Netherlands and Belgium in 1839 recognised the independence of Belgium. As part of the treaty, Belgium had the right to build a road or canal from Sittard to the Prussian border over Dutch territory, with Belgium funding the construction. This right was further established in the Iron Rhine Treaty of 1873. At first, Belgium planned to dig a canal, but in the end it opted for a railway.

In 1868, construction of the Iron Rhine started, and in 1879, the first trains used the railway. Initially, traffic was dense and frequent, but it decreased over time. Currently the railroad is used by some trains between Antwerp and the zinc factory in Budel, and between Budel and Weert. The line Weert - Roermond is part of the Dutch InterCity network, and is used daily by many trains. Between Roermond and the German border, traffic has fully ceased since 1991.

Current operation edit

Although the 160.3 kilometers (99.6 mi) Iron Rhine is not fully operational, 134.8 km (83.8 mi) of its tracks are in regular use. 85 km (53 mi) of the route is double tracked and 55 km (34 mi) is electrified. However, the 16.5 kilometers (Roermond-Dalheim) are not operational and a further 9 km (5.6 mi) (Budel-Weert) are used only rarely. 200 m (660 ft) of track in Dalheim, on the German side is fully overgrown.[citation needed]

On the German section Mönchengladbach-Dalheim RegionalBahn trains run alongside freight trains, long distance travel no longer takes place on the German section. On the Belgian and Dutch side of the track the route is used extensively by InterCity - Interregio -, local and freight trains.[citation needed]

Germany edit

The Schwalm-Nette-Bahn (RB 34) traverses the line between Mönchengladbach Hbf and Dalheim, directly on the border with the Netherlands. It is operated on behalf of DB Regio by Rurtalbahn and runs during peak times every hour and off peak every two hours. The line runs through the territory of the Aachener Verkehrsverbund (AVV) and the Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Ruhr (VRR). The train stops only when needed at the Arsbeck and Mönchengladbach-Genhausen halts. The Rurtalbahn uses railcars of type RegioSprinter on the line. A resumption of cross-border passenger traffic between Dalheim and Roermond (with a Meinewegstation) is the aim of the AVV by 2015.[1]

Freight transportation is provided to a military base near Rheindahlen and to the connection for the Test- and Validationcenter Wegberg-Wildenrath near Arsbeck/Klinkum.

Netherlands edit

 
Iron Rhine in the Netherlands

The Dutch section between Weert-Roermond, since the abandonment of the stations Buggenum, Baexem-Heythuysen, and Kelpen in the 1940s, sees no more regional trains. The stations Roermond and Weert are connected with each other, however, by InterCity trains of the Netherlands Railways. These trains link Amsterdam and Schiphol with the South Limburgian cities Heerlen and Maastricht upto every ten minutes. Double-decker EMUs of type DD IRM are mainly used.

Belgium edit

Given its proximity to the large Belgian port city of Antwerp, freight and passenger traffic between Antwerp, Lier and Mol (the line branches here to Hasselt and Neerpelt) has always been relatively dense. The section between Mol and Neerpelt (inoperational after the Second World War) was, because of political pressure from the municipalities Lommel and Neerpelt, reactivated on 27 May 1978.

 
Iron Rhine in Belgium by Lier

A long-distance inter-regional line (IR e) connects Hamont with Antwerp every hour. The trains start in Hamont, combine in Mol with a train partition from (or to) Hasselt, (or on the way back splits) and travels via Herentals and Lier to Antwerpen Centraal. In Herentals a branch line connects to the city of Turnhout, which is served by two lines of the SNCB; the InterCity R and the Interregio g. The latter, hourly train, uses the same route Herentals–Lier–Antwerp as the Interregio e (Antwerp–Lier–Herentals–Mol–Hasselt/Neerpelt). The InterCity R, which also travels hourly, however, leaves the Iron Rhine in Lier, and reaches Brussels-Midi via Mechelen. The section Antwerp-Lier is also used by the Interregio c (Antwerp-Lier-Aarschot-Liege) and by local trains on the route Antwerp-Lier-Aarschot-Leuven. The service offering is reinforced along the trunk route of the Iron Rhine, with hourly local trains on the route Antwerp-Lier-Herentals-Mol serving smaller intermediate stations. In addition, the only during peak travel time circulating P-Train (Piekuurtrein / Train d'heure de pointe come) will also use the route. On weekends and holidays, the traffic is modest and the route will be run only by the IR e, the IR cand IR g at hourly intervals, whereas the IC-, P-, and L-trains do not run. Smaller stations will be serviced either by the IR gor not at all.

The rolling stock used by the IR e and P-and L-Trein are diesel trains of the NMBS Class 41. InterCity traffic use AM80 break-motor coaches and locomotive-hauled trains (HLE21/27) with M5 or M6 Bilevel rail cars. The IR g and IR c use AM80 Break-railcars and the L-Trein service Antwerp-Lier-Aarschot-Leuven use railcars of type NMBS Class AM 86-89.

Reopening of border section edit

 
The Iron Rhine in Vlodrop

In 2004, Belgium requested a reopening of the Iron Rhine. The government stated it was the result of the increasing transport of goods between the port of Antwerp and the German Ruhr Area. As part of the European policy of modal shift on the increasing traffic of goods, transport over railway lines and waterways is preferred over road transport.

Currently Belgium uses the Montzenroute [nl], south of the Iron Rhine, from Antwerp to Aachen via Aarschot, Hasselt, Tongeren and Montzen, for transportation of goods to Germany. High passenger traffic on parts of this route causes a lack of capacity for goods, and a number of steep inclines over the route make it problematic for long and heavy trains.

The Belgian request is based on the treaty of 1839, and the Iron Rhine Treaty of 1873. Critics felt that Belgium could not invoke these treaties, as the 1873 treaty granted Belgium a concession of 99 years on the Iron Rhine route, a period which ended in 1972. Furthermore, Belgium had sold the railroad to the Dutch Government. The argument that carries most weight in the Netherlands is that the railroad runs through the nature reserve of De Meinweg, and nature activists fear the destruction of the local habitat of several threatened species, whereas Belgian interests consider this to be a delaying tactic while the Netherlands completes the Betuwe line.

After a series of failed negotiations, the Belgian and Dutch governments agreed to take the issue to the Permanent Court of Arbitration and respect its ruling in the case. In its ruling of 24 May 2005, the court acknowledged both the Belgian rights under the cessation treaty of 1839 and the Dutch concerns for the nature reserve.[2] The 1839 treaty still applies, the court found, giving Belgium the right to use and modernize the Iron Rhine. However, it has to finance the modernisation of the line, while the Netherlands have to fund the repairs and maintenance of the route. Both countries will split the costs of the construction of a tunnel beneath the nature reserve.

The reopening would allow heavier trains than on the Montzenroute (2000 tonnes in both directions compared to 800 and 1300 tonnes); and a shorter journey (162 km compared to 211 km); it would reopen some time after 2015.[3] As of 2018, the Dutch and Belgian authorities remain discussing the route the Iron Rhine would take.[4]

However on 11 May 2007, and again in 2013-2014, the Walloon Region opposed the project for fear of seeing employment go down in case of reduced traffic on the Montzenroute.[5] Then end 2014 an alternative route has been proposed, using the existing lines Roermond – Venlo and Venlo – Mönchengladbach, which are in regular use, rather than clearing the historical route from its overgrown vegetation and protecting by tunnels and/or soundscreens the part of it crossing the Meinweg National Park. This alternative route would have the same advantages as the historical one but at half the cost. The need for the train to change direction in Roermond and again in Venlo could be solved easily, e.g. by temporarily adding an additional locomotive at its former "tail" end, to pull it on that part of the line.

References edit

  1. ^ Aachener Zeitung / Aachener Nachrichten, 1 March 2008, the target network avv 2015
  2. ^ Permanent Court of Arbitration (2005-05-24). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-08. Retrieved 2011-04-25.
  3. ^ Infrabel: Steel Rhine railway line 2011-10-06 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ "Limburg verwerpt nieuw plan IJzeren Rijn\date=16 January 2018". Treinreiziger.nl. 2018-01-16.
  5. ^ "Wallonië vindt IJzeren Rijn "weggegooid geld"" ["Wallonia finds Iron Rhine 'money thrown away'"] (in Dutch). Het Belang van Limburg. 2007-05-11.

Literature edit

  • Frank Witlox (2006), "The Iron Rhine Railway Link: a Chronicle of Dutch-Flemish Geo-politics Based on Contextual History" (PDF), Journal of European Economic History, 35 (1): 149–173, ISSN 0391-5115[permanent dead link]

External links edit

  Media related to Iron Rhine at Wikimedia Commons

iron, rhine, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, december, 2010. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Iron Rhine news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Iron Rhine or Steel Rhine Dutch IJzeren Rijn German Eiserner Rhein is a partially nonoperational freight railway connecting the port of Antwerp Belgium and Monchengladbach Germany by way of Neerpelt and the Dutch towns of Weert and Roermond Iron RhineOverviewLine number2524ServiceRoute number485 487TechnicalLine length123 2 kilometres 76 6 mi Track gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in Route mapLegendkmAachen Monchengladbach railwayto Monchengladbach0 0 RheydtKoln Monchengladbach railwayto KolnKrefeld Rheydt railwayto HelenabrunnRheydt Yard2 2 Aachen Monchengladbach railwayto Aachen3 5 Wickrath5 2 Monchengladbach Gunhoven7 4 Monchengladbach Rheindahlen9 5 Monchengladbach Genhausen12 8 Wegberg16 1 Klinkumto Siemens test center18 1 Arsbeck20 1 DalheimJulich Dalheim railway to Julich21 3102 2 GermanyNetherlands border101 6 Vlodrop94 6 HerkenboschA 73Maastricht Venlo railwayto Maastricht88 6 RoermondMaastricht Venlo railway to VenloMeuse81 3 Haelen77 0 Baexem Heythuysen73 0 KelpenWessem Nederweert CanalA 264 0 WeertZuid WillemsvaartEindhoven Weert railwayto Eindhoven55 0 Budel54 031 7 NetherlandsBelgium border30 9 Hamont27 4 Sint Huibrechts LilleWinterslag Eindhoven railwayto EindhovenBocholt Herentals Canal22 8 NeerpeltWinterslag Eindhoven railwayto Winterslag21 5 Overpelt18 6 Overpelt Werkplaatsen13 8 Lommel10 7 Lommel Werkplaatsen8 7 Balen Werkplaatsen4 7 Balen WezelDessel Kwaadmechelen Canal2 9 Gompelline 15 to Hasselt52 0 Mol49 2 Millegem42 8 Geel39 8 Larum36 7 OlenBocholt Herentals Canalto Turnhout30 7 Herentals29 1 Herentals CanalAlbert CanalHerentals Aarschot railwayto Aarschot26 8 WolfsteeA1324 6 Bouwel19 0 Nijlen15 5 Kessel13 8 LispLine 16 to AarschotNete River12 0 Lierto Mechelen amp Brussels8 1 Boshoek6 6 Vos5 6 Boechout4 5 Liersebaan3 0 Krijgsbaan2 3 MortselLine 25 to Brussels0 0 Antwerpen BerchemLine 25 to Antwerpen CentraalkmThis diagram viewtalkeditIron RhineThe Treaty of London between the Netherlands and Belgium in 1839 recognised the independence of Belgium As part of the treaty Belgium had the right to build a road or canal from Sittard to the Prussian border over Dutch territory with Belgium funding the construction This right was further established in the Iron Rhine Treaty of 1873 At first Belgium planned to dig a canal but in the end it opted for a railway In 1868 construction of the Iron Rhine started and in 1879 the first trains used the railway Initially traffic was dense and frequent but it decreased over time Currently the railroad is used by some trains between Antwerp and the zinc factory in Budel and between Budel and Weert The line Weert Roermond is part of the Dutch InterCity network and is used daily by many trains Between Roermond and the German border traffic has fully ceased since 1991 Contents 1 Current operation 1 1 Germany 1 2 Netherlands 1 3 Belgium 2 Reopening of border section 3 References 3 1 Literature 4 External linksCurrent operation editAlthough the 160 3 kilometers 99 6 mi Iron Rhine is not fully operational 134 8 km 83 8 mi of its tracks are in regular use 85 km 53 mi of the route is double tracked and 55 km 34 mi is electrified However the 16 5 kilometers Roermond Dalheim are not operational and a further 9 km 5 6 mi Budel Weert are used only rarely 200 m 660 ft of track in Dalheim on the German side is fully overgrown citation needed On the German section Monchengladbach Dalheim RegionalBahn trains run alongside freight trains long distance travel no longer takes place on the German section On the Belgian and Dutch side of the track the route is used extensively by InterCity Interregio local and freight trains citation needed Germany edit The Schwalm Nette Bahn RB 34 traverses the line between Monchengladbach Hbf and Dalheim directly on the border with the Netherlands It is operated on behalf of DB Regio by Rurtalbahn and runs during peak times every hour and off peak every two hours The line runs through the territory of the Aachener Verkehrsverbund AVV and the Verkehrsverbund Rhein Ruhr VRR The train stops only when needed at the Arsbeck and Monchengladbach Genhausen halts The Rurtalbahn uses railcars of type RegioSprinter on the line A resumption of cross border passenger traffic between Dalheim and Roermond with a Meinewegstation is the aim of the AVV by 2015 1 Freight transportation is provided to a military base near Rheindahlen and to the connection for the Test and Validationcenter Wegberg Wildenrath near Arsbeck Klinkum Netherlands edit nbsp Iron Rhine in the NetherlandsThe Dutch section between Weert Roermond since the abandonment of the stations Buggenum Baexem Heythuysen and Kelpen in the 1940s sees no more regional trains The stations Roermond and Weert are connected with each other however by InterCity trains of the Netherlands Railways These trains link Amsterdam and Schiphol with the South Limburgian cities Heerlen and Maastricht upto every ten minutes Double decker EMUs of type DD IRM are mainly used Belgium edit Given its proximity to the large Belgian port city of Antwerp freight and passenger traffic between Antwerp Lier and Mol the line branches here to Hasselt and Neerpelt has always been relatively dense The section between Mol and Neerpelt inoperational after the Second World War was because of political pressure from the municipalities Lommel and Neerpelt reactivated on 27 May 1978 nbsp Iron Rhine in Belgium by LierA long distance inter regional line IR e connects Hamont with Antwerp every hour The trains start in Hamont combine in Mol with a train partition from or to Hasselt or on the way back splits and travels via Herentals and Lier to Antwerpen Centraal In Herentals a branch line connects to the city of Turnhout which is served by two lines of the SNCB the InterCity R and the Interregio g The latter hourly train uses the same route Herentals Lier Antwerp as the Interregio e Antwerp Lier Herentals Mol Hasselt Neerpelt The InterCity R which also travels hourly however leaves the Iron Rhine in Lier and reaches Brussels Midi via Mechelen The section Antwerp Lier is also used by the Interregio c Antwerp Lier Aarschot Liege and by local trains on the route Antwerp Lier Aarschot Leuven The service offering is reinforced along the trunk route of the Iron Rhine with hourly local trains on the route Antwerp Lier Herentals Mol serving smaller intermediate stations In addition the only during peak travel time circulating P Train Piekuurtrein Train d heure de pointe come will also use the route On weekends and holidays the traffic is modest and the route will be run only by the IR e the IR cand IR g at hourly intervals whereas the IC P and L trains do not run Smaller stations will be serviced either by the IR gor not at all The rolling stock used by the IR e and P and L Trein are diesel trains of the NMBS Class 41 InterCity traffic use AM80 break motor coaches and locomotive hauled trains HLE21 27 with M5 or M6 Bilevel rail cars The IR g and IR c use AM80 Break railcars and the L Trein service Antwerp Lier Aarschot Leuven use railcars of type NMBS Class AM 86 89 Reopening of border section edit nbsp The Iron Rhine in VlodropIn 2004 Belgium requested a reopening of the Iron Rhine The government stated it was the result of the increasing transport of goods between the port of Antwerp and the German Ruhr Area As part of the European policy of modal shift on the increasing traffic of goods transport over railway lines and waterways is preferred over road transport Currently Belgium uses the Montzenroute nl south of the Iron Rhine from Antwerp to Aachen via Aarschot Hasselt Tongeren and Montzen for transportation of goods to Germany High passenger traffic on parts of this route causes a lack of capacity for goods and a number of steep inclines over the route make it problematic for long and heavy trains The Belgian request is based on the treaty of 1839 and the Iron Rhine Treaty of 1873 Critics felt that Belgium could not invoke these treaties as the 1873 treaty granted Belgium a concession of 99 years on the Iron Rhine route a period which ended in 1972 Furthermore Belgium had sold the railroad to the Dutch Government The argument that carries most weight in the Netherlands is that the railroad runs through the nature reserve of De Meinweg and nature activists fear the destruction of the local habitat of several threatened species whereas Belgian interests consider this to be a delaying tactic while the Netherlands completes the Betuwe line After a series of failed negotiations the Belgian and Dutch governments agreed to take the issue to the Permanent Court of Arbitration and respect its ruling in the case In its ruling of 24 May 2005 the court acknowledged both the Belgian rights under the cessation treaty of 1839 and the Dutch concerns for the nature reserve 2 The 1839 treaty still applies the court found giving Belgium the right to use and modernize the Iron Rhine However it has to finance the modernisation of the line while the Netherlands have to fund the repairs and maintenance of the route Both countries will split the costs of the construction of a tunnel beneath the nature reserve The reopening would allow heavier trains than on the Montzenroute 2000 tonnes in both directions compared to 800 and 1300 tonnes and a shorter journey 162 km compared to 211 km it would reopen some time after 2015 3 As of 2018 the Dutch and Belgian authorities remain discussing the route the Iron Rhine would take 4 However on 11 May 2007 and again in 2013 2014 the Walloon Region opposed the project for fear of seeing employment go down in case of reduced traffic on the Montzenroute 5 Then end 2014 an alternative route has been proposed using the existing lines Roermond Venlo and Venlo Monchengladbach which are in regular use rather than clearing the historical route from its overgrown vegetation and protecting by tunnels and or soundscreens the part of it crossing the Meinweg National Park This alternative route would have the same advantages as the historical one but at half the cost The need for the train to change direction in Roermond and again in Venlo could be solved easily e g by temporarily adding an additional locomotive at its former tail end to pull it on that part of the line References edit Aachener Zeitung Aachener Nachrichten 1 March 2008 the target network avv 2015 Permanent Court of Arbitration 2005 05 24 Award of the Arbitral Tribunal PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 08 Retrieved 2011 04 25 Infrabel Steel Rhine railway line Archived 2011 10 06 at the Wayback Machine Limburg verwerpt nieuw plan IJzeren Rijn date 16 January 2018 Treinreiziger nl 2018 01 16 Wallonie vindt IJzeren Rijn weggegooid geld Wallonia finds Iron Rhine money thrown away in Dutch Het Belang van Limburg 2007 05 11 Literature edit Frank Witlox 2006 The Iron Rhine Railway Link a Chronicle of Dutch Flemish Geo politics Based on Contextual History PDF Journal of European Economic History 35 1 149 173 ISSN 0391 5115 permanent dead link External links edit nbsp Media related to Iron Rhine at Wikimedia Commons Project IJzeren Rijn in Dutch Iron Rhine Arbitration Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Iron Rhine amp oldid 1187073458 Germany, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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