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Trams in Berlin

The Berlin tramway (German: Straßenbahn Berlin) is the main tram system in Berlin, Germany. It is one of the oldest tram networks in the world having its origins in 1865[6] and is operated by Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe (BVG), which was founded in 1929.[6] It is notable for being the third-largest tram system in the world, after Melbourne and St. Petersburg.[7] Berlin's tram system is made up of 22 lines[1] that operate across a standard gauge network, with almost 800 stops and measuring almost 190 kilometres (120 mi) in route length and 430 kilometres (270 mi) in line length.[4] Nine of the lines, called Metrotram, operate 24 hours a day and are identified with the letter "M" before their number;[2] the other thirteen lines are regular city tram lines and are identified by just a line number.[3]

Berlin tramway
Operation
LocaleBerlin, Germany
Horsecar era: 1865 (1865)–1910 (1910)
Status Converted to electricity
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Propulsion system(s) Horses
Electric tram era: since 1895
Status Operational
Lines 22[1] (+2 suburban lines)[citation needed]
  • 9 MetroTram lines[2]
  • 13 regular tram lines[3]
Operator(s) Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe (BVG) (since 1929)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Propulsion system(s) Electricity
Electrification 750 V DC Overhead
Route length 193 km (120 mi)[4]
Stops over 800
2013197 million[5]
Map of tram network, December 2022
Website Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe (BVG) (in English)

Most of the recent network is within the confines of the former East Berlin—tram lines within West Berlin having been replaced by buses during the division of Berlin. However the first extension into West Berlin opened in 1994 on today's M13. In the eastern vicinity of the city there are also three private tram lines that are not part of the main system, whereas to the south-west of Berlin is the Potsdam tram system, with its own network of lines.

History Edit

In 1865, a horse tramway was established in Berlin. In 1881, the world's first electric tram line was opened in the city. Numerous private and municipal operating companies constructed new routes, so by the end of the 19th century the network had developed quite rapidly, and the horse trams had been replaced by electric ones. By 1930, the network had a route length of over 630 km (391 mi) with more than 90 lines. In 1929, all operating companies were unified into the BVG. After World War II, BVG was divided into an eastern and a western company but was once again reunited in 1992, after the fall of East Germany. In West Berlin by 1967 the last tram lines had been shut down. With the exception of two lines constructed after German reunification, the Berlin tram continues to be limited to the eastern portion of Berlin.

 
Berlin horsebus

Horse buses Edit

 
Horse tram car of the Große Berliner Pferde-Eisenbahn, built in 1885

The public transport system of Berlin is the oldest one in Germany. In 1825, the first bus line from Brandenburger Tor to Charlottenburg was opened by Simon Kremser, already with a timetable.[8] The first bus service inside the city operated from 1840 between Alexanderplatz and Potsdamer Bahnhof. It was run by Israel Moses Henoch, who had run the cab service since 1815.[9][10] On 1 January 1847, the Koncessionierte Berliner Omnibus Compagnie (Concessionary Berlin Bus Company) started its first horse-bus line. The growing market witnessed the launch of numerous additional companies, with 36 bus companies in Berlin by 1864.

Horse trams Edit

On 22 June 1865, the opening of Berlin's first horse tramway marked the beginning of the age of trams in Germany, stretching from Brandenburger Tor along today's Straße des 17. Juni (17 June Road) to Charlottenburg. Two months later, on 28 August, it was extended along Dorotheenstraße to Kupfergraben near today's Museumsinsel (Museum Island), a terminus which is still in service today. Like the horse-bus, many companies took advantage of the new development and built horse-tram networks in all parts of today's urban area. In 1873, a route from Rosenthaler Platz to the Gesundbrunnen was opened, to be operated by the new Große Berliner Pferde-Eisenbahn (Great Berlin Horse Railway) which would later become the dominant company in Berlin under the name of Große Berliner Straßenbahn (GBS; Great Berlin Tramway).

Electrification Edit

 
Electric car of the GBS, built in 1901
 
Car of Berlin's last class with open platforms, built in 1907
 
Car of the same class, modernized in 1925

On 16 May 1881, the region of Berlin again made transport history. In the village of Groß-Lichterfelde, which was incorporated into Berlin-Steglitz 39 years later, Werner von Siemens opened the world's first electric tramway. The electric tram in Groß-Lichterfelde was built to 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) metre gauge and ran from today's suburban station, Lichterfelde Ost, to the cadet school on Zehlendorfer Straße (today Finckensteinallee). Initially, the route was intended merely as a testing facility. Siemens named it an "elevated line taken down from its pillars and girders" because he wanted to build a network of electric elevated lines in Berlin. But the skeptical town council did not allow him to do this until 1902, when the first elevated line opened.

The first tests of electric traction on Berlin's standard gauge began on 1 May 1882, with overhead supply and in 1886 with batteries, were not very successful. Electric traction of standard-gauge trams in Berlin was definitively established in 1895. The first tram line with an overhead track supply ran in an industrial area near Berlin-Gesundbrunnen station. The first line in a more inhabited area operated with batteries for its first year; a catenary was installed four years later. In 1902, electrification with overhead wiring had been completed, except for a very small number of lines on the periphery.

The last horse-drawn tram line closed in 1910.

Underground trams Edit

On 28 December 1899, it became possible to travel underground, even under the Spree, upon completion of the Spreetunnel between Stralau and Treptow. Owing to structural problems, it was closed on 25 February 1932. From 1916 to 1951, the tram had a second tunnel, the Lindentunnel, passing under the well-known boulevard Unter den Linden.

Great variety of companies until the formation of the BVG Edit

The history of tram companies of the Berlin Strassenbahn is very complicated. Besides the private companies, which often changed because of takeovers, mergers, and bankruptcies, the cities of Berlin, Spandau, Köpenick, Rixdorf; the villages Steglitz, Mariendorf, Britz, Niederschönhausen, Friedrichshagen, Heiligensee and Französisch Buchholz, and the Kreis Teltow (Teltow district) had municipal tram companies.

The most important private operating company was the Große Berliner Pferde-Eisenbahn (Great Berlin Horse Railway), which called itself Große Berliner Straßenbahn (GBS) (Great Berlin Tramway) after commencing electrification. GBS acquired nearly all of the other companies through the years. In 1920, the GBS merged with the municipal companies BESTAG and SSB to become the Berliner Straßenbahn (Berlin Tramway), which was reorganized in 1929 into the newly formed municipal Berliner Verkehrs-AG (BVG) (Berlin Transport Company). Besides the tramway, the BVG also took over the elevated and underground rail lines and the bus routes which were previously operated primarily by the Allgemeine Berliner Omnibus-Actien-Gesellschaft (ABOAG) (General Berlin Bus Corporation).

The following table includes all companies that operated tramways in today's Berlin before the formation of the BVG. The background color of each line marks the drive method which the respective company used to serve their lines at the time of the formation (blue = horse tram, yellow = steam tram, white = electric tram, red = benzole tram).

First line opened Operating company Gauge (mm) Takeover date Taken over by Special remarks
1865-06-22 Berliner Pferde-Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft (BPfEG) 1,435 1894-09-26 BChS first horse tram in Germany
1871-11-01 Westend-Terrain-Gesellschaft H. Quistorp & Co. 1,435 1878 BPfEG
1873-07-08 Große Berliner Pferde-Eisenbahn (GBPfE) 1,435 1898-01-25 GBS
1877-01-01 Neue Berliner Pferdebahn-Gesellschaft (NBPfG) 1,435 1900-01-01 GBS
1879-04-01 Große Internationale Pferde-Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft (GIPfEG) 1,435 1886 GBPfE founded already in March 1872
1881-05-16 Elektrische Straßenbahn der Gemeinde Groß-Lichterfelde 1,000 1895-03-04 ESGLSS Germany's first electric tramway
1882-10-18 Cöpenicker Pferde-Eisenbahn (CPE) 1,435 1903 SSC
1885-06-13 Pferde-Eisenbahn der Gemeinde Rixdorf 1,435 1887-01-01 GBPfE
1886-05-05 Davy, Donath & Co. 1,435 1888-12-22 BDK
1887-08-06 Pferde-Eisenbahn der Gemeinde Mariendorf 1,435 1888-01-01 GBPfE
1888-05-18 Wilmersdorf-Schmargendorfer Dampfstraßenbahn Reymer & Masch (WSD) 1,435 1888-12-22 BDK
1888-07-01 Dampfstraßenbahn Groß-Lichterfelde – SeehofTeltow 1,435 1891-05-31 DLSTS
1888-12-22 Berliner Dampfstraßenbahn-Konsortium (BDK) 1,435 1898-10-01 WBV also operated some horse trams
1891-05-17 Straßenbahn Friedrichshagen 1,000 1906-12-16 SSC in 1894 taken over by the village, electrificated and regauged to standard gauge as of the takeover by SSC
1891-05-31 Dampfstraßenbahn Groß-Lichterfelde – Seehof – Teltow – Stahnsdorf 1,435 1906-04-01 TKb
1891-06-04 Pferdebahn Tegeler Chaussee – Tegel 1,435 1891-06-04 GBPfE
1891-08-01 Pferde-Eisenbahn der Gemeinde Britz 1,435 1891-08-01 GBPfE
1892-06-05 Spandauer Straßenbahn Simmel, Matzky & Müller (SpS) 1,000 1920-12-08 Berliner Straßenbahn on 1894-09-01 management taken over by Allgemeine Deutsche Kleinbahn-Gesellschaft (ADKG), electrification finished on 1896-03-18, from 1899-03-04 management by AEG, regauged to standard gauge on 1907-10-26, bought by the city of Spandau on 1909-07-01
1892-07-01 Pferde-Eisenbahn der Gemeinde Niederschönhausen 1,435 1892-07-01 GBS
1894-09-26 Berlin-Charlottenburger Straßenbahn (BChS) 1,435 1919-05-15 GBS electrification finished on 1900-10-01
1895-03-04 Elektrische Straßenbahnen Groß-Lichterfelde – Lankwitz – Steglitz – Südende (ESGLSS) 1,000 1906-04-01 TKb
1895-09-10 Siemens & Halske 1,435 1899-07-01 BESTAG
1898-01-25 Große Berliner Straßenbahn (GBS) 1,435 1920-10-01 Berliner Straßenbahn electrification finished on 1902-12-15, bought by the Zweckverband Groß-Berlin on 1909-09-20
1898-10-01 Westliche Berliner Vorortbahn (WBV) 1,435 1919-05-15 GBS also operated some horse trams, electrification finished on 1900-06-19
1899-07-01 Berliner Elektrische Straßenbahn-AG (BESTAG) 1,435 1920-12-01 Berliner Straßenbahn
1899-07-01 Südliche Berliner Vorortbahn 1,435 1919-05-15 GBS
1899-10-21 Straßenbahn Berlin-Hohenschönhausen 1,435 1906-12-10 NBSNO
1899-12-18 Gesellschaft für den Bau von Untergrundbahnen (Straßenbahn Schlesischer Bahnhof – Treptow) (SST) 1,435 1909-06-22 Berliner Ostbahnen opened the Spreetunnel
1901-08-15 Straßenbahn Niederschöneweide – Cöpenick (SNC) 1,435 1909-06-22 Berliner Ostbahnen
1901-10-01 Gesellschaft für elektrische Hoch- und Untergrundbahnen in Berlin (tramway line Warschauer Brücke-Zentralviehhof) 1,435 1928-04-01 BSBG on 1910-01-01 tram line was sold to SSB, instead of it opening of a new tram line from Warschauer Brücke to Scharnweber-/Gürtelstraße, later extended to Wagnerplatz (today Roedeliusplatz) in Lichtenberg
1903 Städtische Straßenbahn Cöpenick (SSC) 1,435 1920-10-01 GBS
1904–07 Pferde-Eisenbahn der Gemeinde Französisch-Buchholz 1,435 1907-12-19 BESTAG electrification as of takeover by BESTAG
1905-12-03 Straßenbahn der Gemeinde Steglitz 1,435 1921-04-16 Berliner Straßenbahn
1906-04-01 Teltower Kreisbahnen (TKb) 1,000/1,435 1921-04-16 Berliner Straßenbahn steam tram of DLSTS was electrificated on 1907-03-30
1906-12-10 Neue Berliner Straßenbahn Nordost (NBSNO) 1,435 1910-05-03 NÖBV
1908-03-23 Elektrische Straßenbahn Spandau-Nonnendamm 1,435 1914-10-01 SpS founded by Siemens & Halske
1908-07-01 Städtische Straßenbahnen Berlin (SSB) 1,435 1920-10-01 Berliner Straßenbahn
1909-06-22 Berliner Ostbahnen 1,435 1920-05-01 GBS
1910-05-03 Nordöstliche Berliner Vorortbahn (NÖBV) 1,435 1919-05-15 GBS
1910-08-07 Straßenbahn des Flugplatzes Johannisthal 1,435 1910-10 service suspended last horse tram in Berlin
1912-03-09 Schmöckwitz-Grünauer Uferbahn 1,435 1924-08 Berliner Verkehrs-GmbH electrification finished on 1912-07-23
1913-05-29 Straßenbahn der Gemeinde Heiligensee an der Havel 1,435 1920-10-01 Berliner Straßenbahn
1920-10-01 Berliner Straßenbahn 1,000/1,435 1923-09-10 BSBG meter gauge routes are of former TKb
1923-01-08 Kleinbahn Spandau-West – Hennigsdorf 1,435 1929-01-01 BVG electrification later by BVG
1923-09-10 Berliner Straßenbahn-Betriebs-GmbH (BSBG) 1,000/1,435 1929-01-01 BVG meter gauge routes are of former TKb
1924-08 Berliner Verkehrs-GmbH 1,435 1925-03-01 BSBG

On the day of its formation, the BVG had 89 tram lines: a network of 634 km (394 mi) in length, over 4,000 tramway cars, and more than 14,400 employees. An average tram car ran over 42,500 km (26,400 mi) per year. The Berlin tram system had more than 929 million passengers in 1929, at which point, the BVG already had increased its service to 93 tram lines.

In the early 1930s, the Berlin tram network began to decline; after partial closing of the world's first electric tram in 1930, on 31 October 1934, Germany's oldest tram line followed. The Straße des 17. Juni, formerly the Charlottenburger Chaussee, was rebuilt by Nazi planners following a monumental east–west-Axis, and the tramway had to leave. In 1938, however, there were still 71 tram lines, 2,800 tram cars and about 12,500 employees. Consequently, the bus network was extended during this time. From 1933, Berlin also had trolley buses.

During World War II, some transport tasks were given back to the tramway to save oil. Thus an extensive transport of goods was established. Bombings (from March 1943 on) and the lack of personnel and electricity caused the transportation performance to decline. Due to the final Battle for Berlin, the tram system finally collapsed on 23 April 1945. Prior to the battle, many destroyed and gutted trams were turned into makeshift roadblocks (being pushed by civilians/Volkssturm militia) into the middle of streets and mostly filled with piles of building rubble to serve as solid obstacles) through major roads in the city to halt the advance of Soviet tanks and vehicles invading Berlin.[11]

The network since 1945 Edit

 
BVG class TM36, built in 1927, sometimes ran out of control, due to its innovative controlling system

The BVG was—like most other Berlin institutions—split into two different companies on 1 August 1949. Two separate companies were formed, the BVG West in the three western sections (with 36 tram lines) and the BVG Ost (Berlin Public Transit Authority East) (with 13 lines) in the Soviet sector. The latter became in 1969 the VEB Kombinat Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe (BVB). On 14 October 1950, traffic on the lines from West Berlin to the Brandenburgian suburbs Kleinmachnow and Schönefeld ceased; on 15 January 1953, traffic over the downtown sector border followed.

From 1949 to 1955, line by line, both companies replaced the Thomson-Houston type trolley poles of their tramcars with pantographs.

West Edit

 
Articulated Tatra KT4D tramcar of the BVB, built 1980

From 1954 onwards, a shift took place with the public transit plans for West Berlin. From that moment, planning aimed at discontinuing the tram service and replacing it with extended underground and bus lines. The tramway system was considered old-fashioned and unnecessary since Berlin already had a well-developed underground network. From 1954 to 1962 numerous tram lines were replaced with bus routes and extended underground lines and stops. By 1962, the western part of the city had only 18 tram lines left out of the original 36.

On 2 October 1967 the final tramcar traveled through West Berlin over the last line, numbered 55—from Zoo Station via Ernst-Reuter-Square, the City Hall in Charlottenburg, Jungfernheide S-Bahn station, Siemensdamm, Nonnendammallee, Falkenseer Platz, and Neuendorfer Allee to Spandau, Hakenfelde.

Today, many MetroBus lines follow the routes of former tram lines.

The division of the city resulted in many problems and difficulties for the public transportation system. Tram lines could no longer operate through the city center, and the main tram depot was moved to Uferstraße in Western Berlin.

List of West Berlin trams from 1949 to 1967[12]
Line Stretch Withdrawn Replaced by Current lines
(2014)
02 Bernauer Straße, Sektorengrenze – Schöneberg, Gotenstraße Ecke Torgauer Straße 1964-06-01 A84, A90 245, M10***
03* U Fehrbelliner Platz – Grüntaler Straße Ecke Osloer Straße 1964-08-01 A89 U7, M13***, 104, 106
06 Charlottenburg, Richard-Wagner-Platz – Neukölln, Elsenstraße /Ecke Heidelberger Straße 1961-07-01 A73 M46
15 Marienfelde, Daimlerstraße – Neukölln, Schulenburgpark 1966-07-01 A77 246, 277
21 Straßenbahnhof Moabit, Wiebestraße – Kreuzberg, Friesenstraße 1953-01-22 A24 TXL, M41, 248
23* Moabit, Zwinglistraße – Wollankstraße, Sektorengrenze 1960-05-02 A70 M27
24* Bernauer Straße, Sektorengrenze – Wollankstraße, Sektorengrenze 1960-05-02 no replacement no replacement
25 Schöneberg, Gotenstraße – Bernauer Straße, Sektorengrenze 1961-09-01 U9, A64 U9, 106, 247
26 Spreewaldplatz – Tempelhof, Industriestraße 1963-09-29 no replacement U7, M29, 277
27 Spreewaldplatz – Buckow, Alt-Buckow 1964-10-01 A91 M44, 344
28 Bahnhof Gesundbrunnen, Rügener Straße – Tegelort, Almazeile 1958-06-01 U6, verl. A20 U6, 222
29 Bahnhof Gesundbrunnen, Rügener Straße – Alt-Heiligensee 1958-06-01 U6, verl. A14 U6, 124
35** Gartenfeld – Kopenhagener Straße, Sektorengrenze 1960-10-01 A72 U7, X33, M27, 327
36** Kopenhagener Straße, Sektorengrenze – Bahnhof Gesundbrunnen, Rügener Straße 1960-05-02 A71 327
40 Dahlem, Clayallee – Steglitz, Birkbuschstraße 1959-10-01 A68 X83, 186
41 Bernauer Straße, Sektorengrenze – Alt-Tegel 1958-06-01 A61 U6, U8, 122
44 Invalidenstraße Ecke Heidestraße – Steglitz, Birkbuschstraße 1963-05-02 A86 U7, 186, 245
47 Britz, Gradestraße – Rudow, Stadtgrenze 1966-10-01 A41 171
51 Bahnhof Zoologischer Garten – Roseneck 1957-05-01 A60 249
53 Charlottenburg, Richard-Wagner-Platz – Spandau, Hakenfelde 1967-05-02 A56 136, M45
54 Charlottenburg, Richard-Wagner-Platz – Spandau, Johannesstift 1967-05-02 A54, AS1 M45
55 Bahnhof Zoologischer Garten – Spandau, Hakenfelde (via Siemensstadt) 1967-10-02 A55 U7, 136, 139
57 Wilmersdorf, Emser Platz – Grunewald, Roseneck 1954-11-01 A50 115
60 Schöneberg, Lindenhof – Charlottenburg, Königin-Elisabeth-Straße 1962-05-02 A74 U7, 309, 106
66 Schöneberg, Wartburgplatz – Steglitz, Thorwaldsenstraße 1963-05-02 A83 187
68 Bahnhof Wedding, Nettelbeckplatz – Bahnhof Wittenau (Nordbahn) 1958-06-01 A62 M21, X21
73* Potsdamer Platz, Sektorengrenze – Bahnhof Lichterfelde Ost 1962-05-02 A48,
verl. A53
M48, M85, M11
74* Potsdamer Platz, Sektorengrenze – Lichterfelde, Finckensteinallee 1963-05-02 A83, A84 M48, M85, 184
75 Bahnhof Zoologischer Garten – Spandau, Hakenfelde (via Kantstraße) 1966-01-24 A94, A97 X34, X49, 136, M49
76 (I) Grunewald, Roseneck – Anhalter Bahnhof 1954-07-01 A19 M19
76 (II) Bahnhof Zoologischer Garten – Spandau, Johannisstift (ab 1959) 1966-01-24 A94, A97 X34, X49, M45, M49
77 Bahnhof Zoologischer Garten – Lichterfelde, Goerzallee 1963-05-02 A85 U9, M85, 188, 285, M46
78 Bahnhof Zoologischer Garten – Lichterfelde Süd, Lindenstraße 1963-05-02 A85 U9, M85, 188, 285, M46
79 Grunewald, Hagenplatz – U Nollendorfplatz 1954-07-01 A29 M29
88 Kreuzberg, Wiener Brücke – Steglitz, Stadtpark 1961-03-01 A75 M29, M48/M85, 246, 181
94 Oranienplatz – Neukölln, Schulenburgplatz 1959-10-01 A67 M41
95* Sonnenallee Ecke Schwarzer Weg – Mehringplatz 1965-05-02 A95 M41
96* U Mehringdamm – Lichterfelde, Goerzallee Ecke Darser Straße 1966-05-02 A96 117, 184, 248
98 U Tempelhof – Marienfelde, Daimlerstraße 1961-10-01 A77 U6, 277
99 U Tempelhof – Bahnhof Lichtenrade 1961-10-01 A76 U6, M76, X76
* former BVG-West/BVG-Ost before 1953-01-15
** former BVG-West/BVG-Ost before 1953-01-15 (but only belongs to BVG-West)
*** after reunification it was reopened
Some of the former routes are no longer usable.

East Edit

 
Tram in East Berlin, 1977

Soviet Moscow, with its tram-free avenues, was the role model for East Berlin's transport planning. The car-oriented mentality of West Berlin also spread in the East, with many tram lines also closing in the latter in the 1950s and 1960s. In 1967, the lines through the city center closed down at the same time as the new city expansion around Alexanderplatz was starting to develop.

However, a complete elimination of the city's tram network was neither planned nor even discussed.

The following streets were constructed in order to connect the new housing estates Marzahn, Hohenschönhausen, and finally Hellersdorf to the city's tram network from the late 1970s to the early 1990s:

Date Streets
1951-08-02 Ehrlichstraße, Blockdammweg
1951-08-02 Buschallee (zw. Kniprodeallee [heute Hansastraße] und Suermondtstraße), Suermondtstraße
1951-08-02 Markgrafendamm, Hauptstraße (zw. Markgrafendamm und Karlshorster Straße)
1953-02-15 Groß-Berliner Damm
1953-06-13 Falkenberger Straße (heute Gehrenseestraße, Gartenstadt Hohenschönhausen)
1954-05-17 Friedenstraße, Friedrichsberger Straße, Lebuser Straße
1962-01-28 S-Bahnhof Adlershof (Westseite)
1965-12-14 Langhansstraße (zw. Gustav-Adolf-Straße und Prenzlauer Promenade)
1966-05-18 Stralauer Platz
1966-08-01 Holzmarktstraße (zw. Krautstraße und Andreasstraße)
1966-09-16 Stahlheimer Straße (zw. Wichertstraße und Wisbyer Straße)
1966-12-12 Mollstraße (zw. Leninplatz [heute Platz der Vereinten Nationen] und Hans-Beimler-Straße [heute Otto-Braun-Straße])
1967-01-02 Mollstraße (zw. Hans-Beimler-Straße [heute Otto-Braun-Straße] und Prenzlauer Allee)
1971-11-14 Bleicheroder Straße, Stiftweg
1975-11-02 Herzbergstraße (ab Siegfriedstraße), Allee der Kosmonauten (bis Rhinstraße), Rhinstraße (zw. Allee der Kosmonauten und Straße der Befreiung [heute Alt-Friedrichsfelde])
1979-04-06 Allee der Kosmonauten (zw. Rhinstraße und Schleife Elisabethstraße)
1980-03-17 Altenhofer Straße, Leninallee (heute Landsberger Allee), S-Bahnhof Marzahn
1982-10-06 Marzahner Promenade, Bruno-Leuschner-Straße (heute Raoul-Wallenberg-Straße), Allee der Kosmonauten (zw. Leninallee [heute Landsberger Straße] und Schleife Elisabethstraße), Trasse Lea-Grundig-Straße/Max-Hermannstraße/Trusetaler Straße (bis Schleife Henneckestraße)
1984-12-21 Wartenberger Straße, Rüdickenstraße, Zingster Straße
1985-04-01 Rhinstraße (zw. Hauptstraße und Allee der Kosmonauten)
1985-04-01 Leninallee (heute Landsberger Alle, zw. Allee der Kosmonauten und Betriebshof Marzahn)
1986-10-06 Schleife Henneckestraße bis Schleife Ahrensfelde
1987-08-10 Kniprodeallee, Falkenberger Chaussee (bis Prerower Platz)
1988-08-20 Falkenberger Chaussee (zw. Prerower Platz und Schleife Falkenberg)

Some streets were closed, especially those too close to the Berlin Wall:

Date Streets
1950-10-14 Waltersdorfer Chaussee, Mittelstraße (Schönefeld)
1951-03-19 Königstraße, Spandauer Straße (zw. Königstraße und Molkenmarkt), Schloßplatz, Werderstraße, Französische Straße (bis Charlottenstraße, Lindentunnel, Oberwallstraße, Jerusalemer Straße)
1952-01-02 Elsenstraße (zw. Plesser Straße und Heidelberger Straße)
1952-03-03 Stalinallee (zw. Andreasstraße und Jacobystraße)
1952-06-16 Charlottenstraße (zw. Unter den Linden und Clara-Zetkin-Straße)
1953-01-16 Ebertstraße (zw. Potsdamer Platz und Clara-Zetkin-Straße)
1953-01-16 Breite Straße (Mitte)
1953-01-16 Wollankstraße (zw. Sektorengrenze und Breite Straße (Pankow))
1953-01-16 Kopenhagener Straße, Hauptstraße (zw. Sektorengrenze und Wilhelmsruh (Pankow))
1953-01-16 Bornholmer Straße (zw. Sektorengrenze und Björnsonstraße)
1953-03-27 Rosenfelder Straße, Irenenstraße, Weitlingstraße, Lückstraße, Nöldnerstraße, Stadthausstraße, Türrschmidtstraße
1956-01-11 Kommandantenstraße, Beuthstraße
1957-06-25 Bulgarische Straße (bis Alt-Treptow)
1959-06-05 Groß-Berliner Damm
1959-08-30 Alt-Stralau, Tunnelstraße
1959-11-13 Bulgarische Straße (zw. Alt-Treptow und Köpenicker Landstraße)
1960-08-01 Puschkinallee, Am Treptower Park (zw. Puschkinallee und Elsenstraße)
1961-08-13 Clara-Zetkin-Straße (zw. Ebertstraße und Planckstraße), Ebertstraße (zw. Brandenburger Tor und Reichstagufer)
1961-08-13 Oberbaumbrücke
1961-08-23 Heinrich-Heine-Straße (zw. Dresdner Straße und Schmidstraße)
1961-09-19 Köpenicker Straße (zw. Schillingbrücke und Brückenstraße)
1962-01-28 Adlergestell (zw. Dörpfeldstraße und Köpenicker Straße)
1962-08-03 Elisabethstraße, Karl-Marx-Allee (zw. Elisabethstraße und Leninallee)
1965-01-07 Hannoversche Straße
1965-12-14 Gustav-Adolf-Straße (zw. Langhansstraße und Prenzlauer Promenade)
1966-04-01 Idastraße, Wackenbergstraße, Buchholzer Straße, Blankenburger Straße
1966-05-18 Fruchtstraße (zw. Mühlendamm und Am Ostbahnhof)
1966-07-04 Breslauer Straße (zw. Andreasstraße und Krautstraße)
1966-08-25 Heinrich-Heine-Straße (zw. Schmidstraße und Köpenicker Straße)
1966-09-16 Krügerstraße, Wichertstraße (zw. Stahlheimer Straße und Gudvanger Straße), Gudvanger Straße (zw. Wichertstraße und Krügerstraße)
1966-10-10 Jacobystraße, Kleine Frankfurter Straße, Leninallee (zw. Alexanderplatz und Leninplatz)
1966-10-10 Am Ostbahnhof (zw. Fruchtstraße und Andreasstraße)
1966-10-20 Charlottenstraße, Taubenstraße (Wendeschleife)
1966-12-19 Prenzlauer Straße, Hans-Beimler-Straße (zw. Alexanderplatz und Mollstraße), Weinmeisterstraße, Jüdenstraße (Wendeschleife)
1967-01-20 Münzstraße, Memhardstraße, Alexanderplatz, Alexanderstraße (zw. Alexanderplatz und Wallnerstraße)
1967-12-12 Stralauer Allee, Markgrafendamm
1968-10-19 Wallnerstraße, Raupachstraße (Wendeschleife), Alexanderstraße (zw. Wallnerstraße und Holzmarktstraße)
1969-07-01 Dönhoffplatz (Wendeschleife)
1969-07-01 Stralauer Platz, Mühlenstraße, Warschauer Straße (zw. Mühlenstraße und Helsingforser Platz)
1969-10-13 Karlshorster Straße, Stubenrauchbrücke
1970-08-24 Leipziger Straße, Spittelmarkt, Wallstraße, Inselstraße, Köpenicker Straße (zw. Inselstraße und Brückenstraße), Brückenstraße, Jannowitzbrücke, Holzmarktstraße, Andreasstraße, Lebuser Straße, Friedrichsberger Straße, Friedenstraße
1971-04-01 Baumschulenstraße, Hasselwerderstraße, Schnellerstraße (zw. Hasselwerderstraße und Bruno-Bürgel-Weg), Bruno-Bürgel-Weg
1971-11-08 Damerowstraße
1973-07-14 Wiener Brücke (Wendeschleife), Karl-Kunger-Straße, Plesser Straße, Elsenstraße, Am Treptower Park (zw. Elsenstraße und Bulgarische Straße), Köpenicker Landstraße, Schnellerstraße (zw. Köpenicker Landstraße und Brückenstraße), Wendeschleife S-Bahnhof Schöneweide
1975-11-01 Straße der Befreiung
1983-03-01 Falkenberger Straße, Arnimstraße

After reunification Edit

 
Double-end "GT6N-ZR.2" trams in BVG yellow

In 1992, the West Berlin transport company BVG took over East Berlin's BVB. (In addition to bus and U-Bahn lines, the new BVG also ran the trams, by now only operating in the former East Berlin districts).

There was an attempt to shut down the tram routes running to Pankow, because the trams in Schönhauser Allee run parallel to the U2 line, though the latter does not run to Rosenthal.

In 1995, the first stretch of the tram route along Bornholmer Straße was opened to the west in two stages. The Rudolf-Virchow-Klinikum and the metro stations located in Seestraße, Wedding, and Osloer Straße in Gesundbrunnen have since re-connected to the tram network.

Since 1997, the tram has stopped right at Friedrichstraße station. Previously, passengers changing between modes of transport here had to take a long walk to get to the restored train station. Since then, trams have terminated along the reversing loop "Am Kupfergraben" near Humboldt University and Museum Island.

The following year saw the re-opening of tram facilities at Alexanderplatz. These routes now arrive directly from the intersection with Otto-Braun-Straße across the square, stopping both at the U2 underground station and the overground station for regional and commuter trains, where there is a direct interchange to the U5 and U8 lines. An increase in tram accidents in pedestrian zones was feared by critics but did not materialize.

In 2000, the tram tracks were extended from the previous terminus at Revalerstraße, past the Warschauer Straße S-Bahn station to the U-Bahn station of the same name. Since there is no room for a return loop, a blunt ending track was built. In order to accomplish this, bi-directional vehicles were procured. However, the tracks, which were further extended in 1995 to the Oberbaumbrücke, have not yet been expanded to Hermannplatz, as had been planned.

Since 2000, the tram in Pankow has run beyond the previous terminus Pankow Kirche on to Guyotstraße, connecting the local development areas to the network.

On 12 December 2004, BVG introduced the BVG 2005 plus transport concept. The main focus was the introduction of Metrotram or Metrobus lines on very busy routes which have no U-Bahn or S-Bahn lines. On the tram network, therefore, nine MetroTram lines were introduced and the remaining lines were partially rearranged. The numbering scheme is based on that from 1993, but has undergone minor adjustments. MetroTram and MetroBus lines have an "M" in front of the line number.

Single MetroTram/MetroBus lines operate on the main radial network. As a rule, the line number corresponds to that of 1993: the M4 from lines 2, 3, and 4, the M5 from line 5, and so on. In addition, the two Pankow lines 52 and 53 were included as line M1 in the scheme. The supplementary lines of these radials continue to be numbered from 10 to 19, unless they augment the respective metro service. Metro services of the ring and tangential net received a number in the range 10–19; the supplementary lines retained a number in the range of 20–29. An exception is the subsequently established line 37, which, together with lines M17 and 27, travels a common route. Of the lines numbered 50–59 the only one remaining was the 50; the lines numbered 60–69 remained largely unaffected by the measures. The then-new lines operated as follows:

  • M1: Niederschönhausen, Schillerstraße and Rosenthal to Mitte, Am Kupfergraben (replacing 52 and 53)
  • M2: Heinersdorf to Hackescher Markt
  • M4: Hohenschönhausen, Zingster Straße to Hackescher Markt
  • M5: Hohenschönhausen, Zingster Straße to Hackescher Markt
  • M6: Hellersdorf, Riesaer Straße to Schwartzkopffstraße
  • M8: Ahrensfelde to Schwartzkopffstraße
  • M10: Prenzlauer Berg, Eberswalder Straße to Warschauer Straße (replacing 20)
  • M13: Wedding, Virchow Klinikum to Warschauer Straße (replacing 23)
  • M17: Falkenberg to Schöneweide

Termini in italics above have been subject to change, further information about the current termini is given below.

In 2006, a second line was opened in the western part of the city, and the M10 line was extended beyond its former terminus Eberswalderstraße [de] along Bernauer Straße in Gesundbrunnen to Berlin Nordbahnhof in the district of Mitte, before being further extended to Berlin Hauptbahnhof in 2015.

In May 2007, a new line from Prenzlauer Tor [de] along Karl-Liebknecht-Straße towards Alexanderplatz was put into operation, where the line M2 leads directly to the urban and regional train station instead of the current service via Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz to Hackescher Markt. The previous route along Alt and Neu Schönhauser Straße no longer carries regular services but operates only as a feeder line.

On 4 September 2011, a one-and-a-half-kilometer-long new line from the Adlershof S-Bahn station was opened. It runs from the Adlershof science and business hub (WISTA) to the provisional terminus provisional terminus Karl-Ziegler-Straße [Wikidata] at the Adlershof campus of the Humboldt University of Berlin. The route, with three newly built stops, cost 13 million euros and was first serviced by lines 60 and 61 at overlapping 10-minute intervals. Since 13 December 2015, line 63 has run to Karl Ziegler Street, replacing line 60. The connection was originally planned for completion in 1999. However, the plan approval procedure was only completed in 2002. Shortly before the plan approval decision expired after five years, the project was approved on 9 August 2007, and soon after the first masts for the overhead line were set up. It was expected to carry 9,000 passengers per workday. On 31 October 2021, it was again extended from Karl-Ziegler Straße, via Landschaftspark Johannisthal [de] to Schöneweide [de] via the Groß-Berliner Damm [de].

There are also some minor closures:

Closures from 1990
Date Streets
1993-01-01 S-Bahnhof Adlershof/Köpenicker Straße, Köpenicker Straße [de], Grünauer Straße [de], Am Falkenberg
1993-05-23 Hauptstraße [de] (before Karlshorster Straße)
1997-12-20 Am Weidendamm (between Friedrichstraße and Planckstraße), Planckstraße [Wikidata] (between Am Weidendamm and Georgenstraße)
2000-09-29 Französisch Buchholz: (Parkstraße, Elfenallee, Gravensteinstraße (reversing loop), Grünstraße)
2007-05-30 Alte Schönhauser Straße, Neue Schönhauser Straße (still exists as operational route)
2013-08-26 Chausseestraße (between Invalidenstraße and Wöhlertstraße [de]), Schwartzkopffstraße [de], Pflugstraße [de], Wöhlertstraße [de]

Towards the Hauptbahnhof Edit

At the timetable change on 14 December 2014, a new tram line was opened from Naturkundemuseum to Hauptbahnhof via Invalidenstraße, with the final stop at Lüneburger Straße in the district of Alt-Moabit. The double-track line is 2.3 kilometers long to the main station, and new stops have been built on the Chausseestraße, the Invalidenpark and the Hauptbahnhof. This is followed by the 1.1 km single track block bypass that has three stops at Lesser-Ury-Weg, Lueneburger Straße and Clara Jaschke-Straße, as well as the installation area. The planned opening date has already been postponed several times. Originally planned to complete in 2002. However, the plan was caught by the Administrative Court in 2004 and revised to either 2006 and 2007. However, the first 80 metres of the track has already been built during the construction of Berlin Hauptbahnhof.[13]

A new approval procedure was completed on 15 January 2010. In April 2011, the preparatory construction work had begun. The Ministry of Transport revised the 50 metres of the length, a two-meter-wide strip of garden to the state of Berlin to provide enough space for all road users. In the course of the work on the new line sector, the line branch along, Chausseestraße (between Invalidenstraße and Wöhlertstraße), Schwartzkopffstraße, Pflugstraße, Wöhlertstraße was permanently closed on 26 August 2013. The commissioning of the new line was initially only with the line M5. With the restoration of the connection from the Nordbahnhof to the underground station Naturkundemuseum, the new line from 28 August 2015 could also be used by the lines M8 and M10.[14]

Increasing the supply voltage Edit

In 2023 work on increasing the supply voltage from 600 V to 750 V was completed.[15]

Lines Edit

 
Map as of 2009

The first horse-drawn tramlines did not use any special labeling as they were radially inferior from the respective endpoints in the center and thus had few points of contact with other lines. Only with the expansion of the network into the city center was there a need to distinguish the lines from each other. From the 1880s, most major German cities therefore used colored target signs or signal boards, sometimes both together. In Berlin, these were always kept in the same combination. As identification colors red, yellow, green and white were used, from 1898 additionally blue. The panels were one or two colors, the latter either half / half divided or in thirds with a line in the second color. However, the number of signal panels used was not sufficient to equip each line with its own color code. In addition, crossing or side by side lines should run with different signal panels. This meant that individual lines had to change their color code several times in the course of their existence. As a result of the electrification and the takeover of the New Berlin Horse Ride by the Great Berlin Horse Railways / Great Berlin Tram (GBPfE / GBS) increased their number of lines at the turn of the century abruptly. With a view of the Hamburg tram, where in the summer of 1900 for the first time in German-speaking countries line numbers were introduced, experimented the GBS from 1901 also with the numbers. In the timetables of this time, the lines were numbered, but could change their order every year. The numbering scheme should include not only the GBS but also its secondary lines. At the same time, letter-number combinations as they appeared in the timetable booklet should be avoided.

The scheme introduced on 6 May 1902 was relatively simple: single numbers were reserved for the ring lines, two-digit for the remaining lines. Initially, the tens gave information about where the line was going; 10 lines were to be found in Moabit, 60 lines in Weissensee and 70 lines in Lichtenberg. The lines of the West Berlin suburban railway were assigned the letters A to M, the Berlin-Charlottenburg tram the letters N to Z and the lines of the Southern Berlin suburban railway were numbered with Roman numerals. The 1910 taken over by the GBS northeastern Berliner Vorortbahn received in 1913 the line designation NO. The colored signal panels remained in parallel until about 1904. In addition, the lines created during this period were still colored signal panels with new, sometimes even three-color color combinations.

Insertors were marked separately from the March 1903. They bore the letter E behind the line number of their main line. In later years, these lines increasingly took over the tasks of booster drives and were therefore shown in the timetables as separate lines. On 15 April 1912, the GBS introduced the first line with three-digit number. The 164 was created by extending the 64, which was maintained in parallel. In the following months more lines were provided with 100 numbers or newly set up, usually as a line pair to the existing line.

The surrounding businesses were not affected by the change in May 1902 and set on their own markings. The lines of the urban trams and the meterspurigen lines of the Teltower circular orbits were still marked with signal panels, on the other hand, the BESTAG and in Heiligensee, not the lines, but only the targets were marked with different colored signs. In 1908, the Spandauer Straßenbahn introduced the line identification with letters, which corresponded to the initial letter of the destination (line P to Pichelsdorf, etc.), in 1917 the company switched to numbers. In Cöpenick, the lines were marked from 1906 with numbers, from 1910 additionally with colored signal panels for the individual routes (red lines to Friedrichshagen, etc.). The Berlin Ostbahnen used from 1913 also like the SBV Roman numbers as line numbers. The other companies, including the standard-gauge lines of the Teltower Kreisbahnen, did not use a line marking.

With the merger of companies for the Berlin tram, the GBS's numbering scheme was extended to cover the rest of the network. Usually, those numbers are assigned, whose lines were continued during the World War I. For example, it came about that the lines operating in Köpenick received mainly 80s numbers. Letters were still awarded to the tram lines in the BVG until 1924, after which it was reserved for the suburban tariff buses.

With the outbreak of the Second World War, the Berlin public transport companies had to stop a large part of the bus traffic to save fuel. Tram traffic has been extended accordingly. The newly established amplifier lines contributed to the distinction of the master lines 200 and 300 numbers. From 1941, the night routes of the bus and the tram networks were later classified into the 400-series numbers. The measures were existed until the end of the war. The last 100 numbers were renumbered on 31 May 1949.

After the administrative separation of the BVG initially only changed the numbering scheme. Tram lines running from the east to the west of Berlin kept their number after the grid separation in 1953 and as a result of network thinning, individual lines were disappeared. The BVG-West waived from July 1966, the prefix A on the bus lines, the BVG-Ost waived on 1 January 1968. While in the west tram traffic was stopped 15 months later, the passenger in the east could not tell from the line number whether it was a tram or bus line. The Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe therefore planned to systematise their network in the 1970s. The city center lines of the tram should receive the line numbers 1 to 30, in Köpenick should retain their 80s numbers. The remaining numbers were intended for the bus. Night lines received from 1973 uniformly 100 numbers, for the tram were initially provided only the numbers from 120. The conversion of the daily lines was only partially completed.

After the reunification, in two steps, a uniform numbering scheme was introduced, which included the lines in the state of Brandenburg. The Berlin tram was assigned the line number range from 1 to 86, then followed by the overland operations in Woltersdorf, Schöneiche and Strausberg with the numbers 87 to 89. The Potsdam tram received the 90s line numbers. E-lines were no longer listed separately in the timetable, but the amplifiers continued to operate as such until 2004. Night lines were indicated on both means of transport by a preceding N and the three-digit line numbers were henceforth intended for the bus routes. The first conversion of 2 June 1991 followed the Berlin tram lines on 23 May 1993. The network was reorganized and divided into five number ranges. The main focus was on the focus on the historical center. Single lines formed the radial main network, 10 lines their supplementary network. 20er lines were intended for the ring and Tangentiallinien. There were 50 lines in the district of Pankow, 60 lines in the district of Köpenick analogous to the bus lines there.

BVG had instituted a new line structure, where the BVG has 22 lines since 2004.[1][16] MetroTram also uses the symbol  . On 12 December 2004, BVG had introduced the transport concept, BVG 2005+. The main content was the introduction of metro lines on busy routes where there are no S-Bahn or U-Bahn. In the tram network, therefore, nine tram lines under MetroTram were introduced, and the other lines have permanently rearranged. The numbering scheme is that it was similar to the 1993 scheme, but has undergone major adjustments.

Metro lines with a single digit number travel through the radial main network, as a rule, the line number corresponds to that of 1993, so the lines became 2, 3, and 4 into M4, the 5 into M5 and so on. In addition, the two Pankow lines, 52 and 53 were included as line M1 in the main scheme. The supplementary lines of the radials continue to carry 10 numbers, unless they have been merged into the amplifier of the metro line. Metro lines of the ring and tangential network received the numbers in the 10 range, whose supplementary lines retain the 20 range. An example is the retrofitted line, route 37, which together with the lines of M17 and 27 runs a common route. Of the 50 routes remained, the only one of the 50, the 60 lines were remained untouched by these measures.

  Mitte, Am Kupfergraben – Niederschönhausen, Schillerstraße / Rosenthal Nord
  S+U Alexanderplatz/Dircksenstraße – Am Steinberg (- Heinersdorf)
  S Hackescher Markt – Hohenschönhausen, Zingster Straße / Falkenberg
  (S+U Hauptbahnhof -) S Hackescher Markt – Hohenschönhausen, Zingster Straße
  (S Hackescher Markt -) Landsberger Allee/Petersburger Straße – Hellersdorf, Riesaer Straße
  (S+U Hauptbahnhof -) Landsberger Allee/Petersburger Straße – Ahrensfelde/Stadtgrenze
  U TurmstraßeS+U Warschauer Straße
  Wedding, Virchow-Klinikum – S Warschauer Straße
  (Falkenberg -) Hohenschönhausen, Gehrenseestraße – S Adlershof
  Mitte, Am Kupfergraben – Weißensee, Pasedagplatz
  S+U Frankfurter Allee – Ahrensfelde/Stadtgrenze
  S Springpfuhl – Hellersdorf, Riesaer Straße
  S+U Lichtenberg/GudrunstraßeS Schöneweide (via Eldenaer Straße, Frankfurter Tor, Boxhagener Straße)
  Krankenhaus Köpenick – Weißensee, Pasedagplatz
  S+U Lichtenberg/GudrunstraßeS Schöneweide (via Rhinstraße, Treskowallee)
  (Wedding, Virchow-Klinikum -) Prenzlauer Berg, Björnsonstraße – Französisch Buchholz, Guyotstraße
  Johannisthal, Haeckelstraße – Friedrichshagen, Altes Wasserwerk
  (S Schöneweide) – S Adlershof – Rahnsdorf/Waldschänke
  Wendenschloß – S Mahlsdorf
  Adlershof, Landschaftspark Johannisthal – Mahlsdorf, Rahnsdorfer Straße
  Krankenhaus Köpenick – S Schöneweide
  S Köpenick – Alt-Schmöckwitz

Tram line 68 was named by the National Geographic Society as one of the ten great streetcar routes worldwide.[17]

Future plans Edit

 
Tramway construction at Wista Adlershof

Since December 2016, Berlin has planned major light rail expansion which has been revived. Earlier plans has been there since 2000 for completion between 2005 and 2010.[18] There will be no tramway closures.

Four tram projects already under development by BVG were being prioritised for construction with work beginning from 2017 to 2021, with only the first two of the four starting construction in said time span.[19][20] The other two have had construction delayed for a later time.[21][22]

  • Berlin Hauptbahnhof – Turmstraße U-Bahn station[19]
  • Schöneweide – Wista Adlershof
  • Rahnsdorfer Straße – Mahlsdorf S-Bahn station[22]
  • A planned extension to Ostkreuz from Lichtenberg[21]

Five more tram lines will also be developed and construction will begin after 2021; these will see trams returning to parts of inner West Berlin for the first time since the 1960s, in addition to the already dense network expansion in the city. These include:

  • Alexanderplatz – Kulturforum – Kleistpark – Rathaus Steglitz
  • Turmstraße – Mierendorffplatz
  • Warschauer Straße S-Bahn/U-Bahn station – Hermannplatz
  • connection from Heinersdorf to the Blankenburger Pflasterweg development area, and
  • Pankow – Heinersdorf – Weißensee.

These are the long-term plans after 2026, which will see more direct tram networks in the West Berlin area:

  • S-Bahnhof Schöneweide – Sonnenallee – Hermannplatz – Potsdamer Platz (M9/M41)
  • Potsdamer Platz – Wittenbergplatz/Zoologischer Garten
  • Mierendorffplatz – Jungfernheide – Urban Tech Republic (Tegel Airport)
  • Pankow – Wollankstraße – Turmstraße (M27) – Mierendorffplatz – Luisenplatz
  • (Alexanderplatz –) Spittelmarkt – Lindenstraße – Hallesches Tor – Mehringdamm (it can be M2)
  • Sterndamm – Johannisthaler Chaussee
  • Lützowstraße – Zoologischer Garten
  • Berlin Hauptbahnhof – Perleberger Straße
  • Turmstraße – Rathaus Pankow

Further long-term plans after 2031:

  • Rathaus Spandau – Hahneberg
  • Falkenseer Platz – Freudstraße
  • Rathaus Steglitz – Friedenfelser Straße
  • Virchow-Klinikum – Ernst-Reuter-Platz – Zoologischer Garten
  • Mahlsdorf – Riesaer Straße

In Johannisthal a route over the Sterndamm and the Stubenrauchstraße to the subway station at Zwickauer Damm in Rudow, or to the subway station at Johannisthaler Chaussee, has been proposed. This route serves the residential areas around the Zwickauer Damm and the Eisenhutweg, making for a better public transport connection. For this route, space was reserved for the tram tracks as a preliminary step in the construction of the Hermann-Gladenbeck Bridge over the A-113 and the Massantenbrücke over the Teltowkanal 2004. Likewise, the existing track bed of the Neukölln-Mittenwalder railway can be used behind the Massantenbrücke or Hermann-Gladenbeck bridge, which is just a short distance behind the underground station at Zwickauer Damm.

Until 2006, there were deliberations to suspend parts of lines M1, M2, 12, 27, 60, and 61 as soon as the parts of the road, then considered unprofitable, were to be renewed for further operation. However, these were not realized, in fact, some of the mentioned routes have now been refurbished, the headways have been consolidated on them, or, as already mentioned, there are even plans for extensions.

Rolling stock Edit

 
BVG Tatra KT4D trams in Große Präsidentenstraße

Berlin's tram system has two different families of vehicles. There are low floor six-axle double articulated GTU, GTO and GTZO (formerly GT6N and GT6N-ZR) trams in unidirectional and bidirectional versions, and since 2008, the Bombardier Flexity Berlin.

The Tatra KT4 trams were phased out by 2021, and the Communist-era T6A2/B6A2 trams were phased out by 2007.

The number of trams has shrunk continuously. The BVB had 1,024 vehicles, while currently there are about 600. The reduction is possible because the new low-floor cars on average achieve more than twice the mileage per year (100,000 km (62,137 mi)), and, being longer, carry more passengers and therefore rarely operate in multiple.

In July 2006, the cost of energy per vehicle-kilometer was:

  • tram €0.33
  • coupled set €0.45
  • bus €0.42
  • underground train €1.18[23]

DÜWAG GT6N Edit

 
1067, Düwag GT6N in Große Präsidentenstraße

Between 1992 and 2003 45 bidirectional GT6N-ZRs and 105 unidirectional GT6Ns were purchased. The cars have a width of 2.30 m (7 ft 7 in) and a length of 26.80 m (87 ft 11 in). They can carry 150 passengers and can run as coupled sets.

134 cars were leased to a US investor and leased back. The SNB has accrued more than €157 million ($205 million) to hedge potential losses from cross-border business.[24]

In the end of 2011 and beginning of 2012 the SNB began the upgrading of 1006 and 1016 as a sample exercise. They were provided with a new drive technology and new software such as the Flexitys. The only mutually detachable vehicles are distinguished by new car numbers 1506 and 1516. After completion of the first two the BVG ordered the upgrading of all other cars of the GT6N and GT6N-ZR cars. [25]

Identically to 1506 and 1516 the first 77 cars were provided with a new drive technology and new software and upgraded to type GTU trains in the years 2012 – 2016. All GTU trains got increased car numbers by +500. The new car numbers are 1502 – 1605 (with gaps).[25]

The rest of the GT6N and all of the GT6N-ZR got a new on-board-unit instead, upgrading them to type GTO and GTZO in the years 2016 – 2017. Their numbers were increased by +200. The new car numbers are 1201 – 1263 (with gaps) for the GTO and 2201 – 2245 for the GTZO.[25]

Flexity Berlin Edit

 
8029, Bombardier Flexity Berlin in Hackescher Markt

In April 2005, a European tender was issued for low floor trams, half unidirectional, and half bidirectional vehicles. The latter will respond better to the BVG and construction faults and build on certain routes for cost savings. The Vienna tramway tram type ULF was tested in passenger service.

On 12 June 2006, the BVG decided to procure new trams. These are based on the tested Incentro, referred to by Bombardier as Flexity Berlin. In October 2008, for €13 million ($17 million), four prototypes were ordered and since then extensively tested. There are one- and two-way cars, respectively 30.8 m (101 ft 1 in) and 40 m (131 ft 3 in) in length, carrying about 180 or 240 passengers. Use in coupled sets is not possible.

On 29 June 2009, the supervisory board of the BVG decided to buy 99 Flexity cars, 40 of which will be long and 59 short versions, for €305.3 million ($397.9 million). In September 2011 the first 13 long cars began to be delivered. To replace all old Tatra cars, a further 33 costing €92.3 million ($120.3 million) may need to be ordered in 2017.[26] The trams will be manufactured at Bombardier's Bautzen works or Hennigsdorf.

In June 2012 the supervisory board approved the BVG 2nd Serial recall of an additional 39 trams of type "Flexity Berlin". Considering the order of over 99 vehicles from 2010, that means a total of 38 vehicles and 47 long bidirectional vehicles, as well as 53 short bidirectional vehicles will be ordered from the manufacturer, Bombardier Transportation. Thus, the SNB responds to both the very positive development of passenger numbers at the tram and allows bidirectional vehicles the eventual abandonment of turning loops and enhancing the design stops. Once this procurement is secured in 2017, then the old Tatra cars can be scrapped. The State of Berlin's funded budget is €439.1 million ($572.7 million).[27]

The new cars have 2.4 m (7 ft 10 in) wheel spacing, 10 cm (3.9 in) longer than the existing low-floor trams. The track width was chosen so that modifications in the network are not necessary[28] This affects only the routes upon which the Flexities will be operated. They are unable to run in Köpenick and on parts of the network in Pankow.

In December 2015, BVG exercised an option for another 47 Flexity trams from Bombardier to handle increased ridership.[29]

Tram depots Edit

 
Open Day 2009 at BVG's Berlin-Lichtenberg depot. In front of the maintenance shop typical Berlin trams are presented. From left to right, new to old.

Depots are required for stabling and maintenance purposes. BVG has seven operational tram depots, five of which are used for stabling service trams:

  • Kniprodestraße, in Friedrichshain on the east side of the junction of Kniprodestraße and Conrad-Blenkle-Straße. This depot is used for track storage and rail-grinding machinery only. It is on bus route 200, and the access tracks connect to tram line M10.
  • Köpenick, on the west side of Wendenschloßstraße, south of the junction with Müggelheimer Straße. The depot entrance is on tram route 62.
  • Lichtenberg, on the east side of Siegfriedstraße, north of Lichtenberg U-Bahn station. The depot entrance is on tram routes 21 & 37 and bus routes 240 & 256.
  • Marzahn, on the south side of Landsberger Allee, east of Blumberger Damm. The depot has a tram stop on the M6 and 18 lines. Bus route 197 also passes the depot.
  • Nalepastraße, on the east side of Nalepastraße, in Oberschöneweide. Right at the depot tram line 61 terminates and bus line 365 stops not far from it.
  • Niederschönhausen, on the north-east corner of the junction of Deitzgenstraße and Schillerstraße. The depot is on tram line M1. It is currently not in use and the future of it is uncertain.[30]
  • Weissensee, on the north side of Bernkasteler Straße near the junction of Berliner Allee and Rennbahnstraße. The depot entrance is not directly passed by any bus or tram route, but tram routes 12 & 27 and bus routes 156, 255 & 259 serve the adjacent Berliner Allee/Rennbahnstraße tram stop.

Out-of-service trams returning to Nalepastraße and Weissensee depot remain in-service until reaching the special tram stop at each depot.

Related systems Edit

Around Berlin there are some additional tram systems that do not belong to the BVG but are integrated with the greater VBB system:

The last three companies are located in the eastern suburbs at the eastern edge of Berlin. Each of them has only one line.

See also Edit

References Edit

Inline references Edit

  1. ^ a b c "The company in brief Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe". BVG. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  2. ^ a b "Travel information – Overview of our lines (Metrotram)". BVG. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  3. ^ a b "Travel information – Overview of our lines (Tram)". BVG. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  4. ^ a b . BVG. Archived from the original on 27 July 2014. Retrieved 30 April 2014.
  5. ^ "Zahlenspiegel 2018" [Statistics 2018] (PDF) (in German). Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe (BVG). 31 December 2018. p. 2. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
  6. ^ a b "Berliner Straßenbahn mit langer Tradition" [Berlin Trams' Long Tradition] (in German). BVG. Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  7. ^ [Vienna has the fifth largest tramway network in the world]. wienerlinien.at (in German). Wiener Linien. 2011. Archived from the original on 31 October 2013. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
  8. ^ Textagentur-Grimm.de: Simon Kremser
  9. ^ Elfi Bendikat: Öffentliche Nahverkehrspolitik in Berlin und Paris 1839 bis 1914, p. 103, at Google Books (Walter de Gruyter), Seite 103
  10. ^ http://www.ceciliengaerten-berlin.de/web/zeitrahmen/1800_1899.html 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Cecilengarten Berlin: Zeitrahmen
  11. ^ Tram Travels: Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe (BVG)
  12. ^ Wolfgang Kramer (2001), Arbeitskreis Berliner Nahverkehr e.V. (ed.), Linienchronik der Berliner Straßenbahn 1945–1993 (in German), Berlin{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  13. ^ "Aktuelle Meldungen | BVG Unternehmen".
  14. ^ "Aktuelle Meldungen | BVG Unternehmen".
  15. ^ Berlin tram network ups the voltage
  16. ^ Official BVG tramway map (PDF)
  17. ^ "Top 10 Trolley Rides – Travel – National Geographic". 21 January 2010.
  18. ^ http://www.railjournal.com/index.php/light-rail/berlin-plans-major-light-rail-expansion.html Berlin plans major light rail expansion
  19. ^ a b "Die neue Ost-West Verbindung". BVG – Tram (in German). Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  20. ^ "Anschluss an die Zukunft". BVG – Tram (in German). Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  21. ^ a b "Schluss mit langen Umsteigewegen". BVG – Tram (in German). Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  22. ^ a b "Wir machen den Süd-Osten fit!". BVG – Tram (in German). Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  23. ^ Small request in the Berlin parliament, printed matter 15/13611 (PDF, 128 KB)
  24. ^ Peter Neumann: Now threaten heavy losses, Berliner Zeitung, 14 November 2008
  25. ^ a b c "GTO/GTU/GTZO". Berliner Linienchronik (in German). 11 June 2023. Retrieved 11 June 2023.
  26. ^ Klaus Kurpjuweit Traffic LPP-Flexity trams; art18614, 2836566 300 million for new streetcars The Guardian 1 July 2009
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 15 January 2014.
  28. ^ Jürgen Sember, Hans-Eckhard Warns:.. Purchasing new trams for the Berlin Transport Authority – European tender – an experience report In: ZEVrail Glasers Annalen 131, 10 October 2007, pp. 395–401
  29. ^ "More Flexity Berlin trams ordered". Railway Gazette International. 21 December 2015.
  30. ^ Wähner, Bernd (20 May 2022). "BVG will einstigen Betriebshof Niederschönhausen als "Reserve" behalten" [BVG wants to keep the former tram depot Niederschönhausen as "reserve"]. Berliner Woche (in German). Retrieved 13 July 2023.

Bibliography Edit

Works in English and German Edit

  • Sigurd Hilkenbach, Wolfgang Kramer und Claude Jeanmaire: Berliner Straßenbahnen. Die Geschichte der Berliner Straßenbahn-Gesellschaften seit 1865 (Archive No. 6), Verlag Eisenbahn, Villigen AG (Schweiz), 1973, ISBN 3-85649-006-X
  • Sigurd Hilkenbach, Wolfgang Kramer und Claude Jeanmaire: Berliner Straßenbahngeschichte II. Ein Bericht über die Entwicklung der Straßenbahn in Berlin nach 1920 (Archive No. 31), Verlag Eisenbahn, Villigen AG (Schweiz), 1977, ISBN 3-85649-031-0
  • Sigurd Hilkenbach, Wolfgang Kramer und Claude Jeanmaire: Die Straßenbahnlinien im westlichen Teil Berlins. Der Wiederaufbau ab 1945 und die Stillegung im Westteil der Stadt bis 1967. (2 Bände) (Archive Nos. 46/52), Verlag Eisenbahn, Villigen AG (Schweiz), 1986, ISBN 3-85649-046-9
  • Schwandl, Robert (2012). Schwandl's Tram Atlas Deutschland (in German and English) (3rd ed.). Berlin: Robert Schwandl Verlag. pp. 8–13. ISBN 9783936573336.

Works in German Edit

  • Arbeitsgemeinschaft Blickpunkt Straßenbahn e.V.: Straßenbahnatlas Deutschland 1996, Berlin, ISBN 3-926524-14-6
  • Denkmalpflege-Verein Nahverkehr Berlin e.V.: Rekowagen – Die etwas härtere Art, Straßenbahn zu fahren, Verlag GVE, Berlin, 1996, ISBN 3-89218-045-8
  • Denkmalpflege-Verein Nahverkehr Berlin e.V.: Historische Nahverkehrsfahrzeuge – Berlin und Brandenburg, Verlag GVE, Berlin, 2001, ISBN 3-89218-027-X
  • Denkmalpflege-Verein Nahverkehr Berlin e.V.: 100 Jahre »Elektrische« in Köpenick, Verlag GVE, Berlin, 2003, ISBN 3-89218-082-2
  • Sigurd Hilkenbach und Wolfgang Kramer: Die Straßenbahnen in Berlin, Alba, Düsseldorf, 1994, ISBN 3-87094-351-3
  • Sigurd Hilkenbach und Wolfgang Kramer: Die Straßenbahn der Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe (BVG-Ost/BVB) 1949–1991, Transpress, Stuttgart, 1997, ISBN 3-613-71063-3
  • Wolfgang Kramer und Heinz Jung: Linienchronik der Elektrischen Straßenbahn von Berlin. (2 volumes), Arbeitskreis Berliner Nahverkehr e.V., 1994 (Vol. 1), 2001 (Vol. 2)
  • Holger Orb und Tilo Schütz: Straßenbahn für ganz Berlin. Geschichte – Konzeption – Städtebau, Jaron, Berlin, 2000, ISBN 3-89773-024-3

External links Edit

  • BVG official website
  • Tram network's page on BVG website
  • Berlin tramway network map
  • Track plan of the Berlin tram system
  • Berlin database / photo gallery and Berlin tram list at Urban Electric Transit – in various languages, including English.
  • Berlin database / photo gallery at Phototrans – in various languages, including English.

trams, berlin, berlin, tramway, german, straßenbahn, berlin, main, tram, system, berlin, germany, oldest, tram, networks, world, having, origins, 1865, operated, berliner, verkehrsbetriebe, which, founded, 1929, notable, being, third, largest, tram, system, wo. The Berlin tramway German Strassenbahn Berlin is the main tram system in Berlin Germany It is one of the oldest tram networks in the world having its origins in 1865 6 and is operated by Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe BVG which was founded in 1929 6 It is notable for being the third largest tram system in the world after Melbourne and St Petersburg 7 Berlin s tram system is made up of 22 lines 1 that operate across a standard gauge network with almost 800 stops and measuring almost 190 kilometres 120 mi in route length and 430 kilometres 270 mi in line length 4 Nine of the lines called Metrotram operate 24 hours a day and are identified with the letter M before their number 2 the other thirteen lines are regular city tram lines and are identified by just a line number 3 Berlin tramwayBombardier Flexity BerlinsOperationLocaleBerlin GermanyHorsecar era 1865 1865 1910 1910 Status Converted to electricityTrack gauge 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugePropulsion system s HorsesElectric tram era since 1895Status OperationalLines 22 1 2 suburban lines citation needed 9 MetroTram lines 2 13 regular tram lines 3 Operator s Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe BVG since 1929 Track gauge 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugePropulsion system s ElectricityElectrification 750 V DC OverheadRoute length 193 km 120 mi 4 Stops over 8002013197 million 5 Map of tram network December 2022Website Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe BVG in English Most of the recent network is within the confines of the former East Berlin tram lines within West Berlin having been replaced by buses during the division of Berlin However the first extension into West Berlin opened in 1994 on today s M13 In the eastern vicinity of the city there are also three private tram lines that are not part of the main system whereas to the south west of Berlin is the Potsdam tram system with its own network of lines Contents 1 History 1 1 Horse buses 1 2 Horse trams 1 3 Electrification 1 4 Underground trams 1 5 Great variety of companies until the formation of the BVG 1 6 The network since 1945 1 6 1 West 1 6 2 East 1 7 After reunification 1 8 Towards the Hauptbahnhof 1 9 Increasing the supply voltage 2 Lines 3 Future plans 4 Rolling stock 4 1 DUWAG GT6N 4 2 Flexity Berlin 4 3 Tram depots 5 Related systems 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Inline references 7 2 Bibliography 7 2 1 Works in English and German 7 2 2 Works in German 8 External linksHistory EditIn 1865 a horse tramway was established in Berlin In 1881 the world s first electric tram line was opened in the city Numerous private and municipal operating companies constructed new routes so by the end of the 19th century the network had developed quite rapidly and the horse trams had been replaced by electric ones By 1930 the network had a route length of over 630 km 391 mi with more than 90 lines In 1929 all operating companies were unified into the BVG After World War II BVG was divided into an eastern and a western company but was once again reunited in 1992 after the fall of East Germany In West Berlin by 1967 the last tram lines had been shut down With the exception of two lines constructed after German reunification the Berlin tram continues to be limited to the eastern portion of Berlin nbsp Berlin horsebusHorse buses Edit nbsp Horse tram car of the Grosse Berliner Pferde Eisenbahn built in 1885The public transport system of Berlin is the oldest one in Germany In 1825 the first bus line from Brandenburger Tor to Charlottenburg was opened by Simon Kremser already with a timetable 8 The first bus service inside the city operated from 1840 between Alexanderplatz and Potsdamer Bahnhof It was run by Israel Moses Henoch who had run the cab service since 1815 9 10 On 1 January 1847 the Koncessionierte Berliner Omnibus Compagnie Concessionary Berlin Bus Company started its first horse bus line The growing market witnessed the launch of numerous additional companies with 36 bus companies in Berlin by 1864 Horse trams Edit On 22 June 1865 the opening of Berlin s first horse tramway marked the beginning of the age of trams in Germany stretching from Brandenburger Tor along today s Strasse des 17 Juni 17 June Road to Charlottenburg Two months later on 28 August it was extended along Dorotheenstrasse to Kupfergraben near today s Museumsinsel Museum Island a terminus which is still in service today Like the horse bus many companies took advantage of the new development and built horse tram networks in all parts of today s urban area In 1873 a route from Rosenthaler Platz to the Gesundbrunnen was opened to be operated by the new Grosse Berliner Pferde Eisenbahn Great Berlin Horse Railway which would later become the dominant company in Berlin under the name of Grosse Berliner Strassenbahn GBS Great Berlin Tramway Electrification Edit nbsp Electric car of the GBS built in 1901 nbsp Car of Berlin s last class with open platforms built in 1907 nbsp Car of the same class modernized in 1925On 16 May 1881 the region of Berlin again made transport history In the village of Gross Lichterfelde which was incorporated into Berlin Steglitz 39 years later Werner von Siemens opened the world s first electric tramway The electric tram in Gross Lichterfelde was built to 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in metre gauge and ran from today s suburban station Lichterfelde Ost to the cadet school on Zehlendorfer Strasse today Finckensteinallee Initially the route was intended merely as a testing facility Siemens named it an elevated line taken down from its pillars and girders because he wanted to build a network of electric elevated lines in Berlin But the skeptical town council did not allow him to do this until 1902 when the first elevated line opened The first tests of electric traction on Berlin s standard gauge began on 1 May 1882 with overhead supply and in 1886 with batteries were not very successful Electric traction of standard gauge trams in Berlin was definitively established in 1895 The first tram line with an overhead track supply ran in an industrial area near Berlin Gesundbrunnen station The first line in a more inhabited area operated with batteries for its first year a catenary was installed four years later In 1902 electrification with overhead wiring had been completed except for a very small number of lines on the periphery The last horse drawn tram line closed in 1910 Underground trams Edit On 28 December 1899 it became possible to travel underground even under the Spree upon completion of the Spreetunnel between Stralau and Treptow Owing to structural problems it was closed on 25 February 1932 From 1916 to 1951 the tram had a second tunnel the Lindentunnel passing under the well known boulevard Unter den Linden Great variety of companies until the formation of the BVG Edit The history of tram companies of the Berlin Strassenbahn is very complicated Besides the private companies which often changed because of takeovers mergers and bankruptcies the cities of Berlin Spandau Kopenick Rixdorf the villages Steglitz Mariendorf Britz Niederschonhausen Friedrichshagen Heiligensee and Franzosisch Buchholz and the Kreis Teltow Teltow district had municipal tram companies The most important private operating company was the Grosse Berliner Pferde Eisenbahn Great Berlin Horse Railway which called itself Grosse Berliner Strassenbahn GBS Great Berlin Tramway after commencing electrification GBS acquired nearly all of the other companies through the years In 1920 the GBS merged with the municipal companies BESTAG and SSB to become the Berliner Strassenbahn Berlin Tramway which was reorganized in 1929 into the newly formed municipal Berliner Verkehrs AG BVG Berlin Transport Company Besides the tramway the BVG also took over the elevated and underground rail lines and the bus routes which were previously operated primarily by the Allgemeine Berliner Omnibus Actien Gesellschaft ABOAG General Berlin Bus Corporation The following table includes all companies that operated tramways in today s Berlin before the formation of the BVG The background color of each line marks the drive method which the respective company used to serve their lines at the time of the formation blue horse tram yellow steam tram white electric tram red benzole tram First line opened Operating company Gauge mm Takeover date Taken over by Special remarks1865 06 22 Berliner Pferde Eisenbahn Gesellschaft BPfEG 1 435 1894 09 26 BChS first horse tram in Germany1871 11 01 Westend Terrain Gesellschaft H Quistorp amp Co 1 435 1878 BPfEG1873 07 08 Grosse Berliner Pferde Eisenbahn GBPfE 1 435 1898 01 25 GBS1877 01 01 Neue Berliner Pferdebahn Gesellschaft NBPfG 1 435 1900 01 01 GBS1879 04 01 Grosse Internationale Pferde Eisenbahn Gesellschaft GIPfEG 1 435 1886 GBPfE founded already in March 18721881 05 16 Elektrische Strassenbahn der Gemeinde Gross Lichterfelde 1 000 1895 03 04 ESGLSS Germany s first electric tramway1882 10 18 Copenicker Pferde Eisenbahn CPE 1 435 1903 SSC1885 06 13 Pferde Eisenbahn der Gemeinde Rixdorf 1 435 1887 01 01 GBPfE1886 05 05 Davy Donath amp Co 1 435 1888 12 22 BDK1887 08 06 Pferde Eisenbahn der Gemeinde Mariendorf 1 435 1888 01 01 GBPfE1888 05 18 Wilmersdorf Schmargendorfer Dampfstrassenbahn Reymer amp Masch WSD 1 435 1888 12 22 BDK1888 07 01 Dampfstrassenbahn Gross Lichterfelde Seehof Teltow 1 435 1891 05 31 DLSTS1888 12 22 Berliner Dampfstrassenbahn Konsortium BDK 1 435 1898 10 01 WBV also operated some horse trams1891 05 17 Strassenbahn Friedrichshagen 1 000 1906 12 16 SSC in 1894 taken over by the village electrificated and regauged to standard gauge as of the takeover by SSC1891 05 31 Dampfstrassenbahn Gross Lichterfelde Seehof Teltow Stahnsdorf 1 435 1906 04 01 TKb1891 06 04 Pferdebahn Tegeler Chaussee Tegel 1 435 1891 06 04 GBPfE1891 08 01 Pferde Eisenbahn der Gemeinde Britz 1 435 1891 08 01 GBPfE1892 06 05 Spandauer Strassenbahn Simmel Matzky amp Muller SpS 1 000 1920 12 08 Berliner Strassenbahn on 1894 09 01 management taken over by Allgemeine Deutsche Kleinbahn Gesellschaft ADKG electrification finished on 1896 03 18 from 1899 03 04 management by AEG regauged to standard gauge on 1907 10 26 bought by the city of Spandau on 1909 07 011892 07 01 Pferde Eisenbahn der Gemeinde Niederschonhausen 1 435 1892 07 01 GBS1894 09 26 Berlin Charlottenburger Strassenbahn BChS 1 435 1919 05 15 GBS electrification finished on 1900 10 011895 03 04 Elektrische Strassenbahnen Gross Lichterfelde Lankwitz Steglitz Sudende ESGLSS 1 000 1906 04 01 TKb1895 09 10 Siemens amp Halske 1 435 1899 07 01 BESTAG1898 01 25 Grosse Berliner Strassenbahn GBS 1 435 1920 10 01 Berliner Strassenbahn electrification finished on 1902 12 15 bought by the Zweckverband Gross Berlin on 1909 09 201898 10 01 Westliche Berliner Vorortbahn WBV 1 435 1919 05 15 GBS also operated some horse trams electrification finished on 1900 06 191899 07 01 Berliner Elektrische Strassenbahn AG BESTAG 1 435 1920 12 01 Berliner Strassenbahn1899 07 01 Sudliche Berliner Vorortbahn 1 435 1919 05 15 GBS1899 10 21 Strassenbahn Berlin Hohenschonhausen 1 435 1906 12 10 NBSNO1899 12 18 Gesellschaft fur den Bau von Untergrundbahnen Strassenbahn Schlesischer Bahnhof Treptow SST 1 435 1909 06 22 Berliner Ostbahnen opened the Spreetunnel1901 08 15 Strassenbahn Niederschoneweide Copenick SNC 1 435 1909 06 22 Berliner Ostbahnen1901 10 01 Gesellschaft fur elektrische Hoch und Untergrundbahnen in Berlin tramway line Warschauer Brucke Zentralviehhof 1 435 1928 04 01 BSBG on 1910 01 01 tram line was sold to SSB instead of it opening of a new tram line from Warschauer Brucke to Scharnweber Gurtelstrasse later extended to Wagnerplatz today Roedeliusplatz in Lichtenberg1903 Stadtische Strassenbahn Copenick SSC 1 435 1920 10 01 GBS1904 07 Pferde Eisenbahn der Gemeinde Franzosisch Buchholz 1 435 1907 12 19 BESTAG electrification as of takeover by BESTAG1905 12 03 Strassenbahn der Gemeinde Steglitz 1 435 1921 04 16 Berliner Strassenbahn1906 04 01 Teltower Kreisbahnen TKb 1 000 1 435 1921 04 16 Berliner Strassenbahn steam tram of DLSTS was electrificated on 1907 03 301906 12 10 Neue Berliner Strassenbahn Nordost NBSNO 1 435 1910 05 03 NOBV1908 03 23 Elektrische Strassenbahn Spandau Nonnendamm 1 435 1914 10 01 SpS founded by Siemens amp Halske1908 07 01 Stadtische Strassenbahnen Berlin SSB 1 435 1920 10 01 Berliner Strassenbahn1909 06 22 Berliner Ostbahnen 1 435 1920 05 01 GBS1910 05 03 Nordostliche Berliner Vorortbahn NOBV 1 435 1919 05 15 GBS1910 08 07 Strassenbahn des Flugplatzes Johannisthal 1 435 1910 10 service suspended last horse tram in Berlin1912 03 09 Schmockwitz Grunauer Uferbahn 1 435 1924 08 Berliner Verkehrs GmbH electrification finished on 1912 07 231913 05 29 Strassenbahn der Gemeinde Heiligensee an der Havel 1 435 1920 10 01 Berliner Strassenbahn1920 10 01 Berliner Strassenbahn 1 000 1 435 1923 09 10 BSBG meter gauge routes are of former TKb1923 01 08 Kleinbahn Spandau West Hennigsdorf 1 435 1929 01 01 BVG electrification later by BVG1923 09 10 Berliner Strassenbahn Betriebs GmbH BSBG 1 000 1 435 1929 01 01 BVG meter gauge routes are of former TKb1924 08 Berliner Verkehrs GmbH 1 435 1925 03 01 BSBGOn the day of its formation the BVG had 89 tram lines a network of 634 km 394 mi in length over 4 000 tramway cars and more than 14 400 employees An average tram car ran over 42 500 km 26 400 mi per year The Berlin tram system had more than 929 million passengers in 1929 at which point the BVG already had increased its service to 93 tram lines In the early 1930s the Berlin tram network began to decline after partial closing of the world s first electric tram in 1930 on 31 October 1934 Germany s oldest tram line followed The Strasse des 17 Juni formerly the Charlottenburger Chaussee was rebuilt by Nazi planners following a monumental east west Axis and the tramway had to leave In 1938 however there were still 71 tram lines 2 800 tram cars and about 12 500 employees Consequently the bus network was extended during this time From 1933 Berlin also had trolley buses During World War II some transport tasks were given back to the tramway to save oil Thus an extensive transport of goods was established Bombings from March 1943 on and the lack of personnel and electricity caused the transportation performance to decline Due to the final Battle for Berlin the tram system finally collapsed on 23 April 1945 Prior to the battle many destroyed and gutted trams were turned into makeshift roadblocks being pushed by civilians Volkssturm militia into the middle of streets and mostly filled with piles of building rubble to serve as solid obstacles through major roads in the city to halt the advance of Soviet tanks and vehicles invading Berlin 11 The network since 1945 Edit nbsp BVG class TM36 built in 1927 sometimes ran out of control due to its innovative controlling systemThe BVG was like most other Berlin institutions split into two different companies on 1 August 1949 Two separate companies were formed the BVG West in the three western sections with 36 tram lines and the BVG Ost Berlin Public Transit Authority East with 13 lines in the Soviet sector The latter became in 1969 the VEB Kombinat Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe BVB On 14 October 1950 traffic on the lines from West Berlin to the Brandenburgian suburbs Kleinmachnow and Schonefeld ceased on 15 January 1953 traffic over the downtown sector border followed From 1949 to 1955 line by line both companies replaced the Thomson Houston type trolley poles of their tramcars with pantographs West Edit nbsp Articulated Tatra KT4D tramcar of the BVB built 1980From 1954 onwards a shift took place with the public transit plans for West Berlin From that moment planning aimed at discontinuing the tram service and replacing it with extended underground and bus lines The tramway system was considered old fashioned and unnecessary since Berlin already had a well developed underground network From 1954 to 1962 numerous tram lines were replaced with bus routes and extended underground lines and stops By 1962 the western part of the city had only 18 tram lines left out of the original 36 On 2 October 1967 the final tramcar traveled through West Berlin over the last line numbered 55 from Zoo Station via Ernst Reuter Square the City Hall in Charlottenburg Jungfernheide S Bahn station Siemensdamm Nonnendammallee Falkenseer Platz and Neuendorfer Allee to Spandau Hakenfelde Today many MetroBus lines follow the routes of former tram lines The division of the city resulted in many problems and difficulties for the public transportation system Tram lines could no longer operate through the city center and the main tram depot was moved to Uferstrasse in Western Berlin List of West Berlin trams from 1949 to 1967 12 Line Stretch Withdrawn Replaced by Current lines 2014 0 2 Bernauer Strasse Sektorengrenze Schoneberg Gotenstrasse Ecke Torgauer Strasse 1964 06 01 A84 A90 245 M10 0 3 U Fehrbelliner Platz Gruntaler Strasse Ecke Osloer Strasse 1964 08 01 A89 U7 M13 104 1060 6 Charlottenburg Richard Wagner Platz Neukolln Elsenstrasse Ecke Heidelberger Strasse 1961 07 01 A73 M4615 Marienfelde Daimlerstrasse Neukolln Schulenburgpark 1966 07 01 A77 246 27721 Strassenbahnhof Moabit Wiebestrasse Kreuzberg Friesenstrasse 1953 01 22 A24 TXL M41 24823 Moabit Zwinglistrasse Wollankstrasse Sektorengrenze 1960 05 02 A70 M2724 Bernauer Strasse Sektorengrenze Wollankstrasse Sektorengrenze 1960 05 02 no replacement no replacement25 Schoneberg Gotenstrasse Bernauer Strasse Sektorengrenze 1961 09 01 U9 A64 U9 106 24726 Spreewaldplatz Tempelhof Industriestrasse 1963 09 29 no replacement U7 M29 27727 Spreewaldplatz Buckow Alt Buckow 1964 10 01 A91 M44 34428 Bahnhof Gesundbrunnen Rugener Strasse Tegelort Almazeile 1958 06 01 U6 verl A20 U6 22229 Bahnhof Gesundbrunnen Rugener Strasse Alt Heiligensee 1958 06 01 U6 verl A14 U6 12435 Gartenfeld Kopenhagener Strasse Sektorengrenze 1960 10 01 A72 U7 X33 M27 32736 Kopenhagener Strasse Sektorengrenze Bahnhof Gesundbrunnen Rugener Strasse 1960 05 02 A71 32740 Dahlem Clayallee Steglitz Birkbuschstrasse 1959 10 01 A68 X83 18641 Bernauer Strasse Sektorengrenze Alt Tegel 1958 06 01 A61 U6 U8 12244 Invalidenstrasse Ecke Heidestrasse Steglitz Birkbuschstrasse 1963 05 02 A86 U7 186 24547 Britz Gradestrasse Rudow Stadtgrenze 1966 10 01 A41 17151 Bahnhof Zoologischer Garten Roseneck 1957 05 01 A60 24953 Charlottenburg Richard Wagner Platz Spandau Hakenfelde 1967 05 02 A56 136 M4554 Charlottenburg Richard Wagner Platz Spandau Johannesstift 1967 05 02 A54 AS1 M4555 Bahnhof Zoologischer Garten Spandau Hakenfelde via Siemensstadt 1967 10 02 A55 U7 136 13957 Wilmersdorf Emser Platz Grunewald Roseneck 1954 11 01 A50 11560 Schoneberg Lindenhof Charlottenburg Konigin Elisabeth Strasse 1962 05 02 A74 U7 309 10666 Schoneberg Wartburgplatz Steglitz Thorwaldsenstrasse 1963 05 02 A83 18768 Bahnhof Wedding Nettelbeckplatz Bahnhof Wittenau Nordbahn 1958 06 01 A62 M21 X2173 Potsdamer Platz Sektorengrenze Bahnhof Lichterfelde Ost 1962 05 02 A48 verl A53 M48 M85 M1174 Potsdamer Platz Sektorengrenze Lichterfelde Finckensteinallee 1963 05 02 A83 A84 M48 M85 18475 Bahnhof Zoologischer Garten Spandau Hakenfelde via Kantstrasse 1966 01 24 A94 A97 X34 X49 136 M4976 I Grunewald Roseneck Anhalter Bahnhof 1954 07 01 A19 M1976 II Bahnhof Zoologischer Garten Spandau Johannisstift ab 1959 1966 01 24 A94 A97 X34 X49 M45 M4977 Bahnhof Zoologischer Garten Lichterfelde Goerzallee 1963 05 02 A85 U9 M85 188 285 M4678 Bahnhof Zoologischer Garten Lichterfelde Sud Lindenstrasse 1963 05 02 A85 U9 M85 188 285 M4679 Grunewald Hagenplatz U Nollendorfplatz 1954 07 01 A29 M2988 Kreuzberg Wiener Brucke Steglitz Stadtpark 1961 03 01 A75 M29 M48 M85 246 18194 Oranienplatz Neukolln Schulenburgplatz 1959 10 01 A67 M4195 Sonnenallee Ecke Schwarzer Weg Mehringplatz 1965 05 02 A95 M4196 U Mehringdamm Lichterfelde Goerzallee Ecke Darser Strasse 1966 05 02 A96 117 184 24898 U Tempelhof Marienfelde Daimlerstrasse 1961 10 01 A77 U6 27799 U Tempelhof Bahnhof Lichtenrade 1961 10 01 A76 U6 M76 X76 former BVG West BVG Ost before 1953 01 15 former BVG West BVG Ost before 1953 01 15 but only belongs to BVG West after reunification it was reopenedSome of the former routes are no longer usable East Edit nbsp Tram in East Berlin 1977Soviet Moscow with its tram free avenues was the role model for East Berlin s transport planning The car oriented mentality of West Berlin also spread in the East with many tram lines also closing in the latter in the 1950s and 1960s In 1967 the lines through the city center closed down at the same time as the new city expansion around Alexanderplatz was starting to develop However a complete elimination of the city s tram network was neither planned nor even discussed The following streets were constructed in order to connect the new housing estates Marzahn Hohenschonhausen and finally Hellersdorf to the city s tram network from the late 1970s to the early 1990s Date Streets1951 08 02 Ehrlichstrasse Blockdammweg1951 08 02 Buschallee zw Kniprodeallee heute Hansastrasse und Suermondtstrasse Suermondtstrasse1951 08 02 Markgrafendamm Hauptstrasse zw Markgrafendamm und Karlshorster Strasse 1953 02 15 Gross Berliner Damm1953 06 13 Falkenberger Strasse heute Gehrenseestrasse Gartenstadt Hohenschonhausen 1954 05 17 Friedenstrasse Friedrichsberger Strasse Lebuser Strasse1962 01 28 S Bahnhof Adlershof Westseite 1965 12 14 Langhansstrasse zw Gustav Adolf Strasse und Prenzlauer Promenade 1966 05 18 Stralauer Platz1966 08 01 Holzmarktstrasse zw Krautstrasse und Andreasstrasse 1966 09 16 Stahlheimer Strasse zw Wichertstrasse und Wisbyer Strasse 1966 12 12 Mollstrasse zw Leninplatz heute Platz der Vereinten Nationen und Hans Beimler Strasse heute Otto Braun Strasse 1967 01 02 Mollstrasse zw Hans Beimler Strasse heute Otto Braun Strasse und Prenzlauer Allee 1971 11 14 Bleicheroder Strasse Stiftweg1975 11 02 Herzbergstrasse ab Siegfriedstrasse Allee der Kosmonauten bis Rhinstrasse Rhinstrasse zw Allee der Kosmonauten und Strasse der Befreiung heute Alt Friedrichsfelde 1979 04 06 Allee der Kosmonauten zw Rhinstrasse und Schleife Elisabethstrasse 1980 03 17 Altenhofer Strasse Leninallee heute Landsberger Allee S Bahnhof Marzahn1982 10 06 Marzahner Promenade Bruno Leuschner Strasse heute Raoul Wallenberg Strasse Allee der Kosmonauten zw Leninallee heute Landsberger Strasse und Schleife Elisabethstrasse Trasse Lea Grundig Strasse Max Hermannstrasse Trusetaler Strasse bis Schleife Henneckestrasse 1984 12 21 Wartenberger Strasse Rudickenstrasse Zingster Strasse1985 04 01 Rhinstrasse zw Hauptstrasse und Allee der Kosmonauten 1985 04 01 Leninallee heute Landsberger Alle zw Allee der Kosmonauten und Betriebshof Marzahn 1986 10 06 Schleife Henneckestrasse bis Schleife Ahrensfelde1987 08 10 Kniprodeallee Falkenberger Chaussee bis Prerower Platz 1988 08 20 Falkenberger Chaussee zw Prerower Platz und Schleife Falkenberg Some streets were closed especially those too close to the Berlin Wall Date Streets1950 10 14 Waltersdorfer Chaussee Mittelstrasse Schonefeld 1951 03 19 Konigstrasse Spandauer Strasse zw Konigstrasse und Molkenmarkt Schlossplatz Werderstrasse Franzosische Strasse bis Charlottenstrasse Lindentunnel Oberwallstrasse Jerusalemer Strasse 1952 01 02 Elsenstrasse zw Plesser Strasse und Heidelberger Strasse 1952 03 03 Stalinallee zw Andreasstrasse und Jacobystrasse 1952 06 16 Charlottenstrasse zw Unter den Linden und Clara Zetkin Strasse 1953 01 16 Ebertstrasse zw Potsdamer Platz und Clara Zetkin Strasse 1953 01 16 Breite Strasse Mitte 1953 01 16 Wollankstrasse zw Sektorengrenze und Breite Strasse Pankow 1953 01 16 Kopenhagener Strasse Hauptstrasse zw Sektorengrenze und Wilhelmsruh Pankow 1953 01 16 Bornholmer Strasse zw Sektorengrenze und Bjornsonstrasse 1953 03 27 Rosenfelder Strasse Irenenstrasse Weitlingstrasse Luckstrasse Noldnerstrasse Stadthausstrasse Turrschmidtstrasse1956 01 11 Kommandantenstrasse Beuthstrasse1957 06 25 Bulgarische Strasse bis Alt Treptow 1959 06 05 Gross Berliner Damm1959 08 30 Alt Stralau Tunnelstrasse1959 11 13 Bulgarische Strasse zw Alt Treptow und Kopenicker Landstrasse 1960 08 01 Puschkinallee Am Treptower Park zw Puschkinallee und Elsenstrasse 1961 08 13 Clara Zetkin Strasse zw Ebertstrasse und Planckstrasse Ebertstrasse zw Brandenburger Tor und Reichstagufer 1961 08 13 Oberbaumbrucke1961 08 23 Heinrich Heine Strasse zw Dresdner Strasse und Schmidstrasse 1961 09 19 Kopenicker Strasse zw Schillingbrucke und Bruckenstrasse 1962 01 28 Adlergestell zw Dorpfeldstrasse und Kopenicker Strasse 1962 08 03 Elisabethstrasse Karl Marx Allee zw Elisabethstrasse und Leninallee 1965 01 07 Hannoversche Strasse1965 12 14 Gustav Adolf Strasse zw Langhansstrasse und Prenzlauer Promenade 1966 04 01 Idastrasse Wackenbergstrasse Buchholzer Strasse Blankenburger Strasse1966 05 18 Fruchtstrasse zw Muhlendamm und Am Ostbahnhof 1966 07 04 Breslauer Strasse zw Andreasstrasse und Krautstrasse 1966 08 25 Heinrich Heine Strasse zw Schmidstrasse und Kopenicker Strasse 1966 09 16 Krugerstrasse Wichertstrasse zw Stahlheimer Strasse und Gudvanger Strasse Gudvanger Strasse zw Wichertstrasse und Krugerstrasse 1966 10 10 Jacobystrasse Kleine Frankfurter Strasse Leninallee zw Alexanderplatz und Leninplatz 1966 10 10 Am Ostbahnhof zw Fruchtstrasse und Andreasstrasse 1966 10 20 Charlottenstrasse Taubenstrasse Wendeschleife 1966 12 19 Prenzlauer Strasse Hans Beimler Strasse zw Alexanderplatz und Mollstrasse Weinmeisterstrasse Judenstrasse Wendeschleife 1967 01 20 Munzstrasse Memhardstrasse Alexanderplatz Alexanderstrasse zw Alexanderplatz und Wallnerstrasse 1967 12 12 Stralauer Allee Markgrafendamm1968 10 19 Wallnerstrasse Raupachstrasse Wendeschleife Alexanderstrasse zw Wallnerstrasse und Holzmarktstrasse 1969 07 01 Donhoffplatz Wendeschleife 1969 07 01 Stralauer Platz Muhlenstrasse Warschauer Strasse zw Muhlenstrasse und Helsingforser Platz 1969 10 13 Karlshorster Strasse Stubenrauchbrucke1970 08 24 Leipziger Strasse Spittelmarkt Wallstrasse Inselstrasse Kopenicker Strasse zw Inselstrasse und Bruckenstrasse Bruckenstrasse Jannowitzbrucke Holzmarktstrasse Andreasstrasse Lebuser Strasse Friedrichsberger Strasse Friedenstrasse1971 04 01 Baumschulenstrasse Hasselwerderstrasse Schnellerstrasse zw Hasselwerderstrasse und Bruno Burgel Weg Bruno Burgel Weg1971 11 08 Damerowstrasse1973 07 14 Wiener Brucke Wendeschleife Karl Kunger Strasse Plesser Strasse Elsenstrasse Am Treptower Park zw Elsenstrasse und Bulgarische Strasse Kopenicker Landstrasse Schnellerstrasse zw Kopenicker Landstrasse und Bruckenstrasse Wendeschleife S Bahnhof Schoneweide1975 11 01 Strasse der Befreiung1983 03 01 Falkenberger Strasse ArnimstrasseAfter reunification Edit nbsp Double end GT6N ZR 2 trams in BVG yellowIn 1992 the West Berlin transport company BVG took over East Berlin s BVB In addition to bus and U Bahn lines the new BVG also ran the trams by now only operating in the former East Berlin districts There was an attempt to shut down the tram routes running to Pankow because the trams in Schonhauser Allee run parallel to the U2 line though the latter does not run to Rosenthal In 1995 the first stretch of the tram route along Bornholmer Strasse was opened to the west in two stages The Rudolf Virchow Klinikum and the metro stations located in Seestrasse Wedding and Osloer Strasse in Gesundbrunnen have since re connected to the tram network Since 1997 the tram has stopped right at Friedrichstrasse station Previously passengers changing between modes of transport here had to take a long walk to get to the restored train station Since then trams have terminated along the reversing loop Am Kupfergraben near Humboldt University and Museum Island The following year saw the re opening of tram facilities at Alexanderplatz These routes now arrive directly from the intersection with Otto Braun Strasse across the square stopping both at the U2 underground station and the overground station for regional and commuter trains where there is a direct interchange to the U5 and U8 lines An increase in tram accidents in pedestrian zones was feared by critics but did not materialize In 2000 the tram tracks were extended from the previous terminus at Revalerstrasse past the Warschauer Strasse S Bahn station to the U Bahn station of the same name Since there is no room for a return loop a blunt ending track was built In order to accomplish this bi directional vehicles were procured However the tracks which were further extended in 1995 to the Oberbaumbrucke have not yet been expanded to Hermannplatz as had been planned Since 2000 the tram in Pankow has run beyond the previous terminus Pankow Kirche on to Guyotstrasse connecting the local development areas to the network On 12 December 2004 BVG introduced the BVG 2005 plus transport concept The main focus was the introduction of Metrotram or Metrobus lines on very busy routes which have no U Bahn or S Bahn lines On the tram network therefore nine MetroTram lines were introduced and the remaining lines were partially rearranged The numbering scheme is based on that from 1993 but has undergone minor adjustments MetroTram and MetroBus lines have an M in front of the line number Single MetroTram MetroBus lines operate on the main radial network As a rule the line number corresponds to that of 1993 the M4 from lines 2 3 and 4 the M5 from line 5 and so on In addition the two Pankow lines 52 and 53 were included as line M1 in the scheme The supplementary lines of these radials continue to be numbered from 10 to 19 unless they augment the respective metro service Metro services of the ring and tangential net received a number in the range 10 19 the supplementary lines retained a number in the range of 20 29 An exception is the subsequently established line 37 which together with lines M17 and 27 travels a common route Of the lines numbered 50 59 the only one remaining was the 50 the lines numbered 60 69 remained largely unaffected by the measures The then new lines operated as follows M1 Niederschonhausen Schillerstrasse and Rosenthal to Mitte Am Kupfergraben replacing 52 and 53 M2 Heinersdorf to Hackescher Markt M4 Hohenschonhausen Zingster Strasse to Hackescher Markt M5 Hohenschonhausen Zingster Strasse to Hackescher Markt M6 Hellersdorf Riesaer Strasse to Schwartzkopffstrasse M8 Ahrensfelde to Schwartzkopffstrasse M10 Prenzlauer Berg Eberswalder Strasse to Warschauer Strasse replacing 20 M13 Wedding Virchow Klinikum to Warschauer Strasse replacing 23 M17 Falkenberg to SchoneweideTermini in italics above have been subject to change further information about the current termini is given below In 2006 a second line was opened in the western part of the city and the M10 line was extended beyond its former terminus Eberswalderstrasse de along Bernauer Strasse in Gesundbrunnen to Berlin Nordbahnhof in the district of Mitte before being further extended to Berlin Hauptbahnhof in 2015 In May 2007 a new line from Prenzlauer Tor de along Karl Liebknecht Strasse towards Alexanderplatz was put into operation where the line M2 leads directly to the urban and regional train station instead of the current service via Rosa Luxemburg Platz to Hackescher Markt The previous route along Alt and Neu Schonhauser Strasse no longer carries regular services but operates only as a feeder line On 4 September 2011 a one and a half kilometer long new line from the Adlershof S Bahn station was opened It runs from the Adlershof science and business hub WISTA to the provisional terminus provisional terminus Karl Ziegler Strasse Wikidata at the Adlershof campus of the Humboldt University of Berlin The route with three newly built stops cost 13 million euros and was first serviced by lines 60 and 61 at overlapping 10 minute intervals Since 13 December 2015 line 63 has run to Karl Ziegler Street replacing line 60 The connection was originally planned for completion in 1999 However the plan approval procedure was only completed in 2002 Shortly before the plan approval decision expired after five years the project was approved on 9 August 2007 and soon after the first masts for the overhead line were set up It was expected to carry 9 000 passengers per workday On 31 October 2021 it was again extended from Karl Ziegler Strasse via Landschaftspark Johannisthal de to Schoneweide de via the Gross Berliner Damm de There are also some minor closures Closures from 1990 Date Streets1993 01 01 S Bahnhof Adlershof Kopenicker Strasse Kopenicker Strasse de Grunauer Strasse de Am Falkenberg1993 05 23 Hauptstrasse de before Karlshorster Strasse 1997 12 20 Am Weidendamm between Friedrichstrasse and Planckstrasse Planckstrasse Wikidata between Am Weidendamm and Georgenstrasse 2000 09 29 Franzosisch Buchholz Parkstrasse Elfenallee Gravensteinstrasse reversing loop Grunstrasse 2007 05 30 Alte Schonhauser Strasse Neue Schonhauser Strasse still exists as operational route 2013 08 26 Chausseestrasse between Invalidenstrasse and Wohlertstrasse de Schwartzkopffstrasse de Pflugstrasse de Wohlertstrasse de Towards the Hauptbahnhof Edit At the timetable change on 14 December 2014 a new tram line was opened from Naturkundemuseum to Hauptbahnhof via Invalidenstrasse with the final stop at Luneburger Strasse in the district of Alt Moabit The double track line is 2 3 kilometers long to the main station and new stops have been built on the Chausseestrasse the Invalidenpark and the Hauptbahnhof This is followed by the 1 1 km single track block bypass that has three stops at Lesser Ury Weg Lueneburger Strasse and Clara Jaschke Strasse as well as the installation area The planned opening date has already been postponed several times Originally planned to complete in 2002 However the plan was caught by the Administrative Court in 2004 and revised to either 2006 and 2007 However the first 80 metres of the track has already been built during the construction of Berlin Hauptbahnhof 13 A new approval procedure was completed on 15 January 2010 In April 2011 the preparatory construction work had begun The Ministry of Transport revised the 50 metres of the length a two meter wide strip of garden to the state of Berlin to provide enough space for all road users In the course of the work on the new line sector the line branch along Chausseestrasse between Invalidenstrasse and Wohlertstrasse Schwartzkopffstrasse Pflugstrasse Wohlertstrasse was permanently closed on 26 August 2013 The commissioning of the new line was initially only with the line M5 With the restoration of the connection from the Nordbahnhof to the underground station Naturkundemuseum the new line from 28 August 2015 could also be used by the lines M8 and M10 14 Increasing the supply voltage Edit In 2023 work on increasing the supply voltage from 600 V to 750 V was completed 15 Lines Edit nbsp Map as of 2009The first horse drawn tramlines did not use any special labeling as they were radially inferior from the respective endpoints in the center and thus had few points of contact with other lines Only with the expansion of the network into the city center was there a need to distinguish the lines from each other From the 1880s most major German cities therefore used colored target signs or signal boards sometimes both together In Berlin these were always kept in the same combination As identification colors red yellow green and white were used from 1898 additionally blue The panels were one or two colors the latter either half half divided or in thirds with a line in the second color However the number of signal panels used was not sufficient to equip each line with its own color code In addition crossing or side by side lines should run with different signal panels This meant that individual lines had to change their color code several times in the course of their existence As a result of the electrification and the takeover of the New Berlin Horse Ride by the Great Berlin Horse Railways Great Berlin Tram GBPfE GBS increased their number of lines at the turn of the century abruptly With a view of the Hamburg tram where in the summer of 1900 for the first time in German speaking countries line numbers were introduced experimented the GBS from 1901 also with the numbers In the timetables of this time the lines were numbered but could change their order every year The numbering scheme should include not only the GBS but also its secondary lines At the same time letter number combinations as they appeared in the timetable booklet should be avoided The scheme introduced on 6 May 1902 was relatively simple single numbers were reserved for the ring lines two digit for the remaining lines Initially the tens gave information about where the line was going 10 lines were to be found in Moabit 60 lines in Weissensee and 70 lines in Lichtenberg The lines of the West Berlin suburban railway were assigned the letters A to M the Berlin Charlottenburg tram the letters N to Z and the lines of the Southern Berlin suburban railway were numbered with Roman numerals The 1910 taken over by the GBS northeastern Berliner Vorortbahn received in 1913 the line designation NO The colored signal panels remained in parallel until about 1904 In addition the lines created during this period were still colored signal panels with new sometimes even three color color combinations Insertors were marked separately from the March 1903 They bore the letter E behind the line number of their main line In later years these lines increasingly took over the tasks of booster drives and were therefore shown in the timetables as separate lines On 15 April 1912 the GBS introduced the first line with three digit number The 164 was created by extending the 64 which was maintained in parallel In the following months more lines were provided with 100 numbers or newly set up usually as a line pair to the existing line The surrounding businesses were not affected by the change in May 1902 and set on their own markings The lines of the urban trams and the meterspurigen lines of the Teltower circular orbits were still marked with signal panels on the other hand the BESTAG and in Heiligensee not the lines but only the targets were marked with different colored signs In 1908 the Spandauer Strassenbahn introduced the line identification with letters which corresponded to the initial letter of the destination line P to Pichelsdorf etc in 1917 the company switched to numbers In Copenick the lines were marked from 1906 with numbers from 1910 additionally with colored signal panels for the individual routes red lines to Friedrichshagen etc The Berlin Ostbahnen used from 1913 also like the SBV Roman numbers as line numbers The other companies including the standard gauge lines of the Teltower Kreisbahnen did not use a line marking With the merger of companies for the Berlin tram the GBS s numbering scheme was extended to cover the rest of the network Usually those numbers are assigned whose lines were continued during the World War I For example it came about that the lines operating in Kopenick received mainly 80s numbers Letters were still awarded to the tram lines in the BVG until 1924 after which it was reserved for the suburban tariff buses With the outbreak of the Second World War the Berlin public transport companies had to stop a large part of the bus traffic to save fuel Tram traffic has been extended accordingly The newly established amplifier lines contributed to the distinction of the master lines 200 and 300 numbers From 1941 the night routes of the bus and the tram networks were later classified into the 400 series numbers The measures were existed until the end of the war The last 100 numbers were renumbered on 31 May 1949 After the administrative separation of the BVG initially only changed the numbering scheme Tram lines running from the east to the west of Berlin kept their number after the grid separation in 1953 and as a result of network thinning individual lines were disappeared The BVG West waived from July 1966 the prefix A on the bus lines the BVG Ost waived on 1 January 1968 While in the west tram traffic was stopped 15 months later the passenger in the east could not tell from the line number whether it was a tram or bus line The Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe therefore planned to systematise their network in the 1970s The city center lines of the tram should receive the line numbers 1 to 30 in Kopenick should retain their 80s numbers The remaining numbers were intended for the bus Night lines received from 1973 uniformly 100 numbers for the tram were initially provided only the numbers from 120 The conversion of the daily lines was only partially completed After the reunification in two steps a uniform numbering scheme was introduced which included the lines in the state of Brandenburg The Berlin tram was assigned the line number range from 1 to 86 then followed by the overland operations in Woltersdorf Schoneiche and Strausberg with the numbers 87 to 89 The Potsdam tram received the 90s line numbers E lines were no longer listed separately in the timetable but the amplifiers continued to operate as such until 2004 Night lines were indicated on both means of transport by a preceding N and the three digit line numbers were henceforth intended for the bus routes The first conversion of 2 June 1991 followed the Berlin tram lines on 23 May 1993 The network was reorganized and divided into five number ranges The main focus was on the focus on the historical center Single lines formed the radial main network 10 lines their supplementary network 20er lines were intended for the ring and Tangentiallinien There were 50 lines in the district of Pankow 60 lines in the district of Kopenick analogous to the bus lines there BVG had instituted a new line structure where the BVG has 22 lines since 2004 1 16 MetroTram also uses the symbol nbsp On 12 December 2004 BVG had introduced the transport concept BVG 2005 The main content was the introduction of metro lines on busy routes where there are no S Bahn or U Bahn In the tram network therefore nine tram lines under MetroTram were introduced and the other lines have permanently rearranged The numbering scheme is that it was similar to the 1993 scheme but has undergone major adjustments Metro lines with a single digit number travel through the radial main network as a rule the line number corresponds to that of 1993 so the lines became 2 3 and 4 into M4 the 5 into M5 and so on In addition the two Pankow lines 52 and 53 were included as line M1 in the main scheme The supplementary lines of the radials continue to carry 10 numbers unless they have been merged into the amplifier of the metro line Metro lines of the ring and tangential network received the numbers in the 10 range whose supplementary lines retain the 20 range An example is the retrofitted line route 37 which together with the lines of M17 and 27 runs a common route Of the 50 routes remained the only one of the 50 the 60 lines were remained untouched by these measures nbsp Mitte Am Kupfergraben Niederschonhausen Schillerstrasse Rosenthal Nord nbsp S U Alexanderplatz Dircksenstrasse Am Steinberg Heinersdorf nbsp S Hackescher Markt Hohenschonhausen Zingster Strasse Falkenberg nbsp S U Hauptbahnhof S Hackescher Markt Hohenschonhausen Zingster Strasse nbsp S Hackescher Markt Landsberger Allee Petersburger Strasse Hellersdorf Riesaer Strasse nbsp S U Hauptbahnhof Landsberger Allee Petersburger Strasse Ahrensfelde Stadtgrenze nbsp U Turmstrasse S U Warschauer Strasse nbsp Wedding Virchow Klinikum S Warschauer Strasse nbsp Falkenberg Hohenschonhausen Gehrenseestrasse S Adlershof nbsp Mitte Am Kupfergraben Weissensee Pasedagplatz nbsp S U Frankfurter Allee Ahrensfelde Stadtgrenze nbsp S Springpfuhl Hellersdorf Riesaer Strasse nbsp S U Lichtenberg Gudrunstrasse S Schoneweide via Eldenaer Strasse Frankfurter Tor Boxhagener Strasse nbsp Krankenhaus Kopenick Weissensee Pasedagplatz nbsp S U Lichtenberg Gudrunstrasse S Schoneweide via Rhinstrasse Treskowallee nbsp Wedding Virchow Klinikum Prenzlauer Berg Bjornsonstrasse Franzosisch Buchholz Guyotstrasse nbsp Johannisthal Haeckelstrasse Friedrichshagen Altes Wasserwerk nbsp S Schoneweide S Adlershof Rahnsdorf Waldschanke nbsp Wendenschloss S Mahlsdorf nbsp Adlershof Landschaftspark Johannisthal Mahlsdorf Rahnsdorfer Strasse nbsp Krankenhaus Kopenick S Schoneweide nbsp S Kopenick Alt SchmockwitzTram line 68 was named by the National Geographic Society as one of the ten great streetcar routes worldwide 17 Future plans EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Tramway construction at Wista AdlershofSince December 2016 Berlin has planned major light rail expansion which has been revived Earlier plans has been there since 2000 for completion between 2005 and 2010 18 There will be no tramway closures Four tram projects already under development by BVG were being prioritised for construction with work beginning from 2017 to 2021 with only the first two of the four starting construction in said time span 19 20 The other two have had construction delayed for a later time 21 22 Berlin Hauptbahnhof Turmstrasse U Bahn station 19 Schoneweide Wista Adlershof Rahnsdorfer Strasse Mahlsdorf S Bahn station 22 A planned extension to Ostkreuz from Lichtenberg 21 Five more tram lines will also be developed and construction will begin after 2021 these will see trams returning to parts of inner West Berlin for the first time since the 1960s in addition to the already dense network expansion in the city These include Alexanderplatz Kulturforum Kleistpark Rathaus Steglitz Turmstrasse Mierendorffplatz Warschauer Strasse S Bahn U Bahn station Hermannplatz connection from Heinersdorf to the Blankenburger Pflasterweg development area and Pankow Heinersdorf Weissensee These are the long term plans after 2026 which will see more direct tram networks in the West Berlin area S Bahnhof Schoneweide Sonnenallee Hermannplatz Potsdamer Platz M9 M41 Potsdamer Platz Wittenbergplatz Zoologischer Garten Mierendorffplatz Jungfernheide Urban Tech Republic Tegel Airport Pankow Wollankstrasse Turmstrasse M27 Mierendorffplatz Luisenplatz Alexanderplatz Spittelmarkt Lindenstrasse Hallesches Tor Mehringdamm it can be M2 Sterndamm Johannisthaler Chaussee Lutzowstrasse Zoologischer Garten Berlin Hauptbahnhof Perleberger Strasse Turmstrasse Rathaus PankowFurther long term plans after 2031 Rathaus Spandau Hahneberg Falkenseer Platz Freudstrasse Rathaus Steglitz Friedenfelser Strasse Virchow Klinikum Ernst Reuter Platz Zoologischer Garten Mahlsdorf Riesaer StrasseIn Johannisthal a route over the Sterndamm and the Stubenrauchstrasse to the subway station at Zwickauer Damm in Rudow or to the subway station at Johannisthaler Chaussee has been proposed This route serves the residential areas around the Zwickauer Damm and the Eisenhutweg making for a better public transport connection For this route space was reserved for the tram tracks as a preliminary step in the construction of the Hermann Gladenbeck Bridge over the A 113 and the Massantenbrucke over the Teltowkanal 2004 Likewise the existing track bed of the Neukolln Mittenwalder railway can be used behind the Massantenbrucke or Hermann Gladenbeck bridge which is just a short distance behind the underground station at Zwickauer Damm Until 2006 there were deliberations to suspend parts of lines M1 M2 12 27 60 and 61 as soon as the parts of the road then considered unprofitable were to be renewed for further operation However these were not realized in fact some of the mentioned routes have now been refurbished the headways have been consolidated on them or as already mentioned there are even plans for extensions Rolling stock Edit nbsp BVG Tatra KT4D trams in Grosse PrasidentenstrasseBerlin s tram system has two different families of vehicles There are low floor six axle double articulated GTU GTO and GTZO formerly GT6N and GT6N ZR trams in unidirectional and bidirectional versions and since 2008 the Bombardier Flexity Berlin The Tatra KT4 trams were phased out by 2021 and the Communist era T6A2 B6A2 trams were phased out by 2007 The number of trams has shrunk continuously The BVB had 1 024 vehicles while currently there are about 600 The reduction is possible because the new low floor cars on average achieve more than twice the mileage per year 100 000 km 62 137 mi and being longer carry more passengers and therefore rarely operate in multiple In July 2006 the cost of energy per vehicle kilometer was tram 0 33 coupled set 0 45 bus 0 42 underground train 1 18 23 DUWAG GT6N Edit nbsp 1067 Duwag GT6N in Grosse PrasidentenstrasseBetween 1992 and 2003 45 bidirectional GT6N ZRs and 105 unidirectional GT6Ns were purchased The cars have a width of 2 30 m 7 ft 7 in and a length of 26 80 m 87 ft 11 in They can carry 150 passengers and can run as coupled sets 134 cars were leased to a US investor and leased back The SNB has accrued more than 157 million 205 million to hedge potential losses from cross border business 24 In the end of 2011 and beginning of 2012 the SNB began the upgrading of 1006 and 1016 as a sample exercise They were provided with a new drive technology and new software such as the Flexitys The only mutually detachable vehicles are distinguished by new car numbers 1506 and 1516 After completion of the first two the BVG ordered the upgrading of all other cars of the GT6N and GT6N ZR cars 25 Identically to 1506 and 1516 the first 77 cars were provided with a new drive technology and new software and upgraded to type GTU trains in the years 2012 2016 All GTU trains got increased car numbers by 500 The new car numbers are 1502 1605 with gaps 25 The rest of the GT6N and all of the GT6N ZR got a new on board unit instead upgrading them to type GTO and GTZO in the years 2016 2017 Their numbers were increased by 200 The new car numbers are 1201 1263 with gaps for the GTO and 2201 2245 for the GTZO 25 Flexity Berlin Edit nbsp 8029 Bombardier Flexity Berlin in Hackescher MarktIn April 2005 a European tender was issued for low floor trams half unidirectional and half bidirectional vehicles The latter will respond better to the BVG and construction faults and build on certain routes for cost savings The Vienna tramway tram type ULF was tested in passenger service On 12 June 2006 the BVG decided to procure new trams These are based on the tested Incentro referred to by Bombardier as Flexity Berlin In October 2008 for 13 million 17 million four prototypes were ordered and since then extensively tested There are one and two way cars respectively 30 8 m 101 ft 1 in and 40 m 131 ft 3 in in length carrying about 180 or 240 passengers Use in coupled sets is not possible On 29 June 2009 the supervisory board of the BVG decided to buy 99 Flexity cars 40 of which will be long and 59 short versions for 305 3 million 397 9 million In September 2011 the first 13 long cars began to be delivered To replace all old Tatra cars a further 33 costing 92 3 million 120 3 million may need to be ordered in 2017 26 The trams will be manufactured at Bombardier s Bautzen works or Hennigsdorf In June 2012 the supervisory board approved the BVG 2nd Serial recall of an additional 39 trams of type Flexity Berlin Considering the order of over 99 vehicles from 2010 that means a total of 38 vehicles and 47 long bidirectional vehicles as well as 53 short bidirectional vehicles will be ordered from the manufacturer Bombardier Transportation Thus the SNB responds to both the very positive development of passenger numbers at the tram and allows bidirectional vehicles the eventual abandonment of turning loops and enhancing the design stops Once this procurement is secured in 2017 then the old Tatra cars can be scrapped The State of Berlin s funded budget is 439 1 million 572 7 million 27 The new cars have 2 4 m 7 ft 10 in wheel spacing 10 cm 3 9 in longer than the existing low floor trams The track width was chosen so that modifications in the network are not necessary 28 This affects only the routes upon which the Flexities will be operated They are unable to run in Kopenick and on parts of the network in Pankow In December 2015 BVG exercised an option for another 47 Flexity trams from Bombardier to handle increased ridership 29 Tram depots Edit nbsp Open Day 2009 at BVG s Berlin Lichtenberg depot In front of the maintenance shop typical Berlin trams are presented From left to right new to old Depots are required for stabling and maintenance purposes BVG has seven operational tram depots five of which are used for stabling service trams Kniprodestrasse in Friedrichshain on the east side of the junction of Kniprodestrasse and Conrad Blenkle Strasse This depot is used for track storage and rail grinding machinery only It is on bus route 200 and the access tracks connect to tram line M10 Kopenick on the west side of Wendenschlossstrasse south of the junction with Muggelheimer Strasse The depot entrance is on tram route 62 Lichtenberg on the east side of Siegfriedstrasse north of Lichtenberg U Bahn station The depot entrance is on tram routes 21 amp 37 and bus routes 240 amp 256 Marzahn on the south side of Landsberger Allee east of Blumberger Damm The depot has a tram stop on the M6 and 18 lines Bus route 197 also passes the depot Nalepastrasse on the east side of Nalepastrasse in Oberschoneweide Right at the depot tram line 61 terminates and bus line 365 stops not far from it Niederschonhausen on the north east corner of the junction of Deitzgenstrasse and Schillerstrasse The depot is on tram line M1 It is currently not in use and the future of it is uncertain 30 Weissensee on the north side of Bernkasteler Strasse near the junction of Berliner Allee and Rennbahnstrasse The depot entrance is not directly passed by any bus or tram route but tram routes 12 amp 27 and bus routes 156 255 amp 259 serve the adjacent Berliner Allee Rennbahnstrasse tram stop Out of service trams returning to Nalepastrasse and Weissensee depot remain in service until reaching the special tram stop at each depot Related systems EditAround Berlin there are some additional tram systems that do not belong to the BVG but are integrated with the greater VBB system Potsdam Tramway lines 91 99 Woltersdorf Tramway line 87 partly in Berlin Schoneiche Rudersdorf Tramway line 88 partly in Berlin Strausberg Railway line 89 a tram line located in the town of Strausberg The last three companies are located in the eastern suburbs at the eastern edge of Berlin Each of them has only one line See also Edit nbsp Transport portal nbsp Germany portalGross Lichterfelde Tramway List of urban tram networks in Germany Strausberger Eisenbahn Trams in Germany Potsdam TramwayReferences EditInline references Edit a b c The company in brief Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe BVG Retrieved 5 March 2015 a b Travel information Overview of our lines Metrotram BVG Retrieved 5 March 2015 a b Travel information Overview of our lines Tram BVG Retrieved 5 March 2015 a b Lines amp Networks Means of transport and lines Tram Trams BVG Archived from the original on 27 July 2014 Retrieved 30 April 2014 Zahlenspiegel 2018 Statistics 2018 PDF in German Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe BVG 31 December 2018 p 2 Retrieved 26 June 2019 a b Berliner Strassenbahn mit langer Tradition Berlin Trams Long Tradition in German BVG Retrieved 5 March 2015 Wien hat das funftgrosste Strassenbahnnetz der Welt Vienna has the fifth largest tramway network in the world wienerlinien at in German Wiener Linien 2011 Archived from the original on 31 October 2013 Retrieved 31 August 2013 Textagentur Grimm de Simon Kremser Elfi Bendikat Offentliche Nahverkehrspolitik in Berlin und Paris 1839 bis 1914 p 103 at Google Books Walter de Gruyter Seite 103 http www ceciliengaerten berlin de web zeitrahmen 1800 1899 html Archived 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Cecilengarten Berlin Zeitrahmen Tram Travels Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe BVG Wolfgang Kramer 2001 Arbeitskreis Berliner Nahverkehr e V ed Linienchronik der Berliner Strassenbahn 1945 1993 in German Berlin a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Aktuelle Meldungen BVG Unternehmen Aktuelle Meldungen BVG Unternehmen Berlin tram network ups the voltage Official BVG tramway map PDF Top 10 Trolley Rides Travel National Geographic 21 January 2010 http www railjournal com index php light rail berlin plans major light rail expansion html Berlin plans major light rail expansion a b Die neue Ost West Verbindung BVG Tram in German Retrieved 4 February 2022 Anschluss an die Zukunft BVG Tram in German Retrieved 4 February 2022 a b Schluss mit langen Umsteigewegen BVG Tram in German Retrieved 4 February 2022 a b Wir machen den Sud Osten fit BVG Tram in German Retrieved 4 February 2022 Small request in the Berlin parliament printed matter 15 13611 PDF 128 KB Peter Neumann Now threaten heavy losses Berliner Zeitung 14 November 2008 a b c GTO GTU GTZO Berliner Linienchronik in German 11 June 2023 Retrieved 11 June 2023 Klaus Kurpjuweit Traffic LPP Flexity trams art18614 2836566 300 million for new streetcars The Guardian 1 July 2009 BVG de das Unternehmen Presse Pressemitteilungen Pressemitteilung vom 22 Juni 2012 Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 15 January 2014 Jurgen Sember Hans Eckhard Warns Purchasing new trams for the Berlin Transport Authority European tender an experience report In ZEVrail Glasers Annalen 131 10 October 2007 pp 395 401 More Flexity Berlin trams ordered Railway Gazette International 21 December 2015 Wahner Bernd 20 May 2022 BVG will einstigen Betriebshof Niederschonhausen als Reserve behalten BVG wants to keep the former tram depot Niederschonhausen as reserve Berliner Woche in German Retrieved 13 July 2023 Bibliography Edit Works in English and German Edit Sigurd Hilkenbach Wolfgang Kramer und Claude Jeanmaire Berliner Strassenbahnen Die Geschichte der Berliner Strassenbahn Gesellschaften seit 1865 Archive No 6 Verlag Eisenbahn Villigen AG Schweiz 1973 ISBN 3 85649 006 X Sigurd Hilkenbach Wolfgang Kramer und Claude Jeanmaire Berliner Strassenbahngeschichte II Ein Bericht uber die Entwicklung der Strassenbahn in Berlin nach 1920 Archive No 31 Verlag Eisenbahn Villigen AG Schweiz 1977 ISBN 3 85649 031 0 Sigurd Hilkenbach Wolfgang Kramer und Claude Jeanmaire Die Strassenbahnlinien im westlichen Teil Berlins Der Wiederaufbau ab 1945 und die Stillegung im Westteil der Stadt bis 1967 2 Bande Archive Nos 46 52 Verlag Eisenbahn Villigen AG Schweiz 1986 ISBN 3 85649 046 9 Schwandl Robert 2012 Schwandl s Tram Atlas Deutschland in German and English 3rd ed Berlin Robert Schwandl Verlag pp 8 13 ISBN 9783936573336 Works in German Edit Arbeitsgemeinschaft Blickpunkt Strassenbahn e V Strassenbahnatlas Deutschland 1996 Berlin ISBN 3 926524 14 6 Denkmalpflege Verein Nahverkehr Berlin e V Rekowagen Die etwas hartere Art Strassenbahn zu fahren Verlag GVE Berlin 1996 ISBN 3 89218 045 8 Denkmalpflege Verein Nahverkehr Berlin e V Historische Nahverkehrsfahrzeuge Berlin und Brandenburg Verlag GVE Berlin 2001 ISBN 3 89218 027 X Denkmalpflege Verein Nahverkehr Berlin e V 100 Jahre Elektrische in Kopenick Verlag GVE Berlin 2003 ISBN 3 89218 082 2 Sigurd Hilkenbach und Wolfgang Kramer Die Strassenbahnen in Berlin Alba Dusseldorf 1994 ISBN 3 87094 351 3 Sigurd Hilkenbach und Wolfgang Kramer Die Strassenbahn der Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe BVG Ost BVB 1949 1991 Transpress Stuttgart 1997 ISBN 3 613 71063 3 Wolfgang Kramer und Heinz Jung Linienchronik der Elektrischen Strassenbahn von Berlin 2 volumes Arbeitskreis Berliner Nahverkehr e V 1994 Vol 1 2001 Vol 2 Holger Orb und Tilo Schutz Strassenbahn fur ganz Berlin Geschichte Konzeption Stadtebau Jaron Berlin 2000 ISBN 3 89773 024 3External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Berlin Tramway BVG official website Tram network s page on BVG website Berlin tramway network map Track plan of the Berlin tram system Berlin database photo gallery and Berlin tram list at Urban Electric Transit in various languages including English Berlin database photo gallery at Phototrans in various languages including English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trams in Berlin amp oldid 1174857380, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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