fbpx
Wikipedia

ÖBB

The Austrian Federal Railways (German: Österreichische Bundesbahnen, formally Österreichische Bundesbahnen-Holding Aktiengesellschaft (lit. "Austrian Federal Railways Holding Stock Company") and formerly the Bundesbahnen Österreich or BBÖ), now commonly known as ÖBB, is the national railway company of Austria, and the administrator of Liechtenstein's railways. The ÖBB group is owned entirely by the Republic of Austria, and is divided into several separate businesses that manage the infrastructure and operate passenger and freight services.

Austrian Federal Railways
Company typeAktiengesellschaft
IndustryTransport
PredecessorErste Eisenbahnwagen-Leihgesellschaft 
HeadquartersÖBB Unternehmenszentrale, ,
Area served
Central Europe
Key people
Andreas Matthä
ProductsRail transport, Cargo transport, Services
€6,945 million (2019)
€169 million (2019)
Total assets €31,254 million (2019)
Total equity €2,645 million (2019)
OwnerRepublic of Austria
Number of employees
41.904 (2019)
Divisions
Websitewww.oebb.at
Footnotes / references
[1]
Railjet (RJ), the high-speed-train of ÖBB
Intercity-Express (ICE)
Map of the main network in Austria
InterCity (IC) on the Semmering railway
ÖBB Nightjet (NJ) train in München Hbf
An ÖBB EuroCity (EC) train in Bolzano, South Tyrol
RegionalExpress train (REX) in Vienna
Regional train (R) in Styria
The Vienna S-Bahn is a suburban metro railway network in the Metropolitan area of Vienna
A freight train of Rail Cargo Austria
Shunting locomotive in Upper Austria
The ÖBB runs 9 classification yards in Austria
Salzburg Hauptbahnhof, a junction between local and long-distance transport routes
The current main hall of Linz Hauptbahnhof
Regional train station in Krems, Lower Austria
Typical commuter rail station south of Vienna

The Austrian Federal Railways has had two discrete periods of existence. It was first formed in 1923, using the Bundesbahn Österreich name, as a successor to the Imperial Royal Austrian State Railways (kkStB), but was incorporated into the Deutsche Reichsbahn during the 1938–1945 Anschluss. It was reformed in 1947, under the slightly different name Österreichische Bundesbahnen, and remains in existence in this form.

Major changes currently being made to the Austrian railway network are the construction of the Koralm Railway, the Semmering Base Tunnel and the Brenner Base Tunnel connection with Italy.

Eurobarometer surveys conducted in 2018 showed that satisfaction levels of Austrian rail passengers are among the highest in the European Union when it comes to punctuality, reliability and frequency of trains.[2] Furthermore, with their Nightjet brand, ÖBB operates Europe's largest night train fleet.[3]

Unlike other major railway companies in Europe that offer more flexible cancellation policies, ÖBB only offers two types of tickets: full-price tickets, and cheaper but non-exchangeable and non-refundable tickets.

History edit

  • 1882 – Gradual nationalisation of the railway network of the Austro-Hungarian Empire into the Imperial Royal Austrian State Railways (Kaiserlich-königliche österreichische Staatsbahnen, kkStB). By the outbreak of the World War I, the only major railway in Austria to remain in private hands was the Austrian Southern Railway (Südbahn).
  • 1918 – After the break-up of the Austro-Hungarian Empire following the World War I, the Austrian rump of kkStB remained in state control under the name Deutschösterreichische Staatsbahnen (DÖStB), which was renamed the Österreichische Staatsbahnen (ÖStB) in 1919.
  • 1923 – Foundation of the independent, commercial enterprise, the Bundesbahn Österreich (which used the abbreviation BBÖ, because ÖBB was already taken by the Swiss Oensingen-Balsthal-Bahn). This company took over the assets of the ÖStB and the Südbahn, together with other minor railways.
  • 1938 – The Anschluss of Austria into the German Empire. The BBÖ was taken over by the Deutsche Reichsbahn. During World War II about 41% of the Austrian railway network was destroyed.
  • 1947 – The company was reformed using the slightly different name of Österreichische Bundesbahnen and the abbreviation ÖBB (by that time the Swiss private railway used the abbreviation SP for its goods wagons in international traffic, so its abbreviation ÖBB could now be appropriated) as a state-owned company. Their infrastructure was rebuilt and electrification was accelerated.
  • 1969 – A new federal railway law was enacted. The ÖBB became a non-independent, economic entity, that was run as a branch of the government's industrial programme and remained entirely within the Federal budget.
  • 1992 – The ÖBB were broken out of the federal budget and turned into company with its own legal status (a cross between a GmbH and an AG in Austrian commercial terms). The company is 100% owned by the Republic of Austria. This change had two primary aims: 1. It had to conform to EU rules on the admission of Austria into the European Union. 2. The financial demand on the public purse was to be reduced as a result of improvements in efficiency and the pressure of competition.
  • 2004 – The ÖBB were reorganised into ÖBB Holding AG and a number of operating subsidiaries. The holding company was to oversee the operations of the companies assigned to it, coordinate a coherent strategic approach and allocate tasks for the whole enterprise.[4]
  • 1 January 2005 – The subsidiaries of ÖBB-Holding AG became autonomous and independent operationally.
  • In 2012, ÖBB celebrated the 175th anniversary of the Nordbahn, the earliest predecessor company marking the start of rail transport in Austria. ÖBB CEO Christian Kern inaugurated an exhibition on the company's collaboration with Nazi Germany, named "The Suppressed Years – Railway and National Socialism in Austria 1938–1945". He referred to that period as "the darkest chapter of our company history," adding that the company must accept this period as part of its legacy.[5] The exhibition later went on tour and was presented at the European Parliament's parliamentary building in Brussels.[6]

The Austrian rail system is largely electrified. Electrification of the system began in 1912 but did not reach an advanced state until the 1950s. The last steam locomotive in regular service on the standard gauge network was retired in 1978.

The post-war laws related to the Austrian railways were the:

  • Eisenbahngesetz (EisbG 1957),
  • Schieneninfrastrukturfinanzierungsgesetz (SCHIG 1999),
  • Eisenbahnhochleistungsstreckengesetz (HIG 1999) and
  • Bundesbahngesetz (1992).

Logo history edit

Current structure edit

By a law of August 2009, the organisational structure dating from 2005 was further modified; the railways are under the control of ÖBB-Holding AG, a holding company wholly owned by the Austrian state, under the Ministry of Transport.[9]

The holding company has a number of subsidiaries:[10]

  • ÖBB-Holding AG
    • ÖBB-Personenverkehr AG (Passenger transport)
      • ÖBB-Postbus GmbH
      • ÖBB-Produktion GmbH (50% shares)
      • ÖBB-Technische Services GmbH (75% shares) (railroad vehicle maintenance)
      • Rail Tours Touristik GmbH
      • iMobility GmbH (mobile app developer)
      • ÖV Ticketshop GmbH (online ticket distributor)
    • Rail Cargo Austria AG (RCA) (Freight transport)
      • Rail Cargo Hungaria Zrt.
      • ÖBB-Produktion GmbH (50% shares)
      • ÖBB-Technische Services GmbH (25% shares)
      • Rail Cargo Logistics – Austria GmbH
      • Rail Cargo Carrier Kft.
      • Rail Cargo Operator - CSKD s.r.o
    • ÖBB-Infrastruktur AG (Infrastructure planning, management, and construction)
      • ÖBB-Immobilienmanagement GmbH
      • Mungos Sicher & Sauber GmbH (Security and Cleaning)
      • Rail Equipment GmbH
      • WS Service GmbH (51% shares)
      • Brenner Basistunnel BBT SE (50% shares)
      • Weichenwerk Wörth GmbH (43.05% shares)
    • ÖBB-Business Competence Center GmbH
    • ÖBB-Werbung GmbH
    • ÖBB-Finanzierungsservice GmbH

Infrastructure edit

The infrastructure of the state-owned Austrian network is managed by ÖBB-Infrastruktur AG, which was formed from former infrastructure-related units including Brenner Eisenbahn GmbH. It now manages 9,740 km of track, 788 signal boxes, 247 tunnels, 6,207 bridges and eight hydro-electric power (hep) stations for the 16.7 Hz electrification system, and two hep stations for 50 Hz power generation.

As of 2009 it employed 17,612 staff.[9]

Österreichische Bundesbahnen
Sales Infrastructure
Passenger transport Network
Freight transport Tracks
Traction Signal-/System technology
Technical services Telekom
Power plants Energy network
Facility management Planning/Engineering
Facility management

Statistics edit

According to the Annual Report 2013, the company employs 39,513, there of 13,599 employees, 24,251 tenured employees [clarification needed] and 1,663 apprentices. In 2013, ÖBB-Personenverkehr AG carried 469 million passengers of which 235 million were bus passengers.[11] The ÖBB has

  • 4,859 km (3,020 route miles); 72% electrified
  • 1,128 train stations
  • 1,093 locomotives
  • 2,799 passenger vehicles
  • 26,518 freight wagons
  • 2,200 busses
  • ÖBB's bus services travel 52,500,000 km (32,621,988 mi) per year.

Principal Lines edit

Rail links to adjacent countries edit

All neighbouring railways have the same gauge.

  • Czech Republic  — voltage and frequency change to 25 kV 50 Hz AC
  • Germany  — same voltage and frequency 15 kV 16.7 Hz AC
  • Hungary  — voltage and frequency change to 25 kV 50 Hz AC
  • Italy — voltage and frequency change to 3 kV DC
  • Liechtenstein  — same voltage and frequency 15 kV 16.7 Hz AC
  • Slovakia  — voltage and frequency change to 25 kV 50 Hz AC
  • Slovenia — voltage and frequency change to 3 kV DC
  • Switzerland  — same voltage and frequency 15 kV 16.7 Hz AC

Active Rolling Stock edit

Electric Locomotives edit

Diesel Locomotives edit

Electrical multiple units edit

Diesel Railcars edit

Maintenance of way equipment edit

See also edit

Other railways in Austria edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Geschäftsbericht 2019 (annual report 2019)" (PDF). presse.oebb.at/en/. Alphabet Inc. Retrieved June 17, 2020.
  2. ^ "Mobility and transport" (PDF).
  3. ^ "Austrian Federal Railways Orders Additional Night Trains from Siemens". 10 August 2021.
  4. ^ ÖBB-Holding AG. "Aufgaben".
  5. ^ ""Verdrängte Jahre – Bahn und Nationalsozialismus in Österreich 1938–1945"" (in German). erinnern.at. Retrieved 21 May 2016.
  6. ^ . ÖBB. 2014. Archived from the original on 21 June 2019. Retrieved 21 May 2019.
  7. ^ Richard Deiss: Silberling und Bügeleisen: 1000 Spitznamen in Transport und Verkehr und was dahinter steckt. Book on Demand 2010, Seite 141. ISBN 978-3-83-916269-9.
  8. ^ Logo der Österreichischen Bundesbahnen bis 2004 - Pflatsch, ostarichi.org
  9. ^ a b Richter, Karl Arne, ed. (2010). Europäische Bahnen '11. Hamburg: Eurailpress. ISBN 978-3-7771-0413-3.
  10. ^ "Organigramm". ÖBB. Retrieved March 19, 2022.
  11. ^ . ÖBB. Archived from the original on 2016-06-18. Retrieved 2014-04-01.

External links edit

  Media related to Österreichische Bundesbahnen at Wikimedia Commons

  • Official website
  • International relations CER
  • report of audit court 2006 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine
  • modification of railroad law 2004
  • Winchester, Clarence, ed. (1936), "Austria's rail transport", Railway Wonders of the World, pp. 971–977, illustrated account of Austrian railways in the 1930s.
  • Documents and clippings about ÖBB in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

öbb, this, article, about, austrian, railway, national, company, other, uses, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, german, december, 2020, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translate. This article is about the Austrian railway national company For other uses see OBB You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German December 2020 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the German article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 9 139 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de Osterreichische Bundesbahnen see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated de Osterreichische Bundesbahnen to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Austrian Federal Railways German Osterreichische Bundesbahnen formally Osterreichische Bundesbahnen Holding Aktiengesellschaft lit Austrian Federal Railways Holding Stock Company and formerly the Bundesbahnen Osterreich or BBO now commonly known as OBB is the national railway company of Austria and the administrator of Liechtenstein s railways The OBB group is owned entirely by the Republic of Austria and is divided into several separate businesses that manage the infrastructure and operate passenger and freight services Austrian Federal RailwaysCompany typeAktiengesellschaftIndustryTransportPredecessorErste Eisenbahnwagen Leihgesellschaft HeadquartersOBB Unternehmenszentrale Vienna AustriaArea servedCentral EuropeKey peopleAndreas MatthaProductsRail transport Cargo transport ServicesOperating income 6 945 million 2019 Net income 169 million 2019 Total assets 31 254 million 2019 Total equity 2 645 million 2019 OwnerRepublic of AustriaNumber of employees41 904 2019 DivisionsOBB Personenverkehr AG Rail Cargo Austria AG OBB Infrastruktur AGWebsitewww oebb atFootnotes references 1 Railjet RJ the high speed train of OBB Intercity Express ICE Map of the main network in Austria InterCity IC on the Semmering railway OBB Nightjet NJ train in Munchen Hbf An OBB EuroCity EC train in Bolzano South Tyrol RegionalExpress train REX in Vienna Regional train R in Styria The Vienna S Bahn is a suburban metro railway network in the Metropolitan area of Vienna A freight train of Rail Cargo Austria Shunting locomotive in Upper Austria The OBB runs 9 classification yards in Austria Salzburg Hauptbahnhof a junction between local and long distance transport routes The current main hall of Linz Hauptbahnhof Regional train station in Krems Lower Austria Typical commuter rail station south of Vienna The Austrian Federal Railways has had two discrete periods of existence It was first formed in 1923 using the Bundesbahn Osterreich name as a successor to the Imperial Royal Austrian State Railways kkStB but was incorporated into the Deutsche Reichsbahn during the 1938 1945 Anschluss It was reformed in 1947 under the slightly different name Osterreichische Bundesbahnen and remains in existence in this form Major changes currently being made to the Austrian railway network are the construction of the Koralm Railway the Semmering Base Tunnel and the Brenner Base Tunnel connection with Italy Eurobarometer surveys conducted in 2018 showed that satisfaction levels of Austrian rail passengers are among the highest in the European Union when it comes to punctuality reliability and frequency of trains 2 Furthermore with their Nightjet brand OBB operates Europe s largest night train fleet 3 Unlike other major railway companies in Europe that offer more flexible cancellation policies OBB only offers two types of tickets full price tickets and cheaper but non exchangeable and non refundable tickets Contents 1 History 2 Logo history 3 Current structure 4 Infrastructure 5 Statistics 6 Principal Lines 7 Rail links to adjacent countries 8 Active Rolling Stock 8 1 Electric Locomotives 8 2 Diesel Locomotives 8 3 Electrical multiple units 8 4 Diesel Railcars 8 5 Maintenance of way equipment 9 See also 9 1 Other railways in Austria 10 References 11 External linksHistory editFurther information Economy of Austria Hungary Railways 1882 Gradual nationalisation of the railway network of the Austro Hungarian Empire into the Imperial Royal Austrian State Railways Kaiserlich konigliche osterreichische Staatsbahnen kkStB By the outbreak of the World War I the only major railway in Austria to remain in private hands was the Austrian Southern Railway Sudbahn 1918 After the break up of the Austro Hungarian Empire following the World War I the Austrian rump of kkStB remained in state control under the name Deutschosterreichische Staatsbahnen DOStB which was renamed the Osterreichische Staatsbahnen OStB in 1919 1923 Foundation of the independent commercial enterprise the Bundesbahn Osterreich which used the abbreviation BBO because OBB was already taken by the Swiss Oensingen Balsthal Bahn This company took over the assets of the OStB and the Sudbahn together with other minor railways 1938 The Anschluss of Austria into the German Empire The BBO was taken over by the Deutsche Reichsbahn During World War II about 41 of the Austrian railway network was destroyed 1947 The company was reformed using the slightly different name of Osterreichische Bundesbahnen and the abbreviation OBB by that time the Swiss private railway used the abbreviation SP for its goods wagons in international traffic so its abbreviation OBB could now be appropriated as a state owned company Their infrastructure was rebuilt and electrification was accelerated 1969 A new federal railway law was enacted The OBB became a non independent economic entity that was run as a branch of the government s industrial programme and remained entirely within the Federal budget 1992 The OBB were broken out of the federal budget and turned into company with its own legal status a cross between a GmbH and an AG in Austrian commercial terms The company is 100 owned by the Republic of Austria This change had two primary aims 1 It had to conform to EU rules on the admission of Austria into the European Union 2 The financial demand on the public purse was to be reduced as a result of improvements in efficiency and the pressure of competition 2004 The OBB were reorganised into OBB Holding AG and a number of operating subsidiaries The holding company was to oversee the operations of the companies assigned to it coordinate a coherent strategic approach and allocate tasks for the whole enterprise 4 1 January 2005 The subsidiaries of OBB Holding AG became autonomous and independent operationally In 2012 OBB celebrated the 175th anniversary of the Nordbahn the earliest predecessor company marking the start of rail transport in Austria OBB CEO Christian Kern inaugurated an exhibition on the company s collaboration with Nazi Germany named The Suppressed Years Railway and National Socialism in Austria 1938 1945 He referred to that period as the darkest chapter of our company history adding that the company must accept this period as part of its legacy 5 The exhibition later went on tour and was presented at the European Parliament s parliamentary building in Brussels 6 The Austrian rail system is largely electrified Electrification of the system began in 1912 but did not reach an advanced state until the 1950s The last steam locomotive in regular service on the standard gauge network was retired in 1978 The post war laws related to the Austrian railways were the Eisenbahngesetz EisbG 1957 Schieneninfrastrukturfinanzierungsgesetz SCHIG 1999 Eisenbahnhochleistungsstreckengesetz HIG 1999 and Bundesbahngesetz 1992 Logo history edit nbsp OBB s first logo It consists of a flying wheel styled symbol with one B on each side of the O and was used from 1960 to 1974 nbsp OBB s second logo consists of a stylized O symbol with extending arrows Within Austria it was nicknamed the Pflatsch de lit spatter spot and was officially used from 1974 to 2004 although some stations and vehicles used it up to the mid late 2010s It continued to be used when OBB s current logo was introduced in 1998 7 8 nbsp This is a special variant of the Pflatsch logo created in 1987 for the 150th anniversary of railway in Austria nbsp This combination of the old Pflatsch logo and a new OBB stylized text was rarely used due to the former s popularity within Austria It was in use between 1998 and 2004 nbsp The current OBB logo used since 1998 Current structure editBy a law of August 2009 the organisational structure dating from 2005 was further modified the railways are under the control of OBB Holding AG a holding company wholly owned by the Austrian state under the Ministry of Transport 9 The holding company has a number of subsidiaries 10 OBB Holding AG OBB Personenverkehr AG Passenger transport OBB Postbus GmbH OBB Produktion GmbH 50 shares OBB Technische Services GmbH 75 shares railroad vehicle maintenance Rail Tours Touristik GmbH iMobility GmbH mobile app developer OV Ticketshop GmbH online ticket distributor Rail Cargo Austria AG RCA Freight transport Rail Cargo Hungaria Zrt OBB Produktion GmbH 50 shares OBB Technische Services GmbH 25 shares Rail Cargo Logistics Austria GmbH Rail Cargo Carrier Kft Rail Cargo Operator CSKD s r o OBB Infrastruktur AG Infrastructure planning management and construction OBB Immobilienmanagement GmbH Mungos Sicher amp Sauber GmbH Security and Cleaning Rail Equipment GmbH WS Service GmbH 51 shares Brenner Basistunnel BBT SE 50 shares Weichenwerk Worth GmbH 43 05 shares OBB Business Competence Center GmbH OBB Werbung GmbH OBB Finanzierungsservice GmbHInfrastructure editThe infrastructure of the state owned Austrian network is managed by OBB Infrastruktur AG which was formed from former infrastructure related units including Brenner Eisenbahn GmbH It now manages 9 740 km of track 788 signal boxes 247 tunnels 6 207 bridges and eight hydro electric power hep stations for the 16 7 Hz electrification system and two hep stations for 50 Hz power generation As of 2009 it employed 17 612 staff 9 Osterreichische Bundesbahnen Sales Infrastructure Passenger transport Network Freight transport Tracks Traction Signal System technology Technical services Telekom Power plants Energy network Facility management Planning Engineering Facility managementStatistics editAccording to the Annual Report 2013 the company employs 39 513 there of 13 599 employees 24 251 tenured employees clarification needed and 1 663 apprentices In 2013 OBB Personenverkehr AG carried 469 million passengers of which 235 million were bus passengers 11 The OBB has 4 859 km 3 020 route miles 72 electrified 1 128 train stations 1 093 locomotives 2 799 passenger vehicles 26 518 freight wagons 2 200 busses OBB s bus services travel 52 500 000 km 32 621 988 mi per year Principal Lines editWestern Railway from Wien Westbahnhof via St Polten Hauptbahnhof and Linz Hauptbahnhof to Salzburg Hauptbahnhof including a parallel high speed rail section New Western Railway from Wien Meidling railway station to Linz Southern Railway from Wien Hauptbahnhof Wien Meidling to Graz Hauptbahnhof including the Semmering railway section a UNESCO World Heritage Site continuation to Klagenfurt by the Koralm Railway under construction Northern Railway from Wien Praterstern railway station to Breclav Czech Republic Eastern Railway from Vienna Hauptbahnhof under construction to Hegyeshalom Hungary and Budapest Keleti railway station Emperor Franz Joseph Railway from Wien Franz Josefs Bahnhof to Gmund Lower Austria and Ceske Velenice Czech Republic Salzburg Tyrol Railway from Salzburg Hauptbahnhof to Worgl Hauptbahnhof Enns Valley Railway from the Salzburg Tyrol Railway at Bischofshofen to Selzthal Tauern Railway from the Salzburg Tyrol Railway at Schwarzach Sankt Veit to Spittal an der Drau via the Tauern Railway Tunnel Lower Inn Valley Railway from the German border near Kufstein railway station via Worgl Hauptbahnhof to Innsbruck Hauptbahnhof to be relieved by the New Lower Inn Valley railway line under construction part of the Trans European Berlin Palermo railway axis western continuation by the Arlberg Railway to Bludenz railway station via the Arlberg Railway Tunnel northwestern continuation by the Mittenwald Railway to Garmisch Partenkirchen Germany and the Ausserfern Railway to Kempten Hauptbahnhof southern continuation by the Brenner Railway to Bozen Italy and Verona via the Innsbruck bypass and the Brenner Pass to be replaced by the Brenner Base Tunnel planned Rail links to adjacent countries editAll neighbouring railways have the same gauge Czech Republic voltage and frequency change to 25 kV 50 Hz AC Germany same voltage and frequency 15 kV 16 7 Hz AC Hungary voltage and frequency change to 25 kV 50 Hz AC Italy voltage and frequency change to 3 kV DC Liechtenstein same voltage and frequency 15 kV 16 7 Hz AC Slovakia voltage and frequency change to 25 kV 50 Hz AC Slovenia voltage and frequency change to 3 kV DC Switzerland same voltage and frequency 15 kV 16 7 Hz ACActive Rolling Stock editElectric Locomotives edit nbsp OBB Class 1293 Vectron nbsp OBB Class 1016 1116 1216 Taurus nbsp OBB Class 1144 nbsp OBB Class 1142 nbsp OBB Class 1163 nbsp OBB Class 1063 Diesel Locomotives edit nbsp OBB Class 2016 Hercules nbsp OBB Class 2143 nbsp OBB Class 2043 nbsp OBB Class 2070 Hector nbsp OBB Class 2068 nbsp OBB Class 2080 2081 Rotary Snow Plough Electrical multiple units edit nbsp OBB Class 4011 ICE T nbsp OBB Class 4023 4024 4124 Talent nbsp OBB Class 4020 nbsp OBB Class 4746 Diesel Railcars edit nbsp OBB Class 5022 Desiro nbsp OBB Class 5047 Maintenance of way equipment edit nbsp OBB Class X630 nbsp OBB Class X629 9 nbsp OBB Class X626 nbsp OBB Class X556 1 nbsp OBB Class X554 3 nbsp OBB Class X552 nbsp OBB Class X534See also editRail transport in Austria History of rail transport in Austria Imperial Austrian State Railways OBB Rolling Stock Rail transport in Liechtenstein operated by OBB Railjet the high speed service of the OBB Transport in Austria List of European railways Other railways in Austria edit Achenseebahn Postlingbergbahn Raaberbahn Schafbergbahn Schneebergbahn ZillertalbahnReferences edit Geschaftsbericht 2019 annual report 2019 PDF presse oebb at en Alphabet Inc Retrieved June 17 2020 Mobility and transport PDF Austrian Federal Railways Orders Additional Night Trains from Siemens 10 August 2021 OBB Holding AG Aufgaben Verdrangte Jahre Bahn und Nationalsozialismus in Osterreich 1938 1945 in German erinnern at Retrieved 21 May 2016 The Suppressed Years Railway and National Socialism in Austria 1938 1945 OBB 2014 Archived from the original on 21 June 2019 Retrieved 21 May 2019 Richard Deiss Silberling und Bugeleisen 1000 Spitznamen in Transport und Verkehr und was dahinter steckt Book on Demand 2010 Seite 141 ISBN 978 3 83 916269 9 Logo der Osterreichischen Bundesbahnen bis 2004 Pflatsch ostarichi org a b Richter Karl Arne ed 2010 Europaische Bahnen 11 Hamburg Eurailpress ISBN 978 3 7771 0413 3 Organigramm OBB Retrieved March 19 2022 Daten amp Fakten OBB Archived from the original on 2016 06 18 Retrieved 2014 04 01 External links edit nbsp Media related to Osterreichische Bundesbahnen at Wikimedia Commons Official website International relations UIC International relations CER report of audit court 2006 Archived 2015 09 24 at the Wayback Machine modification of railroad law 2004 passenger traffic tariffs of OBB in 2008 Winchester Clarence ed 1936 Austria s rail transport Railway Wonders of the World pp 971 977 illustrated account of Austrian railways in the 1930s Documents and clippings about OBB in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title OBB amp oldid 1218510231, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

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