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Wels–Passau railway

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Wels–Passau railway
Wels–Passau railway
Overview
Line number
  • 205 01 (Austria)
  • 5831 (Passau border–Passau Hbf)
LocaleAustria and Germany
Service
Route number150, 151
Technical
Line length83 km (52 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification15 kV/16.7 Hz AC overhead catenary
Operating speed160 km/h (99.4 mph) (maximum)
Maximum incline0.8%
Route map

km
elev (m)
-0.047
Wels Hbf
316
A25-AT.svg A 25 Wels Autobahn
3.583
Wels Puchberg
(abandoned 2 July 1996)
7.234
Haiding
320
Trattnach
12.341
Bad Schallerbach-Wallern
309
16.675
Schlüßlberg
18.992
Grieskirchen-Gallspach
330
Trattnach
 
24.736
Obertrattnach-Markt Hofkirchen
Trattnach
25.300
Üst Grieskirchen-Gallspach 2
29.719
Neumarkt-Kallham
387
31.250
Neumarkt-Kallham West
34.096
Kimpling
34.725
Üst Neumarkt-Kallham 1
39.096
Kumpfmühl
Pram
42.261
Riedau
380
43.807
Zell an der Pram
46,780
Üst Riedau 2
47.184
Griesbach
(abandoned 2 July 1996)
51.337
Andorf
352
57.067
Taufkirchen an der Pram
333
60.647
Allerding
(abandoned 2 July 1996)
61.000
Schärding Granite in Schärding
63.000
Schärding Süd in Schärding
64.140
Gopperding
64.405
65.200
Schärding entrance yard in Schärding
67.140
Schärding
314
71.926
Wernstein
74,388
Üst Wernstein 1
76.900
Pyret
309
79.636
Austria–Germany border
80.000
Passau-Voglau
Inn
110m
Passau Tunnel (169m)
81.215
Passau Hbf
1.700
Passau freight yard
km
Source: Austrian railway atlas[1]

The Wels–Passau railway—also called the Passauer Bahn ("Passau Railway") in German—is a two-track, electrified main line railway mainly in Austria, which was originally owned and operated by the k.k. privilegierte Kaiserin Elisabeth-Bahn ("Imperial and Royal privileged Empress Elisabeth Railway", KEB) company. It runs from Wels in Upper Austria to Passau in Bavaria and is part of the core network of the Austrian Federal Railways (Österreichischen Bundesbahnen, ÖBB).

History

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During the construction of the main line of Empress Elisabeth Railway, financial difficulties were encountered by the company. This caused a delay in the construction of the branch railway between Linz and Passau. The Bavarian Eastern Railway Company had already finished construction of the railway near the border, where the Austrian railway was supposed to be connected. On the other hand, the KEB had only undertaken project planning until the beginning of 1860. As a result, the terminus had to be changed to the Wels station because the line length was able to be shortened. The construction begann on 6 August 1860 and was completed by the KEB on 1 September 1861. It is an 81.2 km (83 km to the Passau freight yard) long double-track electrified main line. It runs through 79.6 km of Austrian territory and through 1.6 km of German territory, where it becomes the Regensburg–Passau railway in Passau station.[2]

This line has particular significance for international freight traffic between Austria and northern Europe. International long-distance passenger traffic has also always been of great importance on the route from Hamburg and Frankfurt to Vienna and the east. Since about 1894, the Ostend–Vienna Express has operated via this line and in 1971 the Trans Europ Express Prinz Eugen ran between northern Germany and Vienna via this route; the route and the name were later used by a EuroCity service and an Intercity-Express (ICE). This received its name in 2002 and operated as a direct service between Hamburg and Vienna until late 2007, when it was closed. There has been a direct Hamburg-Vienna ICE service again since the timetable of 2011/2012.

A peculiarity of this line was that, until the opening of the branch line from Passau to Hauzenberg in 1904, the line on German soil was also controlled by an Austrian dispatcher. Until the accession of Austria to the European Union in 1995, there was a station at the end of the line in the Austrian part of Passau, where the necessary border and customs checks were carried out.

Current operations

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The runnung ICE train at Wernstein am Inn

Since the timetable change in December 2007, the international long-distance services between Frankfurt and Vienna have been operated in cooperation between DB and ÖBB using ICE T trains with tilting technology only. Curves on the Western Railway between Wels and Vienna line were improved to reduce the journey time for tilting trains between Frankfurt and Vienna. Apart from day services, the line is still used by an overnight train, which runs from Vienna to Hamburg, with a portion running to Cologne.

In addition to the international long-distance services on this route, there are also ÖBB local services at two-hour intervals, some of which continue to or start at Linz. These are currently operated with loco-hauled CityShuttle carriages. These will be replaced in the coming years by class 4024 railcars; currently only 4 pairs of services are operated with these Bombardier Talent sets. As a special feature, some local services have run between Vienna and Passau as trains with a Danube theme using historic rolling stock; this service has only run in the summer since the timetable change on 14 December 2008.

Route

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The Inn bridge at Passau

The line begins in Wels station, where it runs to the northwest, separating from the Western Railway, which continues to the southwest. Similarly to most of the line from Vienna to Linz, the line between Linz, Wels and Passau avoids the course of the Danube. First, the line runs through the wide Traun valley and the Wels heath near Puchberg and follows the course of the Trattnach river from Bad Schallerbach to Taufkirchen. The Innviertel Railway branches off to Ried im Innkreis in Neumarkt im Hausruckkreis. The line runs in a wide curve to avoid gradients through the local Asbach valley to Zell an der Pram. From Zell it goes along the valley of the Pram to the Inn, which it reaches at Schärding. Shortly before Schärding at St. Florian am Inn, the line meets another branch line from Ried (the Salzkammergut Railway). The line now follows the right (east) bank of the Inn. After the German border the branch line to Hauzenberg branches off. Immediately afterwards the line crosses the Inn river on a 110 metre long iron bridge, which was built after the Second World War, replacing the former 176 metre long stone bridge. After that the line passes through the short Passau tunnel under the Passau Neue Mitte (new centre) project (which was formerly occupied by a small parade ground) and ends in Passau Hauptbahnhof (Hauptbahnhof). There it becomes the Passau−Regensburg railway, running along the Danube.

References

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  1. ^ Eisenbahnatlas Österreich (Austrian railway atlas). Schweers + Wall. 2010. ISBN 978-3-89494-138-3.
  2. ^ H. Strach (1898) p. 454
  • Elmar Oberegger (2007). Zur Geschichte der "Kaiserin Elisabeth-Bahn" (Budweis/Passau/Simbach am Inn/Wörgl-Amstetten-St. Pölten-Wien Westbahnhof) (in German). Sattledt: Information Bureau of Austria. (Railway history 8)
  • Elmar Oberegger (2011). "Wels Hbf. - Neumarkt-Kallham - Passau Hbf". Zu Struktur und Geschichte der "Passauer-Bahn" (in German). Sattledt: Information Bureau of Austria. (Railway history 5)
  • Strach, Hermann (1898). Geschichte der Eisenbahnen Oestereich-Ungarns. Geschichte der Eisenbahnen der Oesterreichisch-Ungarischen Monarchie (in German). Vol. 1.1. Wien / Teschen / Leipzig: Karl Prochaska. pp. 73–503.
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