Dresden–Werdau railway

Dresden Hbf–Werdau wye
Overview
Locale Saxony, Germany
Line number 6258; 6257
Technical
Line length 136.304 km (84.695 mi)
Number of tracks 2
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Minimum radius 213 m (699 ft)
Electrification 15 kV/16.7 Hz AC overhead catenary
Operating speed 120 km/h (74.6 mph)
with tilting: 160 (maximum)
Maximum incline 2.6%
Route number 510, 510.3
Route map

Legend
from Děčín
-0,048 Dresden Hbf 117 m
to Dresden-Neustadt
1.100 Dresden Altstadt junction (Bk)
from Dresden-Altstadt Elbufer
1.500 Dresden-Altstadt 120 m
1.750 Zellescher Weg
2.922 Dresden-Plauensince 1926 135 m
3.700 Dresden-Plauenuntil 1926 139 m
0
Felsenkeller Tunnel,
roof removed in 1895 (56 m)
3.820 Bk Felsenkeller
4.600 A 17
5.528 Freight line to Tharandt
5.680 Freital Ost (Bk) junction 155 m
5.717 to Possendorf
6.844 Freital-Potschappel 162 m
Narrow gauge line to Nossen and
Niederhermsdorf coal branch line
8.736 Freital-Deuben 176 m
10.092 Freital-Hainsberg 187 m
Narrow gauge line to Kurort Kipsdorf
11.550 Freital-Hainsberg West 190 m
Freight line from Freital Ost junction
13.705 Tharandt 208 m
15.920 Bk Breiter Grund
18.020 Edle Krone 281 m
18.200 Edle Krone Tunnel (122 m)
Maximum gradient 2.6  (1:37.5)
21.520 Bk Seerenteich
25.369 Klingenberg-Colmnitz 436 m
Narrow gauge lines to Frauenstein and Mohorn
27.450 Colmnitz Viaduct(148 m)
30.850 Niederbobritzsch 407 
31.250 Niederbobritzsch Viaduct (175 m)
Üst Niederbobritzsch
35.890 Muldenhütten 395 m
36.490 Muldenhütten Viaduct (196 m)
38.500 Kunstgraben Tunnel (36 m; roof removed)
from Halsbrücke
from (Moldava–) Holzhau
40.005 Freiberg (Sachs) 413 m
to Nossen
42.300 Bk Hospitalwald
42.810 Nossen–Moldava
45.380 Kleinschirma 415 m
48.720 Frankenstein Viaduct (349 m)
49.819 Frankenstein (Sachs) 396 m
52.240 Bk Kaltes Feld
54.380 Bk Memmendorf
57.149 Oederan 407 m
59.100 Bk Breitenau
61.560 Bk Hetzdorf
(Neutrassierung 1992)
61.897 Hetzbach viaduct (344 m)
62.300
Hetzdorf Viaduct (326 m)
(Flöha Valley Railway)
62.805
Flöha viaduct (344 m)
(Flöha Valley Railway)
63.600
64.566
km change -966 m
64.750 Falkenau (Sachs) Süd 310 m
from Neuhausen and (Reitzenhain–) Marienberg
from Annaberg-Buchholz
67.370 Flöha 278 m
67.625 B 180 level crossing
68.079 Zschopau bridge (65 m)
70.130 Niederwiesa Stw 1 junction
70.170 B 73 LC
from Roßwein
71.280 Niederwiesa 291 m
73.620 Bk Ebersdorf
76.02
0.000
km change (start of line 6257)
0.490 Chemnitz-Hilbersdorf 325 m
76.520 Chemnitz-Hilbersdorf marshalling yard320 m
from Riesa and Neukieritzsch
3.098
78.600
km change (end of line 6257)
from Riesa
from Neukieritzsch
79.730 Chemnitz Hbf 302 m
81.820 Chemnitz Süd 312 m
to Aue and Stollberg
82.630 Bk Chemnitz Süd
82.850 Chemnitz Mitte 307  m
83.480 Chemnitz-Kappel 310 m
85.530 Chemnitz-Schönau 320 m
85.900 Bk Schönau
B 72
88.010 Chemnitz-Siegmar 326 m
91.250 Grüna (Sachs) 350 m
from Limbach and from Küchwald
to Neuoelsnitz
94.310 Wüstenbrand(former wedge station) 378 m
95.907 Bk Oberlungwitz
98.230 Hohenstein-Ernstthal 345 m

Interurban tramway to Oelsnitz
98.654 Hohenstein-Ernstthal–Oelsnitz tramway
99.700 Hüttengrund viaduct (150 m)
101.220 Bk Hermsdorf
from Stollberg (Sachs)
104.910 St. Egidien 283 m
107.762 Bk Lobsdorf
109.500 Bk Niederlungwitz
Glauchau–Wurzen railway from Großbothen
112.140 Glauchau (Sachs) 244 m
114.310 Bk Gesau
115.990 Glauchau-Schönbörnchen 258 m
to Gößnitz
Narrow gauge railway to Ortmannsdorf
120.540 Mosel 257 
Industrial line to Zwickau
122.790 Oberrothenbach 265 m
125.830 Zwickau-Pölbitz 270 m
Industrial line from Mosel
from Schwarzenberg/Johanngeorgenstadt
128.350 Zwickau (Sachs) Hbf(wedge station)
to Falkenstein (Vogtl.)
131.600 Bk Maxhütte
132.830 Lichtentanne (Sachs) 320 m
134.502 Bk Steinpleis
134.930 Steinpleis 310 m
135.626 Steinpleis Viaduct
135.700 Werdau wye (Zwickauer Spitze)
to Leipzig
136.260 Werdau wye (Neumarker Spitze)
to Hof

Source: German railway atlas[1]

Freital Ost junction–Tharandt (freight railway)
Overview
Locale Saxony
Line number 6259
Technical
Line length 8.250 km (5.126 mi)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Electrification 15 kV/16.7 Hz AC overhead catenary
Operating speed 70 km/h (43.5 mph) (maximum)
Route map

Legend
from Dresden
5.558 to Tharandt (start of line)
5.680 Freital Ost junction (Bk)155 m
6.170
6.182
kn change -12 m
6.844 Freital-Potschappel 162 m
narrow gauge line to Nossen and
Niederhermsdorf coal branch line
connecting line to Freital-Hainsberg
connecting line from Freital-Potschappel
10.092 Freital-Hainsberg 187 m
Narrow gauge line to Kurort Kipsdorf
from Freital Ost
13.705 Tharandt 208 m
13.820 (end of line)
to Werdau

Source: German railway atlas[1]

The Dresden–Werdau railway is an electrified, double-track main line in the German state of Saxony. It is an important section of the so-called Saxon-Franconian trunk line (German: Sachsen-Franken-Magistrale) from Dresden to Nuremberg. Its first section opened in 1842 and it is one of the oldest railways in Germany.

History

The modern Dresden–Werdau line developed from a series of originally independent sections that were built with the support of the Saxon government and eventually became part of the Royal Saxon State Railways. The first section opened on 6 September 1845, as a branch from the Saxon-Bavarian Railway at the modern Werdau Bogendreieck junction (Werdau wye) to Zwickau.

The start of planning for a long-distance railway from Dresden towards Bavaria was the request of mine owners in the Plauen Valley (Plauenscher Grund) of the Weißeritz river for a line to connect their coal mines with Dresden. The request was granted and, on 4 May 1853, the easternmost section of the line from Dresden to Tharandt was opened with branch lines to the mines. The line opened on 18 June 1855 as the Albert Railway (Albert-Bahn), named after Prince Albert of Saxony.

There were problems, however, with the proposed continuation of the line, as strong gradients had to be overcome between Tharandt and Freiberg. Ultimately, a route was selected along the Seerenbach valley to Klingenberg with a maximum gradient of 1 in 40. Several large viaducts had to be built across the valleys of the Colmnitzbach, Bobritzsch and Freiberger Mulde rivers. By the time construction of this line started in 1859, rail angineers had acquired experience with steep haul operations on such inclines as the Schiefe Ebene and the Geislinger Steige. On 11 August 1862, the line was opened to Freiberg.

The route of the missing section between Freiberg and Chemnitz remained controversial. A connection through Hainichen had long been favoured. Ultimately, it was decided to build the shorter but more expensive route through Oederan, which had a steep ramp section and required the construction of several large viaducts. The line between Flöha and Chemnitz was inaugurated in 1866. The opening of the Annaberg-Buchholz–Flöha railway in 1872 made the construction of a second track necessary. The section from Flöha to Freiberg was completed in 1869.

The continuation of the line from Chemnitz to Zwickau had already been opened on 15 November 1858. In the following years, the Dresden–Werdau line became an important link for rail traffic between Silesia and southern Germany.

Route

The route leaves Dresden Hauptbahnhof and runs to a triangular junction (the turn-off to Dresden-Neustadt) and turns south past the rail museum in the former Dresden-Altstadt depot. From Dresden-Plauen station it runs to Freital through the narrow valley of the Weißeritz (known as the Plauenscher Grund) and crosses Autobahn 17. Between Dresden-Plauen and Freital-Potschappel the standard gauge Windberg Railway once branched off.

Just south of Freital-Hainsberg, where the narrow gauge Weisseritztal railway begins, the line passes the confluence of the Weißeritz’s tributaries: the Red Weißeritz and the Wild Weißeritz. The line follows the Wild Weißeritz through Tharandt to Edle Krone station. To the west lies the Tharandt Forest. The line is used by S-Bahn line S3 as far as Tharandt. Starting in Tharandt the line is extremely steep for a main line, with a slope of 1 in 40, sometimes even 1 in 39. In the age of steam, which lasted until the electrification of the line in the mid 1960s, this rise could only be overcome by the use of locomotives in multiple. This gradient was necessary to climb the Ore Mountain Foreland (Erzgebirgsvorland). After Edle Krone station, the line runs through a 122-metre-long tunnel. In Klingenberg Colmnitz the line reaches 435 m above sea level, a rise of 228 metres in 11.6 kilometres. This station was once the starting point of the narrow gauge railways of the Wilsdruff Network to Frauenstein and Oberdittmannsdorf.

Frankenstein Viaduct, built 1868
New Hetzdorf Viaduct

Now begins a section with a number of viaducts. The first viaduct spans the Colmnitzbach in Colmnitz. In Niederbobritzsch, a town in the district of Bobritzsch, the line crosses the Bobritzsch river on a 26 metre high viaduct. After Muldenhütten station, the line crosses the 196 metres-long and 42.8 metres high viaduct over the Freiberger Mulde. At the 40.0 km mark the line reaches Freiberg station. It was formerly a major rail hub, but it is now only the end point for Dresden S-Bahn line S30 and the starting point of the branch line to Holzhau. This section and the Zellwaldbahn form the Nossen–Moldava (Moldau) line, which was restored to operation on 5 November 2005. The line branches off to the west of Freiberg station and runs north to Nossen. At this junction the line passes under federal highway 173 for the first time.

About 1.5 km east of Frankenstein station, in Wegefahrt, the line runs across one of the most impressive railway viaducts of the 19th century, the 348.5 metre-long and 39 metre-high Frankenstein viaduct, which crosses the valley of the Striegis. Shortly before Oederan the line passes under highway 173 again. Before Flöha the line connects with the branch line from Marienberg and Olbernhau. Until 1991 the line crossed the Flöha river on the old Hetzdorf Viaduct; it now runs along a new section with two prestressed concrete viaducts. After passing the junction with the Marienberg branch line and another line from Annaberg-Buchholz, the line reaches the town of Flöha and then crosses the Zschopau river. Niederwiesa, the second last stop before Chemnitz Hauptbahnhof for regional trains, is the beginning of a branch line to Hainichen. Chemnitz-Hilbersdorf station used to be the site of an important rail depot and one of the largest marshalling yards in Saxony; it is now closed. After connecting with two lines from the north, the line from Riesa and the line from Leipzig, the Dresden–Werdau line reaches Chemnitz Hauptbahnhof.

The line runs south from the station. After passing junctions with lines running south to Aue and to Stollberg, it turns to the west, running through the suburbs of Chemnitz and then starts to leave the wide basin of the Chemnitz river. Before Chemnitz-Siegmar, the line passes under the A 72. During the time of East Germany, the area west of Chemnitz was in the county of Hohenstein-Ernstthal, which was the most densely populated county in that country. Accordingly, the density of stations in the region is unusually high. After Hohenstein-Ernstthal the line passes under highway B 180 to reach St. Egidien station, where another line to Stollberg starts. At Glauchau the Glauchau–Wurzen railway (Mulde Valley Railway) used to branch off, but almost all of it is now closed. At the next station, Glauchau-Schönbörnchen, the line to Gößnitz branches off; this is the beginning of the Mid-Germany Railway, a route linking to Weimar via Gera and Jena. The line now turns south and follows the course of the Zwickauer Mulde. The line passes through the town of Mosel, which is the location of a Volkswagen factory, and crosses the four-lane B 93 (and B 175) highway. After 128 km the line finally reaches Zwickau Hauptbahnhof. The line continues past the disused Zwickau marshalling yard for about five km west to Werdau Bogendreieck junction (Werdau wye), which enables trains leaving Zwickau to both directions of Leipzig–Hof railway, i.e. both to Leipzig via Werdau and to Hof and Nuremberg via Reichenbach. The line ends here, 135.96 km from Dresden.

Sources

Notes

  1. 1 2 Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.

References

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