Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Bayreuth–Neuenmarkt Wirsberg railway

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Locale
  
Bavaria, Germany

Route number
  
852

62.21
  
Bindlach

Line length
  
21.0 km (13.0 mi)

58.05
  
Bayreuth Hbf

Line number
  
5051

Track gauge
  
1,435 mm (4 ft 8 ⁄2 in) standard gauge

The Bayreuth–Neuenmarkt-Wirsberg line is a single-track main line railway in the German state of Bavaria. It is an important section of the so-called Saxon-Franconian trunk line from Dresden to Nuremberg. The line was opened in 1853 and is one of the oldest railways in Germany.

Contents

History

It was the first Bavarian railway line to be built and leased to the state. That is, it was financed by the city of Bayreuth and the line was built and subsequently leased by the Bavarian government. The route from Neuenmarkt to Bayreuth was opened on 28 November 1853 by the Royal Bavarian State Railways as one of the first branch lines of the Ludwig South-North Railway. In 1905 the line was nationalised.

Operations

The line connects with the Bamberg–Hof line in Neuenmarkt-Wirsberg, leading to Bamberg and Hof.

In the past trains from Bayreuth had to change direction in Neuenmarkt-Wirsberg to continue up the famous Schiefe Ebene (German: inclined plane) to Hof. The opening of the Schlömen curve in 2001, which allows Neuenmarkt-Wirsberg to be bypassed to the east, improved the connectivity of the line to the northeast considerably. As a result, even some long-distance trains (ICE TD) on the Nuremberg–Dresden route now use the line. Since December 2006, services of the Franken-Sachsen-Express have run on the line at 2-hour intervals; after a period when no trains used the Schloemen curve at all.

References

Bayreuth–Neuenmarkt-Wirsberg railway Wikipedia