You can help expand this article with text translated from
the corresponding article in German. (June 2024) 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.
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:Arlbergbahn]]; see its history for attribution.
You may also add the template {{Translated|de|Arlbergbahn}} to the
talk page.
The Arlberg Railway (
German: Arlbergbahn), which connects the Austrian cities
Innsbruck and
Bludenz, is Austria's only east-west mountain railway. It is one of the
highest standard gauge railways in Europe and the second highest in Austria, after the
Brenner. The 136.7 km line is a highly problematic mountain railway, in part because it is threatened by avalanches, mudslides, rockfalls and floods.[1] It is operated by the
Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB) and frequented by international trains, including the
Orient Express.[2]
History and construction
As early as 1842 a railway over the
Arlberg Pass was under discussion, as the British sought a rail connection for traffic from
England to
Egypt.[3] Two years later, in 1847,
Carl Ganahl - a textile industrialist from
Feldkirch - decided to privately support construction of the railway, despite the many technical challenges involved. On the other hand, the opening of the
Semmering Railway in 1854 showed that mountain railways were basically possible and feasible. Trade Minister Anton Freiherr von Banhans presented on March 22, 1872, at the Chamber of Deputies a draft law on the execution of the Arlberg railway at government expense for a total amount of 42 million
florins. In 1879 the protagonists of the Arlbergbahn with the intended 10,216 m long summit tunnel were successful. The submitted project had won confidence by the progress in the Gotthard Tunnel.[4] Julius Lott was appointed planning director of the Arlbergbahn.[5]
The construction of the Arlberg Railway started on June 20, 1880, and proceeded at a faster pace than planned. Completion was originally not expected until the autumn of 1885, but already by May 29, 1883, the valley route from Innsbruck to Landeck in Tyrol was put into service.[6][page needed] On September 21, 1884, the entire stretch of the mountain railway was completed, including the then single-track, 10.22 kilometres (6.35 mi) long
Arlbergtunnel.[7] The construction claimed 92 lives. The costs were totaled 38,165,282 crowns. The Arlberg tunnel rises from St. Anton on a length of approximately 4 km with 2 ‰. The highest point is at 1310.926 m in kilometer 104.241 m. Then it falls to Langen am Arlberg at 15 ‰.[8]
Operation
The transalpine Arlberg Railway opened up a completely new connection between
Lake Constance and the
Adriatic Sea. Traffic increased so rapidly that already by July 15, 1885, a second track through the tunnel was opened, as had been planned since the beginning of the project. The most renowned train on the Arlberg route was the
Orient Express, from London to Bucharest, which had only first-class compartments and parlors.
Right from the beginning, the use of steam locomotives on the Arlberg led to serious problems: Passengers and crews were exposed to the unhealthy effects of sulfurous acid, which condensed from the steam in the tunnel.[9] Grade slopes of up to 3.4% on the western ramp and 2.6% on the eastern ramp caused traction troubles for the locomotives. Finally, in 1924, this problem was eliminated with the completion of electrification of the tunnel, followed by the ramp sections in 1925. This electrification of the railway was carried out with a 15 kV, 16.7 Hertz system, allowing heavy trains to be pulled over the route once the tracks and supporting structures, including the
Trisanna bridge in 1964, had been upgraded for the increased axle weights.
Today, traffic through the Arlberg railway tunnel has increased considerably, despite competition from road transport through the
Arlberg Road Tunnel. This has made it necessary to widen the approach ramps for double tracks. Many long-distance, high-speed
EuroCity and
Railjet trains ply the route from Vienna to Vorarlberg over the Arlberg. On the occasion of the
World Ski Championships in 2001, the railway station of
St. Anton on the eastern side of the Arlberg Tunnel was relocated from the town centre to a new site on the north side of the valley. This required the Arlberg tunnel be lengthened to 10650 m and the construction of the new Wolfsgruben tunnel.[10]
Beginning with 2020, the stretch of track between Landeck-Zams and Ötztal will be selectively double-tracked, to increase capacity and improve the frequency of local services. The program, which was announced in 2018, will likely be completed by 2025, and was chosen over the more expensive full double-tracking plans. The first works are scheduled to take place between 19 and 21 September 2020, during which services will be disrupted.[11]
St. Anton railway station since 2001; view ist directed eastwards to the Stanzer Valley
Station Langen am Arlberg with western mouth of the
Arlbergtunnel 1894
Locomotives
Steam locomotives
From the universal locomotive,
kkStB Class 73 with an operating weight of 55.1 tons, 436 pieces were ordered.[12] Thanks to its capacity of 700
PS they could transport on the level 1,650 tons at 30 km/h, on a slope of 10 ‰ a weight of 580 t at 15 km/h and on a slope of 25 ‰ 220 t, also at 15 km/h. They were mainly used for freight traffic.[13]
^Arlberg railway at
Zeno.org. Article by: Viktor von Röll (ed.): Enzyklopädie des Eisenbahnwesens (Encyclopaedia of the Railway), 2nd edition, 1912–1923, Vol. 1, p. 265–272
^"die Arlberg-Bahn". Themenwegschnann.at (in German). Retrieved October 28, 2017.