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LĂŒbeck–Bad Kleinen railway
Overview
Line number1122
Locale Mecklenburg-Vorpommern and Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
Service
Route number175 (DR: 782)
Technical
Line length61.9 km (38.5 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Route map

0.0
LĂŒbeck Hbf
1.2
LĂŒbeck main freight yard
2.6
LĂŒbeck Hgbf junction
to LĂŒneburg
6.1
Strecknitz junction
6.4
LĂŒbeck-St. JĂŒrgen
9.5
state border
10.1
Herrnburg
13.5
10.9
Kilometrage change
11.2
LĂŒdersdorf (Meckl)
19.4
Schönberg (Meckl)
25.3
Menzendorf
29.0
Grieben (Meckl)
Börzow
36.7
GrevesmĂŒhlen
44.0
PlĂŒschow
50.6
Bobitz
9.3
Source: German railway atlas [1]

The LĂŒbeck–Bad Kleinen railway is a single-track, non-electrified main line between the German states of Schleswig-Holstein and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. Its construction was started by the LĂŒbeck-Kleinen Railway Company ( German: LĂŒbeck-Kleinener Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft) and, after that company's bankruptcy, it was completed and opened by the Friedrich-Franz Railway (Friedrich-Franz-Eisenbahn).

Operation and history

In the 1850s, the two grand duchies of Mecklenburg-Schwerin and Mecklenburg-Strelitz were planning an east–west route through their territory. This would connect in LĂŒbeck to the LĂŒbeck–BĂŒchen line with Kleinen on the Hagenow–Wismar line and run over the existing Bad Kleinen–Rostock railway to BĂŒtzow and continue to GĂŒstrow and Neubrandenburg. From there it would run via Strasburg over the modern Polish border to Szczecin (then called Stettin). While the middle section was intended to be a state railway, the western section from Bad Kleinen to LĂŒbeck would be built and operated by a private company.

LĂŒbeck Central Station

The newly established LĂŒbeck-Kleinen Railway Company was commissioned in 1865 to construct the line. This was planned to be completed by 1867. However, there was a delay in construction, as the route was changed several times by the company, and it was ultimately not financially able to complete the line. Following its liquidation, the Friedrich-Franz Railway took over and finished construction of the line in 1870. On 1 July 1870, the first train ran over the nearly 60 kilometre-long route.

1870–1945

The line was initially not of great importance. In 1885, only a few passenger trains per day in ran in either direction. Its best days were in the early 20th century. The railways in LĂŒbeck were reorganised in 1907/08 and LĂŒbeck Central Station (Hauptbahnhof) was opened as the city's main station. The concentration of all the lines through the central station allowed through trains to run from Hamburg via LĂŒbeck, Bad Kleinen and Neubrandenburg to Stettin. The line was listed until the Second World War as line 118 in the German railway timetable. It was of great significance for the ferries to Scandinavia through WarnemĂŒnde and Sassnitz.

1945–1989

Level crossing and signalbox in Menzendorf
Herrnburg station

After 1945, through-traffic on the line ended because the border between the British and the Soviet occupation zone was just east of LĂŒbeck. The second track was dismantled for reparations to the Soviet Union. After a brief resurgence of rail traffic from 1952 to 1960, traffic across the border between the Federal Republic ( West Germany) and the GDR ( East Germany) was discontinued. After 20 March 1960, some freight trains and interzonal trains (Interzonenzug) ran between Hamburg and Rostock via LĂŒbeck. The exact route of the trains changed several times over the years. In the early years, trains continued to Sassnitz, connecting to the ferry to Sweden. Even then, the train often went via Stralsund. At times through coaches ran to Neubrandenburg. In the last years before the fall of the Wall, trains ran from Cologne via Hamburg to Rostock. During holidays there were additional relief trains.

The control of passengers travelling across the interzonal boundary, which was carried out by the border organisation of the GDR, took place at Herrnburg station and on trains running between Herrnburg and Bad Kleinen. While passengers passed through the controls at Herrnburg, the trains stayed at the platform. Passengers who left the train here to continue their journey on a train towards GrevesmĂŒhlen were handled in a separate control area. This continued until the 1970s, using old two-axle passenger carriages that were parked on the opposite track.

While on the West German side to the border there were no stations and therefore no rail services, on the eastern side regional services operated on the Herrnburg–Bad Kleinen section (in 1989 there were five pairs of trains from Herrnburg and eight from GrevesmĂŒhlen).

In the second half of the 1980s, trains operated on the line for local border traffic (Kleiner Grenzverkehr, a system under which West Germans from nearby areas were allowed to cross the border for up to 30 days a year and 9 days a quarter, one day at a time) and a pair of express trains was added between LĂŒbeck and Schwerin at weekends. After the East German government eased some of travel restrictions and more GDR citizens were able to travel to the West in May 1989, an additional pair of trains ran on the GĂŒstrow–Hamburg route. For a few years a corridor express (D-Zug) train ran from Cologne to Rostock (only in this direction), stopping in GrevesmĂŒhlen.

Since 1989

BR628 coupled set near Bobitz

After the fall of the Berlin Wall, there was more traffic on this line than it could handle. After German reunification, the line therefore became part of the German Unity Transport Project (Verkehrsprojekte Deutsche Einheit) No. 1. This provided for the upgrade of the LĂŒbeck–Rostock–Stralsund line for a speed of 160 km/h, but there would still be only one track to Bad Kleinen. The upgrade has been slow and is not yet finished.

The importance of the line since the mid-1990s, when two long-distance services (Stralsund–Rostock–Hamburg and Berlin/ Leipzig–LĂŒbeck– Kiel) operated every two hours, has decreased markedly. First, the trains between Rostock and Hamburg now run on the route via Schwerin and BĂŒchen and, on the other hand, the LĂŒbeck–Leipzig InterRegio line was abandoned in 2001. Since then the line has only been served by regional services.

LĂŒbeck-St. JĂŒrgen station was opened on 15 December 2002. It opens up a part of southern LĂŒbeck in the district of St. JĂŒrgen.

Currently the following services operate on the line:

Line Category Route
RE 4 Regional-Express LĂŒbeck – Bad Kleinen – GĂŒstrow – Neubrandenburg – Szczecin
RE 4 Regional-Express LĂŒbeck – Schönberg – GrevesmĂŒhlen – Bad Kleinen

Both Regional-Express lines run every two hours, so on the LĂŒbeck–Bad Kleinen section there are services every hour. The RE4 running on the LĂŒbeck–Bad Kleinen route stops at LĂŒbeck-St. JĂŒrgen, Herrnburg, Schönberg and GrevesmĂŒhlen, while the RE4 running on the LĂŒbeck–Bad Kleinen–Stettin route stops at all stations on the LĂŒbeck–Bad Kleinen section. Since October 2015, class 623 diesel railcars ( LINT 41) have been used on the line. Previously, the trains were operated with locomotives of class 218, hauling Silberling carriages and diesel multiple units of class 628.

A future upgrade and electrification of the line is under discussion.

Notes

  1. ^ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas). Schweers + Wall. 2009. pp. 14–5, 123. ISBN  978-3-89494-139-0.