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Kremmen Railway

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Kremmen Railway
Berlin Karl-Bonhoeffer-Nervenklinik station with the old name of Wittenau (Kremm. Bahn) on the reception building
Overview
Line number6183
LocaleBerlin and Brandenburg, Germany
Service
Route number200.25, 206, 209.55
Technical
Line length33.4 km (20.8 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrification750 V DC third rail
Operating speed120 km/h (75 mph) (max)
Route map

from Neuruppin and Nauen
37.2
Kremmen
to Oranienburg
33.1
Schwante
31.0
Vehlefanz
28.2
Bärenklau
Underpass of A 10
from Oranienburg
25.4
Velten (Mark)
to Nauen
from Velten harbour
23.0
Hohenschöpping
to Schönwalde and Hohen Neuendorf West
22.3
Bk Jägerberg
until the end of 1969
21.0
Hennigsdorf Nord
from Schönwalde and Hohen Neuendorf West
from Hennigsdorf steelworks
19.2
Hennigsdorf (b Berlin), terminus of S25
Bombardier works, Hennigsdorf
to Spandau
Oder-Havel Canal
Stolpe Süd
(formerly Hennigsdorf Süd)
BerlinBrandenburg state border
16.9
Heiligensee
freight yard remeoved in 1971
15.2
Schulzendorf (b Tegel)
13.2
Bk Tegelgrund
Tegel stream
Tegel–Friedrichsfelde industrial railway
from the Tegel–Friedrichsfelde industrial railway
Northern drainage canal
Gorkistraße level crossing
10.9
Berlin-Tegel
freight yard dismantled
Borsig works siding
to Borsigwalde
Borsigwalde
planned
Berlin Tegel Airport junction
from Borsigwalde
8.5
Eichborndamm
(formerly Eichbornstraße)
Waldstraße junction
7.7
Karl-Bonhoeffer-Nervenklinik
(formerly Wittenau (Kremm. Bahn)
7.0
Berlin Reinickendorf freight yard
B 96
6.1
Alt-Reinickendorf
(formerly Reinickendorf)
from Oranienburg S1S85
3.8
Schönholz
(formerly Schönholz-Reinickendorf)
to Gesundbrunnen S1S25S85
Source: German railway atlas[1]

The Kremmen Railway (German: Kremmener Bahn) is a line in northern Berlin and Brandenburg, Germany. It branches off the Prussian Northern Railway in the Berlin district of Reinickendorf, north of Schönholz station (formerly Schönholz-Reinickendorf) and then passes through Tegel, Hennigsdorf and Velten to Kremmen. There it connects with the Kremmen–Meyenburg line opened in 1898 to Neuruppin.

In contrast to the main line railways that had been built to that time, the Kremmen Railway was the first branch line opened in Berlin. Moreover, it did not have its own terminal station but from the beginning it terminated at the Stettiner Bahnhof. The southern end of the line is now served by Berlin S-Bahn line S25.

History

[edit]

The campaign for a connection between Berlin and the Ruppin district (now part of Ostprignitz-Ruppin) was led mainly from Velten, the population of which had grown to have over 5,000 as a result of industrialisation. Since the original plan for a private railway could not be implemented, the Prussian state railways took over the project itself. The first section was opened after about two years of construction on 1 October 1893 between Schönholz-Reinickendorf on the Northern Railway and Velten. The second section opened on 20 December 1893 between Velten and Kremmen.

In 1927, the line from Berlin to Velten was electrified on the third-rail DC system of the lines that were later branded as the Berlin S-Bahn. After the establishment of S-Bahn operations, trains from Kremmen generally reversed at Velten, although a few trains ran through to Berlin or later to Hennigsdorf.

Continuous electrical operations ran between Berlin and Velten until the construction of the Berlin Wall on 13 August 1961 interrupted the track between Heiligensee and Hennigsdorf. Subsequently, S-Bahn operations were maintained between Velten and Hennigsdorf as a shuttle operation. In 1958 with the completion of the Berlin outer ring, Hennigsdorf Nord station was established at the rail crossing as a two-level transfer station; it was closed in 1998. In 1983, the north-western sector of the Berlin outer ring was electrified with the standard German AC system. The section between Hennigsdorf and Velten was re-electrified with the AC system.

In West Berlin the S-Bahn operations to Hennigsdorf continued to be run by East German Railways after 1961 until the handover of operations in West Berlin to the Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe (Berlin Transportation Company) on 9 January 1984. On that date, S-Bahn operations on the line to Hennigsdorf were shut down. In 1995 S-Bahn lines were re-established on the line as far as Tegel. North of Tegel part of the railway embankment had been removed to build the Hamburg Autobahn. This gap was not closed until 1998, when Hennigsdorf was reconnected to the S-Bahn network. The reopening of the S-Bahn to Velten is under discussion.

Current operations

[edit]

The Kremmen railway is now a single-track railway line. In Alt-Reinickendorf, Tegel and Heiligensee there are crossing loops, allowing a 20-minute interval S-Bahn service. In addition, between Hennigsdorf and Velten there are two tracks, with one track used as a test track for the Hennigsdorf locomotive and rollingstock plant of Bombardier Transportation (formerly the Lokomotivbau Elektrotechnische Werke (LEW)). It is equipped with both third rail and overhead electrification, but it is not used for public transport. The only place for trains to pass each other between Hennigsdorf and Kremmen is in Velten station.

In Berlin area S-Bahn line S25 runs on the line to Hennigsdorf station, where there is a connection to Kremmen via Regionalbahn services and Regional-Express line RE6 (Prignitz-Express). This line runs from Berlin-Spandau via the western sector of the Berlin outer ring to Hennigsdorf, where it reverses on to the Kremmen line to Neuruppin and Wittenberge.

In order to operate both AC and DC trains into Hennigsdorf it was decided to avoid electrifying the line there with both systems on the same piece of track. Instead an easier solution was adopted of extending the platform to the south. The southern end is used by the Berlin S-Bahn. The northern end of the platform is used by regional trains with the tracks in between blocked.

Notes

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

References

[edit]
  • Bley, Peter (2004). Die Kremmener Bahn, Berlin-Schönholz–Hennigsdorf–Velten–Kremmen (in German). Berlin: Neddermeyer. ISBN 3-933254-52-3.
  • Strowitzki, Bernhard (2004). S-Bahn Berlin. Geschichte(n) für unterwegs (Berlin S-Bahn. History under way) (in German). Berlin: GVE. ISBN 3-89218-073-3.
  • Kuhlman, Bernd (2006). Bahnknoten Berlin—Die Entwicklung des Berliner Eisenbahnnetzes seit 1838 (Berlin railway node—The development of Berlin's rail network since 1838) (in German). Berlin: Verlag GVE. ISBN 3-89218-099-7.
  • "Kremmener Bahn" (in German). Axel Mauruszat. Retrieved 31 May 2010.
  • "Kremmener Bahn" (in German). beefland. Retrieved 31 May 2010.