Weimar–Gera railway

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Weimar–Jena–Gera
Overview
Locale Thuringia, Germany
Line number 6307
Technical
Line length Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value).
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Route number 565
Route map
 Operating points and lines[1] 
Thuringian Railway from Erfurt
Ilm Valley Railway from Kranichfeld
0.0 Weimar
Thuringian Railway to Naumburg (Saale)
Viaduct over the Ilm
4.1 Oberweimar
7.6 Mellingen (Thür)
14.3 Großschwabhausen
18.1 Block Schlettwein
22.6 Jena West
Saal Railway
from Großheringen
27.5 Jena-Göschwitz
to Saalfeld
Saale bridge, Jena-Lobeda (121 m)
30.8 Neue Schenke
37.2 Stadtroda
42.9 Papiermühle (b. Stadtroda)
48.3 Hermsdorf-Klosterlausnitz
51.0 Block Oberndorf
55.6 Kraftsdorf
61.1 Töppeln
62.0 Überleitstelle Töppeln
64.3 Gera-Thieschitz
Leipzig–Saalfeld line
from Leipzig
68.0 Gera Hbf
to Saalfeld

The Weimar–Gera railway or Holzland Railway (Holzlandbahn) is a line in the German state of Thuringia, connecting the city of Weimar via Jena, Stadtroda and Hermsdorf to Gera. It was built by the Weimar-Gera Railway Company (German: Weimar-Geraer Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft), which was founded in June 1872, and the line was officially accepted into operation in June 1876.

It is now part of the Mid-German Connection and is listed by Deutsche Bahn in its timetable as the Holzlandbahn ("Woodland Railway") because its eastern section runs through the Thuringian Holzland (not to be confused with the Thuringian Forest).

Route

The line starts at Weimar station in northern Weimar, which it leaves to the east. It branches off the Thuringian railway at a grade-separated junction and runs to the south and then curves to the southeast, crossing the valley of the Ilm on a large viaduct and then runs on the eastern slope of the Ilm valley to Mellingen. It then goes through the Lehnstedt land to Großschwabhausen, where the line reaches a height of about 325 metres on the Ilm-Saale Plateau (Ilm-Saale-Platte). From Großschwabhausen it runs through the Schwabhäuser land and the Jena Mühl valley down to Jena, where it runs on the western slopes of the Saale valley past the city centre to Jena West station. Further south, it crosses the Saal Railway and continues to Jena-Göschwitz station on separate tracks parallel with the Saal Railway.

After Göschwitz the line crosses the Saale and runs through the valley of the Roda to Stadtroda and then through the Zeitzgrund woodland to Hermsdorf in the Holzland. From Hermsdorf the line runs east of the valley of the Erlbach to Kraftsdorf and Töppeln to Gera, where it ends at the former Prussian station (preußischen Bahnhof), now the Hauptbahnhof.

Before the Second World War, the line was an important east-west connection and upgraded with double track. The second track was dismantled for reparations to the Soviet Union. At the time of German reunification, the second track had been restored only on the Jena West–Neue Schenke, Stadtroda–Papiermühle and Kraftsdorf–Töppeln sections. Since then the Großschwabhausen–Jena West and the Hermsdorf-Klosterlausnitz–Kraftsdorf sections have been duplicated. There are still single-track sections between Weimar and Großschwabhausen, between Neue Schenke and Stadtroda, between Papiermühle and Hermsdorf-Klosterlausnitz and between Töppeln and Gera. It is proposed to duplicate the first two sections by 2014, as they are a considerable obstacle to the operation of trains at 30-minute intervals on the line, which connects the four largest cities of Thuringia. However, the federal government has not given a commitment to finance this project.[2]

Little freight runs on the line as demand is low and there is little spare capacity for it anyway. The lack of electrification means that the line is only served by diesel multiple units. Although Deutsche Bahn operates its largest DMU, the class 612, with three sets running in combination, traffic demand to and from Jena, has not grown. The two stations in the city of Jena are in poor condition, but they may also be modernised by 2014.

Transport Operations

Transfer connections

Connection to long distance transport

Public transport links from other routes

Notes

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References

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