Hamburg freight rail bypass

Hamburg freight rail bypass
Overview
Native name Güterumgehungsbahn
Locale Hamburg and Lower Saxony
Line number
  • 1234 (HH-Eidelstedt–HH-Rothenburgsort)
  • 1280 (HH-Billwerder–Buchholz)
Technical
Line length 61.1 km (38.0 mi)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Electrification 15 kV/16.7 Hz AC overhead catenary
Operating speed 160 km/h (99.4 mph) (maximum)
Route number 101.1
Route map

Legend
 Operating points and lines[1] 
S21 S3 A1 from Pinneberg
0.0 Hamburg-Eidelstedt
S21 S3 A1 to Altona/Hbf
A 7
U2 SchlumpNiendorf
5.7 Bbf Hamburg-Lokstedt
Tarpenbek
Alster
U1 KellinghusenstraßeOhlsdorf
From Ohlsdorf, S1 S11 from Poppenbüttel
(Hamburg) Rübenkamp
(Hamburg) Alte Wöhr
11.6 Hamburg-Barmbek Bbf
To former Barmbek freight yard (U-Bahn workshop)
(Flying junction)
U3 BarmbekWandsbek-Gartenstadt
(Hamburg-) Barmbek (S-Bahn)
(Hamburg) Friedrichsberg
U1 Hbf SüdWandsbek Markt
(Hamburg) Wandsbeker Chaussee
15.3 Hamburg-Barmbek Gleichrichterwerk
S-Bahn to HH Hbf / from Ahrensburg (planned)
Hamburg–Lübeck
16.0 Horn(junction) from Lübeck
Hamburg-Horn Bbf
Sievekingsallee
U2 Berliner TorBillstedt
Billwerder Industriebahn
From Tiefstack
Hamburg–Berlin
From Hamburg-Rothenburgsort Tk
21.2
39.9
Hamburg-Rothenburgsort Ro
To former Berliner Bahnhof
From (!) Hamburg Hbf
Billhafen
Harburg S-Bahn bridge S3 S31
Main line from Hamburg Hbf
38.5 Hamburg Oberhafen(junction)
38.5 Hamburg-Elbbrücken(under construction)
Norderelbe (312 m)
37.6 Hamburg-Veddel(junction)
Port Railway to Hamburg-Süd port yard
Spreehafen
Hamburg-Veddel (S-Bahn)
Port Railway from Hamburg-Süd port yard
Port Railway from Peute
A 252
35.0 Hamburg-Wilhelmsburg junction
Hamburg-Wilhelmsburg marshalling yard
Hamburg-Wilhelmsburg (S-Bahn)
33.2 Hamburg-Wilhelmsburg S-Bahn(junction)
Hamburg Süderelbrücke junctionPort Railway
Süderelbe
A 253
Lower Elbe Railway from Cuxhaven
Hamburg-Harburg
A 253
Hamburg-Harburg Bbf Süd
Main line to Bremen
(Flying junction)
Hamburg/Lower Saxony state border
Meckelfeld
Meckelfeld junction
24.6 Meckelfeld
Maschen yard
23.2 Maschen Rbf Mnof
22.9 Maschen Rbf Mnwf
Maschen Pbf
21.7 Maschen Rbf Mswf
21.1 Maschen Rbf Msof
19.6 Maschen Rbf Süd(junction)
Main line to Lüneburg
A 39
A 7
Former line from Lüneburg
7.7 Jesteburg(crossover)
0.0 Freight line to Buchholz

The Hamburg freight rail bypass (German: Güterumgehungsbahn) is a railway line in the German city of Hamburg. It runs from Hamburg-Eidelstedt via Hamburg-Rothenburgsort to Hamburg-Harburg and connects the long-distance railways approaching Hamburg, bypassing the link line and the railway junctions on the approaches to Hamburg-Altona station and Hamburg Hauptbahnhof. The line is mainly used for rail freight.

History

The first part of the freight bypass was opened in 1902 by the Lübeck-Büchen Railway Company (Lübeck-Büchener Eisenbahn) as a link connecting Wandsbek station on the Lübeck–Hamburg railway and Rothenburgsort station on the Berlin–Hamburg railway. On 21 February 1903, the bypass was connected to Hamburg Hauptbahnhof via the main freight yard (Hauptgüterbahnhof) at the former Hannoverscher Bahnhof (the original terminal station on the line to Hanover). An extension to Ohlsdorf was completed from the link line before the First World War, along with the connection between Hamburg-Eidelstedt and Hamburg-Lokstedt.

During World War II, railway traffic was repeatedly interrupted through the Hamburg city centre by bombing and trains were diverted over the freight bypass. The embankment along the Kellinghusenstraße–Ohlsdorf branch of the U-Bahn had already been built during its construction, but lacked the bridges needed over the Alster and the Tarpenbek.

The ability to run directly between Rothenburgsort and the Elbe bridges (which previously required reversing in the main freight yard) was made possible by the building of new tracks to Harburg next to the existing line and a new bridge over the upper harbour and the closure of the former main freight yard. The new line was put in operation on 13 August 1996, so that the Maschen Marshalling Yard is now connected by the freight bypass track to Schleswig-Holstein.

In 2009 work began on fitting the line between Groß Borstel and Alsterdorf with noise barriers for the relief of the local residents.

Route

Northern freight train bypass

Route of the northern freight bypass

The northern freight bypass branches off between a former marshalling yard, now an Intercity-Express repair shop (Bahnbetriebswerk Hamburg-Eidelstedt), and Hamburg-Eidelstedt station and runs to the east of the line to Elmshorn. There was formerly a small freight yard in Hamburg-Lokstedt. A siding formerly connected to several major car dealers in Nedderfeld.

The line was planned from the beginning as a double-track line, but it was built only as a "temporary" single track, which is laid alternately on either side or in the middle of the reservation. It continues to the former Barmbek freight yard in the heights near Rübenkamp (City Nord) and Alte Wöhr S-Bahn stations. At Rübenkamp station a short branch line branches off to Hamburg-Ohlsdorf, connecting both to the Hamburg S-Bahn and the Hamburg U-Bahn. From Ohlsdorf a line ran on the east side of U-Bahn line U1 via Langenhorn to the former Ochsenzoll (Langenhorner Bahn) freight yard.

The freight bypass line continues to the south-southeast from Ohlsdorf as a single track to Hamburg-Horn junction, where it is joined by a connecting curve from Hamburg-Wandsbek station on the line to Lübeck. The northern part of the freight bypass ends at the former Hamburg-Rothenburgsort marshalling yard on the line to Berlin. Only a few tracks are used at all these stations and yards.

Following the upgrade of the Hamburg–Lübeck line, duplication of the 3.3 km long section between Horn and Rothenburgsort was completed at the end of 2007, including the widening of eight bridges. Between Horn and Eidelstedt the existing track is to be redeveloped, which will allow higher speeds, but requires no planning approval process. Noise emissions on this section are to be improved as part of a federal noise abatement program.

Ohlsdorf siding

In Ohlsdorf there was also a small freight yard, the site of which is used by Hamburger Hochbahn to hold stock. South of it there is a track connection to the Hamburg S-Bahn. Since the Alster Valley Railway had no separate freight track, the freight formerly operated on it ran over the S-Bahn tracks. In addition, the Hamburg-Ohlsdorf S-Bahn depot is connected to the railway network.

North of Ohlsdorf U-Bahn and S-Bahn station the freight track ran beside the Langenhorn line (Langenhorner Bahn) of the U-Bahn to the original terminus at Ochsenzoll. Today, the only tracks north of Ohlsdorf station is the U-Bahn line. The long-disused track to Ochsenzoll was completely dismantled by 2008. Part of the route was used for building the Hamburg Airport S-Bahn line.

The track between Barmbek freight yard and the main U-Bahn workshop was dismantled in 2005. During World War II, this track was extended to the premises of the important wartime lathe manufacturer Heidenreich & Harbeck.

Southern freight train bypass

The southern part of the freight bypass railway had been planned since the 1920s branching at the existing junction north of Tiefstack and from 1993 branching at the Hamburg-Billwerder freight yard, which had been adapted for combined transport, to the Berlin line as a new line in a wide arc through the marshlands continuing to Harburg to the south to join the existing lines to Hanover and Bremen. This link was reported in 1985 in the federal transport infrastructure plans as a line connecting Hamburg-Harburg and Hamburg-Rothenburgsort, but without a specific route. After it was determined that a new route through the environmentally sensitive Vierlande (four lands) and Marschlande (marsh lands) could not be built, the current line was built between 1987 and 1996.

The essential elements (from south to north) of this rail line are:

After German reunification a new single track was built next to the old line between the former Hamburg main freight yard and Hamburg-Rothenburgsort so that trains running between Hamburg and Berlin could use all platforms in Hamburg Hbf (tracks 5–8 and 11–14).

Traffic

In addition to freight trains, Intercity trains run regularly on the line between the Hamburg-Eidelstedt workshop (Bahnbetriebswerk) and Hamburg Hauptbahnhof, but as empty trains without passengers. Long-distance trains run between Rothenburgsort and Hamburg-Horn on the freight bypass from and to Lübeck, if they are using platform tracks 11–14 in the western part of Hamburg station. In addition, it is used by passenger services during occasional disruptions on other lines.

Notes

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

References

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