Weisseritz Valley Railway


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The Weißeritz Valley Railway (‹See Tfd›German: Weißeritztalbahn) is a steam operated narrow gauge railway in Saxony, Germany. The line connects Freital, near Dresden, with the spa of Kipsdorf in the Ore Mountains, and follows the valley of the Red Weißeritz.

Weißeritz Valley Railway
Overview
Native nameWeißeritztalbahn
Line number6966
LocaleSaxony, Germany
Service
Route number513
Technical
Line length26.335 km (16.364 mi)
Track gauge750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)
Minimum radius50 m (164 ft)
Operating speed30 km/h (18.6 mph) (maximum)
Maximum incline3.47%

Route map

-0.113

Freital-Hainsberg

184 m

0.973

1.192

Red Weißeritz (Rote Weißeritz, 38 m)

1.583

Spinnerei Coßmannsdorf siding

1.620

Freital-Coßmannsdorf

(former Bf)

192 m

1.995

Steinbruch Coßmannsdorf siding

2.556

Rote Weißeritz (43 m)

2.941

Rote Weißeritz (38 m)

3.123

Rote Weißeritz (28 m)

3.170

Einsiedlerfelsen tunnel
(17 m; opened out in 1906)

3.196

Rote Weißeritz (30 m)

3.614

Rote Weißeritz (17 m)

3.760

Rote Weißeritz (15 m)

4.197

Rote Weißeritz (13 m)

4.286

Rote Weißeritz (17 m)

4.411

Rote Weißeritz (24 m)

4.550

Rote Weißeritz (24 m)

4.645

Rote Weißeritz (15 m)

4.728

Rote Weißeritz (13 m)

5.175

Rabenau

249 m

5.195

Oelsabach (11 m)

5.391

Rote Weißeritz (29 m)

5.909

Borlasbach (12 m)

6.758

Spechtritz

(former Bf)

274 m

6.800

former route until 1912,
connection to Malter Dam

6.885

Spechtritz cork mill siding

7.973

bridge over stream (20 m)

8.478

Seifersdorf bridge
(70 m; former route until 1912)

8.660

Seifersdorf

301 m

9.926

Goldgrubenweg bridge (45 m)

10.404

dam construction cooperative siding

10.820

Malter

335 m

11.244

Bormannsgrund bridge (66 m)

13.800

Former route until 1912

14.006

Rote Weißeritz (18 m)

14.322

Wholesale company siding

14.357

Ratsmühle Dippoldiswalde siding

14.885
14.800
Dippoldiswalde

km change +85 m[1]

348 m

16.172

Rote Weißeritz (22 m)

17.263

Ulberndorf

374 m

18.443

Rote Weißeritz (15 m)

18.505

Kitchen furniture factory siding

18.820

Obercarsdorf

395 m

Former route until 1924

20.140

20.730

Schmiedeberg-Naundorf

410 m

metal processing factory siding

21.731

Schmiedeberg viaduct (170 m)

21.825

Schenkgasse (21 m)

Pöbel Valley Railway (never completed)

22.052

Schmiedeberg (Bz Dresden)
(island station) 445 m

23.074

Schmiedeberg foundry siding;
former route until 1924

23.303

Buschmühle

462 m

23.785

25.400

Kurort Kipsdorf Ldst

517 m

26.137

Kurort Kipsdorf

534 m

Source: German railway atlas[2]

The line was the second Saxon narrow gauge railway to be built, and is also considered to be the oldest public narrow gauge railway in Germany still in operation.[3]

Since 14 September 2004, the line has been operated by Saxon Steam Railway Company (formerly the BVO Bahn), a company that also operates the Fichtelberg Railway and Lößnitzgrund Railway.[4]

Train on reconstructed section in Rabenau
 
Train in Seifersdorf

The construction started in 1881. The gauge selected for the line was 750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in), in common with other Saxon narrow gauge railways. The first section to Schmiedeberg was put into operation on 1 November 1882. On 3 September 1883, the regular trains reached the terminal station at Kurort Kipsdorf.

In 1912 a part of the track was relocated to allow construction of the Malter Valley Dam. In 1920 construction began on the Pöbel Valley Railway (Pöbeltalbahn) that was to link Schmiedelberg, on the Weißeritz Valley Railway, to Moldava, now in the Czech Republic. This line was expected to bring additional freight traffic, but construction was abandoned in 1923 and never resumed.

Freight traffic ceased on the line in 1993, leaving only passenger traffic. By the time of the floods in 2002, the railway carried approximately 200,000 passengers per year.[citation needed]

Damage in 2002 floods

edit

 
A bridge under reconstruction in Rabenau

The railway was badly hit by the major flooding in 2002, which severely damaged most of the track and infrastructure. This damage mirrored that of 1897, when almost all the line's bridges were damaged or destroyed.[4]

The damage was estimated to be around 20 million and a fund-raising campaign was organised. The Federal government and the Government of Saxony agreed to cover one half of what is needed to rebuild the railway line. The section of line between Freital-Hainsberg station and Dippoldiswalde, the normal passing point for trains, was reopened on 14 December 2008. Six return trains per day are normally operated on this section.[4]

The section of line from Dippoldiswalde to the terminus at Kurort Kipsdorf was due to reopen in 2010, however reconstruction was halted whilst the cost of rebuilding the first section to reopen is investigated. The rebuilding was originally expected to cost €19 million, but as of 2010 had cost €22.5 million. As this increase has coincided with budgetary cutbacks for the Saxon narrow gauge lines, new sources of funding had to be found if the rebuilding were to be completed.[4][5]

Funding was secured, and work on rebuilding the remainder of the line resumed in 2014; the remaining section from Dippoldiswalde to Kurort Kipsdorf reopened on 17 July 2017.

On 19 August 2024, locomotive 99 1762-6 was derailed and damaged by an accident with a truck on a level crossing near Dippoldiswalde station.

Technical specification

edit

  • Gauge: 750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in)
  • Length: 26.3 kilometres (16.3 mi)
  • Elevation difference: 350 metres (1,150 ft)
  • Min. curve-radius: 50 metres (160 ft)
  • Max. gradient: 1:40
  • Stations/Stops: 13
  • Bridges: 34

 
Station at Freital Cossmannsdorf
 
Station at Dippoldiswalde

The track begins at Freital-Hainsberg station on the standard gauge railway from Dresden to Chemnitz, and at an altitude of 184 m (604 ft).

The other stations and stops are as follows:

  1. ^ STREDA – Total distance directory of the DBAG; status: 1 February 2003
  2. ^ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  3. ^ Älteste öffentliche Schmalspurbahn Deutschlands at www.ig.weisseritztalbahn.de. Retrieved 24 Dec 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d Nock, Andrew (April 2009). "Weisseritztalbahn reopens to Dippoldiswalde". Today's Railways. Platform 5 Publishing Ltd. p. 61.
  5. ^ Fender, Keith (February 2011). "Weisseritztalbahn cost increase puts rebuilding in doubt". Today's Railways. Platform 5 Publishing Ltd. p. 61.
  • Thiel, Hans-Christoph (1996). Schmalspurbahn Freital-Hainsberg – Kipsdorf. Verlag Kenning Nordhorn. ISBN 3-927587-67-2.