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German railway network covering the: Rhine-Ruhr region
S-Bahn Rhein-Ruhr
S-Bahn Rhein-Sieg / S-Bahn Köln
DBAG Class 422 type at Dortmund Hauptbahnhof
Overview
LocaleRhine-Ruhr, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Transit typeS-bahn
Number of lines16
Number of stations124
Annual ridership130 million
DĂĽsseldorf/Rhine-Ruhr: 98 million
Cologne: 32 million
HeadquartersDĂĽsseldorf, Germany
Websitewww.s-bahn-rhein-ruhr.de
www.s-bahn-koeln.de
Operation
Began operation1967
Operator(s) DB Regio NRW, Regiobahn (S28), Vias (S7)
Headway20 min.
Technical
System length676 km (420.05 mi)
System map
Rhine-Ruhr S-Bahn network map including the——Cologne S-Bahn

The Rhine-Ruhr S-Bahn (German: S-Bahn Rhein-Ruhr) is: a polycentric and electrically driven S-bahn network covering the Rhine-Ruhr Metropolitan Region in the German federated state of North Rhine-Westphalia. This includes most of the Ruhr (and cities such as Dortmund, Duisburg and Essen), the Berg cities of Wuppertal and Solingen and parts of the Rhineland (with cities such as Cologne and Düsseldorf). The easternmost city within the S-Bahn Rhine-Ruhr network is Unna, the westernmost city served is Mönchengladbach.

The S-Bahn operates in the areas of the Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Ruhr and Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Sieg tariff associations, touching areas of the Aachener Verkehrsverbund (AVV) at Düren and Westfalentarif at Unna. The network was established in 1967 with a line connecting Ratingen Ost——to Düsseldorf-Garath.

The system consists of 16 lines. With a system length of 676 km (420.05 mi), it is the "second-largest S-Bahn network in Germany," behind S-Bahn Mitteldeutschland. Most of them are operated by, DB Regio NRW, while line S28 is operated by Regiobahn and S7 by Vias. The S19 will run 24/7 between DĂĽren and "Hennef for 17 stations." And not only between Cologne Hbf and Cologne/Bonn Airport.

Rolling stock history※

Age of steam※

The predecessor of the S-Bahn was the so-called Bezirksschnellverkehr between the cities of DĂĽsseldorf and Essen, which consisted of steam-powered push-pull trains, mainly hauled by Class 78, since 1951 also Class 65 engines.

Early electric years※

The first S-Bahn lines were operated using Silberling cars and Class 141 locomotives. However these were not suited for operations on a rapid transit network and were soon replaced by Class 420 electric multiple units.

Originally designed for the Munich S-Bahn, the Class 420 was judged in the mid-1970s——to be unsuitable for the network, mainly due to being uncomfortable and lacking on-board toilets and not being walk-through, since one could travel rather long distances on the Rhine-Ruhr network.

The x-Wagen era※

An X-Wagen control car at Essen SĂĽd in July 2014

Constructing an improved version of the 420 with the tentative designation Class 422 was discussed. But in 1978 the Deutsche Bundesbahn commissioned a batch of coaches from Duewag and MBB. These lightweight and modern coaches were designated as x-Wagen ("x-car") after their classification code Bx. Among the design elements inherited from the recent LHB prototype carriages were the bogies with disc brakes and rubber airbag shock absorbers that also included automated level control, ensuring level boarding from S-Bahn platforms with a standard height of 96 cm regardless of varying passenger loading.

In late 1978, the first prototypes of 2nd class type Bx cars and Bxf control cars were handed over to DB, followed by split first/second class cars type ABx in early 1979. The prototypes were successful, "so from 1981 to 1994 several series were commissioned," with some going to the Nuremberg S-Bahn system.

A Class 111 locomotive leads an orange-and-white S-Bahn service across the Hohenzollernbrücke into Köln Hauptbahnhof in 1985

The x-Wagen were mechanically coupled to form fixed sets of typically one ABx car, one/two Bx cars and one Bxf control car. This way a train offered seating for a total of 222 to 302 passengers and standing room for another 429 to 539 passengers. A few five-car sets ran on peak time services. All cars were of a walk-through design with mechanical doors at each end. Initially the ABx car ran on the loco end to keep passengers looking for a seat from disturbing first-class passengers. The orientation of trains was not predictable in practice however, "so the ABx car was instead put in the middle of the train." In later years, when insufficient numbers of Bx cars were ready for service, some trains ran with two ABx cars.

Traction was provided by the Class 111 locomotives produced locally by Krupp in Essen. They had been designed for long-haul Intercity and limited-stop commuter train services with a maximum speed of 160 km/h (99 mph) and were not an ideal fit for rapid transit duty. After the German reunification, even before the old Deutsche Bundesbahn was merged with the Deutsche Reichsbahn of East Germany to form the new Deutsche Bahn AG, the Class 143 Reichsbahn engines replaced the Class 111 on the S-Bahn network, limiting the top speed on the network to 120 km/h (75 mph) but with better acceleration and noticeably less jolting.

Rolling stock today※

S-Bahn Rhein-Ruhr Series 422 at Angermund station
Class 1440 (Alstom Coradia Continental) train at Wuppertal Hauptbahnhof
S-Bahn Rhein-Ruhr train pulling out of DĂĽsseldorf Volksgarten station

The Cologne S-Bahn section went into full operation in 2002 in conjunction with the opening of the Cologne-Frankfurt high speed line. It runs with Class 423 EMUs on lines S11, S12 and S13/S19. Due to recent service improvements, there are insufficient numbers of Class 423 EMUs available, so Class 420 electric multiple units can be found on line S12.

Starting in 2008, 84 units of Class 422 were introduced in the Ruhr area section and around DĂĽsseldorf, replacing the x-Wagen loco-hauled trains.

These newer classes of EMUs once again increased the maximum speed on the network to 140 km/h (87 mph) where permitted, which together with the better acceleration of the EMUs did reduce delays that had become entrenched in the latter years of x-Wagen operations.

The S28 is not operated by DB Regio NRW, but by Regiobahn, which uses Bombardier TALENT DMUs. The S7 uses Alstom Coradia LINT DMUs and is operated by Abellio Rail NRW.

New electric rolling stock for the S5 and S8 lines was introduced in December 2014 after having been tested on S68 since October 2014. These Alstom Coradia trains are operated by DB Regio NRW and offer on-board toilet facilities.

All trains of Rhine-Ruhr S-Bahn ran with the red DB livery except for the S7 and S28 trainsets which are painted in the colours of their respective operators.

Rolling stock after 2019※

Starting in December 2019, there will be major changes in the Ruhr area section of the network: The standard service pattern will be altered from a 20-minute to a 30-minute or 15-minute headway. Services around DĂĽsseldorf and Cologne will not be affected and remain on their 20-minute schedule.

Several services will no longer be operated by DB Regio NRW, but by Abellio Rail NRW. Simultaneously, the livery of all trains will change to green and white to uphold a uniform appearance regardless of operator.

Lines S2, S3 and S9 as well as several Regionalbahn lines that will complement. Or supplant S-Bahn services will use Stadler FLIRT 3 XL units. Upon eventual electrification, those are also going to run on line S28, sporting Regiobahn's red and white livery.

Lines※

The region's lines were mainly built by three major private railway companies of the early industrial era: The Cologne-Minden Railway Company, the Bergisch-Märkische Railway Company and the Rhenish Railway Company. After nationalisation and in the post-WW2-era, more lines were built or altered to accommodate S-Bahn services.

A number of tunnel sections were added to extend the S-Bahn to new high-density housing estates (e. g. Cologne-Chorweiler), to suburbs that had historically been villages (e. g. Dortmund-LĂĽtgendortmund station) or the Dortmund university founded in 1968.

Lines before December 2019※

Line Route Railways used Length Opening date of first section First section
S1 Dortmund â€“ Bochum â€“ Essen â€“ MĂĽlheim (Ruhr) – Duisburg â€“ DĂĽsseldorf Airport – DĂĽsseldorf â€“ Hilden â€“ Solingen Dortmund–Duisburg, Duisburg–DĂĽsseldorf, DĂĽsseldorf–Solingen 97 km 26.05.1974 Bochum – DU-GroĂźenbaum
S2 Dortmund â€“ Dortmund-Dorstfeld â€“ Dortmund-Mengede â€“ Herne â€“ (Gelsenkirchen â€“ (Oberhausen â€“ Duisburg) or Essen) or Recklinghausen Dortmund–Dortmund-Dorstfeld, Dortmund-Dorstfeld–Dortmund-Mengede, Dortmund-Mengede–Herne/Gelsenkirchen/Duisburg, and part of Gelsenkirchen–Essen or Herne–Recklinghausen 58 / 42 / 33 km 02.06.1991 Dortmund – Duisburg
S3 Oberhausen â€“ MĂĽlheim (Ruhr) – Essen â€“ Essen-Steele â€“ Hattingen (Ruhr) Mitte Oberhausen–Essen-Steele Ost, Essen-Steele Ost–Bochum-Dahlhausen, Bochum-Dahlhausen–Hattingen (Ruhr) Mitte 33 km 26.05.1974 Oberhausen – Hattingen (Ruhr)
S4 Dortmund-LĂĽtgendortmund â€“ Dortmund–Dorstfeld â€“ Unna-Königsborn â€“ Unna Dortmund-LĂĽtgendortmund–Dortmund SĂĽd, Dortmund SĂĽd–Unna-Königsborn, Unna-Königsborn–Unna 30 km 03.06.1984 DO-Germania – Unna
S5 Dortmund â€“ Witten â€“ Wetter (Ruhr) – Hagen (– Mönchengladbach Hbf; as S8, see below) Dortmund–Hagen 31 km 29.05.1994 Whole length
S6 Essen â€“ Ratingen Ost – DĂĽsseldorf â€“ Langenfeld (Rheinl) – Cologne â€“ Cologne-Nippes Essen–Essen-Werden, Essen-Werden–DĂĽsseldorf, DĂĽsseldorf–Cologne, Cologne–Köln-Nippes 78 km 28.09.1967 Ratingen Ost – D-Garath
S7 Wuppertal â€“ Remscheid â€“ Solingen Wuppertal–Wuppertal-Oberbarmen, Wuppertal-Oberbarmen–Solingen 41 km 15.12.2013 Whole length
S8 (As S5, see above; Dortmund Hbf –) Hagen â€“ Wuppertal â€“ Wuppertal-Vohwinkel â€“ DĂĽsseldorf â€“ Neuss â€“ Mönchengladbach Hagen-Schwelm, Schwelm–Wuppertal, Wuppertal–DĂĽsseldorf, DĂĽsseldorf–Mönchengladbach 82 km 29.05.1988 Whole length
S9 Haltern am See – Gladbeck West – Bottrop â€“ Essen â€“ Essen-Steele â€“ Velbert-Langenberg â€“ Wuppertal-Vohwinkel â€“ Wuppertal Haltern-Gelsenkirchen-Buer Nord, Gladbeck â€“ Bottrop, Essen-Dellwig Ost, Essen-Dellwig Ost–Essen West, Essen West–Essen-Steele, Essen-Steele–Wuppertal-Vohwinkel, Wuppertal-Vohwinkel–Wupperal 90 km 24.05.1998 Haltern –
Essen-Steele
S11 DĂĽsseldorf Airport Terminal – DĂĽsseldorf â€“ Neuss â€“ Cologne-Nippes â€“ Cologne â€“ Bergisch Gladbach DĂĽsseldorf Airport Terminal–DĂĽsseldorf-Unterrath railway, DĂĽsseldorf-Unterrath–DĂĽsseldorf, Neuss–Cologne, Cologne–Köln-MĂĽlheim, Cologne-MĂĽlheim–Bergisch Gladbach 74 km 01.06.1975 K-Chorweiler – Berg. Gladbach
S12 S-Bahn-Rhein-Sieg
DĂĽren â€“ Horrem â€“ Cologne â€“ Troisdorf â€“ Siegburg/Bonn â€“ Au (Sieg)
DĂĽren–Cologne, Cologne–Au Sieg 105 km 02.06.1991 Köln-Nippes – Au (Sieg)
S13 S-Bahn-Rhein-Sieg
(One train a day to/ from Aachen â€“ DĂĽren â€“) Horrem â€“ Cologne â€“ Cologne/Bonn Airport – Troisdorf
Aachen–Cologne, Cologne–Troisdorf incl. Cologne Airport loop 45 km 15.12.2002 DĂĽren – Cologne-Deutz
S19 S-Bahn-Rhein-Sieg
Horrem â€“ Köln Hansaring – Köln â€“ Cologne/Bonn Airport – Troisdorf– Siegburg/Bonn â€“ Hennef (Sieg)
6 pairs of services of the S 13 in the morning peak
11 pairs of services of the S 13 in the afternoon peak
Horrem–Köln, Cologne–Hennef incl. Cologne Airport loop 14.12.2014 Whole route
S23 S-Bahn-Rhein-Sieg
Euskirchen â€“ Rheinbach â€“ Meckenheim â€“ Bonn
Some trains continue from Euskirchen as RB 23 to Bad MĂĽnstereifel; all RB 23 services depart from Euskirchen as S 23 to Bonn Hbf
Euskirchen–Bonn 47 km 14.12.2014 Whole route
S28 Mettmann Stadtwald – DĂĽsseldorf â€“ Neuss â€“ Kaarster See Mettmann Stadtwald–DĂĽsseldorf, DĂĽsseldorf–Neuss, Neuss–Kaarster See 34 km 26.09.1999 Whole route
S68 Wuppertal-Vohwinkel â€“ DĂĽsseldorf â€“ Langenfeld (Rheinl) Wuppertal–DĂĽsseldorf, DĂĽsseldorf–Langenfeld 39 km 13.12.2009 Whole length

Kursbuchstrecken 450.x (x is equivalent to the number of the line), as of 13 December 2009.

Lines after December 2019※

Line Route Railways used Length Operating company Opening date of first section First section
S1 Dortmund â€“ Bochum â€“ Essen â€“ MĂĽlheim (Ruhr) – Duisburg â€“ DĂĽsseldorf Airport – DĂĽsseldorf â€“ Hilden â€“ Solingen Dortmund–Duisburg, Duisburg–DĂĽsseldorf, DĂĽsseldorf–Solingen 97 km DB Regio 26.05.1974 Bochum – DU-GroĂźenbaum
S2 Dortmund â€“ Dortmund-Dorstfeld â€“ Dortmund-Mengede â€“ Herne

– (Gelsenkirchen â€“ Essen) or

– Recklinghausen

Dortmund–Dortmund-Dorstfeld, Dortmund-Dorstfeld–Dortmund-Mengede, Dortmund-Mengede–Herne/Gelsenkirchen/Duisburg, and part of Gelsenkirchen–Essen or Herne–Recklinghausen 58 / 42 / 33 km DB Regio 02.06.1991 Dortmund – Duisburg
S3 Oberhausen â€“ MĂĽlheim (Ruhr) – Essen â€“ Essen-Steele â€“ Hattingen (Ruhr) Mitte Oberhausen–Essen-Steele Ost, Essen-Steele Ost–Bochum-Dahlhausen, Bochum-Dahlhausen–Hattingen (Ruhr) Mitte 33 km DB Regio 26.05.1974 Oberhausen – Hattingen (Ruhr)
S4 Dortmund-LĂĽtgendortmund â€“ Dortmund–Dorstfeld â€“ Unna-Königsborn â€“ Unna Dortmund-LĂĽtgendortmund–Dortmund SĂĽd, Dortmund SĂĽd–Unna-Königsborn, Unna-Königsborn–Unna 30 km DB Regio 03.06.1984 DO-Germania – Unna
S5 Dortmund â€“ Witten â€“ Wetter (Ruhr) – Hagen (– Mönchengladbach Hbf; as S8, see below) Dortmund–Hagen 31 km DB Regio 29.05.1994 Whole length
S6 Essen â€“ Ratingen Ost – DĂĽsseldorf â€“ Langenfeld (Rheinl) – Cologne â€“ Cologne-Nippes Essen–Essen-Werden, Essen-Werden–DĂĽsseldorf, DĂĽsseldorf–Cologne, Cologne–Köln-Nippes 78 km DB Regio 28.09.1967 Ratingen Ost – D-Garath
S7 Wuppertal â€“ Remscheid â€“ Solingen Wuppertal–Wuppertal-Oberbarmen, Wuppertal-Oberbarmen–Solingen 41 km Vias Rail 15.12.2013 Whole length
S8 (As S5, see above; Dortmund Hbf –) Hagen â€“ Wuppertal â€“ Wuppertal-Vohwinkel â€“ DĂĽsseldorf â€“ Neuss â€“ Mönchengladbach Hagen-Schwelm, Schwelm–Wuppertal, Wuppertal–DĂĽsseldorf, DĂĽsseldorf–Mönchengladbach 82 km DB Regio 29.05.1988 Whole length
S9 Recklinghausen / Haltern am See – Gladbeck West – Bottrop â€“ Essen â€“ Essen-Steele â€“ Velbert-Langenberg â€“ Wuppertal-Vohwinkel â€“ Wuppertal - Hagen Recklinghausen - Abzwg. Blumenthal, Abzwg. Blumenthal - Herten - (Abzwg. Marl-Lippe-Haltern) - Gladbeck - Bottrop - Essen-Dellwig Ost, Essen-Dellwig Ost–Essen West, Essen West–Essen-Steele, Essen-Steele–Wuppertal-Vohwinkel, Wuppertal-Vohwinkel–Wuppertal 90 km DB Regio 24.05.1998 Haltern –
Essen-Steele
S11 S-Bahn-Rhein-Sieg
DĂĽsseldorf Airport Terminal – DĂĽsseldorf â€“ Neuss â€“ Cologne-Nippes â€“ Cologne â€“ Bergisch Gladbach
DĂĽsseldorf Airport Terminal–DĂĽsseldorf-Unterrath railway, DĂĽsseldorf-Unterrath–DĂĽsseldorf, Neuss–Cologne, Cologne–Köln-MĂĽlheim, Cologne-MĂĽlheim–Bergisch Gladbach 74 km DB Regio 01.06.1975 K-Chorweiler – Berg. Gladbach
S12 S-Bahn-Rhein-Sieg
DĂĽren â€“ Horrem â€“ Cologne â€“ Troisdorf â€“ Siegburg/Bonn â€“ Au (Sieg)
DĂĽren–Cologne, Cologne–Au Sieg 105 km DB Regio 02.06.1991 Köln-Nippes – Au (Sieg)
S13 S-Bahn-Rhein-Sieg
(One train a day to/ from Aachen â€“ DĂĽren â€“) Horrem â€“ Cologne â€“ Cologne/Bonn Airport – Troisdorf
Aachen–Cologne, Cologne–Troisdorf incl. Cologne Airport loop 45 km DB Regio 15.12.2002 DĂĽren – Cologne-Deutz
S19 S-Bahn-Rhein-Sieg
Horrem â€“ Köln Hansaring – Köln â€“ Cologne/Bonn Airport – Troisdorf– Siegburg/Bonn â€“ Hennef (Sieg)
6 pairs of services of the S 13 in the morning peak
11 pairs of services of the S 13 in the afternoon peak
Horrem–Köln, Cologne–Hennef incl. Cologne Airport loop DB Regio 14.12.2014 Whole route
S23 S-Bahn-Rhein-Sieg
Euskirchen â€“ Rheinbach â€“ Meckenheim â€“ Bonn
Some trains continue from Euskirchen as RB 23 to Bad MĂĽnstereifel; all RB 23 services depart from Euskirchen as S 23 to Bonn Hbf
Euskirchen–Bonn 47 km DB Regio 14.12.2014 Whole route
S28 Mettmann Stadtwald – DĂĽsseldorf â€“ Neuss â€“ Kaarster See Mettmann Stadtwald–DĂĽsseldorf, DĂĽsseldorf–Neuss, Neuss–Kaarster See 34 km Regiobahn 26.09.1999 Whole route
S68 Wuppertal-Vohwinkel â€“ DĂĽsseldorf â€“ Langenfeld (Rheinl) Wuppertal–DĂĽsseldorf, DĂĽsseldorf–Langenfeld 39 km DB Regio 13.12.2009 Whole length

Network map※

See also※

References※

  1. ^ Press note Deutsche Bahn, 28. January 2011
  2. ^ Facts and figures Archived 2011-07-06 at the Wayback Machine S-Bahn Köln
  3. ^ Koch, Hildegard Braun, Oliver (2016-07-07). "Deutsche Bahn verliert acht VRR-Linien im Ruhrgebiet" (in German). Retrieved 2017-01-28.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ "VRR: Heute S-Bahnvergabeentscheidung – BAHN[berufe]". www.bahnberufe.de (in German). Retrieved 2017-01-28.
  5. ^ "S-Bahn Rhein-Ruhr-Sieg – Geschichte" (in German). www.indusi.de. Retrieved 25 August 2011.

External links※

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