The Bundesstraße 462 (B 462) is a German Bundesstraße or federal road. It runs from the Upper Rhine Plain near Rastatt for about 114 kilometres (71 mi) through the northern Black Forest to Rottweil. The section from Rastatt to Freudenstadt, which runs through the Murg valley to Baiersbronn, has been known since the 1960s as the Black Forest Valleys Road (Schwarzwald-Tälerstraße) and, along with the B 500 (Black Forest High Road), is one of the tourist routes in the Black Forest. Both roads meet in Freudenstadt. In 2001 the section from Rastatt to Gaggenau was widened into a dual carriageway as far as Schloss Bad Rotenfels (Landesakademie) and a further widening to the centre of Gaggenau is planned. In 1997, the road through Gernsbach was relieved by the building of the 1,527-metre-long Gernsbach Tunnel.

B 462 shield}}
B 462
Bundesstraße 462
Obertsrot (5072606391).jpg
The B 462 in the Murg valley near Gernsbach-Obertsrot
Route information
Length114 km (71 mi)
Location
CountryGermany
StatesBaden-Württemberg
Highway system
  • Roads in Germany

Route edit

The B 462 runs through the following larger settlements: Rastatt, Kuppenheim, Gaggenau, Gernsbach, Weisenbach, Forbach, Baiersbronn, Freudenstadt, Alpirsbach, Schenkenzell, Schiltach, Schramberg, Rottweil. From there the B 14 continues to Tuttlingen.

Electrification edit

In the "eWayBW" pilot project, the route 462 between Kuppenheim and Gernsbach-Obertsrot is to serve as a test route for trolleybus lorries. Three six-kilometer sections in this area will be electrified for this purpose. As of 2018, commissioning in 2020 and dismantling of the facilities is scheduled after three years of testing. After two "E-Highway" pilot projects on motorways is in Germany the first test on a public road.[1][2][3]

See also edit

External links edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Teststrecke für Oberleitungs-Lkw". swr.online. SWR Aktuell. 2018-04-12. Retrieved 2018-10-01.
  2. ^ "Ab 2020 fahren Oberleitungs-Lkw auf der B 462". Badische Neueste Nachrichten. 2018-04-13. Archived from the original on 2018-10-01. Retrieved 2018-10-01.
  3. ^ "eWayBW". Ministerium für Verkehr Baden-Württemberg. Retrieved 2018-10-01.