Roßwein–Niederwiesa railway

The Roßwein–Niederwiesa railway is a branch line in the German state of Saxony. It runs from Roßwein through the Striegis valley to Hainichen and on to Frankenberg and Niederwiesa, where the line ends at a junction with the Dresden–Werdau railway. Since 2004, only the 16.8 km long section between Niederwiesa and Hainichen is still operating.

Roßwein–Niederwiesa railway
Overview
Line number6620
Service
Route number516
Technical
Line length37.49 km (23.30 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Minimum radius290 m (951 ft)
Operating speed80 km/h (49.7 mph) (maximum)
Maximum incline1.4%
Route map

0.00
Roßwein
1.20
Goldbornstraße bridge
1.70
Wannesiedlung bridge
5.42
Grunau (Sachs)
5.45
Grunau paper factory siding
9.30
Böhrigen
12.00
Berbersdorf hard stone works siding
12.35
Berbersdorf
17.04
Kratzmühle
19.00
Hainichen brick works siding
19.92
Hainichen
26.32
Dittersbach (b Frankenberg/Sachs)
28.29
Lützeltal viaduct (104 m)
29.09
Frankenberg (Sachs)
30.18
Frankenberg (Sachs) Süd
(ehem. Gunnersdorf)
32.62
Harrassprung tunnel (86 m)
33.89
Braunsdorf-Lichtenwalde
34.64
Braunsdorf viaduct (255 m)
34.82
Zschopau bridge (109 m)
36.55
Niederwiesa viaduct (181 m)
37.49
Niederwiesa
Operating points and lines[1]

History edit

In the spring of 1867 construction began on the railway line between Niederwiesa and Hainichen. On 1 March 1869, the Royal Saxon State Railways (German: Königlich Sächsische Staatseisenbahnen) opened the line as a branch of the main line between Chemnitz and Dresden. Initially, only about two to three trains ran daily.

The Hainichen-Rosswein Railway Company (Hainichen-Rossweiner Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft), which had been founded in 1872, opened, on 15 August 1874, a new 17 km-long section from Hainichen to Roßwein to the Borsdorf–Coswig railway of the Leipzig–Dresden Railway Company. It was taken over by the Royal Saxon State Railways on 10 August 1876, which had managed operations on it from its opening.

 
Harras Tunnel on a postcard appr. in 1915

The Harass (or Harrassprung—"Haras’ leap", referring to the legend of a leap on horseback off the rocks into the river said to have been made by Dietrich von Harras in 1449) tunnel runs through the Harass rocks (Harrasfelsen) between Braunsdorf and Frankenberg. It was the site of a serious railway accident on 14 December 1913. During a winter storm, about 100 m³ of rock broke away from the Harass rocks and blocked the southern exit of the tunnel. Shortly after 22.15, a passenger train from Frankenberg to Niederwiesa ran into the debris. The accident claimed 10 dead and 53 wounded and is still regarded as the worst rail disaster in Saxony.

Saxony cancelled passenger services between Roßwein and Hainichen on 24 May 1998. Freight traffic on this section was also closed on 1 January 2000. The Federal Railway Authority (Eisenbahn-Bundesamt) approved the closure of the Hainichen–Roßwein section on 11 July 2001 and it was completed on 30 September 2001. In August 2002, during the most severe flood in Saxony, bridges on this section were completely destroyed and parts of the track were washed away by the flow of the Striegis. The reconstruction and reopening of the line is therefore out of the question.

In October 2002, the whole line was leased to Regio Infra Service Sachsen. After several years of renovation, the City-Bahn Chemnitz reopened the Niederwiesa–Hainichen section on 11 December 2004. As part of the renovation, the old Frankenberg (Sachs) Süd halt was abandoned and replaced by a newly established halt of the same name about 800 metres closer to the centre of Frankenberg, near the Auf dem Wind housing estate. Two services an hour run on the line on weekdays and on Saturdays and Sundays services run every two hours. Services are operated using a Regio-Shuttle diesel railcar.

Railtrail edit

 
Abandoned track at former Grunau station (May 2017)

The lower section between Hainichen and Roßwein, however, remains unused. In 2005, it was abandoned by Regio Infra Service Sachsen and the city of Hainichen decided to dismantle the tracks in order to build a cycle path on the route.

References edit

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

Sources edit

  • Erich Preuß, Rainer Preuß (1991). Sächsische Staatseisenbahnen (in German). Berlin: transpress Verlagsgesellschaft mbH. ISBN 3-344-70700-0.
  • Andreas Petrak (2006). Die Eisenbahn Niederwiesa–Roßwein (in German). Nordhorn: Kenning. ISBN 3-927587-84-2.

External links edit