Apeldoorn–Zwolle railway

The Apeldoorn–Zwolle railway was a railway in the Netherlands connecting Apeldoorn, Gelderland with Zwolle, Overijssel. The railway was constructed by the Royal Netherlands Railway Company (Koninglijke Nederlandsche Locaalspoorweg-Maatschappij, KNLS) and opened between 1887 and 1889. The railway soon earned the nickname Baron Line, thanks to the number of nobles living along the line. The railway was closed in 1950 and largely demolished in the 1970s.[1]

Apeldoorn–Zwolle railway
Overview
Other name(s)Baron Line
StatusDemolished
TerminiApeldoorn
Zwolle
Stations13
Operation
Opened2 July 1887
Closed10 October 1950
OwnerKNLS
Operator(s)HSM
Technical
Line length36.7 km (22.8 mi)
Number of tracks1
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Route map
Legend
-
line from Deventer
line from Zutphen
museum line from Dieren
0.0 Apeldoorn
line to Amersfoort
4.2 Palace Het Loo
4.0 Het Loo
7.2 Wenum
fermentation plant
11.0 Vaassen
stone factory De Veluwe
14.0 Emst
17.9 Epe
24.0 Heerde
29.1 Wapenveld
31.0 Berghuizen
paper factory
factory
33.5 Hattem
line to Kampen Zuid
line from Amersfoort
36.6 Hattemerbroek
36.7
line from Lelystad
IJssel river
Zwolle depot
line from Kampen
Zwolle NCS
NedTrain
Zwolle
Zwolle freight yard
line to Deventer
line to Almelo
line to Meppel

History

In 1876, royal palace Het Loo was connected to the Amsterdam–Zutphen railway. Via the Loolijn, the palace could be reached directly from Amsterdam Centraal. One year later, the Royal Dutch Local Rail Company (KNLS) was founded, which built several railways from Apeldoorn, including the railway to Zwolle. West of the Apeldoorn railway station, this new line connected to the Loo line. Just before the palace, the line split to Vaassen, Epe and Hattem. Near Wezep, the line merged into the Utrecht–Kampen railway of the Dutch Central Railway Company (NCS). This way, KLNS could use the existing railway bridge over the river IJssel.[2]

In 1887, the section Apeldoorn-Hattem was opened. Trains terminated in a temporary station, close to the NCS Hattemerbroek railway station. The connection to the line to Zwolle was built in 1889. Trains were operated by the Dutch Iron Railway Company (HSM).

Passenger services were terminated on October 8, 1950. The section from Heerde to Wapenveld was immediately put out of service. In 1970, freight services between Wapenveld and Hattem were ended. The last freight trains between Hattem and Hattemerbroek and between Heerde and Apeldoorn rode in 1972. Soon after, the track was demolished.

After the closure, passengers between Apeldoorn and Zwolle were serviced by buses of the Veluwe's Car Service (VAD). As of December 2010, Syntus's Veluwelijn provides the bus service.

Stations and buildings

Most stations were so called Standard Stations by KNLS. Het Loo station was a unique design. In Apeldoorn and Hattemerbroek, the KNLS used the existing stations of HSM and NCS. In Epe, Heerde and Hattem, large station buildings of the type 1st Class were built. Vaassen railway station was of type 2nd Class. Emst and Wapenveld were 3rd Class. Kampen Zuid was built in the style of HSM stations, but this building was demolished after just twenty years. Apart from Wapenveld, Heerde and Vaassen, all station building have been demolished after the closure of the railway line.

Present day

The former railway, currently in use as a bike trail near Emst, April 2003

Many recognizable objects have survived the demolition of the railway line. In Apeldoorn, two connection curves are now in use as footpaths and several homes of signalmen are still standing. Outside of Apeldoorn, almost the entire railway is converted into bike paths.[3]

gollark: Yes, camto is correct.
gollark: https://osmarks.tk/infipage/
gollark: LYRICLY PLAY INFIPAGE
gollark: I spend my time oscillating around neutral.
gollark: The best date system.

References

  1. Stationsweb
  2. "Geheugen van Apeldoorn". Archived from the original on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2014-10-16.
  3. Spoorzoeken

Bibliography

Veenendaal, Augustus J., Jr. (2001). Railways in the Netherlands : a brief history, 1834-1994. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford Univ. Press. ISBN 0804739471.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.