Florianerbahn

The Florianerbahn is a museum tramway in Upper Austria that is not operational due to construction work. It was built as a railway - a licensed narrow gauge Lokalbahn or branch line - between the independent commununity of Ebelsberg (today a district within Linz) and Sankt Florian. It was owned by the Lokalbahn Ebelsberg–St. Florian AG, but operated by the firm of Stern & Hafferl from Gmunden. Because the line had the character of a tramway (Überlandstraßenbahn) it switched over to providing tramway services in the wake of the annexation of Austria in 1938 – along with Stern & Hafferl's sister companies Elektrische Lokalbahn Unterach–See and Elektrische Lokalbahn Gmunden.

Ebelsberg–St. Florian tramway
Florianerbahn depot
Technical
Line length9.6 km (6 mi)
Track gauge900 mm (2 ft 11 716 in)
Electrification600 V DC
Route map
Connexion from and to the Linz tramway
0,0 Ebelsberg
tracks lifted at present during construction work
3,5 Pichling Lokalbahn
5,0 Pichling See
rebuilt, currently no catenary
5,6 Bruck
7,9 Taunleiten
8,4 Glockengießerei
9,6 Markt Sankt Florian

The rail gauge is the same as that of the Linz tramway, 900 mm (2 ft 11 716 in), the line is electrified, operating at 600 V C. It ran regular services from 2 September 1913 to the end of 1973. From 1929 it was connected directly to the Linz tramway network at Ebelsberg, so that trailer coaches could run through from Linz to St. Florian.

The line was officially opened on 1 September 1913. The specially decorated first train, consisting of a railcar and two carriages, left Sankt Florian at 6:22 and arrived at Ebelsberg at 6:50. 42 of the 96 places available were taken.

After the fall in passenger numbers and the cessation of services on 31 December 1973 the line was taken over by the Austrian Society for Railway History (ÖGEG), and later by the Club Florianerbahn society and a section of the line reactivated as a museum railway. As of 2008 there were no museum services because much of the route is not usable: between Pichling and Bruck the line runs under the Western motorway and had to be lifted whilst construction work is going on. The track has since been replaced, but the catenary is still missing. Between Pichling and Ebelsberg a large section of the overgrown tracks has been removed to build a ring road and has not been fully replaced. The museum's vehicle collection in St. Florian can be visited if notice is given.

Vehicles

EM 1 in the shed
EM 1 on the track

The line was worked by the following vehicles until it closed in 1973:

Number Year of manufacture Manufacturer Remarks
Railbuses
EM 11912Grazer Waggonfabrikretired in 1974, transferred to the museum railway in 1975
EM 21912Grazer Waggonfabrikscrapped in 1975
EM 31912Grazer Waggonfabrikretired in 1974, transferred to the museum railway in 1975
Trailer coach
EP 11912Grazer Waggonfabrikrenumbered to EB 20.224 in 1974
EP 21912Grazer Waggonfabrikrenumbered to EB 20.222 in 1974
EP 31912Grazer Waggonfabrikrenumbered to EB 20.223 in 1974
EP 41913Grazer WaggonfabrikGep 4 to 1951, transferred to the museum railway in 1975
EP 51913Grazer WaggonfabrikGep 5 to 1940, transferred to the museum railway in 1975
good wagon
E 5011912Grazer Waggonfabrikscrapped in 1974
E 5021946Stabegscrapped in 1974
E 5211912Grazer Waggonfabrikscrapped in 1974

The abbreviations had the following meaning:

  • EM – Ebelsberg Motorwagen (power car)
  • EP – Ebelsberg Personenwagen (coach)

These designations were not written on the vehicles themselves.

Sources

  • Helmut Weis: Die Unternehmung Stern & Hafferl III. Bahn im Bild, Band 80, 1991
  • Wolfgang Kaiser: Straßenbahnen in Österreich. GeraMond Verlag, 2004 ISBN 3-7654-7198-4
gollark: A metric minute would be a thousandth of a day, or something like that, depending on exactly how it's sliced.
gollark: Huh?
gollark: Metric time is just using seconds with SI prefixes.
gollark: Decimal time is the French revolution thing where they split the day into 10 hours and whatnot.
gollark: I think you may be confusing metric and decimal time.

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