Lüneburg–Soltau railway

The Lüneburg–Soltau railway is a standard gauge railway line in North Germany operated by the East Hanoverian Railways (Osthannoversche Eisenbahnen or OHE).

Lüneburg–Soltau railway
Overview
LocaleLower Saxony, Germany
Line number9111
Technical
Line length57.13 km (35.50 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Operating speed60 km/h (37 mph)
Maximum incline1.7%
Route numberformerly 162, 109b
Route map

Lüneburg West
0,0
Lüneburg Süd
12.7 m
rail ending
old siding to the Lüneburg bleachworks
and the saline/Fuller siding
1.3
link line to the DB
former brick factory siding
2.4
Lüneburg cure park
to the Saline
3.6
Oedeme
5.0
Rettmer
9.4
Melbeck-Embsen
12.8
Heinsen
15.9
Drögennindorf
90.9 m
19.8
Schafstall
109 m
Lopau
22.4
Amelinghausen-Sottorf
64.67 m
27.4
Soderstorf
30.2
Schwindebeck
31.7
Grevenhof
33.8
Steinbeck (Luhe)
Light railway from Winsen (Luhe)
41.1
Hützel (Lüneb)
69.9 m
39.5
Bispingen
81.68 m
41.3
Luhegrund
44.2
Timmerloh
47.2
Harmelingen
48.8
Hambostel
53.2
Harber
connecting track to the DB
57.1
Soltau Süd
57.5
Soltau (Han)
61.12 m
Source: German railway atlas[1]

History

After a lengthy planning phase the 57-kilometre (35 mi) long railway from Lüneburg to Soltau was opened on 13 June 1913 by the Lüneburg–Soltau Light Railway. This company had been founded on 15 February 1911 by the Prussian state, the Province of Hanover and the districts of Lüneburg and Soltau.

It ran from Lüneburg through the middle of the Lüneburg Heath via Amelinghausen-Sottorf and Hützel, where it was joined by the line from Winsen, which had been built by the Winsen–Evendorf–Hützel Light Railway. Finally it reached the railway hub of Soltau, where it share the same station as the Celle–Soltau railway and, from 1920, the Soltau–Neuenkirchen railway as well, which enabled passengers to transfer to the state railway. Running powers for the line in the period 1 June 1923 to July 1944 were the responsibility of the State Light Railway Office of the Province of Hanover. On 1 January 1944 the light railway company merged with the Soltau-Neuenkirchen Light Railway Company to form the Lüneburg-Soltau Railway Company, but this was absorbed the same year, on 11 July 1944, into the East Hanoverian Railways.

The inclines on the line are the most demanding in the OHE's network as its popular name Gebirgsbahn ('hill railway') testifies. It has a height difference of over 100 metres.

In 1973 the Soltau–Hützel section was incorporated into Celle's remotely controlled section. The signal box for this is at Soltau Süd. However, due to the decline in traffic, remote-control is superfluous and, since 2001, is no longer in use on this section. The signals in Hützel and Lüneburg Süd are meanwhile controlled by Celle. The station of Melbeck-Embsen has its own signal box with push-button routing.

Operations

Passenger services

Passenger traffic was moderate in the early years. From 1932 to 1936 three Wismar railbuses were procured which handled all the passenger duties. Only schoolchildren and excursion services were operated by normal trains. The service was very modest; in 1938 there were three pairs of through trains daily, and other trains on the sections from Lüneburg to Amelinghausen and Soltau to Hützel. After 1950 five to six train pairs ran daily. Between 1950 and 1960 semi-fast railbuses (Eiltriebwagen) were introduced, running from Lüneburg via Soltau to Celle. From 28 May 1961 passenger trains called at the Deutsche Bundesbahn (DB) station in Soltau. This made it easier to catch connexions. In Lüneburg an agreement was reached with the DB to allow for a ten-minute walk to the DB station.

On 27 June 1975 passenger services between Soltau and Schwindebeck were withdrawn; the remaining passenger trains followed suit on 21 May 1977.

The Lüneburg Transport Society (Arbeitsgemeinschaft Verkehrsfreunde Lüneburg) offers trips on historic trains at weekends during the summer months and in December between Lüneburg and Hützel under the name "Heath Express" (Heide Express).

Goods traffic

To begin with the transportation of agricultural goods dominated. In Lüneburg the saltworks had a large siding and was an important customer. From the 1960s in Drögennindorf and Hambostel there were mixing plants for road construction materials; they were big customers of the railway for a period of time. The most important goods customer was the compound fertiliser factory at Embsen. They transported a million tonnes of freight and, during their peak years, made up 30 per cent of the entire freight transported by the OHE. In 1989 fertiliser production in Embsen ceased. Until then there had been three local goods trains daily on the line; since 2006 only three per week. Through traffic, too, has reduced. In 1980 there were up to four trains per day, by 2006 on the Soltau–Hützel section only three per week.

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References

Footnotes

  1. Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas). Schweers + Wall. 2017. pp. 21–22. ISBN 978-3-89494-146-8.

Sources

  • Wolff, Gerd (2007). Deutsche Klein- und Privatbahnen (in German). 10: Niedersachsen 2. Zwischen Weser und Elbe. Freiburg: EK-Verlag. pp. 312–321. ISBN 978-3-88255-669-8.
  • Hütter, Ingo; Bretschneider, Thorsten (2010). Die Osthannoverschen Eisenbahnen (in German). EK-Verlag. ISBN 3882557303.
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