Lufthansa Airport Express

The Lufthansa Airport Express was an express train service in Germany, initially linking Düsseldorf and Frankfurt am Main Flughafen (Frankfurt Airport), and later Stuttgart too. The trains were operated by Deutsche Bundesbahn (German Federal Railway, or DB) on behalf of the German airline Lufthansa,[1] and with the airline providing the on-board customer service staff, and its use was limited to Lufthansa customers taking airplane flights into or out of Frankfurt or Düsseldorf airports.[2]

Lufthansa Airport Express
Lufthansa Airport Express
in Kelsterbach, 1993
Overview
Service typeSpecial express, DB designation LH/TEE
(1982–1987)
InterCity (IC)
(1987–1993)
StatusDiscontinued
LocaleGermany
First service27 March 1982 (1982-03-27)
Last service22 May 1993 (1993-05-22)
Former operator(s)Deutsche Bundesbahn /Lufthansa
Route
Distance travelled254 km
Technical
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Electrification15 kV 16,7 Hz (Germany)

Preparations

In 1981 the German airline Lufthansa wanted to lower the costs of the very expensive shorthaul flights between Düsseldorf Airport and Frankfurt am Main, and they came up with the idea of replacing these flights with rail transport.[3] The Deutsche Bundesbahn agreed and eliminated a problem of their own, that the Class 403 electric multiple units (EMUs) that were stored and not generating any revenue because they did not fit into the two-class InterCity system.[4] On 13 and 16 February 1981, the Class 403 made test runs as TEE Goethe on the West Rhine Railway.[5] The Class 403, consisting of three EMUs only, were refurbished and re-fitted with the same seats as the Lufthansa DC-10 business class and the grey-yellow Lufthansa livery on the outside.[3]

Lufthansa Airport Express with business class seats

Flight level zero

On 27 March 1982, the Lufthansa Airport Express started with four trips a day in each direction. Initially starting at Düsseldorf Hbf, and calling at Köln Deutz station, Köln Hbf and the West German capital Bonn, one year later the route was extended northward to Düsseldorf Flughafen (Düsseldorf Airport) station.[6] Although the Lufthansa Airport Express was integrated into Lufthansa's reservation system using flight numbers and never integrated in the TEE booking office, the Deutsche Bundesbahn classified the trains as Trans Europ Express in their operation. This meant a double numbering of the trains, e.g. "Flight" LH 1001 was TEE 61 for railway staff.[1] The "flights" at flight level zero were carried out by two EMUs using the West Rhine Railway, whilst the third one received maintenance. The trains were not officially TEEs and the Thomas Cook Continental Timetable identified the Lufthansa Airport Express not as TEEs but as "special trains for Lufthansa passengers holding air tickets. Ordinary rail tickets [are] not valid on these trains."[2]

Timetable[7]

LH 1001
TEE 61
LH 1003
TEE 63
LH 1005
TEE 65
LH 1007
TEE 67
station km LH 1002
TEE 62
LH 1004
TEE 64
LH 1006
TEE 66
LH 1008
TEE 68
06:1709:4613:1717:58Düsseldorf Hbf011:3215:3119:0123:30
06:3610:0713:3718:16Köln Deutz39.511:0815:0818:3823:07
06:4110:1113:4118:22Köln Hbf4011:0415:0418:3523:03
06:5910:1913:5918:41Bonn Hbf7410:4314:4318:1522:43
08:4212:0815:3820:20Frankfurt Flughafen25409:0713:1116:3821:06

On 1 June 1986, the "flight" and train numbers were unified; LH 1001 became train number TEE 1001, etc. One year later the EuroCity network replaced most TEEs (including all remaining TEEs in Germany), so DB dropped the designation "TEE" for the LHAE service.[8]

The service provided a non-stop journey linking the West-German capital Bonn with the international airport in Frankfurt. North of Bonn it called in the city centres rather than at the airports outside. On board, the passengers were served by Lufthansa stewardesses like in an airplane. It appeared to be successful in both passenger figures[3] and costs compared to the Boeing 737 used before.[1] In the summer of 1988 the seating capacity was enlarged and one year later the same formula was introduced between Frankfurt Airport and Stuttgart.

Locomotive-hauled Lufthansa Airport Express

With the extension to the south more rolling stock was needed, so some class 103 locomotives were repainted in Lufthansa livery and coaches were refurbished in the same way as the EMUs.[6] Despite festivities celebrating the tenth anniversary of the Lufthansa Airport Express in 1992, with promotional statements addressing the success, the service ended on 22 May 1993. The combination of the poor financial state of Lufthansa and the need for an expensive midlife overhaul of the 1973-built EMUs, led to the withdrawal of the service.[3]

gollark: Also, this is the *canonical* cyber PC now.
gollark: Anyway, if you think about it, then since my search index is something like 4GB, and the internet is several... exabytes, probably..., and search engines can search that in half a second, then recoll *should* be able to work in an attosecond or so.
gollark: Matrix is apiously complicated, denied.
gollark: I suspect that part of it might be that my disk is a slow outdated 7200RPM hard disk, since it's *quite* fast after I refresh, but still.
gollark: osmarkscalculator™, we've been through this.

References

  1. La Légende des TEE p. 398.
  2. "Table 2000: Airport Links". Thomas Cook Continental Timetable (May 29–June 30, 1983 edition), p. 479. Also pp. 65–67. Peterborough, UK: Thomas Cook Publishing.
  3. TEE Züge in Deutschland p. 33.
  4. TEE Züge in Deutschland p. 32.
  5. La Légende des TEE p. 69.
  6. Das grosse TEE Buch p. 130
  7. La Légende des TEE p. 399.
  8. La Légende des TEE p. 399.

Works cited

  • Hajt, Jörg (2001). Das grosse TEE Buch (in German). Bonn/Königswinter: Heel Verlag. ISBN 3-89365-948-X.
  • Mertens, Maurice; Malaspina, Jean-Pierre (2007). La Légende des Trans Europ Express (in French). Vannes: LR Presse. ISBN 978-29-036514-5-9.
  • Goette, Peter (2008). TEE-Züge in Deutschland (in German). Freiburg: EK-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-88255-698-8.

Media related to Lufthansa Airport Express at Wikimedia Commons

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