Meiringen–Innertkirchen Railway

The Meiringen–Innertkirchen Railway (German: Meiringen–Innertkirchen Bahn, MIB) is a 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 38 in) metre gauge railway in the Swiss canton of Bern. It covers a distance of 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) between Innertkirchen and Meiringen, where it connects with the Brünig line of the Zentralbahn company, which links Interlaken and Lucerne.[1]

Meiringen-Innertkirchen Bahn
MIB Be 4/4 8 near the Aareschlucht
Overview
LocaleBernese Highlands, canton of Bern, Switzerland
TerminiMeiringen
Innertkirchen
Stations7
Services1
Operation
Opened1 August 1926; 6 May 1946
OwnerKWO
Operator(s)Meiringen-Innertkirchen Bahn
Charactercommuter and tourist railway
Technical
Line length4.99 km (3.10 mi)
Track gaugeMetre (3 ft 3 38 in)
Electrification1200 V, DC Overhead (19 November 1977 )
Highest elevation635 m (2,083 ft)
Maximum incline20 
Route diagram

km
elev
0.00
Meiringen
0.16
former Meiringen MIB platform
0.65
Alpbach
1.37
Aareschlucht West
Kirchetunnel
1502 m
3.38
Aareschlucht Ost
4.15
Unterwasser
Chiesten
63 m
4.44
Innertkirchen Post MIB
4.99
Innertkirchen MIB
Source: Swiss railway atlas[1]

Originally built to support the development of the local hydroelectricity industry, and still owned by the Kraftwerke Oberhasli (KWO) electricity supply company, the line now serves a local transport role, as well as transporting tourists to the scenic Aare Gorge.

History

The line was originally built as a construction railway to support the building of hydroelectric dams in the Oberhasli and the Grimsel Pass. It was built by the Kraftwerke Oberhasli (KWO) company, which was founded to build and operate the hydroelectric plants, and it was opened in 1926. Several Mallet-type steam locomotives were acquired from the Rhätische Bahn to operate the line. As well as construction traffic, the line also operated a limited passenger service for workers and their families. In 1931 a battery railcar was purchased, and a second in 1939.

In 1940, a military installation was constructed in caverns, which connected to the Kirchetunnel that by-passes the Aare Gorge, as well as to the gorge itself. A train parked in the tunnel provided offices and other facilities for this installation. The caverns and connecting tunnels still exist, but are no longer used.[2]

In 1946 the line received a licence to operate as a public passenger-carrying railway, and to this end the Mieringen-Innertkirchen Bahn company was founded to operate the line as a subsidiary of the owners, KWO.

When the license came up for renewal in 1976, it was decided to upgrade the line drastically. The heavy, four-wheel battery railcars were harsh on the track and trackbed, and were at the end of their economic life. The line was electrified and electric streetcar-type railcars were purchased. In 1996, a new railcar was purchased to run most services. In 2005, a second-hand railcar was purchased to act as reserve, allowing the former streetcars to be scrapped.

In 2003, the underground Aareschlucht Ost stop was opened, to provide access to the eastern entrance to the Aare Gorge.[3]

Operation

Route

The line begins at track 13 of Meiringen railway station, where it is physically connected to the Brünig line of the Zentralbahn company. Both lines are of 1,000 mm gauge, but are incompatible electrically, and no through passenger services are operated. Shortly after leaving the station, the line crosses a level crossing and passes the disused former passenger terminus of the line, used until passenger service was extended into the main station.[1]

The first stop on the line is at Alpbach. This is some 500 metres (1,600 ft) walk from the lower station of the Reichenbachfall Funicular, which takes visitors up to the famous Reichenbach Falls, the site of the apparent death of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's fictional hero, Sherlock Holmes. For many years, Alpbach was the point at with the MIB made a level crossing with the Meiringen–Reichenbach–Aareschlucht line, a tramway that existed from 1912 to 1956.[1][4]

From Alpbach the line follows the north bank of the Aare river. The next stop is Aareschlucht West, just before the beginning of the scenic Aare Gorge or Aareschlucht. The line by-passes the gorge through the 1,502-metre (4,928 ft) long Kirchetunnel, which contains the underground Aareschlucht Ost stop. Both Aareschlucht stops link to the tourist walkways through the gorge itself.[1]

After a further intermediate stop at Unterwasser, the line passes through the middle of Innertkirchen village, calling at the Innertkirchen Post stop, before ending at the KWO plant in Innertkirchen. Beyond the passenger terminus, the line continues into the KWO's workshops, where the line's workshops are also found.[1]

Services

Passenger services are operated once or twice per hour, seven days a week, with connections into and out of most trains on the Brunig line. Trains comprise a single railcar.[5]

The operation of the Aareschlucht Ost stop is particularly notable, as the train stops within the tunnel, with its front door adjacent to a door in the side of the tunnel that opens out through the side of the gorge. The tunnel door is opened by the train driver only once the train has come to a halt. The stop is a request stop, and passengers wishing to board a train must press a button outside the tunnel door to request the train to stop.

Freight traffic is run as demand warrants, largely carrying spare parts arriving via the Brünigbahn for the power stations.

Rolling stock

Current rolling stock

Image Numbers Notation Year Notes
8 Be 4/4 1996 New railcar built by Stadler Rail.[6]
11 BDe 4/4 1953 Ex Chemins de fer du Jura 604. Bought and rebuilt in 2005 as reserve railcar used when 8 is not available.[6]
12 Gem 4/4 1952 Ex Chemins de fer du Jura 402. Rebuilt from De 4/4, with the addition of a diesel engine. Operational in 2011.[6]

Former rolling stock

Image Numbers Notation Year Notes
3 Ba 2/2 1931 Battery railcar with 12 seats. Taken out of service in 1979 and sold to the Deutscher Eisenbahn-Verein at Bruchhausen-Vilsen where it is numbered T46.
4-5 CFa 2/2 1939, 1949 Battery railcars with 22 seats. Number 4 was put on display at the Verkehrshaus Luzern in 1982. Number 5 is on display outside the MIB's Innertkirchen workshops.
6-7 Bem 4/4 1952 Ex Oberrheinische Eisenbahn railcars 63, 65 and 68. Bought and rebuilt in 1977. Railcar 6 was broken up in 1999 and railcar 7 was broken up in around 2001.
9 Be 4/4 1961 Ex Regionalverkehr Bern-Solothurn Be 4/4 74. Bought in 1997 for use as reserve railcar used when 8 is not available, replaced by 11 in 2005. Plans to restore it as a historic vehicle for RBS failed in 2007 due to the high cost of asbestos removal.[6]
10 Tm II 1959 Ex Brünigbahn Tm II 980. With La Traction since 2011.[6]
gollark: I have things I want out of software other than "it's the absolute easiest possible thing to use for very basic things".
gollark: ... no?
gollark: Personally, I only play exciting open-source games like Minetest on my FPGA-based entirely open-source RISC-V computer.
gollark: And firmware! And actually a lot of things now I come to think of it!
gollark: But those have closed-source CPUs!

References

  1. Eisenbahnatlas Schweiz (Swiss railway atlas). Schweers + Wall. 2012. p. 33. ISBN 978-3-89494-130-7.
  2. Explanatory sign in Aare Gorge. Aareschlucht AG. Viewed 10 September 2014.
  3. Schweizer Eisenbahn-Revue (in German). June 2003. p. 252. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  4. "Meiringen–Reichenbach–Aareschlucht". www.eingestellte-bahnen.ch (in German). Retrieved 2014-10-01.
  5. "Meiringen–Innertkirchen" (PDF). Bundesamt für Verkehr. Retrieved 2013-01-07.
  6. "MIB/KWO rolling stock". railfaneurope.net. Retrieved 23 September 2014.


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