Nijkerk–Ede-Wageningen railway

The Nijkerk–Ede-Wageningen railway is a railway line in the Netherlands currently running from Barneveld to Ede-Wageningen. The part between Nijkerk and Barneveld has been demolished. It was previously nicknamed the Kippenlijn ("chicken line") in Dutch, but since 2006, it's nicknamed Valleilijn ("valley line") by its operator (Connexxion).

Nijkerk–Ede-Wageningen railway
Overview
StatusOperational
LocaleThe Netherlands
TerminiNijkerk railway station
Ede-Wageningen railway station
Operation
Opened1902-1903
Operator(s)1902-2006 Nederlandse Spoorwegen since 2006: Connexxion
Technical
Line length30 km (19 mi)
Number of trackssingle track
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Electrification1.5 kV DC
Route map
Legend
-
Line from Amersfoort
0.0 Nijkerk
Line to Zwolle
Driedorp
Appel
Dusschoten
Voorthuizen
Line from Amersfoort
Line to Apeldoorn
Barneveld-Kruispunt
12.2 Barneveld Noord
14.7 Barneveld Centrum
21.9 Lunteren
27.7 Ede Centrum
Line from Utrecht
29.6 Ede-Wageningen
Line to Arnhem

The line

The Valleilijn is a single track line with passing loops at Barneveld Centrum and Lunteren. It runs through the valley where there are many chicken farms and was therefore originally called the Kippenlijn until a project was launched on 10 December 2006.

The line has interchanges with other railway services at Amersfoort and Ede-Wageningen.

History

The line opened on 1 May 1902 as the Kippenlijn from Nijkerk to Ede. The line between Nijkerk and Barneveld Noord closed in 1937 and the whole line was shut on 7 September 1944 because of World War II.

The line re-opened on 20 May 1951 and was electrified for that date as well. The line operates as the Oosterspoorweg between Amersfoort and the Barneveld Noord junction. From there the line is 17 km long and takes 20 minutes to operate from Barneveld Noord to Ede-Wageningen.

Stations

The following stations are on or serviced by the Valleilijn (Hoevelaken is technically situated on the Oosterspoorweg), including some possible interchanges:

Station Interchanges Notes
Amersfoort Centraal Zwolle, Apeldoorn, Deventer, Utrecht, Hilversum, Amsterdam, Gouda, The Hague and Rotterdam Previously known as Amersfoort Aansluiting (1889–1902) and Amersfoort (1902–2019).
Hoevelaken Previously, Hoevelaken had a station on the Utrecht - Zwolle railway line from 1905–1938.[1]
Barneveld Noord P&R Site, signposted off the A1 (Transferium). Previously known as Barneveld-Voorthuizen (1937-1981).
Barneveld Centrum Previously known as Barneveld Dorp (1902-1981).
Barneveld Zuid Newest station on the line; opened on 2 February 2015.
Lunteren
Ede Centrum Previously known as Ede Dorp (1902-1951).
Ede-Wageningen Utrecht and Arnhem Previously known as Ede (1845-1938).

Previous stations

Driedorp, Appel, Dusschoten, Voorthuizen, Barneveld Kruispunt, Meulunteren, Doesburgerbuurt, Stompekamp and Ede Gemeentehuis.

2006 Service improvements

Before 10 December 2006, the line was operated by Nederlandse Spoorwegen but on that date, Connexxion took over the service and made a lot of improvements.

Train

5 new Protos train sets were placed into service, to improve comfort on the line. They wear a special blue Valleilijn livery (see gallery). 2 Stadler FLIRT 3 train sets were also put into service in 2018.

Buses

From 10 December 2006 Veolia Transport, also relaunched the bus service 88 (Ede - Wageningen). A fleet of brand new buses were placed into service in the same Valleilijn livery. This service operates up to every 10 minutes.

Passengers can connect with the train from/to Amersfoort.

Train services

Series Train Type Route Material Frequency
31300 Connexxion Stoptrein Amersfoort - Barneveld Noord - Barneveld Centrum - Barneveld Zuid - Lunteren - Ede Centrum - Ede-Wageningen Protos 2x per hour
31400 Connexxion Stoptrein Amersfoort - Barneveld Noord - Barneveld Centrum - Barneveld Zuid Protos, GTW 2x per hour (Mo-Fri until 8 pm, Sa until 5 pm, does not run on Sundays and on holidays)
gollark: So presumably you can do the evaluation of each thing in parallel.
gollark: Genetic algorithms work by evaluating a bunch of things and merging/selecting/mutating the best ones, right?
gollark: It says here that Matlab has a `parfor` and `spmd` thing, are you using those?
gollark: Your personal computer probably has basically as much single-threaded performance as the best available ones now, give or take 40%, which is actually quite substantial but oh well.
gollark: That probably doesn't help if your thing isn't already parallel.

References

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