Rhein-Hellweg-Express

The Rhein-Hellweg-Express (RE 11) is a Regional-Express service in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW), running from Hamm via Dortmund, Bochum, Essen, Duisburg and Düsseldorf Airport to Düsseldorf Hbf. It is named after the Rhine and the Westphalian Hellweg.

RE 11 Rhein-Hellweg-Express
Overview
LocaleNorth Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Technical
Line length186 km (116 mi)
Route number415, 430
Route map

291
Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe
(since 2016)
ICE, IC
266
Hofgeismar
(since 2016)
241
Warburg (Westf)
(since 2016)
222
Willebadessen
(since 2016)
204
Altenbeken
(since 2016)
186
Paderborn Hbf
(until 2010, since 2016)
154
Lippstadt
(until 2010, since 2016)
134
Soest
(until 2010, since 2016)
108
Hamm (Westf)
100
Nordbögge
(until 2016, not hourly)
93
Kamen
89
Kamen-Methler
87
Dortmund-Kurl
(until 2016)
83
Dortmund-Scharnhorst
(until 2016, not hourly)
77
Dortmund Hbf
ICE, IC
59
Bochum Hbf
ICE, IC
52
Wattenscheid
43
Essen Hbf
ICE, IC
33
Mülheim (Ruhr) Hbf
IC
24
Duisburg Hbf
ICE, IC
Rheinhausen
(2010–2016)
Krefeld-Uerdingen
(2010–2016)
Krefeld Hbf
(2010–2016)
Viersen
(2010–2016)
IC
Mönchengladbach Hbf
(2010–2016)
ICE, IC
8
Düsseldorf Airport
(until 2010, since 2016)
ICE, IC
0
Düsseldorf Hbf
(until 2010, since 2016)
ICE, IC
Source: German railway atlas[1]

History

In 1988 the first regular interval regional rapid train service was established from Dortmund via Essen, Duisburg and Düsseldorf to Cologne. This operated hourly on the Cologne–Duisburg and Dortmund–Duisburg lines, which even then were the most important railway lines for passenger traffic in North Rhine-Westphalia.

With the introduction of high-speed regional services in the early 1990s, this line was named the NRW-Express (originally numbered RSB 1; from 1995 it was redesignated as Stadt-Express line SE 1) and ran from Bielefeld via Hamm, Dortmund, Essen, Duisburg, Düsseldorf and Cologne to Aachen. With the extension of the service on the Hamm–Bielefeld and Cologne–Aachen lines, the service soon had insufficient capacity. Therefore, in May 1998 with the NRW-wide implementation of regional express lines, the NRW-Express (now RE 1) was supplemented by the Westfalen-Express (RE 6) from Bielefeld via Hamm, Dortmund, Essen and Duisburg to Düsseldorf so that on the northern section there were two Regional-Expresses per hour.

Timetable change in 2002

After the timetable change in December 2002, services on the central Ruhr axis between Hamm and Düsseldorf increased to five Regional-Express services in each two hour period. The NRW-Express was now shortened to run on the Hamm–Aachen route, the Westfalen-Express (RE 6) was established between Düsseldorf and Minden. The new Rhein-Hellweg-Express (RE 11) was introduced at two hourly intervals, running from Düsseldorf to Hamm and continuing on the line to Paderborn.

Timetable change in 2010

When the timetable change in December 2010 there was an exchange of sections between the NRW-Express, the Rhein-Hellweg Express and Rhein-Haard-Express (RE 2):

  • The section of the Rhein-Hellweg-Express from Hamm via Soest and Lippstadt to Paderborn was taken over by the NRW-Express; this section continues to be operated only every two hours.
  • The section of the Rhein-Hellweg Express between Duisburg and Düsseldorf (now operated hourly) was taken over by the Rhein-Haard-Express. In return, the Rhein-Hellweg Express runs (now also hourly) on the section between Duisburg and Mönchengladbach. The Duisburg–Mönchengladbach line is for the first time connected directly to the eastern Ruhr region by Regional-Express services.

Overall, there were further bottlenecks due to the timetable change. In the central Ruhr area between Hamm and Duisburg, three regional express lines (RE 1, RE 6 and RE 11) were now running at approximately 20-minute intervals. The Hamm–Dortmund section was reinforced by RE 3, the Bochum–Essen section by RE 16 and the Essen–Duisburg section by RE 2.

Timetable change in 2016

In the course of the development of the Rhein-Ruhr-Express (RRX, an upgraded Regional-Express system) network, the Rhein-Hellweg-Express returned to its original route between Düsseldorf and Paderborn and was extended to Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe at the timetable change on 11 December 2016.[2] The section between Hamm and Kassel, however is only operated generally at two-hour intervals and some trains even in the afternoon peak terminate in Paderborn. Due to some remaining IC/ICE services on the line, there are unsatisfactory gaps in the regional services of up to four hours in both directions, especially at lunch time. Departure times also differ significantly, so the timetable is difficult for customers to remember since there are no regular services.[3]

In the evenings, the RE 11 service from Düsseldorf ends in Dortmund. At the other end, some services only run from Kassel to Hamm, so passengers are forced to change trains regularly to reach the Ruhr area or Düsseldorf.

Due to longer scheduled stays in Duisburg and Dortmund, the travel time of regional services between Paderborn and Düsseldorf has increased by up to ten minutes compared to the previous operation by RE 1. The use of the class 425 sets has significantly reduced the capacity of seating and standing places. The number of daily circuits serving the entire route has been reduced from eight to seven. The section of Eurobahn's daily Dortmund-Kassel-Sprinter service from Hamm was integrated in RE 11.

The section of the RE 11 from Duisburg via Krefeld to Mönchengladbach that is no longer served by the RE 11 was replaced by the RE 42 (Niers-Haard-Express), which was upgraded from the RB 42 and extended from Münster via Essen, Mülheim, Duisburg and Krefeld to Mönchengladbach.[4]

Route

The Rhein-Hellweg Express runs daily every hour (every two hours between Hamm and Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe) and uses five railway lines:

Operations

RE 11 services runs hourly from Monday to Sunday. Initially, when the service operated between Hamm and Paderborn on weekdays at two hourly intervals, trains were composed of class 110 and 111 locomotives, usually hauling five Silberling carriages. But it was soon noticed that the number of passengers required higher capacity, which meant that class 112 (sometimes class 111) locomotives are now used with four double-decker carriages. The carriages have air conditioning and are approved for a maximum speed of 160 km/h (99 mph). The service has an average speed of 81 km/h (50 mph).

Since 21 February 2011, in addition to the double-decker trains, class 425 electric multiple units are used on the Rhein-Hellweg Express,[5] these had previously been modernised for use on this service. Double-deck trains remain operating on the line until the completion of the conversion of the class 425 EMUs.

Operator

Abellio Rail NRW took over operations on the line from 9 December 2018. This subsidiary of Nederlandse Spoorwegen won the contract for the operation of the NRW-Express as Lot 1 of the Rhein-Ruhr-Express.

The line was formerly operated by DB Regio NRW under a special contract with the North Rhine-Westphalian public transport associations. DB Regio NRW had the contract to operate the line until the timetable change on 13 December 2015.[6] The contract included provisions for services every two hours between Hamm and Paderborn; this section became part of the RE 1 at the timetable change in December 2010, committing operations on this line to run permanently with a sixth double-deck coach. As part of the so-called RRX interim contract, operations from December 2016 until the commissioning of RRX rolling stock were provided by DB Regio.[7]

gollark: What's your % uncertainty and % uncertainty % uncertainty?
gollark: Based on a flawed apiometric measurement.
gollark: We just synchronise state over certain backchannels.
gollark: It *is* bee bee apio, yes.
gollark: AQA assembly language is some sort of weird ARM derivative with 13 registers and 1024 words of RAM.

See also

Notes

  1. Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  2. "Ausschreibung zum RRX-Vorlaufbetrieb gestartet" (in German). Mobilitätsportal NRW. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  3. "Timetable for RE 11, VRR" (PDF) (in German). VRR. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  4. "Neuer Zug ab 2016 nach Krefeld". RP Online (in German). 12 January 2012. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  5. "Bahn: Neue Verbindungen im Regionalverkehr" (in German). WA.de. 24 November 2010. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
  6. "Mehr Komfort zwischen Düsseldorf, der Hellweg-Region und dem Hochstift" (Press release) (in German). Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Ruhr. 12 July 2006. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
  7. "RRX-Interimsvergabe geht an DB Regio NRW" (Press release) (in German). NVR. 11 April 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.