Lake Zürich right-bank railway

The Lake Zürich right-bank railway line, or Rechtsufrige Zürichseebahn, is a railway line in the Swiss canton of Zürich. As its name suggests, it runs down the right, or east, bank of Lake Zürich, connecting Zürich to Rapperswil.[2]

Lake Zürich right-bank railway
The right-bank line at Tiefenbrunnen
Technical
Line length31.90 kilometres (19.82 mi)
Track gauge1435 mm
ElectrificationOverhead line
  • 15 kV 16.7 Hz AC
Maximum incline1.7  %
Zürich–Meilen–Rapperswil

km
elev
1.9
Hardbrücke
407 m
Vorbahnhof Viadukt
823 m
Limmatbrücke
175 m
2.8
Letten
0.9
99.0
Hirschengrabenlinie
Durchbindung 1990
Vorbahnhoftunnel
Letten Tunnel
2093 m
Sihlbrücke
67 m
0.3
Zürich HB
(surface)
408 m
99.9
Zürich HB
(underground)
394 m
Hirschengraben Tunnel
2148 m
Letten Tunnel
2093 m
101.6
5.7
Hirschengrabenlinie
seit 1989
5.7
Stadelhofen
410 m
Überdeckung Kreuzbühlstrasse
5.8
Zürichberg line to Stettbach
Riesbachtunnel
1493 m
7.9
Tiefenbrunnen
408 m
9.5
Zollikon
415 m
10.8
Küsnacht Goldbach
417 m
11.7
Küsnacht ZH
415 m
13.5
Erlenbach ZH
419 m
Hitzbergtunnel 70 m (re) / Erlenbach
71 m (li)
14.6
Winkel am Zürichsee
426 m
Seehaldebrücke I
96 m (re)
Seehaldebrücke II
137 m (re) bzw. 37 m (li)
16.6
Herrliberg-Feldmeilen
423 m
19.4
Meilen
420 m
22.4
Uetikon
414 m
Langackerbrücke
64 m
23.6
Männedorf
419 m
Lattenbergtunnel
93 m
26.4
Stäfa
414 m
28.9
Uerikon
426 m
31.4
Feldbach
426 m
Feldbachbrücke
68 m
33.8
Kempraten
412 m
Wallisellen–Uster–Rapperswil line
Rapperswil–Ziegelbrücke line
35.9
Rapperswil
409 m
Rapperswil–Pfäffikon SZ railway line over the Seedamm
Source: Swiss railway atlas[1]

The line was opened in 1894, nineteen years after the complementary left bank railway. As built, it originally departed from the surface level of Zürich Hauptbahnhof station in a westerly direction, before performing a clockwise 270 degrees turn via a viaduct over the River Limmat and the Letten Tunnel to Stadelhofen station. Since 1990 the Letten Tunnel has been closed and replaced by the Hirschengraben Tunnel, which takes a direct easterly route under the River Limmat from new low level platforms at Hauptbahnhof.[2]

At the same time as the Hirschengraben tunnel was constructed, the Zürichberg tunnel was constructed in order to link Stadelhofen station with the Zürich to Winterthur and Wallisellen to Rapperswil via Uster lines. As a consequence the section of the right bank line between Zürich Hbf and Stadelhofen is now part of the backbone of the Zürich S-Bahn, carrying no fewer than eight separate routes.[2][3]

However beyond Stadelhofen the traffic reduces to three S-Bahn routes. Routes S6 and S16 stop at all stations as far as Uetikon or Meilen respectively. Route S7 runs non-stop from Stadelhofen as far as Meilen, then serves all stations to Rapperswil.[3]

The line is 31.90 kilometres (19.82 mi) long, standard gauge and electrified at 15 kV  16.7 Hz AC supplied by overhead line. It is predominantly double-track, but with single-track sections from Stadelhofen to Tiefenbrunnen, Herrliberg-Feldmeilen to Meilen, Uetikon to Stäfa, and Uerikon to Rapperswil.[2]

References

  1. Eisenbahnatlas Schweiz (Swiss railway atlas). Schweers + Wall. 2012. p. 12, 13, 64, 65. ISBN 978-3-89494-130-7.
  2. Eisenbahnatlas Schweiz. Verlag Schweers + Wall GmbH. 2012. pp. 12–13, 64–65. ISBN 978-3-89494-130-7.
  3. "S-Bahn trains, buses and boats" (PDF). ZVV. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-01-31. Retrieved 2012-03-12.


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