Borsdorf–Coswig railway


The Borsdorf–Coswig railway is a mainline railway in the German state of Saxony, originally built and operated by the Leipzig-Dresden Railway Company. It runs mostly along the Freiberger Mulde from Borsdorf via Döbeln and Meissen to Coswig near Dresden. It is part of a long-distance connection from Leipzig to Dresden, but is now used for local traffic only.

History

Meissen had been linked since 1 December 1860 to the Leipzig–Dresden railway by a branch line from Coswig. On 7 July 1864 the Leipzig–Dresden Railway Company
One of the largest construction projects of the interwar period was the rebuilding of the bridge over the Elbe in Meissen. Between 1925 and 1926, the Lauchhammer-Rheinmetall company rebuilt it with a new steel truss superstructure. The bridge escaped demolition in 1945, so the original bridge is now preserved, but it has only had a single track since 1946.
After the Second World War one track of the line was dismantled to provide reparations to the Soviet Union.
In 1970, the Coswig–Meissen-Triebischtal section was electrified for Dresden suburban services. On 18 December 1970, electric train operations started. A little later—in September 1973—the section was included in the network of the newly established Dresden S-Bahn. After that all rail services were broken in Meissen, with services operating between the Leipzig and Meissen and between Meissen–Triebischtal and Dresden, requiring a change of trains. Even express trains on the line only ran between Leipzig and Meissen.
In December 1981, the second track was returned to service between Meissen and Coswig. In 1989, the short Borsdorf–Beucha section was electrified. On 30 September 1989, the electrical equipment on this section was removed.
A completely new situation emerged after the political changes in East Germany in 1989–90. For the first time in decades express trains ran between Leipzig and Dresden via Döbeln. Together with the two S-Bahn services every hour between Leipzig and Meissen there were hourly express services. The Dresden S-Bahn service — now running as line S1 — operated after that at continuous 30-minute intervals from Meissen through Coswig to Dresden and Schöna. Only in 2000, with the formation of the transport authorities of the Verkehrsverbund Oberelbe and the Mitteldeutscher Verkehrsverbund, was this timetable abandoned. The express trains, which last ran between Leipzig and Zittau, were cancelled on 9 June 2001.
The line was broken at several points between Großbothen and Coswig during the flood in August 2002. The most serious cases were with damage between Tanndorf and Leisnig. In addition to several smaller damaged areas, a total of 500 metres of track including the railway embankment were completely destroyed at Tanndorf. The line was restored to use on 21 August 2004. According to a town council, the federal government had invested €45 million in the line after the 2002 floods.
By December 2015, the service consisted of Regionalbahn trains running at two-hour intervals between Leipzig and Meißen, with additional trains providing an hourly services in the morning and afternoon peaks. Outside of the peaks and on the weekend, the hourly service from Leipzig ends in Grimma. Siemens Desiro Classic diesel multiple units are used; at peak times running in double sets. The Symmetry minute of the timetable is between Leipzig and Nossen about three minutes earlier than usual, so that the transfer times of trains running in one direction and trains running in the other direction at crossing points, e.g. in Leipzig, may differ by up to eight minutes. Other trains run on weekdays in the morning and late afternoon in an alternating cycle between Leipzig and Grimma. In freight transport the line does not have much significance any more. This is essentially limited to the operation of the Rhäsa tank farm on the former line to Riesa.
On 2 May 2010, the first construction phase of the electronic interlocking Mulde Valley was put into operation with the ESTW-A Großbothen and the ESTW-A Leisnig. They are controlled from the sub-center in Geithain, which has been converted into an ESTW-Z control centre. At the end of July 2012 the connection of the Großsteinberg and Grimma ob Bf stations to the ESTW Muldental was completed. Naunhof station was integrated into the ESTW Muldental at the end of November 2013 after the construction of a second outside platform in the autumn of 2013. On 9 August 2015, Borsdorf-Naunhof was included as the last section of the ESTW with the converted Beucha station.
The Upper Elbe Transport Association has been considering the permanent closure of local rail services between Nossen and Meißen-Triebischtal since autumn 2010. A citizens' initiative collected 14,000 signatures to maintain services on the route in 2010. According to the citizens' initiative, more than 1,000 passengers per day were counted on the section of the line in 2001; the count was 400 at the beginning of 2014. Meanwhile, the direct connections to Dresden had been lost and the hourly service had been reduced to a two-hourly service.
On 3 June 2013, the service between Großbothen and Meißen had to be stopped due to a flood. After repairing the damage, train traffic between Döbeln and Meißen-Triebischtal was resumed on 8 June 2013.
In 2013, the upgrade of the section used by the S-Bahn Dresden was carried out, which involved blockading of the line between Meißen Triebischtal and Meißen. The new Meißen Altstadt station was built near the centre of Meißen. In addition, the second track was restored in the section between Meißen Altstadt and Meißen. With the completion of the work, the S1 service to Meißen-Triebischtal was restored on 30 November 2013.
From November 2013 to mid-2014, the line between Großbothen and Leisnig was interrupted for the reconstruction of the viaduct across a gully near Kössern. On the affected section, there was a substitute bus.
On 28 November 2013, the board of the VVO decided to discontinue the RB 110 passenger service between Meißen and Nossen for economic reasons from December 2015 and replace it with buses. With an average of 13 passengers per train, the section between Nossen and Meißen was among the most vulnerable in the VVO area; since 2012, passenger numbers have continued to decline. With the replacement of the trains by an "optimised bus network", the VVO hoped for a significant reduction in the subsidy requirement. The VVO estimated the cost of maintaining traffic at €1.6 million per year. An investigation of the expansion of the railway services showed that it would have doubled passenger numbers and tripled the subsidies required.
On 7 March 2014, the Verkehrsverbund Mittelsachsen decided not to run services between Döbeln and Nossen from December 2015 onwards. Recently, 200 to 300 passengers per day had used the trains. The association also decided to establish a new Döbeln Körnerplatz station near the centre of Döbeln. A citizens' initiative had collected 7,000 signatures against the closure plans by March 2014.
On 12 December 2015, the RB 110 service ended on the Meißen Triebischtal-Döbeln section.

Prospects

The Zweckverband für den Nahverkehrsraum Leipzig will continue to procure local rail services between Leipzig and Döbeln. On 17 September 2015, the ZVNL also published a change to the invitation to tender for the Dieselnetz Nordwestsachsen / Teil B, which covers transports services from 12 June 2016 to 13 December 2025, to include services to Döbeln-Zentrum station. Politicians and citizens advertise in a position paper that the passenger services should be extended to Roßwein instead of Döbeln-Zentrum, as this was possible in the planned working timetable.
In the 1980s the integration of Grimma into the then Leipzig S-Bahn network was planned, but this failed because of the low clearance of the A 14 overbridge. In 2009 the A 14 bridge was rebuilt higher, so the possibility was again considered in 2012. The Saxon Minister of Economic Affairs, Sven Morlok, however, has stated that the integration was not to be expected before 2025.

New infrastructure operator

On 28 June 2013 DB Netz AG offered the 37.1 kilometre section of the line between Döbeln, Nossen and Meißen-Triebischtal for sale or rent due to the line's poor returns. According to these figures, it incurred annual infrastructure revenues of around €1.3 million while its costs amounted to €2.3 million. Between 2014 and 2018, investment of around €24.8 million would also be expected. The sale price was €627,990 and the annual rent was €50,239. DB Netz decided in the middle of 2015 to transfer this section to the Nossen-Riesaer Eisenbahn-Compagnie GmbH as railway infrastructure owner. The company is already a tenant of the Nossen–Riesa and Nossen–Ausschlichstelle Rhäsa sections.
The transfer, which was originally scheduled for 13 December 2015, was delayed until 16 April 2016, after an earlier delay to February 2016, announced in 2015. The NRE intends to operate the Döbeln–Meißen–Triebischtal section using the Direct traffic control operating procedure.

Route description

Course

The line branches off at Borsdorf towards the southeast from the Leipzig–Dresden Railway and runs without sharp curves through agricultural areas. The line then passes through Beucha and the branch to the Beucha-Trebsen railway, which is only used for freight, and under the A14 and goes through the landscape protection area of the Naunhofer Forst, while on the eastern side is a recreational area with lakes in old quarries. The line crossed the newly built bypass road B 107n before Grimma, where it reaches the course of the Mulde for the first time. Before Großbothen the northern part of the landscape protection area of the Colditzer Forst is crossed, before the 1.5 kilometre-long station operating facilities are reached and federal highway 107 is crossed. The Glauchau–Wurzen railway, which crosses the Borsdorf-Coswig line at the exit from the station and runs parallel for about one kilometre, begins on the north side of the Inselbahnhof before heading south to Colditz. Near Kössern, the line changes for the first time to the north bank of the Mulde, until it changes back to the south near Röda. At the exit from Leisnig station, the line returns to the northern bank and then runs through the landscape protection area of Freiberger Mulde-Zschopau. After about 400 metres, the ruins of the Buch Abbey are passed before the line switches again to the south side of the Freiberger Mulde at the mouth of the Zschopau. Before Döbeln, the line crosses the line from Chemnitz together with federal highway 169.
The line leaves the Keilbahnhof of Döbeln in a southeastern direction and crosses the southern urban area, while the Riesa line branches off to the northeast. Federal highway 175 is crossed at the station exit. The line crosses the narrowing valley of the Freiberger Mulde several times after Döbeln Zentrum station. After Niederstriegis, the dismantled line of the former Roßwein–Niederwiesa railway approaches and follows the Borsdorf–Coswig railway for about two kilometres to Roßwein station. After crossing and recrossing the Freiberger Mulde, the connecting line from the Rhäsa tank farm approaches from the north and the two lines runs parallel past the Altzella Abbey and meet the Zellwald railway, which comes from the south, pass under the B 175 and enter Nossen station. The line crosses federal highway 101 at a level crossing and passes along a sloping section and reaches the Meissen highland in the Waldhufendorf of Eula. From Deutschebora, the highest point, the line turns north-east, crosses the A 14 and turns into the landscape protection area of the valley of the Triebisch. From here, it follows the river through the Garsebacher Schweiz over a length of about 10 kilometres, past the Götterfelsen, which rise 60 metres above the valley, to Meißen-Triebischtal station, where the wiring for the Dresden S-Bahn begins. After crossing the Elbe together with federal highway 6 and passing through Meissen station, the now two-track line turns south-east, rules through a sparsely-built flatland and rejoins the Leipzig–Dresden railway between Weinböhla and Coswig.

Operating points

Grimma ob Bf
Grimma ob Bf was opened on 1 June 1866 with the name Grimma. After the opening of the Großbothen–Wurzen section of the Glauchau–Wurzen railway in 1877, the Grimma station was renamed Grimma ob Bf since the Mulde Valley Railway had a station in the town on the right bank of the Mulde called Grimma unt Bf. With the discontinuation of rail traffic on the Mulde Valley Railway in 1967, Grimma ob Bf is the only railway station in the town.
Großbothen