Stuttgart S-Bahn


The Stuttgart S-Bahn is a suburban railway system serving the Stuttgart Region, an urban agglomeration of around 2.7 million people, consisting of the city of Stuttgart and the adjacent districts of Esslingen, Böblingen, Ludwigsburg and Rems-Murr-Kreis.
The Stuttgart S-Bahn comprises seven lines numbered S1 through S6 and S60, and is operated by S-Bahn Stuttgart, a subsidiary of Deutsche Bahn. The system is integrated with the regional transport cooperative, the Verkehrs- und Tarifverbund Stuttgart, which coordinates tickets and fares among all transport operators in the metropolitan area.

Lines

All lines lead through the city centre of Stuttgart. The northeastern end of the tunnel was the first part of the tunnel to open and has been used since the beginning, the southwestern end from Schwabstraße through Universität since 1985.
The main node to change for Stuttgart Stadtbahn is at Stuttgart Hauptbahnhof, but at Stuttgart Stadtmitte S-Bahn-station, you can get to some more lines of the Stadtbahn. In the outer city districts there are nodes of S-Bahn and Stadtbahn at Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt station and Stuttgart-Vaihingen station.
LineRouteLengthRailways used
Kirchheim – WendlingenPlochingen – Esslingen – Bad CannstattHauptbahnhof – Schwabstraße – VaihingenRohr – Böblingen – Herrenberg71 kmTeck Railway – Neckar-Alb Railway/Fils Valley Railway – VerbindungsbahnGäu Railway
SchorndorfWaiblingen – Bad Cannstatt – Hauptbahnhof – Schwabstraße – Vaihingen – Rohr – Flughafen/MesseFilderstadt57 kmRems Railway – Neckar-Alb Railway/Fils Valley Railway – Verbindungsbahn – Gäu Railway – Stuttgart-Rohr–Filderstadt railway
Backnang – Waiblingen – Bad Cannstatt – Hauptbahnhof – Schwabstraße – Vaihingen – Rohr – Flughafen/Messe50 kmMurr Railway – Rems Railway – Neckar-Alb Railway/Fils Valley Railway – Verbindungsbahn – Gäu Railway – Stuttgart-Rohr–Filderstadt railway
Schwabstraße – Hauptbahnhof – Zuffenhausen – Ludwigsburg – Marbach – Kirchberg – Burgstall – Backnang41 kmVerbindungsbahn – Franconia RailwayBacknang–Ludwigsburg railway
Schwabstraße – Hauptbahnhof – Zuffenhausen – Ludwigsburg – Bietigheim26 kmVerbindungsbahn – Franconia Railway
Schwabstraße – Hauptbahnhof – Zuffenhausen – LeonbergWeil der Stadt35 kmVerbindungsbahn – Franconia Railway – Black Forest Railway
Schwabstraße – Hauptbahnhof – Zuffenhausen – Leonberg – RenningenMagstadtMaichingenSindelfingen – Böblingen45 kmRankbach Railway

Schedule

The Stuttgart S-Bahn has a "memory schedule" or clock-face schedule. The basic cycle is one train per hour and line. During the day, there are usually additional trains which increases the cycle for each line to every 30 minutes or 15 minutes. Beginning at Schwabstraße and heading towards Hauptbahnhof, the schedule is as follows:
If there are additional trains, these times repeat at 15- or 30-minute intervals. Some additional trains do not travel the full length of the track, e.g. there are some trains of line S1 that shuttle between Esslingen and Schwabstraße or Plochingen and Schwabstraße instead of continuing through to Kirchheim u. Teck.

History

Suburban transport in Stuttgart has been operated since 1933, initially along electric lines from the Central Station until 1978. The primary line was from Esslingen to Ludwigsburg while changing direction in Stuttgart Central Station.
The first steps toward an S-Bahn in Stuttgart began after World War II. With the Stuttgart Central Station moved to its current location in the 1920s, the focus was shifted to construction of a downtown railway tunnel to improve access to the central city and points south. Simultaneously, the Stuttgart streetcar company was embarking on plans to build tunnels downtown for their system. Additionally, extra tracks were added to several outlying rail corridors in preparation for eventual S-Bahn service.
After financing agreements between the city, state and federal government and the state railway Deutsche Bundesbahn were reached, construction on the downtown tunnel from Stuttgart Central Station to Schwabstraße began on July 5, 1971. Work was completed in September 1978 and operation of the Stuttgart S-Bahn began with three lines : the S1 to Plochingen via Esslingen, the S4 to Ludwigsburg and the S6 to Weil der Stadt via Feuerbach and Leonberg.
Over the following years, the network has been extended to Bietigheim, Backnang and Schorndorf and the southern branches to Böblingen, Herrenberg and Airport. The S2 was then extended beyond the airport, connecting Filderstadt with the network.
The latest changes are the addition of Kirchheim unter Teck to the end of the S1 and the construction of a first tangential line S60 from Böblingen to Maichingen, Renningen and Schwabstraße and the extension of line S4 to Backnang.

Operation

The 215 km long system has 83 stations and serves approximately 435,000 passengers every workday. The trains operate on the standard gauge tracks of the Deutsche Bahn AG and are powered by single phase AC at 15 kV and 16.67 hertz, taken from overhead wires.
Installation of new passenger information systems began in December 2004. These systems indicate the actual real-time status for the next three trains rather than just the scheduled departure time and route of the next train.
All seven S-Bahn lines travel under the downtown area to Schwabstraße, and three continue on to Vaihingen through a dual-track tunnel. This tunnel (Verbindungsbahn, however, presents a bottleneck that limits train headways to two and a half minutes, meaning that trains on each individual line can only run at 15-minute headways.

Operational improvements

At first, the shortest headway on each line was 20 minutes. Headways were subsequently improved on the S1 between Schwabstraße and Esslingen and on the S6 between Schwabstraße and Leonberg to 10 minutes. Beginning in 1996, 15-minute headways during rush hours were introduced on all lines. This was accomplished with supplemental trains and operational changes along the outlying segments. This allowed the overall headway on the central trunk section to remain at 2.5 minutes.
All lines currently converge in the central trunk section of the track. This results in steady headways to Rohr, Waiblingen, and Ludwigsburg. The section from Vaihingen to Bad Cannstatt and Zuffenhausen has an optimal 10-minute headway during the day.
As early as 2015, introducing ETCS on the core section has been considered. In early 2017, Verband Region Stuttgart, the state of Baden-Württemberg and DB Netz announced to spend a million Euros on a feasibility study on ETCS for S-Bahn Stuttgart. After a Request for tender, four offers were received and the contract concluded in October 2017. ETCS proved to be technically feasible and useful to recude headways. The final report, published in early 2019, concluded that headways in the central core section of the network could be reduced by some 20 percent.
On January 30th, 2019, the regional parliament enacted a package of measures. Based on the introduction of ETCS, the train operating contract was extended to mid 2032 and 56 further S-Bahn trainsets were to be purchased.
VRS expects to reduce 15-minute intervals to 10-minute intervals through ETCS.

Fleet

As of July 7, 2005, the fleet consisted of ninety Class 420 train sets and sixty Class 423 sets. The Class 423 trains ply the S1 and S3 lines, while the 420s are in use along the other lines. Maintenance of the trains and power units takes place in the S-Bahn service yard at the original eastern terminus of line S1 in Plochingen. This yard is equipped with the latest wheel lathes and washing and graffiti-cleaning equipment. About 550 employees working in three shifts keep the S-Bahn in service. On May 5, 2009, Bombardier and Alstom announced they received an order for 83 Class 430 train sets to replace the Class 420 from 2012 on.
The deployment of the Class 430 trains was delayed in July 2013 after several failures of the doors and retractable steps. These problems, along with unrelated signal failures, resulted in widespread delays on the S-Bahn system, especially on the S1, S2, and S3 lines. It was decided that the retractable step feature would be disabled and Class 430 trains will be gradually introduced beginning on December 15, 2013. By April 2014, 36 of the 430 train sets were in service with the S1 line completely converted.

Expansion projects

The following expansions of the Stuttgart S-Bahn system are currently in planning or underway:
Additional projects not in active planning at present: