Wutach Valley Railway

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Lauchringen–Immendingen
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Route number: 743, 12737
Line number: 4403
Line length: 61.5
Track gauge: 1435
Straight track
Upper Rhine Railway from Basel
Station on track
0.0 Lauchringen
Junction to right
Upper Rhine Railway to Schaffhausen
Unknown BSicon "eBHF"
3.2 Horheim 373 m
Station on track
5.7 Wutöschingen
Unknown BSicon "eBHF"
7.4 Ofteringen 398 m
Station on track
9.7 Eggingen 410 m
Unknown BSicon "eBHF"
13.7 Eberfingen 434 m
Station on track
17.4 Stühlingen 455 m
Straight track
Connection to the Schaffhausen-Schleitheim Tramway
Station on track
20.4 Weizen-Bahnhof 471 m
Stop on track
23.6 Lausheim-Blumegg 502 m
Enter and exit tunnel
24.5 Kehr Tunnel in Grimmelshofer Weiler (1205 m)
Large bridge
Wutach Bridge, Grimmelshofen (107,5 m)
Enter and exit tunnel
27.2 Tunnel near Grimmelshofen (225 m)
Unknown BSicon "eBHF"
28.5 Grimmelshofen 539 m
Enter and exit short tunnel
28.2 Little Stockhalde Tunnel, Grimmelshofen (86 m)
Enter and exit tunnel
28.4 Greta Stockhalde Tunnel, Grimmelshofen (1700 m)
Large bridge
Fützen Viaduct (153 m)
Station on track
33.5 Fützen 587 m
Stop on track
Wutachblick
Enter and exit tunnel
37.0 Tunnel at Achdorfer Weg (540 m)
Station on track
40.9 Epfenhofen 655 m
Large bridge
Epfenhof Viaduct (264 m)
Large bridge
Biesenbach Viaduct (252,5 m)
Enter and exit tunnel
45.0 Buchberg Tunnel (805 m)
Station on track
46.0 Blumberg-Zollhaus 702 m
Stop on track
50.4 Blumberg-Riedöschingen 692 m
Stop on track
54.2 Geisingen-Leipferdingen 690 m
Stop on track
56.5 Geisingen-Aulfingen 684 m
Stop on track
58.8 Geisingen-Kirchen
Stop on track
59.7 Geisingen-Hausen 671 m
Junction from left
Black Forest Railway from Offenburg
Unknown BSicon "eBHF"
61.7 Hintschingenclosed
Stop on track
Immendingen-Zimmern
Station on track
119.0 Immendingen 658 m
Junction to left
Danube Valley Railway to Ulm
Straight track
Black Forest Railway to Konstanz

The Wutach Valley Railway or German: Wutachtalbahn is one of the most unusual and impressive stretches of railway in Germany. It links the town of Waldshut-Tiengen, on the Upper Rhine Railway (Hochrheinbahn) and the border of Baden-Württemberg and Switzerland, with Immendingen on the Black Forest Railway (Schwarzwaldbahn). Because of the twisting route of its central section, it is popularly known as the Sauschwänzlebahn (pigtail line).

The line was planned in the 1860s, though construction was not completed until the 1890s, and its purpose was at least partly strategic, to allow a means for moving military supplies around the south of the Black Forest; the German Empire having seized Alsace and Lorraine from the French in the Franco-Prussian war of 1870-71, a revenge attack in this area from the French or a preemptive strike to prevent one were key issues in German military thinking at the time. The normal commercial route along the Rhine passed into Swiss territory so could not be used for military purposes.

The southern section of the line, following the valley of the Wutach river from Waldshut-Tiengen to Weizen (part of the town of Stühlingen), is relatively conventional. However, the middle section, from Weizen to Blumberg, involved an approximately 250 meter gain in height, and the military authorities specified that the line must not have a gradient of more than 1:100. Accordingly, the line proceeds in a series of curves (including one complete circle), taking 26.5 km of track to travel a beeline distance of 9.5 km, with spectacular large viaducts, tunnels and bridges including the only spiral railway tunnel in Germany. The track is of standard gauge and is mainly single track; the bridges and tunnels were built on a scale to allow eventual doubling of the track, though this was never carried out. The final section, from Blumberg to meet the Black Forest Railway near Geisingen, is again relatively conventional.

The line did indeed play a strategic role at various times in its history, and its most recent refurbishment (in the early 1960s) was carried out with NATO funds. However, in the period after the Second World War its commercial use declined, and, section by section, passenger service was withdrawn, though the southern section remained open for freight traffic until 2001. After the Deutsche Bundesbahn withdrew passenger services on the central section in 1974, a voluntary organization was set up in 1976 to re-open it as a museum line under steam traction, and it is now a popular tourist attraction. There have been a number of initiatives to re-open passenger services on the other sections of the line as part of a regional transport strategy, and since December 2004 the northern section has formed part of the 3rd Ring Railway (3er Ringzug) network of local railway lines in the south-eastern part of the Black Forest, in the districts of Tuttlingen, Rottweil and Schwarzwald-Baar. The southern section remains out of regular use, though the line remains usable.

Map of the "Pigtail Line" stretch of the Wutachtalbahn

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 47°50′16″N 8°33′23″E / 47.83778°N 8.55639°E / 47.83778; 8.55639

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