Burgenlandbahn (Saxony-Anhalt)

Burgenlandbahn
Industry Transport
Founded 1999
Founder DB Regio
Headquarters Leipzig, (Germany)
Parent DB Regio
Website burgenlandbahn.de

The Burgenlandbahn is a brand that DB Regio uses for their local passenger rail transport in southern Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Since 1999, it has served several branch lines, some of them have been canceled in the meantime. With the Burgenlandbahn great hopes were combined to secure the area network by low operating costs despite low population density permanently.[1]

The train company currently serves 32 stations in a traffic area of 2,200 square kilometers and 500,000 inhabitants and a network of around 100 kilometers. Annually around 1.15 million train kilometers are provided.[2]

Rolling stock

VT 672 in Weißenfels
VT 672 in Naumburg (Saale) Ost on 4 June 2007
672 901-6 ("Naumburg") and 672 905-7 ("Weißenfels") parked at Naumburg (Saale) Hauptbahnhof on 13 January 2007
Burgenlandbahn at Mücheln (Geiseltal)

Network

Current services

Line KBS Route Railway line Duration of contract
RB 76 551 Weißenfels – Teuchern – Theißen – Zeitz Weißenfels–Zeitz railway
RB 77 585 Naumburg (Saale) OstNaumburg (Saale) Hauptbahnhof – Freyburg (Unstrut) – Laucha (Unstrut) – Nebra – Wangen (Unstrut) Unstrutbahn
RB 78 586 Merseburg – Braunsbedra – Mücheln (Geiseltal) – Querfurt Geiseltalbahn

Former services

Line KBS Route Railway line Duration of contract Notes
RB 73 337 Klostermansfeld – Mansfeld (Südharz) – Vatterode – Wippra Wipperliese until 12 April 2015 replaced by bus service
RB 77 592 Berga-Kelbra – Rottleberode – Stolberg (Harz) until 13 December 2014 replaced by bus service
RB 79 588 Merseburg – Bad Lauchstädt – Schafstädt until 10 December 2011 replaced by bus service
RB 94 551 Naumburg (Saale) Ost – Teuchern – Zeitz until 11 December 2010 replaced by bus service
RB 95 551 Wangen (Unstrut) – Roßleben – Artern until 9 December 2006 replaced by bus service
RB 587 Querfurt – Esperstedt – Schraplau – Röblingen until 13 Dezember 2003 replaced by bus service

References

  1. http://www.pro-bahn.de/web_historie/historie_99/pbz/heft73.htm
  2. "Firmenprofil Burgenlandbahn" (in German). DB Regio AG – Burgenlandbahn. Retrieved 2017-09-18.
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