U1 (Vienna U-Bahn)

Line U1
Line U1 train at Kagran
Overview
Type Rapid transit
System Vienna U-Bahn
Status Operational
Termini Oberlaa
Leopoldau
Stations 24
Operation
Opened 1978
Operator(s) Wiener Linien
Depot(s) Kagran (closed 2006), Leopoldau, Neulaa
Technical
Line length 19.2 km (11.9 mi)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)

Line U1 is a line on the Vienna U-Bahn metro system.[1] It currently has 24 stations and it runs 19.2 km from Oberlaa to Leopoldau. When the extension to Oberlaa was completed in 2017, the line became the longest on the network, surpassing the length of Line U6. It is connected to Line U2 and Line U4 at Karlsplatz, Line U3 at Stephansplatz, Line U4 at Schwedenplatz and Line U2 at Praterstern. The line opened on 25 February 1978.

Stations

StationTransfers
Oberlaa
Neulaa
Alaudagasse
Altes Landgut
Troststraße
Reumannplatz
Keplerplatz
Südtiroler Platz-Hauptbahnhof
Taubstummengasse
Karlsplatz
Stephansplatz
Schwedenplatz
Nestroyplatz
Praterstern
Vorgartenstraße
Donauinsel
Kaisermühlen
Alte Donau
Kagran
Kagraner Platz
Rennbahnweg
Aderklaaer Straße
Großfeldsiedlung
Leopoldau

History

The Construction of U1 (1969-1982)

The modern construction of Vienna's railway was built on the 3 November 1969.[2] This consisted of the newly built U1 line, and two merged lines from a tram and old metro, of the line U2 and U4 respectively. As the result of a more streamlined network, there were new routes between U1, U2 and U4.[3]

Line U1 Routes: Reumannplatz - Stephansplatz - Praterstern (6.1 kilometres in length)[4]

The construction started in Karlsplatz, the largest interchange station in Vienna. On 25 February 1978, the first Vienna U-Bahn route between Karlsplatz and Reumannplatz, the U1, went into operation. All sections of the basic network were in operation by December 1981. The extension of line U1 to Kagran (3.9 km), which was not part of the original plans and was added later when the Reichsbrücke over the Danube collapsed in 1976, was completed in September 1982.[5] Finally, the Vienna U-Bahn basic network was completed on 3 September 1982, where the network reached a total length of 30 kilometres.[6]

The development of the cars of both the U1 and U2 Trains was by Simmering-Graz-Pauker (SGP) in 1972.[7] This unit had a two-axle motorcar, it was 36.8 metres long and 2.8 metres wide and a permanently coupled twin railcar. A train was made up of three double cars. From 1987, SGP upgraded their cars' technical equipment, which included water-cooled three-phase motors, brakes with energy recovery and modernised emergency braking and safety equipment.[8] In 2006, the U1 and U2 LED displays replaced the original in-and-out illuminated telltale displays. In addition, the trains were retrofitted with plastic seats, video surveillance and warning lights that had signalled the door closing. An individual car consists of 49 seats and 91 standing spots.

References

  1. http://homepage.univie.ac.at/horst.prillinger/metro/english/u1.html
  2. Rout, Stephen. "Vienna Underground Train System - Information from Vienna Direct". ViennaDirect. Retrieved 2018-09-14.
  3. Prillinger, Horst. "The Modern Metro (U-Bahn), Phase 1 - The Vienna Metro". The Vienna Metro. Retrieved 2018-09-14.
  4. "U1 Route: TIme Schedules, Stops & Maps". Moovit. Retrieved 2018-09-14.
  5. "Wiener U-Bahn-Bau". ORF.at. Retrieved 2018-09-14.
  6. "U-Bahn Line U1". WienVienna. Retrieved 2018-09-14.
  7. Horst, Prillinger. "U, U11 and U2 Stock". The Vienna Metro. Retrieved 2018-09-14.
  8. "Vienna U-Bahn". Rehau. Retrieved 2018-09-14.
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