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The Vienna S-Bahn is a suburban commuter rail network in Vienna, Austria. As opposed to the city-run urban metro network, the Vienna U-Bahn, it extends beyond the borders of the city, is operated by the ÖBB (Austrian Federal Railways), and consists of many branch lines. ''S-Bahn'' is short for ''Schnellbahn'', which can be translated as "rapid railway".


Network

The Vienna S-Bahn consists of a multitude of branch lines extending beyond the city boundary, most of which converge at a central route segment called the ''Stammstrecke'' ("trunk line"). While many of the individual lines run at half-hourly or hourly intervals, they are able to offer combined frequencies of only a few minutes or less along the ''Stammstrecke''. Only line S45 operates entirely within Vienna's boundaries. Unlike many S-Bahn networks in Germany, the Vienna S-Bahn is not a separate rail network. It is integrated with, and part of, the national railway system. As such, S-Bahn trains share tracks with regional trains (which travel further than the S-Bahn, some regional lines crossing into neighbouring countries) and other rail traffic, including freight trains. The numbering of the lines has changed since the partial opening of the Wien Hauptbahnhof on 9 December 2012. All lines except for S45 have the same route and final station; most have trains that go further and ones that do not run to the terminal.


History

The Wiener Stadtbahn, which belonged to the Commission for Transport Facilities in Vienna and was operated by the Imperial Royal Austrian State Railways, was in its original mode of operation (1898–1925) a forerunner of the S-Bahn, since it was a full-line operation (''Vollbahn''), which also handled local traffic. However, since other factors, such as military transports, long-distance traffic, etc., played an important role in their planning and the railway was operated with steam locomotives, there was no great success. As a result, numerous proposals were made to improve the situation, but most of them failed. In these proposals, in general, no distinction was made between full railway and metro, so many proposals under the name "subway" mostly included railway facilities. The original light rail design included more lines than were actually built; these remained legally binding until 1951. However, the Stadtbahn, which had been shut down after 1918, was reopened in 1925 by the Vienna city administration as the Wiener Elektrische Stadtbahn and in a fare network with the tram; for the sets, turning loops were built in Vienna Hütteldorf and Vienna Heiligenstadt and at the station Gumpendorfer Straße connecting tracks to the tram network, the cars used could also run on the tram. The track connections to the full railway network, on the other hand, were shut down or dismantled. The light rail was thus eliminated for an operation that was spreading to the region. When in 1933 the municipal building Wildganshof (3rd district) was built, a railway line between the buildings was taken into account as planned, so that an elevated railway line on the path would have been possible. In the entrance area of the complex there is a board in which this planned route is referred to as a subway. After the " Anschluss" of 1938, the Siemens Bau Union developed a combined U-Bahn and S-Bahn network with municipal offices, the latter intended to be operated by the Deutsche Reichsbahn. Although the planned network was extremely extensive, due to the onset of World War II that plan was not able to go beyond test drilling. In the post-war period, there were new proposals, but these rarely had an official character. A proposal by Otmar Denk from 1947 was very similar to the project that was later realised. Planning for the S-Bahn network for Vienna was started in 1954 as a part of reconstruction of the ÖBB and especially the Wien Südbahnhof. Concrete plans were completed by 1955, but financing was not secured until 1958. The collapse of the investment budget of the city of Vienna led to a partial stop of construction in 1960, necessitating a postponing of the grand opening of the network by a little over a year. The S-Bahn era in Austria began on 17 January 1962. Its official opening was attended by over 900 invited guests, including Federal President Adolf Schärf and Vice Chancellor Bruno Pittermann. After a day of testing the network with empty trains, passenger transport began at 11:45pm the following day. Between Meidling and Praterstern a driving ban for steam locomotives was immediately imposed. The station Hauptzollamt was renamed "Landstraße" (now Wien Mitte), analogous to the Stadtbahn station. The S-Bahn was an immediate success. There was severe overcrowding, which could only be eliminated by replacing the single sets with double sets. An agreement was concluded with Wiener Verkehrsbetriebe which allowed passengers to use other parallel modes of transport without additional ticket purchase in the event of a malfunction. In 1963, the first television monitors for train handling were installed on a trial basis in the Südbahnhof stop (now Wien Quartier Belvedere). On the ''Stammstrecke'' trains were initially run every quarter of an hour, but already in October 1962 the traffic between Floridsdorf and Landstraße was increased in the rush hour, and from 1964 on the entire ''Stammstrecke''. Since 3 June 1984, the Vienna S-Bahn has formed part of the integrated fare structure of the Verkehrsverbund Ost-Region (VOR) of Vienna, Lower Austria and Burgenland. From 1962 until 2005, the term ''S-Bahn'' was rarely used, the full term ''Schnellbahn'' being preferred. Starting with the 2005/2006 timetable, however, ''S-Bahn'' has begun to appear in timetables and loudspeaker announcements. Announcements in
Badner Bahn The Badner Bahn or Wiener Lokalbahn is a tram-train service in the metropolitan area of Vienna. It runs for between Vienna and Baden, and is operated by the Wiener Lokalbahnen Aktiengesellschaft. The entire Badner Bahn is part of the and is one ...
trains still use the term ''Schnellbahn'' as of 2009.


The ''Stammstrecke''

The ''Stammstrecke'', which translates to "Trunk line", of the Vienna S-Bahn has a length of 13.3 km (8.3 mi) with trains running at headways comparable to those of the Vienna U-Bahn. It is shown on maps (including U-Bahn maps) as a dusty pink line. From the south to the north, the following stations are served: * Wien Meidling * Wien Matzleinsdorfer Platz * Wien Hauptbahnhof (formerly Südtiroler Platz) * Wien Quartier Belvedere (formerly Wien Südbahnhof tracks 21/22) * Wien Rennweg * Wien Mitte (formerly Landstraße) * Wien Praterstern (formerly Wien Nord) * Wien Traisengasse * Wien Handelskai * Strandbäder (closed 2002) * Wien Floridsdorf


The ''Vorortelinie''

The most highly frequented single line in Vienna is the S45 ''Vorortelinie'', which translates to "Suburban line". The localities along this line all lie within the city proper, although they had been independent until the late nineteenth century, when they were incorporated, six years before this line opened. Originally part of Otto Wagner's federally operated Stadtbahn, this line was not taken over by the city with the rest of the network in 1925. The line was subsequently closed to passengers in 1932. Although still used for freight traffic for several decades afterwards, the line would not see passenger traffic again until 1987, when it was reopened as part of the S-Bahn after extensive renovation. Many of the original Otto Wagner stations are still standing and still in use. However, two of the present stations, Breitensee and Oberdöbling were demolished after the original line's closure and rebuilt in a different style by architects Alois Machatschek and Wilfried Schermann. One new station, Krottenbachstraße, was added to the refurbished line, and two of the original line's stations, ''Baumgarten'' and ''Unterdöbling'', which had also been demolished, were not replaced. Rebuilding ''Unterdöbling'' station is proposed for the near future, as is extending the line south to the Reichsbrücke. The line was extended from Heiligenstadt to Handelskai in 1996, to allow for an easy connection to line ''U6'' of the Vienna U-Bahn. The ''Vorortelinie'' runs at headways of 10 minutes (daytime on weekdays), and is shown on maps (including U-Bahn maps) as a light green line.


Rolling stock


Current

* ÖBB Class 4020 (since 1979) * ÖBB commuter double deck cars ( de) push-pull bilevel cars hauled by ÖBB Class 1116 or ÖBB Class 1144 locomotives (since 1996) * ÖBB Class 4024 (since 2004) * ÖBB Class 4744/4746 "''cityjet''" (since 2015) Schnellbahn Wien 6020050 199110.jpg , A Class 4020 EMU in his original painting between Rennweg and Quartier Belvedere Wien IMG 7210 (9443635084).jpg, An Austrian double deck cab car at Wien Praterstern ÖBB Schnellbahn S-Bahn Wien S45 891433.jpg, A Class 4024 EMU at Wien Gersthof Cityjet in Floridsdorf.jpg, A Class 4746 EMU at Wien Floridsdorf


Former

* ÖBB Class 4030 (from 1962 until 2004) * ÖBB Class 5145 ( de) (partly as multiple working with Class 4030) *
DB Class 420 The Class 420 (german: Baureihe 420) is a commuter electric multiple unit train type in service on German S-Bahn networks since 1972. Their use in Munich during the 1972 Summer Olympics earned them the colloquial name (Olympic multiple unit). ...
(1970 trial) * SBB-CFF-FFS Re 450 (1992 double-decker train trial) 066R03270180 Haltestelle Strandbäder, Blick Richtung Nordbahnbrücke, Schnellbahn Lok 6030.205.jpg , A Class 4030 EMU at Station Strandbäder Oggau 6645-004 198708.jpg, A 5145 DMU with cab car at first at Oggau


Future plans

Plans for expansions of the S-Bahn network currently exist only to a small extent. Depending on the results of the negotiations between ÖBB and the states of Vienna and Lower Austria, a line S10 is to be created from Gänserndorf via Stadlau, Simmering and Wien Hauptbahnhof to Meidling. Demands for the extension of the S7 to the Slovakian capital city
Bratislava Bratislava (, also ; ; german: Preßburg/Pressburg ; hu, Pozsony) is the Capital city, capital and largest city of Slovakia. Officially, the population of the city is about 475,000; however, it is estimated to be more than 660,000 — approxim ...
have been made since 1990; the realisation fails because the ÖBB has sold the right-of-way from the Wolfsthal terminus to the Slovakian border to private individuals. The most important current construction project is the renewal of many S-Bahn stations. Recently, for example, the Westbahnhof and the Bahnhof Wien Mitte were completed.
Vienna Airport railway station Vienna Airport (german: Flughafen Wien) is a railway station serving Vienna International Airport in Schwechat, Lower Austria, Austria. The train services are operated by ÖBB and Deutsche Bahn. Train services The station is served by the follo ...
's renewal to accommodate long-distance trains was completed by 2014. The Wien Quartier Belvedere stop was refurbished by 2016. Furthermore, in December 2014, in the course of the new construction of Wien Hauptbahnhof on the site of the former Südbahnhof, the construction of a connection between the Ostbahn and the airport rapid transit line was completed in order to create an optimal connection to Vienna Airport. The double-track connection was built in the vicinity of the Zentralverschiebebahnhof/Kledering/Zentralfriedhof and has been scheduled since 14 December 2014. According to plans of the ÖBB, the new connection could be run as line S75 from the airport to Vienna Central Station and then on the S-Bahn trunk line to Wien Meidling to Wien Hütteldorf with appropriate financing by the states of Vienna and Lower Austria. An extension of the suburban line S45 from Handelskai to Donaumarina U2 station along the freight-only Donauuferbahn ( de), with through-running on the current line S80 to form a S-Bahn Ring ( de:S-Bahn-Ring Wien) linking the Laaer Ostbahn at Haidestraße and then connecting to the ''Stammstrecke'' at Wien Hauptbahnhof, has been under discussion since 1993. In 2018, the municipal council of Vienna announced its support for constructing the S-Bahn Ring, which is expected to enter service in 2025. The Penzing–Meidling ''Verbindungsbahn'', which was noticeably relieved by the Lainz Tunnel, is also to be upgraded between Hütteldorf and Meidling. In addition to a complete renovation and large-scale grade-separation works, the two stations Hietzinger Hauptstraße and Stranzenbergbrücke are to be rebuilt. As of 2020, preparatory work is expected to begin around 2023 and completion is expected in 2026.


See also

* Trams in Vienna *
Vienna Metro The Vienna U-Bahn (german: U-Bahn Wien), where ''U-Bahn'' is an abbreviation of the German term ''Untergrundbahn'' ( en, underground railway), is a rapid transit system serving Vienna, Austria. With the September 2017 opening of the , five-stati ...
* Wiener Lokalbahnen *
Transportation in Vienna Vienna has an extensive transportation system that includes highways, railroads and public transportation. Public transportation Vienna has a large public transportation network. * Vienna S-Bahn * Vienna U-Bahn * Local Railways (Lokalbahn W ...


References


External links

* * {{Urban public transport in Austria Transport in Vienna S-Bahn in Austria 15 kV AC railway electrification