Soden Railway

Bad Soden–Frankfurt-Höchst

Course of the Soden Railway and the nearby Königstein Railway
Overview
Locale Hesse
Line number 3640
Technical
Line length 6.6 km (4.1 mi)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Electrification 15 kV/16.7 Hz AC overhead catenary
Route number 643
Route map

Legend
 Operating points and lines[1] 
6.6 Bad Soden (Taunus)S3 terminus
Sulzbacher Straße
Limes Railway to Schwalbach S3
L 3014
5.2 Oberliederbacher Weg LC
4.3 Bahnstraße LC
4.3 Sulzbach (Taunus)
3.4 Feldweg LC
A 66
2.3 Lindenweg (Roman road) LC
1.7 Sossenheimer Weg LC
1.7 Frankfurt-Sossenheim
?,? Zuckschwerdtstraße(planned)
Zuckschwerdtstraße
Taunus Railway to Frankfurt (Mainline/S-Bahn)
Main-Lahn Railway to Frankfurt S1S2
0.0 Frankfurt-Höchst
Königstein Railway to Königstein
Taunus Railway to Wiesbaden S1 and
  Main-Lahn Railway to Niedernhausen S2

The Soden Railway is a line in the western suburbs of Frankfurt am Main and was one of the oldest railways in Germany, opened in 1847.

Route

The Soden Railway runs from Frankfurt-Höchst to Bad Soden am Taunus and is 6.6 km long. It was also called the Höchst–Soden Railway. The line has timetable route number 643 and is operated as line RB 13 of the Rhein-Main-Verkehrsverbund.

History

In 1893 the line ran largely through open fields.
Sulzbach station
VT2E in Sulzbach

The line was opened on 22 May 1847 and is might be described as the first German branch line. In Höchst it connects with the Taunus Railway opened in 1839 from Frankfurt to Wiesbaden. It was built to connect the emerging spa town of Soden to the new rail network. The builder and owner of the line was the Soden Company (German: Sodener Actien-Gesellschaft). The line was managed from the beginning by the Taunus Railway Company.

Since 1972, there has been a connection in Bad Soden to the Limes Railway to Niederhöchstadt, which connects Bad Soden with the Rhine-Main S-Bahn network.

Operations

The railway was originally only operated in the summer months. In 1860 the operating company stopped operations and demanded subsidies from the Nassau Government, which refused. Operations only resumed on 1 October 1863 after the track had been sold to the Taunus Railway Company for 100,000 guilders. On 1 January 1872 the Soden Railway was sold to the Prussian state railways and subsequently ran all year.

From 1979 to 1997 Soden Railway formed part of S-Bahn line S3. In addition, the line was electrified. Train patronage was very poor, so S-Bahn services were abandoned. From 1997, the Frankfurt-Königsteiner Eisenbahn operated the line. These operations have since been rebranded as Hessische Landesbahn (Hessian State Railways). Despite the fact that the line is electrified, it is operated, along with the Hessische Landesbahn’s other routes through the Taunus, by a diesel multiple unit (usually a VT 2E, sometimes a LINT).

Future

The section south of the A 66 autobahn would from part of the proposed Regionalstadtbahn Regionaltangente West line through the western fringes of Frankfurt. If built, this would have a new station called Zuckschwerdtstraße.

Notes

  1. Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.

References

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