*** Welcome to piglix ***

Austrian Western Railway

Western Railway
Westbahn ÖPNVKarte 02.png
Overview
Other name(s)

Old Western Railway (Alte Westbahn):
Wien Westbf – Kn. Wagram – (GZU) – Linz Hbf – Salzburg Hbf
New Western Railway (Neue Westbahn):

(Wien Meidling – Bf. Tullnerfeld) – Kn. Wagram – St. Pölten – Linz Hb
Line number
  • Route 1 (Old Western Railway):
    2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016,
    2017, 4011, 4012, 4013, 4014, 4015
  • Route 30 (New Western Railway):
    2305, 2306, 2307, 4301
  • Route 3 (relief track):
    2035, 1036
  • Route 23 (suburban track):
    2231
Technical
Line length 312.2 km (194.0 mi)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Minimum radius 247 mm
Electrification 15 kV 16.7 Hz AC
Operating speed 250 km/h (160 mph) (max)
Maximum incline 1.3%

Old Western Railway (Alte Westbahn):
Wien Westbf – Kn. Wagram – (GZU) – Linz Hbf – Salzburg Hbf
New Western Railway (Neue Westbahn):

The Western Railway (German: Westbahn) is a two-track, partly four-track, electrified railway line in Austria that runs from Vienna to Salzburg via St. Pölten and Linz Hauptbahnhof and is one of the major lines of Austria. It was originally opened as the Empress Elisabeth Railway in 1858 (Vienna–Linz). The line is owned and operated by Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB).

The Western Railway consists of the double-track Old Western Railway (Alten Westbahn, line 1) and the double-track New Western Railway (Neuen Westbahn, line 30).

For operational reasons the Western Railway is supplemented by the suburban track (line 23) from Vienna Hütteldorf to Unter Purkersdorf and the relief track (line 3) from Pottenbrunn via St. Pölten to Prinzersdorf.

The line was opened from Vienna Westbahnhof to Linz on 15 December 1858 and was extended to Salzburg on 1 August 1860. The continuation to Munich was opened on 12 August 1860. The line was built by the k.k. privilegierte Kaiserin Elisabeth-Bahn ("Imperial and Royal privileged Empress Elisabeth Railway", KEB) company under Hermann Dietrich Lindheim. In addition to the Vienna–Salzburg line, it also built the Wels–Passau Railway (1861) and the St. Valentin–Summerau–České Budějovice line (1872).

The line was authorised under a treaty contracted by Bavaria and Austria in 1851. The Vienna–Linz section was completed in 1858 and the rest of the line to Salzburg was opened for traffic in 1860. The trip from Vienna to Salzburg initially took nine hours. A few weeks before the official opening Empress Elizabeth used the line to travel to her home in Bavaria. Emperor Franz Joseph and Maximilian II of Bavaria were present at the official opening on the line on 12 August 1860.


...
Wikipedia

...