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Bobingen–Landsberg am Lech railway

Lechfeld Railway
Bahnhof Bobingen Desiro.JPG
A DB Regio train at Bobingen station in 2014
Overview
Locale Bavaria, Germany
Line number 410
Operation
Operator(s) DB
Technical
Line length 27.4 km (17.0 mi)
Number of tracks 1
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Electrification non-electrified
Route number 986
Route map

Lechfeldbahn.png

Operating points and lines

from Augsburg
0,0 Bobingen 525 m
to Buchloe
3,7 Oberottmarshausen
Graben (Lechfeld)-Gewerbepark
9,9 Lagerlechfeld 551 m
13,2 Klosterlechfeld
16,7 Hurlach
from Buchloe
22,6
0,0
Kaufering 591 m
to Munich
A 96
4,0 Landsberg (L) Schule
4,8 Landsberg (Lech) 586 m
to Schongau

Lechfeldbahn.png

Operating points and lines

The Bobingen–Landsberg am Lech railway (also called Lechfeld railway or Lechtal railway) is a branch line in Swabia and Upper Bavaria.

The existing Bobingen-Kaufering railway since 1877 is a 22.6 km long single-track link between the rail lines Augsburg-Buchloe and Munich-Buchloe. From the perspective of railway operations, part of the Lechfeld railway is opened (branch line Kaufering-Landsberg am Lech) five years before the main part is finished.

On 1 September 1847, the 60.19 km long connection from Augsburg Central Station via Bobingen and Buchloe to Kaufbeuren was opened up as a result of the Bavarian Act of 25 August 1843. In Bobingen a branch was opened on 15 May 1877, which is a 22.6 km long Lechfeld track to Kaufering.

A 4.83 km extension was opened on 1 November 1872 to Landsberg am Lech. The Fox Valley Railway leads from there for 28.71 km to Schongau and has traveled for the first time on 16 November 1886. The Landsberg station is the interface between the Lechfeld railway and the Landsberg am Lech–Schongau railway (or Fuchstalbahn: Fox Valley Railway) between Landsberg am Lech and Schongau.

In addition to the civilian use, Lechfeld railway was also used in military. So a 7.4 km long parallel track between Klosterlechfeld and the military training area was relocated. In this way, equipment and soldiers could be implemented quickly. In addition, there was a siding for ammunition depot.

The scale of the 19th century infrastructure along the railway was dismantled after World War II. The military railway was closed in 1957. The freight was set similar to many other secondary lines in the 1990s and terminated appropriate systems (freight tracks and goods warehouses). The route is only used by the Augsburg Localbahn as connection towards Schongau.


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Wikipedia

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