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Hamburg City S-Bahn

City-S-Bahn
Overview
Locale Hamburg, Germany
Line number 1270
Technical
Line length 5.38 km (3.34 mi)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Electrification 1200 V DC third rail
Operating speed 60 km/h (37 mph) (max)
Maximum incline 0.4%
Route number 101.1, 101.2, 101.3
Route map
link line from Berliner Tor and Hammerbrook
0.0 Hauptbahnhof
link line towards Dammtor
0.2 Tunnel entrance
1.3 Jungfernstieg
2.0 Stadthausbrücke
3.0 Landungsbrücken
4.0 Reeperbahn
4.9 Königstraße
5.9 Altona
Tunnel exit
Blankenese railway
from and to link line (Holstenstraße)
7.8 Diebsteich
S-Bahn to Pinneberg
Source: German railway atlas

The City S-Bahn is a 5,380 metre-long tunnel section of the Hamburg S-Bahn. It runs between Altona station and Hamburg Hauptbahnhof through the city centre of Hamburg and the districts of Altona and St. Pauli. The S-Bahn lines S1, S2 and S3 of the Hamburger Verkehrsverbund (Hamburg Transport Association) run through the tunnel. Seven S-Bahn stations are located in the tunnel, including the tourist-oriented stations of Landungsbrücken and Reeperbahn.

The tunnel begins directly after the Hauptbahnhof where its two tracks branch off the Hamburg-Altona link line and immediately dive under it. The ramp has a maximum gradient of 3.94%, since only a few hundred metres from the beginning of the tunnel it begins to run under the Inner Alster Lake to Jungfernstieg station, which is built under the lake. The line runs from there to the southwest, passing through Stadthausbrücke station to Landungsbrücken station. From there, it swings back to the northwest and tunnels under the Reeperbahn to Reeperbahn station. It then continues to Königstrasse station and reaches Altona station from the south. The underground S-Bahn station at Altona was built with four tracks, including a reversing facility. Shortly north of the station, the railway climbs at a maximum gradient of 4.0% to reach ground level.

In the 1960s, Hamburg had only two S-Bahn lines. During the planning and construction of the large housing estate of Osdorfer Born in north-western Hamburg, consideration was given to increasing S-Bahn services on the Hamburg-Altona link line (Verbindungsbahn), which at that time had services running at a minimum interval of 150 seconds. The signalling system allowed trains to run 90 seconds apart but the slightest deviation from the timetable would have created a major difficulty. Moreover, the link line avoided the entire central city of Hamburg and the former city of Altona, as it ran along part of the former Hamburg ramparts. As a result, it was decided to build an underground S-Bahn line to the south of the Link line to open up the inner city—the City S-Bahn line.


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Wikipedia

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