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Lietzow-Binz railway

Lietzow (Rügen)–Ostseebad Binz
Route of the Lietzow–Binz railway
Route of the Lietzow–Binz railway
Route number: 190
Line number: 6776
Line length: 12,1
Track gauge: 1435
Voltage: 15 kV 16.7 Hz AC
from Stralsund
0,0 Lietzow (Rügen)
to Sassnitz
7,1 Proraformerly KdF-Seebad Rügen
8,8 Prora Ost
12,1 Ostseebad Binz

The Lietzow and Binz railway is a single track, electrified branch line on the German Baltic Sea island of Rügen in the state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. It mainly used by local and long-distance passenger services.

The line branches off at the Lietzow (Rügen) station on the Stralsund–Sassnitz railway. It then runs eastward along the northern shore of Kleiner Jasmunder Bodden lagoon. It then swings south and, later, southeast, on a neck of land between the Kleiner Jasmunder Bodden and the Baltic. Parallel to the railway line, between it and the sea, is the four and a half kilometre long complex of Prora. The line ends at the station of Binz at the northern edge of the village. The station is known locally as the "Big Station" (Großer Bahnhof), in contrast to the small station in the south of the village.

Until the 1930s there was only an isolated railway network on the island of Rügen. This comprised two standard gauge tracks, the line from Altefähr to Sassnitz and the line that branched off in Bergen to Lauterbach. The completion of the Rügen Causeway in 1936 meant that, from then on, the island of Rügen could be directly accessed by train. By contrast, the onward journey to Binz, the largest seaside resort on Rügen, and to the other resorts in the southeast of the island, was complicated by having to change in Bergen auf Rügen and Putbus to the narrow gauge line of the Rügen Light Railway. In addition, the resort for the Strength through Joy (KDF) organization was built in the second half of the 1930s north of Binz, where 20,000 people were to be accommodated. To connect that and to improve services to Binz, a line was built from Lietzow station to Binz and inaugurated on 15 May 1939. By 1938 the station building in Binz was finished. There were plans for an extension of the route along the coast to Thiessow, as well as the replacement of the narrow gauge railway from Putbus with a standard gauge track. These did not come to fruition due to the outbreak of World War II. The KDF complex was never completed; holiday traffic was not part of the war effort. In 1940, only two pairs of trains ran per day. After the war, the track was initially dismantled as war reparations to the Soviets. But by 1952 it was back in service. A new halt was built in Prora East.


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