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Stendal–Uelzen railway

Stendal–Uelzen
The Uelzen–Stendal route
The Uelzen–Stendal route
Route number: 305
Track gauge: 1435
Voltage: 15 kV, 16.7 Hz AC
Maximum speed: 160
From Berlin
From Tangermünde
From Magdeburg
0.0 Stendal
To Wittenberge
To Wolfsburg
9.1 Steinfeld (b Stendal) Schönfeld until 1944
14.8 Kläden (Kr Stendal)
20.0 Hohenwulsch Bismark (Altm) until 1944
To Peulingen and to Kalbe
25.7 Meßdorf
32.0 Brunau-Packebusch
40.5 Fleetmark
45.0 Rademin
From Osterburg
49.4 Pretzier (Altm)
49.0 From Wittenberge
53.5 Former flying junction
From Dannenberg
56.0 Salzwedel freight yard
From Diesdorf, Badel
57.1 Salzwedel
50.0 To Oebisfelde
70.2 Bergen (Dumme)
Saxony-AnhaltLower Saxony state border
72.0 Nienbergen
76.2 Schnega
82.7 Varbitz
86.2 Soltendieck
90.3 Heuerstorf
93.6 From Braunschweig
93.7 Wieren
Elbe Lateral Canal
98.3 Stederdorf (Kr Uelzen)
From Hannover
107.5 Uelzen
To Hamburg
To Langwedel-Bremen

The Stendal–Uelzen railway is a mostly single-track, electrified main line and connects Stendal in the east of Altmark with Uelzen in Lower Saxony. The most important stop along the way is Salzwedel.

The Stendal–Uelzen line was originally opened in 1873 as part of a direct connection from Berlin to the naval base at Wilhelmshaven by the Magdeburg–Halberstadt Railway Company (MHE) and was opened as part of the so-called America Line.

In 1945, the line was cut by the Inner German border. West of the border a temporary terminus was created at Nienbergen as the former station in the Lower Saxon town of Bergen an der Dumme was 1,200 meters east of the Iron Curtain. The second track was removed in two phases in 1946 and the 1980s: first, the section from Wieren to Nienbergen was singled, then the second track was also removed between Wieren and Uelzen.

In the Soviet Zone, which became East Germany in 1949, trains initially ran between Stendal and Bergen. Border security measures were imposed between Salzwedel and Bergen on 7 October 1951 as Bergen station was only 1,200 meters from the border. Between Stendal and Salzwedel one of the two tracks was dismantled because the track material was supposedly needed for the construction of the Berlin outer ring.

After the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1990, the rebuilding of the Stendal–Salzwedel–Uelzen connection was added to the list of German Unity Transport Projects (Verkehrsprojekte Deutsche Einheit). The old line was completely rebuilt and established in 1999 as a single-track, electrified mainline railway and restored to operation. Part of the second track was also restored. The whole project took several years to complete. The 17.5 km long section between Brunau and district road 1005 in Klein Gartz now has two tracks and there is also an approximately one kilometre long passing loop west of the former Kläden station; the current Kläden station is now located further to the east on a single-track section. In addition, during the implementation of the German Unity Transport Project, all loading sidings near the line were dismantled and connecting sidings were reduced so that local freight movements are no longer possible on this line. The originally planned complete reconstruction of the line as a two-track line has not yet been realised.


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Wikipedia

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