Cologne Stadtbahn
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The Cologne Stadtbahn is a light rail system in the German city of
Cologne Cologne ( ; german: Köln ; ksh, Kölle ) is the largest city of the German western state of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) and the fourth-most populous city of Germany with 1.1 million inhabitants in the city proper and 3.6 millio ...
, including several surrounding cities of the Cologne Bonn Region ( Bergisch Gladbach,
Bonn The federal city of Bonn ( lat, Bonna) is a city on the banks of the Rhine in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia, with a population of over 300,000. About south-southeast of Cologne, Bonn is in the southernmost part of the Rhine-Ru ...
, Bornheim, Brühl, Frechen,
Hürth Hürth is a town in the Rhein-Erft-Kreis, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. Hürth shares borders with the city of Cologne and is about 6 km to the southwest of Cologne city centre, at the northeastern slope of the natural preserve Kott ...
,
Leverkusen Leverkusen () is a city in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, on the eastern bank of the Rhine. To the south, Leverkusen borders the city of Cologne, and to the north the state capital, Düsseldorf. With about 161,000 inhabitants, Leverkusen is o ...
-Schlebusch, Wesseling). The term ''
Stadtbahn ' (; German for "city railway"; plural ') is a German word referring to various types of urban rail transport. One type of transport originated in the 19th century, firstly in Berlin and followed by Vienna, where rail routes were created that co ...
'' denotes a system that encompasses elements of
tram A tram (called a streetcar or trolley in North America) is a rail vehicle that travels on tramway tracks on public urban streets; some include segments on segregated right-of-way. The tramlines or networks operated as public transport are ...
s as well as an
underground railway The Underground Railroad was a network of clandestine routes and safe houses established in the United States during the early- to mid-19th century. It was used by enslaved African Americans primarily to escape into free states and Canada. ...
network (''
U-Bahn Rapid transit in Germany consists of four U-Bahn systems and fourteen S-Bahn systems. The U-Bahn commonly understood to stand for Untergrundbahn (''underground railway'') are conventional rapid transit systems that run mostly underground, while ...
'') and
interurban The Interurban (or radial railway in Europe and Canada) is a type of electric railway, with streetcar-like electric self-propelled rail cars which run within and between cities or towns. They were very prevalent in North America between 1900 ...
rail, even including three lines that are licensed as heavy rail and used by
freight train Rail freight transport is the use of railroads and trains to transport cargo as opposed to human passengers. A freight train, cargo train, or goods train is a group of freight cars (US) or goods wagons (International Union of Railways) haul ...
s as well as Stadtbahn vehicles. Two of these lines connect the Cologne Stadtbahn to the
Bonn Stadtbahn The Bonn Stadtbahn ('' en, city rail'') is a part of the local public transit system in Bonn and the surrounding Rhein-Sieg area, that also includes the Bonn Straßenbahn. Although with six actual Stadtbahn lines (as well as three tram lines) th ...
. These lines (16 and 18) are jointly operated by both cities' transport authorities, resulting in both systems and the lines connecting them sometimes collectively referred to as ''Stadtbahn Rhein-Sieg''. The Cologne Stadtbahn is operated by the Kölner Verkehrsbetriebe (KVB) and the Bonn Stadtbahn is operated by the Stadtwerke Bonn (SWB – City of Bonn Utilities Division). The KVB and SWB are members of the
Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Sieg The Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Sieg (''Rhine-Sieg Transport Association''; VRS) is the public transport association covering the area of the Cologne/Bonn Region, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. It was founded on 1 September 1987, and covers an area ...
(VRS – Rhein-Sieg Transit Authority), formed in 1987 to consolidate the transit authorities in the metropolitan Cologne area and operate a joint fare structure. There are 236 stations, of which 42 are underground.


History


Horsecar and tram (1877 - 1960s)

The Cologne Stadtbahn traces its history to the first
horsecar A horsecar, horse-drawn tram, horse-drawn streetcar (U.S.), or horse-drawn railway (historical), is an animal-powered (usually horse) tram or streetcar. Summary The horse-drawn tram (horsecar) was an early form of public rail transport, w ...
lines that started operating in 1877. Within a few years, several companies had built an extensive network. Because none of these companies showed interest in electrifying their lines, the city of Cologne bought them on 1 January 1900, and by 1907 all horsecar lines had been electrified or replaced by other services. Additional lines were built until 1912, including ''Vorortbahnen'' to surrounding villages outside the city limits. Outside the city center, these lines had segregated
right-of-way Right of way is the legal right, established by grant from a landowner or long usage (i.e. by prescription), to pass along a specific route through property belonging to another. A similar ''right of access'' also exists on land held by a gov ...
and were more similar to "real" railroads than to trams. The dense tram network in the city center that had been present before
World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposing ...
was only partially rebuilt afterwards, and the ''Hauptbahnhof'' (Central Station) was not linked to important places like Neumarkt and Heumarkt for the time being. This was partly due to the plans to make Cologne a car friendly city which meant that old tramways (like the north–south one) were replaced by bus service; and also due to the planned widening of vehicles which wouldn't have fit through some of the narrow streets previously served by trams. Another question was the connection between the two banks of the
Rhine ), Surselva, Graubünden, Switzerland , source1_coordinates= , source1_elevation = , source2 = Rein Posteriur/Hinterrhein , source2_location = Paradies Glacier, Graubünden, Switzerland , source2_coordinates= , so ...
which had been provided by the Hohenzollern-, Mülheim- and Deutzer Brücke, that were all destroyed during the war. A decision was taken to dedicate the Hohenzollern Bridge solely to interregional services, and the new Severins Bridge was only finished in 1959, allowing a restructuring of tram lines.


Upgrade to a Stadtbahn (1960s - now)

Already in 1956, the transportation plan of the city council intended a newly built tunnel through the city center in the north–south direction. An overground routing along the Nord-Süd-Fahrt (North-South-Road) would not have served many central areas and was rejected. The tunnel was not planned as a ''U-Bahn'' as in many other cities, but rather as an underground tram. This meant a design similar to overground trams with small turning radii, short distances between stops and low-floor platforms. At the end of the tunnels the trains were supposed to run as trams on the streets again, but in many places the trams were already separated from car traffic anyways. For this type of system - tunnels in highly congested areas, elsewhere mostly on or next to streets - the term
Stadtbahn ' (; German for "city railway"; plural ') is a German word referring to various types of urban rail transport. One type of transport originated in the 19th century, firstly in Berlin and followed by Vienna, where rail routes were created that co ...
was later created. Similar concepts to separate rail and car traffic were later used in many cities in
North Rhine-Westphalia North Rhine-Westphalia (german: Nordrhein-Westfalen, ; li, Noordrien-Wesfale ; nds, Noordrhien-Westfalen; ksh, Noodrhing-Wäßßfaale), commonly shortened to NRW (), is a state (''Land'') in Western Germany. With more than 18 million inha ...
and adjacent foreign cities (
Brussels Brussels (french: Bruxelles or ; nl, Brussel ), officially the Brussels-Capital Region (All text and all but one graphic show the English name as Brussels-Capital Region.) (french: link=no, Région de Bruxelles-Capitale; nl, link=no, Bruss ...
, Antwerp). The term Stadtbahn is not regularly used, as the system is mostly referred to as ''U-Bahn'' and sometimes ''Straßenbahn'' (tram) by officials and the KVB, and most underground stations are also marked by a big white U on blue background which refers to ''U-Bahn''. Most people in Cologne speak about the ''U-Bahn'' or ''Straßenbahn'', or just about the train or the KVB. When construction of the first tunnel started in 1963, there was no promise of the state NRW or the federal government to finance the project, and in the worst case the city would have had to pay completely on their own. With this background, the building of the Innenstadttunnel (city center tunnel) was begun. The tunnel opened in parts between 1968 and 1970 and was designed to be continued later, when more money and higher demand could make it necessary. Nearly all tunnels completed afterwards aren't new routes, but rather overground sections of existing lines moved to the underground. Beneficial to the expansion of the Stadtbahn were the ''Vorortbahnen'' that mostly ran on the right side of the Rhine and usually had their own right-of-ways. Another advantage was the previous use of wide trains instead of the usual other cities used for their trams, which made the adjustment for the new wide Stadtbahnwagen B easier. After the '' Vorgebirgsbahn'' of the '' Köln-Bonner Eisenbahnen'' started serving Barbarossaplatz over Luxemburger Straße in 1898, the '' Rheinuferbahn'' used rail tracks of the trams from its start in 1906, beginning the mix of trams and interregional rail. The '' Köln-Frechen-Benzelrather Eisenbahn'', which opened in 1893, was modified from
metre-gauge Metre-gauge railways are narrow-gauge railways with track gauge of or 1 metre. The metre gauge is used in around of tracks around the world. It was used by European colonial powers, such as the French, British and German Empires. In Europe, la ...
to
standard-gauge A standard-gauge railway is a railway with a track gauge of . The standard gauge is also called Stephenson gauge (after George Stephenson), International gauge, UIC gauge, uniform gauge, normal gauge and European gauge in Europe, and SGR in Ea ...
in 1914, and has been operated by the KVB since 1955 using EBO certified vehicles. The integration of the ''Rheinuferbahn'' and ''Vorgebirgsbahn'' was already planned in the mid-1960s, but had to be put off due to a lack of vehicles that could run on interregional rail and partially tunneled Stadtbahn. As seen in other cities, the changing ideas on efficient traffic systems lead to differing needs for the system. An example of this is the length of the platforms. While the first platforms were designed for two coupled wagons, later the state NRW required space for three or sometimes four Stadtbahnwagen B, which lead to platforms of up to in length. The usually much shorter overground platforms currently only allow two wagons of collective length. Another changing factor was the routing itself: the curve radii were enlarged and at-grade crossings avoided. The outer parts of the tunnel network are designed for up to , but the distance between stations is more similar to the previous tram network, which is why the top speed is rarely reached. There is no plan for the final state of the network as in the U-Bahn of
Berlin Berlin ( , ) is the capital and List of cities in Germany by population, largest city of Germany by both area and population. Its 3.7 million inhabitants make it the European Union's List of cities in the European Union by population within ci ...
,
Munich Munich ( ; german: München ; bar, Minga ) is the capital and most populous city of the German state of Bavaria. With a population of 1,558,395 inhabitants as of 31 July 2020, it is the third-largest city in Germany, after Berlin and Ha ...
or
Nuremberg Nuremberg ( ; german: link=no, Nürnberg ; in the local East Franconian dialect: ''Nämberch'' ) is the second-largest city of the German state of Bavaria after its capital Munich, and its 518,370 (2019) inhabitants make it the 14th-largest ...
. The lines and tunnels were built in the order which made most sense to relieve traffic at the time. Because of this and the financial insecurity if the state or federal government would finance more projects, many ramps going from the tunnels to the overground were built only provisorily to enable a later continuation of the tunnels, but no underground stations were designed to become multi-level stations serving different directions. Initially the mixed use of trams and Stadtbahnen only allowed for low-floor platforms with a height of , which meant that the high-floor Stadtbahnen had to be (and still are) equipped with stairs. In 1985 the first part of the network was built that was only accessible for high-floor trains with a platform height of . Since the summer of 2006, no more trams are in use in Cologne. But in the 1990s, the city council had decided to only convert part of the network for use with high-floor trains, that has since been upgraded almost completely. The first few lines were converted to low-floor operations in 1994, another few in 2003. This led to the curiosity that at some platforms the earlier-built escalators don't end at platform level, but a few steps above it, as it had been intended to raise those platforms to . Underground construction in downtown Cologne, one of
Germany Germany,, officially the Federal Republic of Germany, is a country in Central Europe. It is the second most populous country in Europe after Russia, and the most populous member state of the European Union. Germany is situated betwe ...
's oldest cities, is often obstructed by
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s' legal rights to dig in all future building sites within the medieval city limits before all heavy construction machinery.


Current routes

Because the light rail network evolved from the tram network instead of replacing it, there were numerous stations served by both light rail and tram vehicles for almost three decades. While high platforms for step less entry into light rail vehicles could be built on the outer branches, stations in the city center had to have low platforms to support trams as well. The introduction of
low-floor Accessibility is the design of products, devices, services, vehicles, or environments so as to be usable by people with disabilities. The concept of accessible design and practice of accessible development ensures both "direct access" (i. ...
technology in the early 1990s promised wheelchair-accessible entry throughout the network without having to build several hundred high platforms. To allow the introduction of low-floor trains without having to demolish existing high platforms, the network was divided into two sub-networks of different floor heights. On weekdays, all lines are served in 5- to 10-minute intervals from 6 am to 8 pm, with little or no service between around 1 am and about 4.30 am, and usually 15-minute intervals in the early night and early morning. On weekends, there is an hourly service throughout the night. Because several lines overlap on the routes through the city center, some stations are served by up to 30 trains per hour in each direction.


Low-floor lines


East-West lines

The first step towards a low-floor light rail network was concentrating four lines on similar routes into a common east–west-corridor in 1994. These lines were quickly equipped with low platforms above street level on every single station. While there are some stretches that can be described as classic tramway lines, the majority of the east–west-network has been upgraded to a high standard with long sections having segregated right-of-way, justifying the term "low-floor light rail" (''Niederflurstadtbahn''). In 2006, during the
2006 FIFA World Cup The 2006 FIFA World Cup, also branded as Germany 2006, was the 18th FIFA World Cup, the quadrennial international football world championship tournament. It was held from 9 June to 9 July 2006 in Germany, which had won the right to host th ...
, route 1 was extended to Weiden-West, via Schulstraße, which connects to the RheinEnergieStadion. In 2007, Line 8, which previously operated during peak hours, stopped service. All its runs were integrated into the schedules of Lines 7 and 9. * : Weiden West (S-Bahn) – Junkersdorf – Rheinenergiestadion – Aachener Straße/GürtelRudolfplatzNeumarktBf Deutz/Messe – Kalk – Brück – Refrath – Bensberg * : Frechen – Marsdorf – Aachener Straße/GürtelRudolfplatzNeumarkt – Poll – Porz – Zündorf * : Sülz – Zülpicher Straße/Gürtel – University – Zülpicher PlatzNeumarktBf Deutz/Messe – Kalk – Vingst – Ostheim – Rath/Heumar – Königsforst


Ring lines

When it became clear to city authorities that the construction of a large number of additional high platforms was not financially feasible, other options were investigated. It was deemed most economical to create a second low-floor network and equip the remaining lines with high platforms. Between the stations "Ebertplatz" and "Barbarossaplatz", there are two possible routes. It was decided that the future low-floor lines would be concentrated in the tunnel underneath the Cologne Ring road, while high-floor lines would use the tunnel under the Central station. This change was implemented in December 2003, after the high platforms at the ''Hansaring'' station were removed. In 2006, the tracks of the '' Chorweiler'' station were raised with additional gravel. Since then, all "Ringe" lines are operated with low-floor vehicles. In 2007, Line 6, which had only operated during peak hours, was replaced by additional trains of Line 15. * : Merkenich – Fordwerke – Wilh.-Sollmann-Straße – EbertplatzFriesenplatzBarbarossaplatzEifelstraße – Zollstock * : Chorweiler – Longerich – Wilh.-Sollmann-Straße – EbertplatzFriesenplatzBarbarossaplatzEifelstraßeChlodwigplatzUbierring


High-floor lines

The high-floor network consists of all lines operated by "classic" light rail vehicles with a floor height of roughly one meter above street level. Since separation from the low-floor network, high platforms are being built in stations in the city center at one or two per year. As of 2022, the most frequented stations have been upgraded except for the Barbarossaplatz station. Since the construction of temporary platforms at the Severinstraße station while the actual station gets modernized and connected to the North-Southern tunnel, lines 3 and 4 are Cologne's first HF lines completely equipped with level entrance. The western branch of Line 5 still has two stops (Subbelrather Straße/Gürtel and Nußbaumerstraße, both shared with Line 13) with low platforms, the rest of its stations were made high-floor when the line was extended into the Butzweilerhof industrial area. Line 13 is also called the "beltway" ( Gürtel) line because it is the only line that does not touch the city center. Line 13 is also called the Outer Ring line, while Lines 12 and 15 together can be called the inner ring line. Most of the line runs along a series of roads of the same name. The northern part of Line 13 is built as an elevated railway. High-floor platforms are still very rare on this line, because it shares three platforms (Dürener Straße, Wüllnerstraße, Aachener Straße/Gürtel) with the low-floor line 7 and many parts of the platforms are lined with old trees, making the upgrade more difficult. Since the timetable change on 13 December 2015, a section of the north–south rail has been oprated by line 17. From Severinstraße it runs through the newly built tunnel to Bonner Wall, after which it joins line 16 at Schönhauser Str. and runs alongside it to Rodenkirchen Bf. In the morning and evening peak (07:00 to 08:00 and 16:30 to 18:00), the line runs further to Sürth. Lines 16 and 18 are the longest lines in the network, connecting Cologne to
Bonn The federal city of Bonn ( lat, Bonna) is a city on the banks of the Rhine in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia, with a population of over 300,000. About south-southeast of Cologne, Bonn is in the southernmost part of the Rhine-Ru ...
via railway lines. * : Mengenich – Bocklemünd – Venloer Straße/GürtelHans-Böckler-PlatzFriesenplatzNeumarkt – Severinstraße – Bf Deutz/LANxess Arena – Buchheim – Holweide – Dellbrück – Thielenbruch * : BocklemündVenloer Straße/GürtelHans-Böckler-PlatzFriesenplatzNeumarkt – Severinstraße – Bf Deutz/LANxess Arena – Mülheim – Höhenhaus – Dünnwald – Schlebusch * : Sparkasse Am Butzweilerhof – IKEA Am Butzweilerhof – Alter Flughafen Butzweilerhof – Rektor-Klein-Straße – Margaretastraße – Iltisstraße – Lenauplatz – Nußbaumerstraße – Subbelrather Str./Gürtel – Liebigstraße – Gutenbergstraße – Hans-Böckler-PlatzFriesenplatzAppellhofplatzDom/Hbf (Central Station)RathausHeumarkt * : Sülzgürtel – Zülpicher Straße/Gürtel – Dürener Straße/Gürtel – Aachener Straße/GürtelVenloer Straße/Gürtel – Subbelrather Straße/Gürtel – Nußbaumer Straße – Escher StraßeNeusser Straße/GürtelAmsterdamer Straße/GürtelSlabystraße – Mülheim – Buchheim – Holweide * : Bonn-Bad GodesbergBonn Hbf (Main Station) – Wesseling – Sürth – Rodenkirchen – UbierringBarbarossaplatzNeumarktDom/Hbf (Central Station)EbertplatzReichensperger PlatzNiehl * : Severinstr. – Chlodwigplatz – Rodenkirchen (– Sürth)
Monday to Friday, 7:00 to 8:00 and 16:30 to 18:00 to Sürth * : Bonn Hbf (Main Station) – Brühl – Klettenberg – SülzgürtelBarbarossaplatzNeumarktDom/Hbf (Central Station)EbertplatzReichensperger PlatzSlabystraße – Mülheim – Buchheim – Holweide – Dellbrück – Thielenbruch


Former lines

A list of old routes of lines and lines that stopped service. If a line's route only changed because it was expanded on one end, that change is not listed here. The highest line number ever used on the system was 27 in the 1930s.


Past expansion

Due to the lack of an overarching plan on the expansion of the network, there's no single point when the tram became the Stadtbahn, and the expansion projects since the building of the ''Innenstadttunnel'' will be listed chronologically.


Innenstadttunnel (City center tunnel)

The ''Innenstadttunnel'' was opened in several parts from 1968 to 1970. The first part served from Dom/Hbf to Appellhofplatz reaching the surface through a temporary ramp at Friesenplatz, and in the following year the section Appellhofplatz - Barbarossaplatz was added. At the station Appellhofplatz a triangular junction was built, with the tunnel from Friesenplatz to Dom/Hbf passing under the rest of the railways. In October 1970 the sections Poststraße - Severinsbridge and Dom/Hbf - Breslauer Platz followed, with a temporary ramp built at Breslauer Platz. The ramp at Barbarossaplatz was also intended to only be temporary, but is still in use to this day (2022). Because the ''Innenstadttunnel'' was built as an underground tram, it has small curve radii and level junctions at Appellhofplatz and Poststraße. Currently (2022) the tunnel is served by three lines with 10 min headway and one with 5 min headway.


Chorweiler extension

The in the 1970s newly built line to the
commuter town A commuter town is a populated area that is primarily residential rather than commercial or industrial. Routine travel from home to work and back is called commuting, which is where the term comes from. A commuter town may be called by many ...
Chorweiler is the first line in Cologne to be built metro-like from the start. In 1971, the first long part was constructed: On a segregated right-of-way it starts from existing tram lines to the north, crosses under the Militärringsstraße and over the A1 to the underground station Heimersdorf. The line ended in a temporary loop about farther. In 1973 the extension was continued to its new and current (2022) underground terminus Chorweiler which is shared with the
S-Bahn The S-Bahn is the name of hybrid urban-suburban rail systems serving a metropolitan region in German-speaking countries. Some of the larger S-Bahn systems provide service similar to rapid transit systems, while smaller ones often resemble c ...
line S11. Since 2003, line 15 operates this part of the network.


Eberplatz and Nippes tunnels

In 1974 the so far biggest opening of tunnels happened: The lines from Breslauer Platz and Hansaring to the zoo and under the Neusser Straße with a quad-platform station at Ebertplatz. The station is built for efficient operation with few grade crossings of different lines. The tunnels leading to Hansaring are connected creating an underground turning loop. At Reichensbergerplatz the start of a tunnel in the direction of Amsterdamer Straße was used for another turning loop. In addition to the continuation of the ''Innenstadttunnel'', the tunnel under the Neusser Straße (Ebertplatz, Lohsestraße, Florastraße, Neusser Straße/Gürtel) was a priority, because the street is a narrow main street that was the most used part of the network at the time, outside of the city center. To get a higher reduction in travel time from the north parts of the city, higher stop spacing was used, at the price of a worse service for residents. Because of financing problems the tunnel had to end at the station Mollwitzstraße instead of continuing to the split of the line at Wilhelm-Sollman-Straße, and the ramp was built as a temporary solution, enabling later continuation of the tunnel.


Gürtel Hochbahn (elevated railway)

At the same time as the tunnels in Nippes, an
elevated railway An elevated railway or elevated train (also known as an el train for short) is a rapid transit railway with the tracks above street level on a viaduct or other elevated structure (usually constructed from steel, cast iron, concrete, or bricks ...
was finished for line 13 following the Gürtel, which at the time was planned to be extended from Bilderstöckchen to the Mülheim Bridge. The line starts at Nußbaumerstraße up to where line 13 runs in the middle of the Gürtel, and connects it with the Mülheim Bridge. The Cologne-Neuss railway however is crossed underneath, at which a station (Geldernstraße/Parkgürtel) creates a connection to S-Bahn services. At the approach to the Mülheim Bridge the line joins the also junction-free line from the zoo. To create enough space for climbing the elevation change, the two lines cross at the station Slabystraße before joining farther along the bridge. This and the tunnels in Nippes meant that Cologne now had the longest underground/elevated railway networks of German cities that started those systems after World-War 2.


Deutz/Kalk

The first tunnel to the east of the Rhine was opened in the years 1976 to 1983. After the station Frankfurter Straße had already been lowered in 1964, the ramp to the first part of the tunnel with the station Fuldaer Straße was built there. The subsequent tunnels in Kalk, Vingst and Deutz followed in 1980, 1981 and 1983. The branch to Königsforst joins at station Kalk Kapelle without a junction by crossing under. Between the stations ''Deutz Technische Hochschule'' and ''Bf Deutz/Messe'' a small underground parking facility was created, and in the station Kalk Post a bunker was built. At the same time as the tunnels were built, the Deutz Bridge was widened by building another bridge with the same profile to its south, and then moved next to the existing one. With this new construction, the Stadtbahn got a dedicated track through the middle of the bridge.


Rheinuferbahn

Since 1978 line 16 operates as an overland-line. At the station Marienburg (now 2022: Heinrich-Lübke-Ufer) it diverges from its previous routing to the center of
Rodenkirchen Rodenkirchen () is a southern borough (''Stadtbezirk'') of Cologne (Köln) in Germany. It has about 110,000 inhabitants and covers an area of . The borough includes the quarters Bayenthal, Godorf, Hahnwald, Immendorf, Marienburg, Meschenich, Rad ...
to the Rheinuferbahn of the ''Köln-Bonner Eisenbahnen'' (Cologne-Bonn railways) which it follows to Bonn. Different to the solution later used in
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, the railway was changed to accommodate Stadtbahn vehicles, instead of equipping Stadtbahn vehicles with the technology needed to be used on mainline railways. The Rheinuferbahn was converted to Stadtbahn service by changing its electrification from 1200 V to 750 V, upgrading the
train protection system A train protection system is a railway technical installation to ensure safe operation in the event of human error. Development Train stops The earliest systems were train stops, as still used by the New York City Subway, the Toronto subway, ...
and retrofitting the switches for the smaller wheels of the Stadtbahn vehicles. The line is still operated as a railway under EBO, with mixed freight and passenger services running on parts of it. Line 16 was the first time, that vehicles from Bonn entered Cologne's network.


Friesenplatz - Gutenbergstraße

The ''Innenstadttunnel'' was continued from the station Friesenplatz in 1985. It diverges grade separated from the tunnel to Ehrenfeld at Hans-Böckler-Platz/Bahnhof West where elevators go directly from the underground station's platforms to the ones of Köln West station. The tunnel then turns north beneath the green belt and reaches the surface at the station Gutenbergstraße. During the construction of the tunnel under Venloer Straße the tunnel was used by lines 3 and 4, while usually it is only served by line 5.


Vorgebirgsbahn

Like the Rheinuferbahn 8 years before, the Vorgebirgsbahn was completely converted to Stadtbahn operations in 1986. Already since the electrification in the 1930s, the trams and Vorgebirgsbahn shared tracks between Barbarossaplatz and Klettenberg. With the conversion to Stadtbahn, the tram lines 10 and 11 were replaced by the Stadtbahn, which meant that the turning loop was replaced by a turning rail. In 1990 to 1992 the platforms were converted to high-floor platforms (except for Barbarossaplatz).


Ring-tunnel

Since October 1987 a tunnel exists under the Cologne Ring. It continues the tunnel at from Hansaring and crosses under the lines 1 and 7 at Rudolfplatz. At Friesenplatz it crosses under the ''Innenstadttunnel'' which forms the currently (2022) only completely underground station junction which is a bit messy because of the stacked side-platforms. At Zülpicher Platz the tunnel ends in a ramp to the surface. The ring tunnel is the last tunnel built so far (2022) that uses low-floor platforms. The station Rudolfplatz was also designed as a bunker. The station Christophstraße/Mediapark was the location of the worst accident in the recent history of the Stadtbahn in 1999, when a CitySprinter prototype hit a standing train at .


Ehrenfeld

The tunnel through Ehrenfeld was opened in two parts: the line from Hans-Böckler-Platz to Venloer Straße/Gürtel, where a connection to S-Bahnhof Ehrenfeld was created, in 1989, and the tunnel to Wolffsohnstraße and surface tracks to Bocklemünd in 1992, where an on-platform transfer to buses can be made. The Ehrenfeld tunnel has multiple differentiating factors from previously built tunnels: It is the first tunnel built with high-floor platforms, and the stations have their platforms in the middle between the tracks instead of on the side. Because of the experiences with the tunnel below Neusser Straße the station spacing was reduced to get a better service for the residents.


Amsterdamer Straße

In 1992 as well, the line from Reichensberger Platz to Niehl Sebastianstraße was opened. The line had already been planned in the 1960s which meant that in the early 1970s in addition to a tunnel junction at Reichensbergerplatz, a long tunnel had been built below an intersection and another rail line. The rest of the line lies on the surface in the middle of Amsterdamer Straße and is mostly built with green track. The platforms are in the middle of the tracks and feature comparatively extensive designs. The last before the terminus lie next to an elevated 6 lane road. An extension to Merkenich would be possible, but is not planned at the time (2022).


Mülheim

The Mülheim tunnel was opened in June 1997, starts at the Mülheim Bridge, crosses the Wiener Platz with a station, provides a connection to
Köln-Mülheim station Köln-Mülheim is a railway station situated at Mülheim, Cologne in western Germany. It is served by several regional trains, the S6 and S11 lines of the Rhine-Ruhr S-Bahn and the 13 and 18 lines of Cologne Stadtbahn. History In the 19th c ...
with direct elevators from the Stadtbahn platform to the mainline rail and ends on the surface in Buchheim. It is the first tunnel in Cologne built using a
tunnel boring machine A tunnel boring machine (TBM), also known as a "mole", is a machine used to excavate tunnels with a circular cross section through a variety of soil and rock strata. They may also be used for microtunneling. They can be designed to bore thro ...
(TBM) under buildings. Construction started in 1992, and 2 years later the TBM had completed the two tunnel sections with a total length of .


Bensberg

Line 1 was extended to Bensberg on its east end in 2000: Instead of ending at the previous terminus that was renamed from Bensberg to Im Hoppenkamp, it now enters a nearly long tunnel to the new terminus Bensberg in the center of the quarter. The tunnel was necessary, because the terrain's elevation increase is to steep for trains, and the final station lies below surface.


Weiden

On the 16th of July 2002 a part of west end of line 1 discontinued in 1956 was reopened. This produced an uncommon problem: Because the routing passed the past headquarters of RTL, shaking, which could've disrupted the broadcasts, had to be avoided using a complex damping system. For the
2006 FIFA World Cup The 2006 FIFA World Cup, also branded as Germany 2006, was the 18th FIFA World Cup, the quadrennial international football world championship tournament. It was held from 9 June to 9 July 2006 in Germany, which had won the right to host th ...
the line was extended again to the newly built S-Bahn station Weiden West. At its new terminus, the line meets perpendicularly with the
Cologne–Aachen high-speed railway The Cologne–Aachen high-speed line is the German part of the Trans-European transport networks project ''high-speed line Paris–Brussels–Cologne''. It is not a newly built railway line, but a project to upgrade the existing railway line which ...
through which S-Bahn lines S 13 and S 19 create new connections especially in a western direction. This part was built to make the RheinEnergieStadion accessible by Stadtbahn from both sides. At the terminus station a
Park and ride A park and ride, also known as incentive parking or a commuter lot, is a parking lot with public transport connections that allows commuters and other people heading to city centres to leave their vehicles and transfer to a bus, rail system ( ...
facility was built with space for 430 cars, but because other close park and rides are in a different pay zone making the ride to Cologne more expensive, it has seen high usage, and has been extended by 255 more spaces to a total of 685, with more expansions for a total of 1280 spaces planned. A bicycle tower with a capacity for 130 bicycles is also planned, and after it was supposed to be finished by 2022, planning is now expected to end around the start of 2023.


Butzweilerhof extension

The Kölner Verkehrsbetriebe (KVB) opened a -long extension from the former Ossendorf terminus into the Butzweilerhof/Gewerbegebiet Ossendorf area in December 2010. Three new stations (Alter Flughafen Butzweilerhof, IKEA am Butzweilerhof and the new terminus, Sparkasse Am Butzweilerhof) were added to the existing Line 5. Construction of the extension cost about , with €5 million being financed through a charge on the companies which will benefit from the extension. The remaining €13 million was financed by the KVB Köln (Cologne Transit Authority). The extension begins near the former Ossendorf terminus (which has been closed), crosses the tracks of the HGK, follows the southern edge of the Hugo-Eckener-Strasse with the 1st station (Alter Flughafen Butzweilerhof) being sited at the corner of Hugo-Eckener-Strasse and Köhlstrasse. It then follows a new street which continues east from Köhlstraße. The line passes the new IKEA am Butzweilerhof store (2nd station), crosses the new extension of Richard-Byrd-Straße, and ends at the intersection of Richard-Byrd-Straße and Von-Hünefeld-Straße.


Mengenich

For the newly built neighborhood Bocklemünd/Mengenich a connection to the tram network has been planned since the 1960s. This connection was supposed to cross the Militärringstraße on a bridge and the run through a green space to the Autobahn A 1 where the line would've ended in a turning loop. This initial planning was first lowered in priority, and later made impossible by an expansion of the Militärringstraße. In 2002, line 3 was expanded to the new terminus Mengenich Ollenhauerring as the first part of a planned expansion to the center of Görling including a tunnel. The planned tunnel was not deemed financeable by NRW and so the city council decided in 2006 that a routing along the surface, that only passed along the edge of the residential area, would be done. Several variants of the now high priority project along Militärringsstraße to Tollerstraße, Schumacherring or Buschweg were prepared and presented to residents for discussion in 2008. On the 6th of February 2018 the construction of the new terminus station at Schumacherring began, with it being opened on the 27th of August of the same year.


Brühl double-track

In 2015 the city council approved the expansion to double-track the part of line 18 between Brühl-Mitte and Brühl-Badorf. By December 2018, the new tracks had been built, but because a new railway control center and required inspections had delays, the new track could be opened in April 2019. Additional construction such as the upgrade of platforms along the track was finished by mid 2020.


Current and future expansion


North-South rail (''Nord-Süd Stadtbahn'', NSS)

The NSS is made up of three stages: # Two parallel tunnels from Breslauer Platz to Marktstraße, connecting to the existing Innenstadttunnel # A track from Bonner Wall to Schönhauser Straße connecting the route to the Rheinuferbahn # 4 more surface stations along Bonner Straße from Marktstraße to Arnoldshöhe


Background

First considerations to connect the north and south of the city center were already undertaken in the 1970s, and actual planning was started by the city in 1983. A direct connection of the north to the south is needed, because part of the Innenstadttunnel is operating at capacity with 30 trains per hour serving it. Because the old tunnel was built using a
cut-and-cover A tunnel is an underground passageway, dug through surrounding soil, earth or rock, and enclosed except for the entrance and exit, commonly at each end. A pipeline is not a tunnel, though some recent tunnels have used immersed tube cons ...
technique, it follows major roads distant from the old city center with its narrow alleys. The first stage aims at fixing these problems, by rerouting line 16 from the Innenstadttunnel to the newly built one and building new stations directly under the old city center. Additionally, travel time on line 16 will be decreased by eight minutes and it is one of the last steps in the separation of the high-floor and low-floor networks. The new 3 km long tunnel is the first newly built line since the opening of the original downtown tunnel in 1968, while every tunnel opened in between had been a replacement for previous surface lines. It will be used by lines 5 and 16 once complete. The second stage is only to connect the line to the Rheinuferbahn, necessary for line 16's operation. The third stage aims to provide a better service for the residents of the Südstadt, Bayenthal, Marienburg and Raderberg by extending line 5, decreasing the travel time from the end of A 555 to the
Hauptbahnhof Central stations or central railway stations emerged in the second half of the nineteenth century as railway stations that had initially been built on the edge of city centres were enveloped by urban expansion and became an integral part of the ...
from 30 minutes to just 13.


Tunnel collapse and delays

On 3 March 2009 the building of the city's archive collapsed into the first stage's tunnel under construction on the Severinstraße between stations Severinstraße and Heumarkt, killing two people. Poor construction, the theft of necessary iron reinforcements and several ground water break-ins into the tunnel, which were not reported or controlled properly by the construction company, are among the alleged causes for this catastrophe. In 2012, line 5 was re-routed from its previous terminus Reichensbergerplatz to the already finished part of the NSS, now serving Rathaus (city hall) station. A further expansion to Heumarkt opened in December 2013. The 4 stations south of the collapse, Bonner Wall to Severinstraße, and the 2nd stage of the project were opened on the 13th of December 2015, served by line 17. The next step of the expansion will be an above ground extension from the Marktstr. Station down Bonner Straße, through Bayenthal. Construction started in January 2022 and should be completed at the end of 2025. Full operation of the North-South Rail Tunnel will not be achieved until 2028 due to the issues of stabilizing the section of tunnel that collapsed in 2009.


Cost

The extra cost of approximately 4 million euro is planned to mitigate the negative perception of the NSS project due to the collapse as well as budget increases, late completion (originally planned for 2011) and disruption. To avoid the possible destruction of archaeological artefacts underneath one of the oldest cities in Germany, the NSS was bored down to nearly 30 meters below ground level. At the location of the future stations, however, archaeological digs were still required and are cited as one of the reasons for the already significant cost overruns. While initially estimated to cost around 600 million euro, the current price tag is calculated at around 960 million euro. Because the second stage, connecting the tunnel to the line along the Rhine river has not yet been tendered, but is expected to cost another 100 million, total cost is expected to be 1.1 billion euro.


East-West rail (Ost-West Achse)

With line 1 being the 2nd most used line and line 7 and 9 running on the same surface-level tracks in the city center, the rail section at Neumarkt is operating at capacity, while more capacity is needed especially on line 1. To address this growing issue, new long trains will be used, increasing capacity by 50%. This upgrade needs longer platforms however, for which line 1 has been divided into four parts that need different kinds of upgrades.


West

This part between Weiden West and Universitätsstraße runs completely on the surface in the middle of Aachener Straße. In this part, platforms and turning loops will have to be upgraded to fit the longer trains. Planning started in 2018, and between August 15 and September 4, 2022, feedback for the plans could be given online. Construction is expected to start in the middle of 2027.


City Center

This part lies between Moltkestraße and Heumarkt. At stations Moltkestraße and Rudolfplatz its two tracks run separate on one-way streets, and it then runs in the middle of a street until Heumarkt. Because of the demand in this part, building a tunnel is considered. The different options, all starting at Deutzer Brücke (Deutz Bridge), are: # Neumarkt on lines 1, 7 and 9 ("short tunnel") # Rudolfplatz on lines 1, 7 and Dasselstraße/Bf Süd on line 9 ("middle long tunnel") # Melaten on lines 1,7 and University on line 9 in separate tunnels ("long tunnel variant A") # Melaten on lines 1,7 and University on line 9 with a shared tunnel until Moltkestraße and subsequent routing through the green belt ("long tunnel variant B") In an open discussion with residents, Stadtbahn users and car users in mid-2018, options 1 and 4 were rejected by everyone, while car users are against a tunnel completely. Stadtbahn users favour no tunnel or option 3, and residents support option 2 more than 3. Only options 1 and 2 could be financed by the state of NRW, while 3 and 4 would require large expenses of the city. The stations not rebuilt underground, whether because no tunnel is built or because it is to short to reach them, will be lengthened to accommodate the longer trains as well. Which option to use, if any, will be decided until Q3 of 2023. Planning is anticipated to take until 2026, with construction starting in 2029.


Tunnel

The part between Deutzer Freiheit and Fuldaer Straße is already a tunnel with sufficiently long platforms. In this part accessibility will be improved and fire protection will be upgraded for the increasing amount of passengers.


East

The part between Höhenberg Frankfurter Straße and Bensberg is overground and will be upgraded to feature longer stations, with the exception of Bensberg which is underground and already features long enough platforms, but will get improved fire protection like the other underground stations. Construction is expected to start in the middle of 2026.


Stepless access to all platforms and trains

Because parts of the network were built before accessibility was a concern, many older stations don't feature elevators/ramps to get from street level to the platform without steps. Also, because the network started as a tram, was then partially operated with high-floor Stadtbahn vehicles, and then split into a high-floor (HF) and low-floor (LF) network, some platforms still don't feature level boarding, requiring the users to climb a few steps to enter the train. Seven of these stations can't be upgraded, because they're served by both HF and LF vehicles, while others could, but just haven't been upgraded yet. The LF lines feature level boarding everywhere, as they're compatible with old tram platforms, but parts at both ends of the trains are not accessible. Also a few LF platforms can't be reached without climbing steps, a notable example being the highly used station Friesenplatz. Equipping the HF lines with matching platforms could only be started in 2003, as until then large parts of the network were served by HF and LF lines. First the city center tunnel was converted step-by-step, and in 2010 lines 3 and 4 became the first to be fully accessible. Since then the missing of HF platforms is concentrated on the lines 13 and 16, with a few missing on the other HF lines. Out of the 352 stations, 32 are not accessible, 12 have limited accessibility and 308 are fully accessible.


Longer trains and platforms

Because of the increasing demand throughout the system that can no longer be met by increasing frequency in some parts of the system, lines 1, 4, 9, 13 and 18 will be operated by longer trains in the future. Line 1 and possibly line 9 will have their platforms lengthened to as part of the east–west rail project, and will then be operated by long trains. Lines 4, 13 and 18 will have in total 39 platforms upgraded to accommodate new 70m long trains and add sufficient fire protection for the increasing number of passengers in underground stations.


Other plans

All of these plans have been brought up by a political party, and some are in different planning stages currently.


Rolling stock

Since the last traditional tramcars were retired in 2006, the Stadtbahn's active rolling stock consists exclusively of modern
articulated An articulated vehicle is a vehicle which has a permanent or semi-permanent pivot joint in its construction, allowing it to turn more sharply. There are many kinds, from heavy equipment to buses, trams and trains. Steam locomotives were sometim ...
light rail vehicles. All of them are about long, wide, seat approximately 70 passengers and are approved for speeds of up to . With rare exceptions, all services are operated by two units coupled together. File:KVB2252 Schoenhauser Str.jpg, alt=, Third-generation Type B LRV in new livery on line 16 File:K4000 Koeln Zollstock.jpg, alt=, A K4000 low-floor tram in old livery on line 12 File:K4500 VB Presentation.jpg, alt=, A newer K4500 tram at its presentation on 18 April 2005 File:KVB5102 AeussereKanalstrasse.jpg, alt=, Two K5000 high-floor trams on lines 3 (left) and 4 (right) File:Kvb koeln 2422.jpg, alt=, Refurbished train 2422 at Gleueler Str./Gürtel File:Stadtbahn HF6 Koeln.jpg, alt=, A HF6 train at station Venloer Straße/Gürtel on line 13


Stadtbahnwagen B

In 1973, Cologne received two prototypes of the Duewag Stadtbahnwagen B LRV. Since then, 172 units in four batches were delivered to Cologne until 1996. The first generation (series 2000) is currently being retired, with only four units (2031, 2032, 2035 and 2049) currently remaining in service, the other units were either scrapped, sold to Istanbul Tram, or in the case of unit 2012, donated to the Straßenbahn-Museum Thielenbruch. On the 8th of October 2022, a 4th generation Stadtbahnwagen Typ B (series 2300) caught on fire in the underground station Ebertplatz. The cause was determined to be a technical failure by a component beneath the steps, and later narrowed down to an overheated power converter responsible for the breaks. The KVB then temporarily stopped operating the 33 (one source says 32) trains of the series on 27th of October 2022, and started operating lines 3, 5 and 13 with single, long, trains, which lead to overcrowding. The manufacturer of the component,
ABB ABB Ltd. is a Swedish- Swiss multinational corporation headquartered in Zürich, Switzerland. The company was formed in 1988 when Sweden's Allmänna Svenska Elektriska Aktiebolaget (ASEA) and Switzerland's Brown, Boveri & Cie merged to crea ...
, supplied a software update to KVB, which was approved by the technical authority on the 10th of November, and the operation of the trains resumed on 11.11.2022., the start of carnival season in Cologne.


Low-floor LRVs (K4000 and K4500)

After tests with a low-floor tram from
Vienna en, Viennese , iso_code = AT-9 , registration_plate = W , postal_code_type = Postal code , postal_code = , timezone = CET , utc_offset = +1 , timezone_DST ...
, a similar vehicle was developed for Cologne by Bombardier Transportation, later becoming part of Bombardier's standardized
Bombardier Flexity Swift The Bombardier Flexity Swift is a series of urban and inter-urban tram, light rail and light metro vehicles manufactured by Bombardier Transportation. It is part of the Bombardier Flexity family of rail vehicles, and like the others, Flexity S ...
family. A total of 124 low-floor trams were delivered between 1995 and 1998, referred to as "K4000". These vehicles received numbers starting with 4001. When it was decided to create a second low-floor network, an option for high-floor vehicles was changed to additional low-floor vehicles. Bombardier developed a new low-floor tram based more on the K5000 (see below) than on the K4000. These new trams were named K4500. Delivery of 69 units started in 2005 and was completed in late 2007. The Bombardier CR4000 trams operating on
Tramlink London Trams, previously Tramlink and Croydon Tramlink, is a light rail tram system serving Croydon and surrounding areas in South London, England. It began operation in 2000, the first tram system in the London region since 1952. It is manage ...
in Croydon, England are largely based on the original K4000 stock used in Cologne.


CitySprinter

By the time a new series of high-floor vehicles was needed, Duewag had been sold to Siemens Transportation Systems and later dissolved, meaning that additional Type B cars were no longer being made. Siemens subsequently proposed the " CitySprinter", a high-floor derivative of its
Combino The Siemens Combino is a low-floor tram produced by Siemens Mobility (formerly Duewag). The first prototype was produced in 1996 at the Duewag works in Düsseldorf; the trams are now made in Krefeld- Uerdingen. Due to its modular design using ...
series of low-floor city trams. In August 1999, after two months of testing, the first CitySprinter prototype crashed into another tram at at the Christophstraße/
MediaPark The MediaPark is an urban regeneration neighborhood in Cologne, Germany, completed by the turn of the millennium. It was set up to accommodate companies of the media and communication industry, as well as cultural institutions, a hotel and some a ...
U-Bahn station. The accident was caused by a simultaneous electronics shutdown resulting in the train's inability to apply its brakes. Eight people sustained serious injuries. A second prototype was produced but as a result of the crash was never delivered.


High-floor LRVs (K5000 and K5200)

Following the failure of the CitySprinter, Bombardier derived a high-floor tram from the K4000. 59 units, named K5000, were delivered in 2002 and 2003. The numbering was changed to 5101 at short notice to avoid re-using the number 5001, which had been the number of the ill-fated CitySprinter. Another 15 vehicles of the same design, named K5200, were delivered before 2011. The
Bombardier M5000 The Bombardier M5000, is a model of light rail passenger vehicle. It is part of the Flexity Swift range of vehicles, built specifically as a high-floor, articulated bi-directional tram to operate solely on the Manchester Metrolink system in En ...
trams used on the
Manchester Metrolink Manchester Metrolink (branded locally simply as Metrolink) is a tram/ light rail system in Greater Manchester, England. The network has 99 stops along of standard-gauge route, making it the most extensive light rail system in the United Ki ...
, England are almost identical to the K5000/K5200 series used in Cologne.


Refurbished Stadtbahnwagen B series 2100 (now 2400)

Starting in 2011, the KVB along with the
Bonn Stadtbahn The Bonn Stadtbahn ('' en, city rail'') is a part of the local public transit system in Bonn and the surrounding Rhein-Sieg area, that also includes the Bonn Straßenbahn. Although with six actual Stadtbahn lines (as well as three tram lines) th ...
, converted its old 2nd generation Stadtbahnwagen B (the old series 2100) to new, modern trains now classified as series 2400. In this conversion the brake system, seats, air conditioning and the vehicle's body were completely upgraded, and the second cockpit was removed. The type got its EBO certification in 2016, and since then the trains can operate in the whole HF network for another 30 years. The last of the 28 vehicle was certified in April 2021. According to the KVB, upgrading the old trains for 49 million
Euro The euro ( symbol: €; code: EUR) is the official currency of 19 out of the member states of the European Union (EU). This group of states is known as the eurozone or, officially, the euro area, and includes about 340 million citizens . ...
saved about 40.6 million € over buying new vehicles. Additionally, the engineers servicing the trains already know every part of the trains, knowledge that first has to be gathered with new trains. The project was the first of its kind, with a local rail operator renovating their trains. The project was only possible, because of the high quality materials used in the original 2100 trains.


Flexity Swift HF6

Together with the Düsseldorf Rheinbahn, the KVB ordered 79 trains of the type
Bombardier Flexity Swift The Bombardier Flexity Swift is a series of urban and inter-urban tram, light rail and light metro vehicles manufactured by Bombardier Transportation. It is part of the Bombardier Flexity family of rail vehicles, and like the others, Flexity S ...
in 2015, 59 of which were intended for Düsseldorf and 20 for Cologne. Since then, the KVB converted 7 options to orders. The first of the 27 trains arrived in December 2020, and after undergoing extensive testing they started normal passenger operation about one year later. The last trains are expected to arrive in Cologne in early 2023. The new trains are capable of achieving , are long, about the same length as the other trains, and include 64 seats.


Low-floor NF12/NF6

In 2020, a contract for 62 new long NF12s, and 2 half as long NF6s was given to Alstom and Kiepe Electric. Delivery and testing of 2 long and 2 short trains is planned to start in July 2024, with passenger service starting a year later. The new trains are supposed to completely replace the 124 existing K4000 LRVs. The trains feature many new things previously not seen in the system. Currently all trains are composed of two 30 m units, resulting in wasted space and a safety hazard where the trains are coupled together, where the new NF12's will fully use the whole length of the trains and feature a fifth set of doors in the middle. The trains will also be equipped with a collision warning system that can detect objects up to in front of the train, issuing a warning to the driver depending on the speed of the train. The trains will feature more efficient
air conditioning Air conditioning, often abbreviated as A/C or AC, is the process of removing heat from an enclosed space to achieve a more comfortable interior environment (sometimes referred to as 'comfort cooling') and in some cases also strictly controlling ...
than previous ones, better passenger information screens and sensors that enable preventive maintenance. For the first time in the system's history, in 2021 a design mockup was constructed at tram museum Thielenbruch used to get feedback on accessibility and the layout of the driver's cab. In 2022, another mockup was put on public display at the museum.


Train interiors

File:KVB2000erInnenraum.jpg, B100S 2000 File:KVB2100erInnenraum.jpg, B100S 2100 File:KVB2254Innenraum.jpg, B80D 2200 File:KVB2300erInnenraum rot.jpg, B80D 2300 File:4000er Innenraum.jpg, K4000 File:Innenraum eines K5000.jpg, K5000


Depots and workshops ("''Betriebshöfe''")

The KVB has 4 large depots and workshops, as well as a few smaller parking facilities. Historically there were 17 more depots and workshops, that have since been relocated or abandoned.


Current depots, workshops and parking facilities


Wesseling

The depot and workshop in Wesseling was first constructed by the KBE in 1906. It's the smallest one, with space for just 50 trains and 30 employees, and mainly serves the trains for lines 16, 17 and 18. It's the only depot outside of Cologne, and sometimes the old Querbahn is used to connect it to line 18. It was transferred to the KVB, when the KBE closed in 1986.


Main workshop and depot in Weidenpesch

The current main workshop ("''Hauptwerkstatt''", HW) of the KVB was opened in 1923, when the former HW moved from Rhieler Straße to Weidenpesch. Most heavy maintenance as well as the conversion of the series 2100 to series 2400 are done here. In 2021 a new modern depot opened next to the HW, with space for 64 trains and facilities to restock sand and wash the trains, and a water collection system for the washing, as well as solar panels on the roof. Along with the new depot building, new track to connect the HW and depot to Neusser Straße were constructed, reducing operating noise especially during the night.


West

The depot at Scheidweilerstr. exists since 1924 when the old depot, that stood where the Aachener Weiher now is, was destroyed. After World War 2, the depot was almost completely destroyed and for the time, depots Sülz and Ost were used. In 1961 to 1964 the depot as it now is was built. The depot is known as the heart of the KVB, because the control room is situated there, as well as customer service and management. In total, about 1200 employees work at the depot and the surrounding offices. The depot has space for 60 of the trains used on lines 1, 5, 7 and 13. In 2004 and 2005, the management building was renovated and 2 new buildings were built, and in 2021 the old tracks from the 1960s were replaced. The control room is one of the most modern ones in Europe since its renovation in 2014.


Merheim

The depot in Merheim, that opened in 1994, is the biggest and most modern, with space for 140 trains in an area of about , and 120 employees working there. After its opening the former depots East and Thielenbruch were closed. Nearly all trains, especially on lines 3 and 4, are stored and serviced here.


Stadium

The parking facility at the RheinEnergieStadion was built along with the sport facilities in 1923 with 8 tracks, and has since been modernized several times. It's mainly used to provide trains to visitors of sport events and some trains only used during peak hours.


Porz

Just behind Porz Markt station there are two tracks were the trains running to the university in the morning are parked.


Zündorf

At the south end of line 7 there's a single track for parking created in 2000. It's necessary because going there from Betriebshof West or Merheim is time-consuming and complicated, the parking facility in Porz is to small and former depots in Deutz and Porz were closed.


Deutz

The quad-tracked underground parking facility Deutz is just east of Bahnhof Deutz/Messe station, and was created together with the tunnel in 1983. The plans to rebuild Merheim and close Betriebshof Deutz were concrete enough already, that this parking facility was deemed necessary.


Merkenich

Only in 2005 a parking facility was created at the terminus of line 12 in Merkenich for trains of lines 12 and 15, because of the long time required to get there from other depots. It was built double-tracked with space for six trains per track, and was extended in 2013 with a third track, but the first track is now used to turn the trains around, while only the 2nd and 3rd are used for parking. The trains of line 15 parking here depart as line 15 in the morning, but serve line 12's route until Wilhelm-Sollman Straße, where lines 12 and 15 join. These additional services on line 12's route are not explicitly mentioned on timetables.


Former depots


Maximinenstraße

In Maximinenstraße there were two depots: Starting 1877 it was the main depot, workshop and office of the first horsecar system, but an expansion of the Centralbahnhof forced it to close in 1886. In 1888 another depot was built in Maximinenstraße, that was closed in 1902 because it was deemed to small in the electrification of the system.


Kalk

The depot in Kalk was also opened in 1877, housing the horses and wagons of the horsecar between Deutz and Kalk, which both didn't formally belong to Cologne at that point. When the much larger Ost-Bahnhof in Deutz was opened in 1902, the depot was closed.


Nippes

The depot in Nippes served the horsecar lines to Nippes and Sechzig, but had to be closed in 1903 because it was to small for the electrification.


West

The former Betriebshof West was built in 1877 for services to Melaten and Lindenthal, and upgraded in 1902 for use with electric vehicles. The old depot was located at the junction of Dürener Straße/(Innere) Kanalstraße and was torn down when the Aachener Weiher was constructed in 1923. Only a year later the current Betriebshof West in Scheidtweiler Straße was opened, keeping the wooden halls from the old site which later burnt down due to bombing during World War 2.


Ehrenfeld

The depot in Gutenbergstraße was also constructed in 1877 for the service to Ehrenfeld, and was one of the few that had enough space to be upgraded in the electrification in 1901. During World War 2 it was damaged so badly, that it was closed in 1944.


''Süd'' (South)

The last depot opened in 1877 was located at Koblenzer Straße in Bayenthal, where it first housed horsecars and later electric trams. The depot was modernized regularly to keep up with new vehicle technologies, but starting in the 1950s the increasingly larger vehicles were parked and serviced in depots West and ''Ost'' more and more, until the depot sharply reduced train operation in 1967, serving only for some parking during the night. A few years later the depot was only used for buses until it closed entirely in 1996.


Mülheim

In 1889 a depot was built in Kranenstraße, but was to small for the electrification in 1902, and closed. The original building still exists today.


Rodenkirchen

Rodenkirchen saw the smallest depot of the KVB ever from 1883 to 1902. The just big area had space for just four wagons and nine horses, as well as beds for the personnel, but it was probably only used by one horsecar at a time.


Weißbüttengasse

Located in Altstadt-Süd, the depot was opened in 1885. The building had a two-story hall, with offices on the second floor for the management, which moved there after Maximinenstraße was closed. Due to space constraints, only trains of line 18 were parked there when the depot closed in 1933. The offices were still used until 1943 when the building was destroyed in World War 2.


''Nord'' (North)

In 1888 the depot at Rhieler Straße, opposite to the zoo, was opened, and in 1901 it was electrified and got an access from the Rhine's shore, but it housed the last horsecars until 1907. The workshop was closed in 1923 and moved to Merheim (now Weidenpesch). Starting 1950 only buses were parked here, and in 1956 the depot was closed.


''Ost'' (East)

The depot was opened in 1902 for electric trams at Deutz-Kalker Straße in Deutz, and until its closure in 1994, when the depot in Merheim made it obsolete, the depot was modernized countless times. Today the space is used by the
Kölner Haie The Kölner Haie (English: ''Cologne Sharks'') are an ice hockey club based in Cologne, Germany that plays in the professional Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL). The team was one of the founding members of the DEL. The ''Kölner Haie'' play their hom ...
.


Merheim left-rhenish (Weidenpesch)

The old depot in Weidenpesch, which was called Merheim until 1952, was opened in 1902 in Jesuitengasse, and closed in 1969.


Thielenbruch

The depot in Thielenbruch was opened in 1902 to serve the ''Vorortbahn'' C, later G, to Bergisch Gladbach. In 1926 the depot was expanded with a second hall, and is under preservation since 1985. It was one of few depots that weren't damaged badly during World War 2, and was closed in 1994 because the new depot Merheim opened and expansion was difficult due to the preservation. The history of the depot doesn't end here though, as one hall was converted to the terminus of (now) lines 3 and 18, and in 1997 a museum opened in the other hall where the historical horsecars, trams and trains of the system are shown.


Porz

The depot in Porz was opened in 1909 where now Porz Markt station is located, but the area was limited by Goethestraße in the east and rail tracks in the West. In 1973 train operations were stopped, and in 1975 it was closed.


Bensberg

In 1913 a depot was opened at the former terminus Bensberg, that's now called Im Hoppenkamp. Starting 1945 no trains spent their time here, and in 1961 the hall that once had 4 tracks of which one had remained, was destroyed and replaced by 3 outdoor tracks. This new parking space was not needed technically, but it was built anyways to attract potential new personnel from Bergisch Gladbach by providing a close by depot. It was closed in 1967. In this place the tunnel to the current terminus Bensberg was started in 1996.


Mülheim

The second depot in Mülheim was opened in 1913 by the Mülheimer Kleinbahnen, because Mülheim only became part of Cologne the next year. After the city took over the Mülheimer Kleinbahnen in 1933, the depot was mainly used for the ''Vorortbahn'' O. Between 1936 and 1941 the depot was closed and used as storage, and after that it was reopened to be a reserve in case Betriebshof Ost would become inoperable by bombing. In 1958 the depot became unnecessary and was closed.


Sülz

In 1927 a depot was opened at Hermeskeiler Platz where now the terminus of line 9 is located, and for a short time it was the largest Betriebshof on European mainland. In World War 2 large parts of it were destroyed, and afterwards two previous tracks were used for
trolleybus A trolleybus (also known as trolley bus, trolley coach, trackless trolley, trackless tramin the 1910s and 1920sJoyce, J.; King, J. S.; and Newman, A. G. (1986). ''British Trolleybus Systems'', pp. 9, 12. London: Ian Allan Publishing. .or trol ...
es that were tested in the 1950s. Because of its location in a residential area, there was no space for expansion and residents often complained about the noise. Due to these problems, the depot was closed in 1986.


Technology

Like most German Stadtbahn systems,
standard-gauge A standard-gauge railway is a railway with a track gauge of . The standard gauge is also called Stephenson gauge (after George Stephenson), International gauge, UIC gauge, uniform gauge, normal gauge and European gauge in Europe, and SGR in Ea ...
and
overhead line An overhead line or overhead wire is an electrical cable that is used to transmit electrical energy to electric locomotives, trolleybuses or trams. It is known variously as: * Overhead catenary * Overhead contact system (OCS) * Overhead equipm ...
are used. The wires are supplied with 800 V DC, and the trains are made for 750 V DC. Due to the beginning of the system as a tram, the tracks feature small curve radiuses of down to ; other systems like the
Stuttgart Stadtbahn The Stuttgart Stadtbahn is a light rail system in Stuttgart, Germany. The Stadtbahn began service on 28 September 1985. It is operated by the Stuttgarter Straßenbahnen AG (SSB), which also operates the bus systems in that city. The Stuttgar ...
use radiuses of at least . The trains use the maximum legal width of vehicles on streets of . In most trains there are groups of 4 seats, but the newer K4500 and K5000 use some row-seating. The platform height is (low-floor network) and (high-floor network) above the rails. All platforms are built for a long double-units, with the smallest platforms being long requiring an exact stop. The longest platforms are on the underground station Fuldaer Straße, which is long.


Signalling and train protection

On most surface tracks, line-of-sight operation is used. The surface signals can indicate one of three things, though not all signals have all indications installed. * Horizontal bar: Stop * Vertical bar: Proceed straight ahead * Diagonal bar: Proceed to the right/left In the tunnels, on the elevated track and on some surface right-of-ways, signalling and train protection are used. On KVB tracks the maximum speed is even with these installed, while on HGK tracks up to are allowed, but never achieved because the trains only allow up to . The signals have three indications: * Green: Proceed * Yellow: Expect stop at next signal * Red: Stop In the city center tunnel, sometimes the yellow signal is used together with speed signal "2", allowing entering a partially blocked segment with up to to allow smaller distances between trains. On all lines there is a kind of PZB in use, where the inductors are located between the tracks instead of next to them like standard PZB. On the HGK lines, additional PZB equipment for freight trains is installed.


Passenger information

All Stadtbahn trains have speakers to play announcements, and in the 1970s the trams were retrofitted with these as well. Since the 1990s all trains are fitted with at least two displays showing the next station, or while in a station, the terminus. Because the recorded announcements became increasingly pieced together with every timetable change, they were all newly recorded in 2003. In 2010, after a previous test on line 13, the announcements on the east–west lines (1, 7, 9) got a larger amount of information with all possible connections (Stadtbahn, bus, regional- and intercity trains) being announced. Also for the first time in Cologne's history, the announcements on some important stations like Bahnhof Messe/Deutz were also done in English, but only giving important info for tourists, but these are no longer in use. Since the 1st of December 2012 all announcements include the connections, and are computer generated. Because of the amount of side-platforms, the exit side is only announced when it is on the left side. Beginning with the stations of the city center tunnel, the other stations following step-by-step, they were first equipped with digital platform displays capable of showing the next 2 trains and a line of other information. In the 2000s these were replaced by new, bigger displays capable of 3 trains and one line of information, with some playing back an audible announcement at the station when a train enters the station. Interchange stations have larger displays, that show departures of all lines on all platforms. Since February 2021, these are getting replaced again with even larger displays capable of showing more trains, and will be capable of showing videos once a system update planned for mid 2022 is installed, for example to suggest passengers alternative routes when a train is cancelled. In a further step the displays inside the trains will be replaced by similar displays as well.


See also

* Transportation in Cologne *
List of Cologne KVB stations This is a list of Kölner Verkehrs-Betriebe, KVB light rail Metro station, stations of the Cologne Stadtbahn system. The system covers the city of Cologne, as well as several surrounding cities (Bergisch Gladbach, Bonn, Bornheim (Rheinland), Bornh ...
* List of rapid transit systems


References


Inline citations


Books

* * *


External links


Kölner Verkehrsbetriebe Homepage in English




* ttp://www.nord-sued-stadtbahn.de/ Official Homepage for the Nord-Süd-U-Bahn Construction Project (in German only) {{Authority control Transport in Cologne Light rail in Germany Tram transport in Germany Underground rapid transit in Germany