The Heidelberg Mountain Railway ( German : Heidelberger Bergbahn ) is a two-section funicular railway in the city of Heidelberg , Germany. The first section runs from a lower station at Kornmarkt in Heidelberg's Altstadt , via an intermediate station at Heidelberg Castle , to an upper station at Molkenkur . Here passengers may change to the second section, which runs up the Königstuhl , a nearby hill with good views over the city and the River Neckar .
7-416: The upper and lower sections of the funicular have different histories and are sometimes referred to separately by the names Königstuhlbahn and Molkenkurbahn respectively. These two sections present quite different appearances, with the upper section using wooden bodied cars of historic appearance, whilst the lower section uses modern style cars. Similarly the upper stations at Molkenkur and Königstuhl are to
14-620: Is a network of tramways forming an important element of the public transport system in Heidelberg , a city in the federal state of Baden-Württemberg , Germany . Opened in 1885, the network has been operated since 2009 by Rhein-Neckar-Verkehr (RNV) within the Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Neckar (VRN). The network includes line 5 of the Mannheim/Ludwigshafen tram system , which is connected with Heidelberg’s tram system via
21-2103: The Upper Rhine Railway Company ( Oberrheinische Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft , OEG). As of 2013 , the Heidelberg tramway network had the following lines: Weinheim – Viernheim – Käfertal – Mannheim – Edingen – Wieblingen – Hauptbahnhof – Bismarckplatz – Neuenheim – Handschuhsheim – Dossenheim - Schriesheim – Weinheim Bismarckplatz – Adenauerplatz – Poststraße – Stadtbücherei – Stadtwerke – Hauptbahnhof – Betriebshof – Jahnstraße – Bunsengymnasium – Technologiepark – Heiligenbergschule – Hans-Thoma-Platz → no evening service, Mon–Fri only Bismarckplatz – Seegarten – Stadtbücherei – Ringstraße – Montpellierbrücke – Hauptbahnhof Süd – Gadamerplatz – Eppelheimer Terrasse – Henkel-Teroson-Straße – Marktstraße – Kranichweg/Stotz - Jakobsgasse - Eppelheim Rathaus - Kirchheimer Straße Burgstraße – Biethsstraße – Hans-Thoma-Platz – Kapellenweg – Blumenthalstraße – Kußmaulstraße – Brückenstraße – Bismarckplatz – Adenauerplatz – Poststraße – Stadtbücherei – Römerkreis Süd – Christuskirche – S-Bahnhof Weststadt/Südstadt – Bergfriedhof – Bethanien-Krankenhaus – Rheinstraße – Markscheide – Eichendorffplatz – Rohrbach Markt – Ortenauer Straße – Freiburger Straße – Rohrbach Süd – Zementwerk – Johannes-Reidel-Straße – Georgi-Marktplatz – Kurpfalz-Centrum – Moltkestraße – Leimen Friedhof → After 21:00, departs from Bismarckplatz; evening and early morning weekend services towards Handschuhsheim are served by line 5 (Schriesheim Bahnhof – Schriesheim Süd – Dossenheim Nord – Dossenheim Bahnhof – Dossenheim Süd –) Burgstraße – Biethsstraße – Hans-Thoma-Platz – Heiligenbergschule – Technologiepark – Bunsengymnasium – Jahnstraße – Betriebshof – Hauptbahnhof – Stadtwerke – Römerkreis Süd – Christuskirche – S-Bahnhof Weststadt/Südstadt – Bergfriedhof – Bethanien-Krankenhaus – Rheinstraße – Markscheide – Eichendorffplatz – Rohrbach Markt – Ortenauer Straße – Freiburger Straße – Rohrbach Süd → Serving Schriesheim only weekdays in
28-608: The day. The services start at 9 a.m. and end at times that vary from summer to winter. The lower section of the funicular (the Molkenkurbahn ) opened in 1890, and its original form used the water ballast system of propulsion, similar to that still used by the Nerobergbahn in Wiesbaden . The line was rebuilt to use a conventional electric drive in 1907. Between 1961 and 1962 the section was rebuilt and new cars provided in order to handle
35-836: The funicular (the Königstuhlbahn ) opened in 1907, and used a conventional electric drive from the start. It continued to run in its original form until April 2003, when changes to safety regulations forced it to shut down. The section reopened in March 2005; during the closure period the existing cars were rebuilt and provided with new wooden bodies to the original design. The section has the following technical parameters: 49°24′26.10″N 8°42′53.96″E / 49.4072500°N 8.7149889°E / 49.4072500; 8.7149889 Trams in Heidelberg The Heidelberg tramway network ( German : Straßenbahnnetz Heidelberg )
42-511: The original design, whilst those further down the hill at Kornmarkt and Heidelberg Castle present a more modern image. The Heidelberger Bergbahn is operated by the Heidelberger Straßen- und Bergbahn AG (HSB), the operator of buses and trams in Heidelberg . The funicular predominantly serves tourist traffic. The lower section runs every ten minutes throughout the day, whilst the connecting upper section runs every twenty minutes throughout
49-432: The volume of traffic to Heidelberg Castle; at this time new stations were built at Kornmarkt and Heidelberg Castle. The section was closed between October 2003 and March 2005; during the closure period the existing cars were scrapped and replaced by new and larger cars to a modern design, and Kornmarkt and Heidelberg Castle stations were again rebuilt. The section has the following technical parameters: The upper section of
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