Munich–Buchloe railway
Overview
Line number5520
LocaleBavaria, Germany
Termini
Service
Route number
  • 970
  • 999.4 (München–Geltendorf)
Technical
Number of tracks2
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Minimum radius607 m (1,991 ft)
Electrification15 kV/16.7 Hz AC overhead catenary
Operating speed160 km/h (99 mph)
Maximum incline0.5%
Route map

km
7.385
Munich Pasing
527
from Munich Pasing
9.015
Munich Pasing West
9.920
Munich Leienfelsstraße
(since 1970)
11.117
Munich Aubing
526
15.893
Puchheim
519
17.912
Eichenau (Oberbay)
(since 1935)
18.500
Roggenstein
(until 1935)
from Munich Trudering (North Ring, 1939–1949)
19.881
Steinwerk junction[1]
23.040
Fürstenfeldbruck
(until 1908: Bruck)
528
24.860
Amper (98 m)
26.205
Buchenau (Oberbay)
538
28.985
Schöngeising
553
32.337
Grafrath
568
39.220
Türkenfeld
600
42.106
Geltendorf
596
to Mering (until 1907)
to Mering (since 1907)
46.224
Schwabhausen (b Landsberg/Lech)
(until 1985)
592
51.030
Epfenhausen
(siding, former station)
595
54.781
Lech (152 m)
56.177
Kaufering
590
60.493
Igling
(until 1985)
605
60.999
Singold (19 m)
66.969
Gennach (45 m)
67.994
Buchloe
617
km
Source: German railway atlas[2]

The Munich–Buchloe railway is a double-track, electrified main line in Bavaria, Germany. The 60 kilometre-long line runs from Munich Pasing via Geltendorf and Kaufering to Buchloe. Together with the Buchloe–Kempten–Lindau line, it is known as the Allgäubahn (Allgäu railway). The line is owned and maintained by DB Netz.

The Royal Bavarian State Railways (Königlich Bayerische Staatseisenbahnen) opened the line between 1872 and 1873 as part of the MunichMemmingen line. From the beginning, the line was of great importance for international long-distance traffic between Munich and Switzerland and was duplicated along its entire length from 1899 to 1906. The section from Munich-Pasing to Geltendorf was electrified in 1968 and has been served by the Munich S-Bahn since 1972. Deutsche Bahn electrified the remaining section from Geltendorf to Buchloe as part of the upgrade of the Munich–Memmingen–Lindau line, completed in 2020.

History

After the opening of the Ludwig South-North Railway (Ludwig-Süd-Nord-Bahn) from Hof via Augsburg to Lindau, additional Bavarian government railway lines were initially built with no regard for the creation of an integrated railway network. At the beginning of the 1860s, the headquarters of the Royal Bavarian State Railways (Generaldirektion der Königlichen Verkehrsanstalten) first considered a more systematic approach in order to complete the Bavarian railway network and increase its flexibility for use for passengers, freight and the military.[3]

The line from Munich to Memmingen via Buchloe was listed as one of 19 proposed railways in a bill that the Ministry of Trade and Public Works submitted to the Chamber of Deputies of the Bavarian Parliament on 28 January 1868. The only railway connecting to the west from Munich until then was the Munich–Augsburg–Ulm line, meaning that Kempten, Memmingen and Lindau could only be reached from Munich with a considerable detour via Augsburg or Neu-Ulm. The new line would therefore produce a significantly shorter connection to the Ludwig South-North railway in Buchloe and the Neu-Ulm–Kempten railway in Memmingen. From 1869, there were plans to extend the line from Memmingen through Württemberg to Hergatz to create a shorter alternative to the Ludwig South-North railway. Under the law of 29 April 1869, the Bavarian State Parliament approved the construction of 22 new railway lines, including the line from Munich to the Württemberg border via Buchloe and Memmingen.[4] With an estimated construction cost of 13 million guilders, it was the third most expensive project of the proposed new railways.[5]

Since the Kingdom of Württemberg did not permit its extension beyond the border, the line was initially planned only as far as Memmingen. The construction department of the headquarters of the Royal Transport Authority (Königlichen Verkehrsanstalten), which was responsible for the planning, determined the route based primarily on economic and topographical criteria: to avoid steep inclines and to build as few complex engineering structures as possible, some stations had to be located far away from the locations they served.[6]

The town of Landsberg am Lech had campaigned for a route via Sandau about one kilometre north of Landsberg's old town as early as 1863. With the approval of the headquarters of the Transport Authority, the town drew up its own plan for a route from Pasing via Stegen on the Ammersee and Landsberg to Buchloe. However, due to the risk of flooding in the Ampermoos and on the banks of the Ammersee as well as the large difference in altitude on the steep bank of the Lech near Sandau, the transport authority rejected this route. Instead, it planned a route further north via Bruck (now Fürstenfeldbruck) and Grafrath with a Lech crossing near Kaufering, which it considered to be considerably cheaper due to a 13 metre reduction in the difference of heights. The detailed planning of the route from Munich to Kaufering began in 1869. However, the town of Landsberg continued to call for a crossing of the Lech near Sandau and offered to cover part of the costs for this route.[7] In October 1870, the headquarters of the Transport Authority finally chose the route via Kaufering to minimise costs. Landsberg would be connected by a branch from the main line in Kaufering.[8]

Construction and commissioning

Between December 1869 and February 1870, the Transport Authority divided the construction of the line into three sections based on Bruck, Landsberg and Buchloe. Railway construction director Karl von Dyck took over the management of the construction, while Alois Röckl was the technical consultant.[9] Construction of the first earthworks for the line began at the end of 1869. The line was prepared for two tracks from the start, but initially it only had one track.[10] Major earthworks and bridges were required in several places due to the hilly terrain and the rivers that had to be crossed. At Bruck, a cutting through the Engelsberg had to be dug 36 metres deep and a 12 metre high bridge had to be built over the Amper.

The most elaborate work took place in the Landsberg construction section: a 114 metre bridge was built over the Lech near Kaufering, which, with construction costs of 313,000 guilders, was the most expensive structure on the line. In order to compensate for the difference in altitude between the high bank to the east of the Lech and the lower bank to the west, the Landsberg section included a two-kilometre-long cutting east of the river with a maximum depth of 15 metres and a two-kilometre-long, up to 22 metres-high embankment to the west.[6] Over 400,000 cubic metres of material were moved, requiring up to 200 workers. A Feldbahn (field railway) was used to transport the excavated material from the east to the west bank, for which the building gang erected a temporary wooden trestle bridge over the Lech south of the permanent bridge.[11]

The Royal Bavarian State Railways opened the first 11.81 kilometre-long section from Kaufering to Buchloe and the branch from Kaufering to Landsberg on 1 November 1872. The Lech bridge near Kaufering was completed in March 1873; the strength test on the bridge was carried out on 9 March 1873. As a result, the Bavarian State Railways were able to start operations on the 56.18 kilometre-long section from Munich to Kaufering via Pasing on 1 May 1873.[12][13] The extension from Buchloe to Memmingen was opened on 1 May 1874.[14][15] The cost of the construction for the entire Munich–Memmingen line, including the branch line to Landsberg, amounted to 21,839,273 marks.[16]

Operations before the Second World War

When it opened, the Munich–Buchloe main line had six stations in Pasing, Bruck, Grafrath, Türkenfeld, Kaufering and Buchloe and four Haltstellen (halts) in Aubing, Schwabhausen, Epfenhausen and Igling.[17]

The line had significant traffic from the start. Together with the Buchloe–Lindau line, it was part of the fastest route between Munich and Switzerland and was therefore used by international long-distance passenger and freight trains from its opening. The Munich–Memmingen line, however, did not initially achieve as much traffic as initially hoped because of the lack of an extension from Memmingen towards Württemberg. With the opening of the Arlberg Railway from Innsbruck to Bludenz in 1884, the Munich–Buchloe line lost international freight traffic between Austria and Switzerland.[18]

Bavarian Pt 2/4 H with a suburban train at Roggenstein (1915)

The Bavarian State Railways introduced suburban services between Munich and Bruck (Fürstenfeldbruck since 1908) on 1 May 1896, which were used to transport schoolchildren and commuters to the city.[19] For this, it opened the halts of Puchheim and Roggenstein between the stations of Aubing and Bruck.[20] On 1 May 1899, the Bavarian State Railways completed a second track on the Pasing–Bruck section, which was heavily used by suburban traffic.[21]

Due to the increasing volume of traffic, the Bavarian State Railways duplicated the rest of the line from 1905. Since the entire length of the line had already been prepared for two tracks, the work was completed within a year.[22] The second track went into operation from Bruck to Grafrath on 21 November 1905, from Grafrath to Türkenfeld on 27 April 1906, from Igling to Buchloe on 28 April and from Türkenfeld to Epfenhausen on 29 May. With the completion of the remaining intermediate section from Epfenhausen to Igling, the entire line was double-track from 29 September 1906.[21]

In 1939, Dynamit AG (DAG) began building an ammunition factory southwest of Kaufering, which was connected to Kaufering station via a siding. Deutsche Reichsbahn significantly upgraded the tracks in Kaufering for the expected increase in freight traffic. A third track was built between Kaufering and Igling to the south of the two main tracks from 1939 to connect another planned ammunition factory near Igling. In the course of the Second World War, however, work on both factories was stopped at the end of 1940 and the third track was therefore not completed. For the construction of the Weingut II and Diana I bunkers as part of the Ringeltaube armaments project, DAG's existing sidings were extended to the bunker construction sites and an additional connection was built to the main line between Kaufering and Igling in 1944. Prisoners from the Kaufering concentration camp complex were used as forced labourers in the construction of the sidings.[23]

With the approach of the American troops at the end of April 1945, the Schutzstaffel transported the prisoners of the Kaufering satellite camps in freight wagons over the Munich–Buchloe line to Dachau concentration camp. A train with 3,500 prisoners near Schwabhausen bei Landsberg was strafed by an American fighter, killing over 100 prisoners, on 27 April 1945. Other prisoners were shot by the SS while they were fleeing.[24][25] In order to prevent the advance of the American soldiers, the Wehrmacht tried to blow up the Lech Bridge near Kaufering on 27 April and the bridge was badly damaged.[22] On the night of 28–29 April 1945, a Wehrmacht commando blew up the Amper bridge near Fürstenfeldbruck. The entire line was taken by American troops by 30 April 1945.[26] It was not until the winter of 1945/46 that Deutsche Reichsbahn was able to resume continuous train operations between Munich and Buchloe, initially on a single track.[22]

Reconstruction for the S-Bahn and electrification

Prior to the introduction of the V 200 diesel locomotive in the mid-1960s, which reduced travel times between Munich and Lindau by around 30 minutes, the line was operated with steam locomotives. Bavarian S 3/6 (later class 18) locomotives hauled high-quality, international express services on the line for many decades. They were still used for express services at the end of 1967.

In 1967, Deutsche Bundesbahn began converting the section between Munich and Geltendorf for S-Bahn operations. Work on electrification of the section at 15 kV AC began in the summer of 1967. An overhead line of the Re 160 type (designed for operations up to 160km/h) was installed. Deutsche Bundesbahn began operating electric trains on local services between Munich and Geltendorf on 29 September 1968. The electrification reduced travel time from 78 to 40 minutes. In addition, Deutsche Bundesbahn replaced the mechanical signal box along the section by push-button relay interlockings and equipped the future S-Bahn stations with new 76 cm high and 210 m long platforms.[27] The Munich S-Bahn began operations on 28 May 1972 as line S4, with trains running every 40 minutes to Geltendorf.[28][29]

Deutsche Bundesbahn reduced passenger train stops in Schwabhausen, Epfenhausen and Igling on the Geltendorf–Buchloe section. In Schwabhausen and Epfenhausen access to some platforms was still across the tracks, which posed a safety risk when trains were passing through at speeds of up to 140 km/h. Because of this, and because of the low number of passengers, Deutsche Bundesbahn ended passenger services at all three stations on 29 September 1985.[30]

In order to accelerate traffic between Munich and Switzerland, the governments of Germany, Bavaria and Switzerland and Deutsche Bahn agreed on 20 April 2009 to upgrade the Munich–Memmingen–Lindau route, which included the electrification of the still non-electrified section of the Geltendorf–Buchloe route.[31] It was given planning approval on 31 August 2017; work on the electrification began on 23 March 2018.[32] Deutsche Bahn lowered the tracks under five road bridges at Schwabhausen, Kaufering and Igling to make room for the overhead line.[33] Between Kaufering and Buchloe, it equipped the line for bi-directional operation, finishing on 20 October 2018.[34] Noise barriers were erected in the course of the work in the vicinity of Schwabhausen, Igling and Buchloe.[35] Deutsche Bahn began scheduled electric train operations between Geltendorf and Buchloe on 13 December 2020.[36]

DB Netz is planning to build a third track between Munich-Pasing and Eichenau to increase the line capacity in the Munich area. A four-track, grade-separated extension from Munich-Pasing station and an upgrade of the intermediate stations to allow barrier-free access are planned as part of this project.[37] A four-track upgrade between Eichenau and Pasing is assumed as part of the third expert draft of the proposed German regular-interval integrated timetable. The estimated cost of this project in 2019 prices was €339 million.[38][39]

Route

Class 612 diesel multiple unit on a curve west of Grafrath (2021)

The Munich–Buchloe line begins at kilometre 7.4 in Munich Pasing station, with the line chainage starting at München Hauptbahnhof. Two single-track lines branch off the Munich–Garmisch-Partenkirchen railway and the Munich–Gauting suburban line at the western end of Pasing station. These lines converge in an area known as Munich-Pasing West to form a double-track line. In addition, a single-track connecting line joins Pasing West from the north side of Pasing station. The line runs in a straight line to the west through the Munich district of Aubing, turns to the northwest at the end of the built-up area and passes through the forest area of Aubinger Lohe and the settlement of Puchheim-Bahnhof. After Eichenau, it turns to the southwest at Gutshof Roggenstein and meets the course of the Munich North Ring, which branched off the Munich–Buchloe line at Steinwerk junction at line-kilometre 20.1 from 1939 to 1949. Passing Emmering to the south, it reaches Fürstenfeldbruck station on the southern edge of Fürstenfeldbruck. The line runs through several curves between Fürstenfeld Abbey and cuts into the Engelsberg (hill). It crosses the Amper and then runs straight again and steadily rises to the southwest through the Fürstenfeldbruck district of Buchenau and an extensive area of forest to Grafrath. After Grafrath station, at km 32.3, the line runs through several long curves to the north past Ampermoos and Kottgeisering and crosses the watershed between Amper and Lech at an altitude of 600 metres above sea level in the Türkenfeld district. The line runs to the west slightly downhill from Türkenfeld station and meets the Mering–Weilheim railway coming from the south at the east end of Geltendorf station at km 42.1.[40]

West of Geltendorf station, the Munich–Buchloe line crosses over the line to Mering on a bridge and runs on a high embankment over the Weihergraben stream and continues on a largely straight route through a wooded area to Schwabhausen. Between Schwabhausen and Epfenhausen, the line turns back to the southwest. At the former Epfenhausen station, which is now only a junction, a siding connects to the now closed Landsberg-Lech Air Base. The line runs south through a two-kilometer-long and up to 15 metre deep cutting past Altkaufering and across the Lech on a 114 metre-long bridge. It runs over an embankment on the southern edge of Neukaufering to Kaufering station at kilometre 56.2, where the lines to Landsberg and to Bobingen branch off. The line climbs steadily to the north, past the Welfen barracks, and passes the village of Igling to the south and crosses the Singold. Running in a straight line over several railway embankments to the southwest, it reaches its highest point on the watershed between the Singold and Wertach at 621 metres above sea level.[41] Now descending, the line enters the local area of Buchloe and runs on a bridge over the Gennach. At the end of the bridge it turns south, meets the Augsburg–Buchloe railway coming from the north and the two lines run to Buchloe station, where they end at km 68.0. Buchloe is the starting point of the Buchloe–Lindau and Buchloe–Memmingen railways.[42][12]

Operations

Long-distance services

218 264 hauling TEE 66 Bavaria in Geltendorf (1970s)

The Trans Europ Express (TEE) Bavaria service was established for the 1969/70 winter timetable on the route between Munich and Zürich. In 1977, the Bavaria was no longer listed as a TEE, but instead operated as D 276/277, which now offered both classes of travel.

With the introduction of the EuroCity (EC) train class from 1987, the Bavaria became an EC service. A total of four EuroCity train pairs operated daily between Munich and Zurich, but without train names from the end of 2002.

With the development of the ICE TD (class 605), Deutsche Bahn sought to replace the EuroCitys on the Munich–Lindau–St. GallenZürich route with the new trains from autumn 1999. The ICE TD was finally introduced with the 2001/2002 timetable change. However, the sets showed significant defects when they were put into operation, which were only gradually remedied. After the approval of the class was withdrawn on 24 July 2003, services were again operated with EuroCity sets. Between mid-August and 13 December 2003, a pair of trains were operated with ICE TD sets, after which they were no longer operated on this line for scheduled services. From then on, the Munich–Zurich line was again operated with conventional EuroCity sets.

Following the electrification of the Geltendorf–Buchloe section, six pairs of EuroCity-Express (ECE) services have run daily on the line between Munich and Zurich since 13 December 2020. ETR 610 class electric multiple units (Astoro) of the SBB are used.[36][43]

Local services

Class 420 S-Bahn set in Schöngeising (2021)

In the 2021 timetable, the Munich–Buchloe line is served by four regional transport services that each run every two hours and together form a 30-minute cycle: The Regional-Express service RE 70/76 of DB Regio runs from Munich via Kempten to Lindau-Insel and Oberstdorf and stops only in Kaufering between Munich-Pasing and Buchloe. In addition, DB Regio operates the RE 72 service from Munich to Memmingen and RE 74 from Munich to Kempten with stops in Geltendorf and Kaufering. Bayerische Regiobahn (BRB) operates the Regionalbahn service RB 68 from Munich to Füssen, which also stops in Geltendorf and Kaufering.[44]

The Munich–Geltendorf section is served by the S 4 services of the Munich S-Bahn from Ebersberg or Munich Trudering to Geltendorf. The S-Bahn trains run every 20 minutes to Buchenau or Grafrath and every 20 or 40 minutes to Geltendorf. In the peak hour, additional trains run from Munich-Pasing to Grafrath and Geltendorf.[45]

Starting with the timetable change in December 2014, a total of seven trains with new class 245 (Bombardier TRAXX) diesel locomotives valued at €28 million and double-decker coach replaced the previous trains composed of class 218 locomotives and single-decker Silberling coaches on the Munich–Füssen, Munich–Memmingen and peak hour Munich–Kempten lines.[46][47]

References

Footnotes

  1. Franzke, Armin. Wolf-Dietger, Machel (ed.). "Ringbahn München. München-Moosach – München-Schwabing – München-Johanneskirchen und München Ostbahnhof – Ismaning – Flughafen München". Neben- und Schmalspurbahnen in Deutschland einst & jetzt (in German). Munich: GeraNova Zeitschriftenverlag: 78.
  2. Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas). Schweers + Wall. 2009. pp. 106–107, 164–66. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  3. Lutz, Kosmas (1883). Der Bau der bayerischen Eisenbahnen rechts des Rheines (in German). Munich/Leipzig: R. Oldenbourg. pp. 56–57. ISBN 9783110680065. Retrieved 10 November 2021 via Google Books.
  4. Lutz, Kosmas (1883). Der Bau der bayerischen Eisenbahnen rechts des Rheines (in German). Munich/Leipzig: R. Oldenbourg. pp. 60–61. ISBN 9783110680065. Retrieved 10 November 2021 via Google Books.
  5. Marr & Scherner 1994, pp. 41–42.
  6. 1 2 Marr & Scherner 1994, pp. 42–43.
  7. Rasch 2011, pp. 24–25.
  8. Rasch 2011, pp. 257.
  9. Lutz, Kosmas (1883). Der Bau der bayerischen Eisenbahnen rechts des Rheines (in German). Munich/Leipzig: R. Oldenbourg. p. 126. ISBN 9783110680065. Retrieved 10 November 2021 via Google Books.
  10. Marr & Scherner 1994, pp. 57.
  11. Rasch 2011, pp. 26–27.
  12. 1 2 Lutz, Kosmas (1883). Der Bau der bayerischen Eisenbahnen rechts des Rheines (in German). Munich/Leipzig: R. Oldenbourg. p. 127. ISBN 9783110680065. Retrieved 10 November 2021 via Google Books.
  13. Bufe 1991, p. 9.
  14. Marr & Scherner 1994, p. 55.
  15. Rasch 2011, pp. 27–30.
  16. Lutz, Kosmas (1883). Der Bau der bayerischen Eisenbahnen rechts des Rheines (in German). Munich/Leipzig: R. Oldenbourg. p. 128. ISBN 9783110680065. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  17. Rasch 2011, pp. 28–30.
  18. Marr & Scherner 1994, pp. 56–57.
  19. Hoffmann, Carl A. (1992). "Von der Reformzeit bis zum Ersten Weltkrieg (1799–1918). Kontinuität und Wandel". In Busley, Hermann-Joseph (ed.). Der Landkreis Fürstenfeldbruck. Natur – Geschichte – Kultur (in German). Fürstenfeldbruck. p. 180. ISBN 3-9803189-0-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  20. Pospischil & Rudolph 1997, p. 199.
  21. 1 2 Korhammer, Franzke & Rudolph 1991, p. 152.
  22. 1 2 3 Rasch 2011, p. 32.
  23. Rasch 2011, pp. 342–349.
  24. Wagner, Andreas (1995). Todesmarsch. Die Räumung und Teilräumung der Konzentrationslager Dachau, Kaufering und Mühldorf Ende April 1945 (in German). Ingolstadt: Panther-Verlag Lutz Tietmann. pp. 74–77. ISBN 3-9802831-7-8. Archived from the original on 2016-04-04. Retrieved 10 November 2021 via Google Books.
  25. Breubeck 1994, pp. 145–146.
  26. Wollenberg 1992, pp. 268–269.
  27. Pospischil & Rudolph 1997, pp. 43, 94.
  28. Rasch 2011, p. 33.
  29. Janikowski 1996, p. 49.
  30. Rasch 2011, pp. 33–34.
  31. Rasch 2011, p. 34.
  32. "Projektstatus" (in German). DB Netz AG. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  33. "Projektabschnitt 1 – Darstellung größerer Einzelmaßnahmen" (in German). DB Netz AG. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  34. "Baumaßnahmen 2018" (in German). DB Netz AG. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  35. "Baumaßnahmen 2019" (in German). DB Netz AG. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  36. 1 2 "Aufnahme des elektrischen Zugbetriebs" (in German). DB Netz AG. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  37. "Ausbau S4 West Pasing–Buchenau einschließlich barrierefreier Ausbau" (in German). DB Netz AG. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  38. SMA und Partner (17 August 2021). "Infrastrukturliste Bewertung: Maßnahmen des Planfalls "Deutschlandtakt", laufende Nummer 44 des Unterabschnitts 2, Vorhaben des Potentiellen Bedarfs des Bedarfsplans der Bundesschienenwege" (PDF) (in German). Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure. p. 21. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  39. "Deutschlandtakt: Bewertung Infrastrukturmaßnahmen für den 3. Gutachterentwurf" (PDF) (in German). Intraplan Consult, TTS TRIMODE Transport Solutions. 17 August 2021. p. 2. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  40. Rasch 2011, pp. 36–38.
  41. "Infrastructure Register" (in German). DB Netz AG. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  42. Rasch 2011, pp. 38–42.
  43. "Fahrplan 2021: München und Zürich wachsen zusammen" (Press release) (in German). Deutsche Bahn AG. 11 October 2020. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  44. "970: München / Augsburg – Buchloe – Kempten – Immenstadt Lindau-Reutin / Oberstdorf" (PDF) (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  45. "999.4: Geltendorf – München – Trudering: S 4" (PDF) (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  46. "DB Regio Allgäu-Schwaben: Zufriedene Kunden und umweltfreundliche Lokomotiven" (Press release) (in German). Deutsche Bahn. 15 February 2013. Retrieved 10 November 2021 via AllgaeuHIT.
  47. "Neue Loks für das Allgäu". Schwäbische Zeitung (in German). 14 February 2014. Retrieved 10 November 2021.

Sources

  • Breubeck, Reinhold (1994). Netzbahnhof Buchloe (Ostallgäu). Eisenbahnknoten zwischen Ammersee und Wertach (in German). Buchloe: Druck und Verlag Hans Oberbayer GmbH. ISBN 3-927781-05-3.
  • Bufe, Siegfried (1991). Allgäubahn. München–Kempten–Lindau (in German). Egglham: Bufe-Fachbuch-Verlag. ISBN 3-922138-41-1.
  • Janikowski, Andreas (1996). Die Ammerseebahn. Verkehrsentwicklung im westlichen Oberbayern (in German). Stuttgart: Transpress. ISBN 3-344-71033-8.
  • Korhammer, Klaus-Dieter; Franzke, Armin; Rudolph, Ernst (1991). Lisson, Peter (ed.). Drehscheibe des Südens. Eisenbahnknoten München (in German). Darmstadt: Hestra-Verlag. ISBN 3-7771-0236-9.
  • Marr, Thorsten; Scherner, Antje (1994). "Der Neubau des Pasinger Bahnhofs und die Bahnlinie von München nach Memmingen (1869–1875)". In Pasinger Fabrik (ed.). Ein Jahrhundert wird mobil! Von Pasing nach Augsburg, Memmingen, Starnberg und Herrsching. Vier Bahnlinien und ihre Bahnhöfe von 1839 bis heute (in German). München: Buchendorfer Verlag. pp. 41–57. ISBN 3-927984-33-7.
  • Pospischil, Reinhard; Rudolph, Ernst (1997). S-Bahn München. Von den Anfängen des Vorortverkehrs zum modernen Hochleistungssystem. Ein Jahrhundert Planungsgeschichte – 25 Jahre im Dienst der Fahrgäste (in German). Düsseldorf: Alba. ISBN 3-87094-358-0.
  • Rasch, Peter (2011). Die Nebenbahnen zwischen Ammersee, Lech und Wertach. Mit Ammerseebahn, Pfaffenwinkelbahn & Co rund um den Bayerischen Rigi (in German). Sankt Ottilien: EOS Verlag. pp. 24–58. ISBN 978-3-8306-7455-9.
  • Wollenberg, Klaus (1992). Busley, Hermann-Joseph (ed.). Reich und Republik. Die Entwicklung von Weimar bis Bonn (in German). Fürstenfeldbruck: Der Landkreis Fürstenfeldbruck. Natur – Geschichte – Kultur. ISBN 3-9803189-0-7.
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