Appenzell Railways Explained

Appenzell Railways
Isin:CH0026212446
Type:AG/SA
Foundation: (retroactive)
Location City:Herisau
Location Country:Switzerland
Industry:Public transport
Key People:Ernst Boos (CEO),
Thomas Baumgartner (director)
Revenue: CHF41.9 million (2012)
Num Employees:216 (as of 2020)[1]
Divisions:Passenger
Homepage:http://www.appenzellerbahnen.ch/
Gauge:,
,
Railroad Name:Appenzell Railways (AB) network
Start Year:1875
End Year:present
Length:935921NaN1
Electrification:1500 V / DC, 600 V / DC, 15 kV 16.7 Hz Overhead line

Appenzell Railways (German: Appenzeller Bahnen, AB) is a Swiss railway company with headquarters in Herisau. It operates a network of railways in the cantons of Appenzell Innerrhoden, Appenzell Ausserrhoden, St. Gallen and Thurgau.

It was founded in 2006 through the merger of the former Appenzeller Bahnen (founded in 1988) with the Rorschach–Heiden railway, Rheineck–Walzenhausen mountain railway and Trogenerbahn. In 2021, AB acquired the Frauenfeld-Wil railway.

History

The origins of the Appenzeller Bahnen company lies in a number of formerly independent companies and railway lines:[2]

The Appenzellerbahn and Santisbahn merged in 1947, retaining the Appenzellerbahn (AB) identity. The St. Gallen–Gais–Appenzell-Bahn and Altstätten-Gais-Bahn merged in 1948, under the name St. Gallen–Gais–Appenzell–Altstätten-Bahn (SGA).[2]

The Appenzeller Bahnen company was formed in 1988, with the merger of the Appenzellerbahn and the St. Gallen–Gais–Appenzell–Altstätten-Bahn. In 2006, the Appenzeller Bahnen company merged with the Rorschach–Heiden-Bergbahn, the Rheineck–Walzenhausen-Bergbahn and the Trogenerbahn companies. In legal terms, this merger took the form of the Appenzeller Bahnen company acquiring the other companies.[2]

In 2021 the company merged with Frauenfeld-Wil-Bahn AG, owner of the Frauenfeld–Wil line. The two companies had shared operations for years.[4]

Operation

Today, the company operates the following railway lines:[5] [6]

The St. Gallen–Gais–Appenzell, Gossau–Appenzell–Wasserauen and Altstätten–Gais lines form a connected network of lines, all electrified at 1500 V DC. Until 2018, the St. Gallen–Trogen line was also of metre gauge, but ran independently.

From 2016 to 2018, the Appenzellerbahnen undertook a large construction project to connect the Appenzell-St. Gallen and St. Gallen-Trogen lines. The three points of incompatibility were electrification (the St. Gallen-Trogen line was 1000 V DC with a brief stretch at 600 V DC shared with the St. Gallen trolleybus system), different (but physically adjacent) termini in St. Gallen, and maximal grades (the rack railway approach to St. Gallen from Appenzell was too steep for adhesion-based St. Gallen-Trogen rolling stock). So the new project re-electrified the St. Gallen-Trogen line at 1500 V DC and constructed a new tunnel through St. Gallen. The old alignment through St. Gallen closed in April 2018, and the system began through-running in October of the same year.[7] [8]

The Rheineck–Walzenhausen and Rorschach–Heiden lines are geographically separate from the rest of the network, and are of respectively and standard gauges. The Altstaetten–Gais, Rheineck–Walzenhausen and Rorschach–Heiden lines all have rack railway sections, whilst the Gossau–Appenzell–Wasserauen and Appenzell–St. Gallen–Trogen lines are adhesion only.[5] [6] Frauenfeld-Wil was cooperating closely, but legally distinct from 2003. It is not connected by tracks. 2021 they were taken over.

The company also operates a bus service from Teufen, on the St. Gallen–Gais–Appenzell line, to Speicher, on the St. Gallen–Trogen line. Night bus services are operated over the routes of the St. Gallen–Gais–Appenzell and St. Gallen–Trogen lines.[5]

Services

, Appenzell Railways (AB) operates eight regional train services that run on its own railway network. Trains operate as S-Bahn services (numbered 15, 20‒26 with "S" prefix) for St. Gallen S-Bahn (some also for Bodensee S-Bahn). In addition, AB also operate bus line 190.[9]

RouteNotes
––Operates over the metre gauge Frauenfeld–Wil line
––––––Operates over the metre gauge Appenzell–St. Gallen–Trogen line. Rush-hour service, calls between Gais and St. Gallen only at Bühler, Teufen AR and Niederteufen
––––––Operates over the metre gauge Appenzell–St. Gallen–Trogen line
–––Operates over the metre gauge Appenzell–St. Gallen–Trogen line. Only during rush hour
––––Operates over the metre gauge Gossau–Wasserauen line
––Operates over the metre gauge Altstätten–Gais line (part rack railway)
–––Operates over the standard gauge Rorschach–Heiden line (part rack railway)
––Operates over the gauge Rheineck–Walzenhausen line (part rack railway)
––Speicherschwendi–St. Gallen, NeudorfBus service

Rolling stock

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Zahlen und Fakten [Numbers and facts] ]. 2023-12-29 . Appenzeller bahnen . de.
  2. Web site: Geschichte . German . History . Appenzeller Bahnen . 2014-07-02 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140630160410/http://www.appenzellerbahnen.ch/Unternehmen/Geschichte.aspx . 2014-06-30 . dead .
  3. Web site: Die verschwundene Bahnlinie [The lost railway line] ]. de . Tagblatt . 2023-12-28.
  4. News: 17 June 2021 . Frauenfeld-Wil-Bahn fusioniert mit den Appenzeller Bahnen . de . . 16 September 2021.
  5. Web site: Unterwegs . German . Route network . Appenzeller Bahnen . 2014-07-02 .
  6. Book: Eisenbahnatlas Schweiz . 2012 . Verlag Schweers + Wall GmbH . 978-3-89494-130-7 . 14–15.
  7. Thomas Baumgartner, Lukas Regli: Die Bedeutung der Durchmesserlinie Appenzell – St. Gallen – Trogen für die Appenzeller Bahnen (in German). In: Schweizer Eisenbahn-Revue. No. 11/2013. Minirex,, pp. 604–606.
  8. News: Appenzeller Bahnen's Durchmesserlinie project completed . 11 October 2018 . Railway Gazette . 11 October 2018.
  9. Web site: Teufen - Speicher - Speicherschwendi - St. Gallen . Bundesamt für Verkehr . 2023-11-23 . 2023-12-29.