Nightjet Explained

ÖBB Nightjet
Image Alt:View of Nightjet train no. NJ 490, as it awaits departure from Wien Hauptbahnhof bound for Düsseldorf Hbf / Hamburg-Altona
Type:Sleeper train
Predecessor:City Night Line
Operator:ÖBB

Nightjet (stylised as nightjet) is a brand name given by the Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB) to its overnight passenger train services.

Nightjet operates in Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland and Switzerland. There are services provided by other train companies to Croatia, Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia and Slovenia that operate under the Nightjet Partner label. Nightjet trains offers beds in sleeper carriages (Nightjet's most comfortable service category), couchette carriages, and seated carriages. On certain connections, cars can also be transported on the train. Bikes can be transported in a bike transport bag, or on some connections also in special bike racks.

Nightjet of the new generation

On the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the ÖBB the 'new generation' of the Nightjet services was launched. Newly designed, more comfortable carriages built by Siemens Mobility were announced on 2 October 2023 for the 2024 schedule, starting 10 December 2023. The services will cross Germany from Hamburg to Innsbruck (and Vienna) and vice versa, to be expanded to the existing lines later.[1] [2] [3]

History

During December 2015, the German state railway company Deutsche Bahn announced that it would stop its night train services under the City Night Line branding and replace them with additional overnight high speed ICE services; this outcome followed years of efforts to turnaround the sector, which the company claimed to be little used, accounting for roughly 1% of all long-distance passengers that year, and thus unprofitable. Even prior to this decision, discussions were underway with the Austrian Federal Railways ÖBB on the topic of continuing traditional night trains in some form.[4] During February 2016, reports emerged that ÖBB was in negotiations with Deutsche Bahn to take over the operation of several night train services. Furthermore, the company was also evaluating its options in regards to rolling stock for operating these services, these included new-build carriages as well as the modernisation of existing rolling stock.[5] Later that year, ÖBB decided to adopt the Nightjet branding for its night train service.[6]

In December 2016, the first Nightjet services were launched; that same month, Deutsche Bahn discontinued its own competing night trains.[7] [8] During February 2017, ÖBB declared that passenger numbers on the Nightjet services were growing.[9]

In August 2019, the Swiss Federal Railways (SBB) and ÖBB jointly announced their plans to expand the passenger services between their two countries; this included the running of Nightjet services between the Swiss cities of Zürich and Basel with the German urban centres of Berlin and Hamburg. Furthermore, the two companies were examining options for the further expansion of the Nightjet network and to provide more overnight connections to Switzerland.[10] That same year, Netherlands Railways (NS) was also discussing options with ÖBB for the provision of night trains through to Amsterdam;[11] in October 2019, it was announced that the Dutch government had agreed to provide a temporarily subsidy for NS and Nightjet to jointly provide daily night trains between Amsterdam, Nürnberg, Munich, Innsbruck, and Vienna.[12]

Usage of the service steadily grew during the 2010s; in October 2019, ÖBB CEO Andreas Matthä stated the passenger traffic on the Nightjet had grown by 10 percent over the year prior.[13] During the first half of 2020, along with the majority of cross-border services in Europe, Nightjet services were temporarily suspended on account of the COVID-19 pandemic; in June 2020, the resumption of regular scheduled operations was announced.[14] In December 2020, four railway companies, including ÖBB, Deutsche Bahn, SBB, and France's SNCF, signed an agreement to cooperate on the development of night train services across Europe; specifically, the launch of four new Nightjet connections between 13 European cities will be prioritised. Two of these services will run between Vienna, Munich, and Paris, as well as Zurich, Cologne, and Amsterdam, starting in December 2021, while services between Vienna and Berlin, and Brussels and Paris, will commence during December 2023. In December 2024, a new service between Zurich and Barcelona should be launched as well[15] but it is uncertain since the Nightjet from Zurich to Rome planned in 2022 was delayed to an unknown date[16] .

In August 2018, ÖBB announced the placement of an initial €375m order for eight day trains and 13 night trains as part of a wider €1.5bn framework agreement with the German engineering company Siemens Mobility for a new fleet of long-distance trains, which includes the delivery of up to 700 passenger coaches over the next five years. The new Viaggio coaches, which will be manufactured at Siemens’ factory in Vienna, shall be operated with ÖBB's existing fleet of Siemens Taurus locomotives, and be operated in Austria, Germany, Italy and Switzerland, while provisions are present to equip the coaches for use in Croatia, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia as well. The seven-car night trains offer 100 seats and 160 berths, and are fully equipped to accommodate passengers with limited mobility. Siemens claims that the Viaggio coaches have improved energy efficiency achieved through LED interior lighting, air conditioning via heat pumps in both cooling and heating modes, and a regulated fresh air supply based on the interior levels. Commissioning of the new fleet is expected in 2022, with service entry starting in the summer of 2023.[17] [18] [19]

In October 2019, as a stopgap measure, ÖBB announced its intention to lease sleeping and couchette cars, permitting additional Nightjet services to be operated without having to wait for the delivery of its outstanding Siemens order. Specifically, two options were evaluated; the hiring of four sleeping and four couchette cars between 2020 and 2023 that can operate in Germany, Denmark and Sweden; or eight sleeping cars and eight couchette cars between 2021 and 2022 with approval for operation in Austria, Germany, Switzerland, Belgium and the Czech Republic.[20] In August 2020, ÖBB received permission by the Austrian federal government to purchase an additional 20 seven-car Nightjet trains along with additional locomotives for a combined value of roughly €500m. When combined with previous orders, ÖBB's new-build rolling stock for the Nightjet includes 231 new sleeping cars, couchettes, and seated vehicles; the expansion of the fleet will enable the operator to reach more destinations.[21] [22] That same month, as to accommodate the expanding fleet, ÖBB invested €40m into the modernisation and enlargement of the Vienna Simmering depot, which included the construction of a new 5,500m2 maintenance hall with two elevated tracks.[23] In August 2021, a further 20 seven-car Nightjets, based on the new generation Viaggio Next Level, were ordered from Siemens Mobility.[24]

Despite these stop-gap measures, since 2023 passengers have been strongly affected by cancellations of service or severe delays.[25] This includes unannounced “downgrades”, in which customers who had reserved sleeping berths are informed on the train that they must sit for the journey as there is no sleeping carriage available.[26]

Train services

Train numberOperatorRoute
NJ 446/447ÖBBVienna - Linz - Innsbruck - Feldkirch - Bregenz
NJ 464/465ÖBBGraz - Leoben - Innsbruck - Feldkirch - Zurich
NJ 466/467ÖBBVienna - Linz - Salzburg - Innsbruck - Zurich
NJ 468/469ÖBBVienna - Linz - Salzburg - Munich - Karlsruhe - Strasbourg - Paris
NJ 401/40470ÖBBHamburg - Frankfurt - Freiburg - Basel - Zurich
NJ 471/470ÖBBBerlin - Frankfurt - Freiburg - Basel - Zurich
NJ 456/457ÖBBGraz - Vienna - Wroclaw - Frankfurt/Oder - Berlin
NJ 490/491ÖBBVienna - Linz - Nuremberg - Hanover - Hamburg
NJ 40490/40421ÖBBVienna - Linz - Nuremberg - Frankfurt - Cologne - Düsseldorf - Amsterdam
NJ 420/421ÖBBInnsbruck - Munich - Frankfurt - Cologne - Düsseldorf - Amsterdam
NJ 50490/425 ÖBBVienna - LinzNuremberg – Cologne – Brussels
NJ 40420/40491ÖBBInnsbruck - Munich - Nuremberg - Hanover - Hamburg
NJ 40233/40294ÖBBVienna - Villach - Bologna - Florence - Rome
NJ 40466/236ÖBBVienna - Linz - Salzburg - Villach - Udine - Venice
NJ 295/294ÖBBMunich - Salzburg - Villach - Bologna - Florence - Rome
NJ 40295/40235ÖBBMunich - Salzburg - Villach - Verona - Milan - Genova - La Spezia
NJ 236/237ÖBBStuttgart - Munich - Salzburg - Villach - Udine - Venice
NJ 233/235ÖBBVienna - Klagenfurt – Villach – PaduaVicenzaVerona Porta NuovaBresciaMilan RogoredoGenoa Piazza PrincipeLa Spezia
NJ 404/24ÖBBBerlin - Erfurt - Frankfurt/Main - Strasbourg - Paris

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Wilcock . Rich . OBB celebrates 100 years with Nightjet model . Rail Technology Magazine . 24 October 2023.
  2. Web site: ÖBB's Nightjet new generation is the future of night train travel in Europe . Railway International . Induportals Media Publishing . 24 October 2023.
  3. Web site: Nightjet unveiled as the 'flagship of European night train traffic' . Railway Gazette International . The Railway Gazette Group . 24 October 2023.
  4. News: Fender . Keith . DB to withdraw all remaining sleeper trains . . 21 December 2015 . 2 January 2017.
  5. News: Reidinger . Erwin . ÖBB evaluates options for new couchette coaches . . 8 February 2016 . 16 March 2018.
  6. OBB presents Nightjet . . 252 . December 2016 . 6.
  7. "Nightjet What's new this month". European Rail Timetable (Winter 2016/2017 edition), p. 3. UK: European Rail Timetable Ltd.
  8. Nightjet - OBB takes over former Citynightline Network . . 821 . February 2017 . 79.
  9. News: Nachtzüge: "Die ÖBB kann's, die DB nicht" . . 19 February 2017 . 16 March 2018.
  10. Web site: SBB and ÖBB to expand Nightjet services . . David . Briginshaw . 19 August 2019.
  11. Web site: SBB considers reintroducing night trains . . David . Briginshaw . 31 May 2019 .
  12. Web site: Dutch government to support return of international night train . International Railway Journal . Quintus . Vosman . 11 October 2019.
  13. Web site: Nightjet passenger traffic up 10%, says ÖBB's CEO . . David . Briginshaw . 15 October 2019.
  14. Web site: Cross-border services resume as European borders reopen . International Railway Journal . David . Burroughs . 27 June 2020.
  15. Web site: ÖBB, DB, SBB, and SNCF announce Nightjet collaboration . International Railway Journal . David . Burroughs . 8 December 2020.
  16. Web site: Zurich-Rome en train de nuit? Il va falloir patienter.
  17. Web site: ÖBB agrees €1.5bn deal with Siemens for long-distance trains . . David . Burroughs . 17 August 2018.
  18. News: . 5 January 2019 . Der neue Boom der Nachtzüge . The new boom of night trains . de . Manager Magazin . 7 January 2019 .
  19. Web site: ÖBB unveils new-generation Nightjet cars . International Railway Journal . Simon . Artymiuk . 6 September 2022.
  20. Web site: Austrian Federal Railways to hire sleeping cars . International Railway Journal . Erwin . Reidinger . 18 October 2019.
  21. News: ÖBB to order more Nightjet trains . en . International Rail Journal . Smith . Kevin . 11 August 2020 . 11 December 2020 .
  22. Web site: Neue ÖBB-Nachtzüge kommen erst ab Sommer 2023 . derstandard.de . de-AT . 10 June 2022.
  23. Web site: ÖBB to invest €40m in Vienna Simmering Nightjet depot . International Rail Journal . Oliver . Cuenca . 25 August 2020.
  24. Web site: ÖBB orders 20 additional Nightjets . International Rail Journal . Richard . Clinnick . 10 August 2021.
  25. Web site: 2023-12-22 . Bahnfahren zwischen Zürich und Wien – Hohe Preise und defekte Züge: Österreichs Bahn fährt in die Krise . 2024-04-11 . Tages-Anzeiger . de.
  26. Web site: Corazza . Nicola . wien.ORF.at . 2023-06-14 . Ausfälle bei ÖBB wegen fehlender Züge . 2024-04-11 . wien.ORF.at . de.