Trams in Heidelberg

Heidelberg tramway network
A tram on line 23 crosses the Theodor-Heuss-Brücke, 2014.
Operation
LocaleHeidelberg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
OperatorRhein-Neckar-Verkehr
Horsecar era: 1885 (1885)–1901 (1901)
Status Superseded
Track gauge 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) metre gauge
Propulsion system Horses
Electric tram era: since 1901 (1901)
Status Operational
Lines 6
Track gauge 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)
Propulsion system Electricity
Electrification 750 V DC
Heidelberg tramway network.
Website Rhein-Neckar-Verkehr (in German)

The Heidelberg tramway network (German: Straßenbahnnetz Heidelberg) 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 first electric tram ran in 1901. 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 the Upper Rhine Railway Company (Oberrheinische Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft, OEG).

Lines

[edit]

As of 2013, the Heidelberg tramway network had the following lines:

Line Route
5 Weinheim – Mannheim – Heidelberg – Weinheim: (OEG)

Weinheim – Viernheim – Käfertal – Mannheim – EdingenWieblingenHauptbahnhof – Bismarckplatz – NeuenheimHandschuhsheimDossenheim - SchriesheimWeinheim

21 Bismarckplatz – Hauptbahnhof – Technologiepark – Hans-Thoma-Platz:

Bismarckplatz – Adenauerplatz – Poststraße – Stadtbücherei – Stadtwerke – Hauptbahnhof – Betriebshof – Jahnstraße – Bunsengymnasium – Technologiepark – Heiligenbergschule – Hans-Thoma-Platz

→ no evening service, Mon–Fri only

22 Bismarckplatz – Bergheimer Straße – PfaffengrundEppelheim:

Bismarckplatz – Seegarten – Stadtbücherei – Ringstraße – Montpellierbrücke – Hauptbahnhof Süd – Gadamerplatz – Eppelheimer Terrasse – Henkel-Teroson-Straße – Marktstraße – Kranichweg/Stotz - Jakobsgasse - Eppelheim Rathaus - Kirchheimer Straße

23 Handschuhsheim – Neuenheim – Bismarckplatz – WeststadtRohrbachLeimen:

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

24 (Schriesheim –) Handschuhsheim – Technologiepark – Hauptbahnhof – Weststadt – Rohrbach Süd:

(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 the rushhour every 20 minutes (10 times a day)

26 Burgstraße – Bismarckplatz –Bahnstadt – Messplatz – Kirchheim:

Burgstraße – Biethsstraße – Hans-Thoma-Platz –Kapellenweg – Blumenthalstraße – Kußmaulstraße – Brückenstraße – Bismarckplatz – Altes Hallenbad – Campus Bergheim – Volkshochschule – Betriebshof – Czernybrücke – Gadamerplatz – Hauptbahnhof Süd – Rudolf-Diesel-Straße – Messplatz – Ilse-Krall-Straße – Albert-Fritz-Straße – Odenwaldstraße – Kirchheim Rathaus – Kirchheim Friedhof

Current fleet

[edit]

The current fleet of RNV trams at operating in Heidelberg currently consists of:

  • 16 eight-axle Rhine-Neckar Variobahns from Bombardier, built in 2002 and 2003 (numbers 3273 to 3280 without energy storage), as well as 2009 and 2010 (numbers 3281 to 3288 with energy storage)
  • 10 six-axle Rhine-Neckar Variobahns from Bombardier, built between 2005 and 2006 (numbers 4133–4138 and 4140–4142 without energy storage) and 2009 (number 4143 with energy storage)

Since 2024/2025, RNV has been operating the newly built Rhein-Neckar Tram 2020 on several routes within the city, as well as on the line 5 circulator. This has allowed for the retirement of many remaining Düwag vehicles in the city, which have been experiencing increased technical difficulties in regular service.

History

[edit]

Early suburban trains

[edit]

In 1883, the Leferenz brothers received a concession for a local railway from Heidelberg to Schriesheim, extending to Weinheim, but they were unable to realize the project for financial reasons. In 1887, they sold the concession to Herrmann Bachstein, who had already received the concession for the Mannheim–Weinheim line in 1886. Bachstein, opened this line in the same year. In 1890, the Weinheim–Heidelberg line followed, running along the Bergstrasse (Mountain Road) via Leutershausen, Schriesheim, Dossenheim, and Handschuhsheim.

The Mannheim–Heidelberg line via Wieblingen, Edingen, and Neckarhausen was completed in 1891. In 1897, the railway was incorporated into the South German Railway Company (SEG) and in 1911 became the Upper Rhine Railway Company.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  • Basten, Robert; Jeanmaire, Claude (1986). Heidelberger Strassenbahnen. Villingen (Schweiz), ISBN 3-85649-053-1 (in German)
  • Höltge, Dieter (1999). Straßen- und Stadtbahnen in Deutschland [Tramways and Stadtbahnen in Germany] (in German). Vol. Band 6: Baden [Volume 6: Baden]. Freiburg i. B., Germany: EK-Verlag. ISBN 3882553375.
  • Muth, Frank (2003). Straßenbahnen in Heidelberg. München, ISBN 3-7654-7197-6 (in German)
  • Röth, Helmut (2006). Auf Schienen zwischen Odenwald und Pfalz. Fotografien 1955–1976. Ludwigshafen am Rhein, Verlag Pro Message. ISBN 3-934845-18-5. (in German)
  • Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Neckar (Hrsg.) (2004). An einem Strang. Eisenbahngeschichte im Rhein-Neckar-Dreieck. Ludwigshafen, Verlag Pro Message. ISBN 3-934845-17-7 (in German)
[edit]

Media related to Trams in Heidelberg at Wikimedia Commons