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The Hamburg S-Bahn:

By Hartmut Schnorr, Assistant Operating Director Hamburg S-Bahn and a Member of the Locomotive & Carriage Institution.

From the December 2001 Newsletter.

I have rewritten this article from that printed in the newsletter in an endeavour to 'smooth-out' the German to English translation, Tom Chaffin.

Hamburg is Germany's second largest city after Berlin, as well as an important industrial, economical and cultural centre.  Some 1.7 million inhabitants live in Hamburg.  The port in Hamburg is known as "Germany's gateway to the world".

In Hamburg, as elsewhere, car useage has continued to grow over the last ten years so that  traffic jams are now a daily occurrence, both on the motorways and city streets.  Therefore, Hamburg's public transport system is increasingly being used as a faster alternative to the car.  It is expected that the Hamburg economy will further grow over the next few years and so the public transport system will have to keep pace.

Hamburg's public transport system consists of: a bus network;  the Hamburg Underground or "U-Bahn", run by Hamburger Hochbahn AG and the Suburban railway system or "S-Bahn".

The Hamburg S-Bahn:

The Hamburg S-Bahn operates over 110Km, and serves 59 stations, making it approximately 1/3rd the size of the Berlin S-Bahn.  Some 500,000 passengers travel on the system daily.  165 3-Car trains operate the S-Bahn, all maintained at the S-Bahn workshop at Ohlsdorf.  The network is staffed by 1200 employees and controlled by 16 signalboxes.

There are six lines on the system:

S 1 Wedel - Blankenese - Altona - Landungsrücken - Hauptbahnhof (Hbf / main DB station), Poppenbtüttel
S 11 Blankenese - Altona - Dammtor - Hauptbahnhof (Hbf / main DB station) - Ohlsdorf
S 2 Altona - Landungsbrücken - Hauptbahnhof (Hbf / main DB station) - Bergedorf
S 21 Elbgaustraße - Altona - Dammtor - Hauptbahnhof (Hbf / main DB station) - Bergedorf  - Reinbek
S 3 Pinneberg - Altona - Landungsbrücken - Hauptbahnhof (Hbf / main DB station) - Neugraben
S 31 Altona - Dammtor - Hauptbahnhof (Hbf / main DB station)  - Harburg Rathaus

Hamburg S-Bahn Map.gif (81025 bytes)

A 1200V DC side-contact current rail system is used, adapted from the underside contact 750V DC system used in Berlin:

Hamburg Rail.jpg (25210 bytes)

Rolling Stock:

All classes of train consist of three-car units operating at 1200V DC.  Trains can be formed of between one and three units.

The four classes of unit which have been used on the S-Bahn are as follows:

Class: In-Service: Number of Units:
471 1939 - 2001 73
470 1959 - 2001 45
472 1974 - 62
474 1996 - 103

The oldest units, the class 471s, were finally withdrawn from 26th October 2001.  One unit has been kept as a vintage train.   The class 470s should also be withdrawn by the end of 2001.

The class 474 first entered service in 1997.  A feature of these units is the "SAT System", this consists of three monitors in each cab which displays images from the CCTV system installed at each station platform (similar to that on the Central and Jubilee lines on the London Underground).  This enables the driver to judge when it is save to close the doors and depart.  This system means that it is only necessary to staff a few station platforms (Hamburg Hbf, Altona, Jungfernstieg, Elbgaustrasse, Blankenese, Berliner Tor and Ohlsdorf) during the rush-hour.  The SAT system will be installed in the class 472s in 2002 and at all 59 stations by 2004.

Signalling System:

Three different signalling systems are in use:

Semaphore systems between Klein Flottbek and Sulldorf on line S1.

The Ks signalling system between Berliner Tor and Reinbek on line S2 controlled from Bergedorf IECC.

The Sv at all other locations.

The following signal boxes control the network:

Signal Box: Control Area: Type:
Pinneberg Pinneberg station area, lines S3 & S21 Panel
Elbgaustraße Diebsteich - Pinneberg, line S 3 Panel
Altona

Holstenstraße - Altona line S21

Panel
Holstenstraße - Diebsteich, lines S1 and S3
Reeperbahn - Othmarshen line S1
Klein Flottbek Klein Flottbek station area, lines S1 & S11 Electro-mechanical
Hochkamp Hochkamp station area, lines S1 & S11 Electro-mechanical
Blankenese Blankenese station area, lines S1 & S11 Electro-mechanical
Sülldorf Sülldorf station area, lines S1 & S11 Mechanical
Wedel Wedel to Rissen, line S1 Panel
Hamburg Hbf Berliner Tor - Reerperbahn, lines S1 & S2 Panel
Hammerbrook - Reerperbahn, line S3
Berliner Tor - Holstenstraße, lines S11 & S21
Hammerbrook - Holstenstraße, line S31
Hasselbrook Hasselbrook station area Electro-mechanical
Barmbek Barmbek station area, lines S1 & S11 Electro-mechanical
Ohlsdorf Ohlsdorf station area, lines S1 & S11 Electro-mechanical
Poppenbüttel Poppenbüttel station area, lines S1 & S11 Electro-mechanical
Bergedorf Berliner Tor - Reinbek line S21 IECC
Willhelmsburg Willhelmsburg station area, lines S3 & S31 Panel
Harburg Rathas Hammerbrook   - Hausbruch lines S3 & S31 Panel
Neugraben Hausbruch   - Neugraben, lines S3 & S31 Panel

 

Harburg Rathaus SB.jpg (14454 bytes)

Blankenese SB.jpg (13776 bytes)
Panel Signalbox at Harburg Rathaus Electoro-mechanical Signalbox at Blankenese

The S-Bahn Control Room:

The control room at Altona was opened in August 2001 and controls the entire network, issuing instructions to drivers, signalmen and station staff.  Some 1000 trains run each day.  Central to the control room systems is the electronic "Information and Report System", or IMS, which can locate every train on the network and give information on: train number and line; train formation; timetable and any delays.  This system also drives the customer information systems (CIS) on the stations platforms which display next train information and any delays.  This replaced a previous CIS system which dated from 1975 and had become unreliable and expensive to maintain.

The Future:

The demands on the system will become greater over the next few years and to mitigate this the Hamburg S-Bahn is harnessing new methods and technologies.  New IECCs will replacing the existing signalling centres and eventually driver-less trains maybe introduced, as on the underground networks in Lyon and Lille in France.

Related Articals:

If you have found this account interesting, you may wish to read our related page on the Berlin S-Bahn, taken from notes from a lecture by Hartmut Schnorr when he was 2nd Operating Manager.