Odenwald Railway (Baden)

Odenwald Railway (Baden)
Historical route of the Odenwald Railway
Overview
Native nameOdenwaldbahn
LocaleBaden and Bavaria, Germany
Technical
Line length159.2 km (98.9 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Route map

Mainline from Mannheim
Mainline from Karlsruhe
0.0
Heidelberg
2.2
Karlsthor
5.6
Schlierbach
9.8
Neckargemünd
14.3
Bammenthal
17.5
Mauer
19.8
Meckesheim
24.9
Eschelbronn
26.7
Neidenstein
30.1
Waibstadt
31.9
Neckarbischofsheim
34.9
Helmstadt
38.9
Aglasterhausen
42.5
Asbach
Mörtelstein tunnel (690 m)
Erlesrain tunnel (98 m)
46.8
Obrigheim
49.1
Kalksberg tunnel (147 m)
49.4
Neckar bridge (ca. 310 m)
50.0
Neckarelz
53.2
Mosbach
56.8
Neckarburken
59.0
Dallau
60.3
Dallau tunnel (370 m)
62.4
Auerbach
66.0
Schefflenz tunnel (543 m)
67.3
Schefflenz
69.4
Eicholzheim
70,2
Eicholzheim tunnel (363 m)
72.2
Truss bridge (412 m)
73.9
Seckach
75.3
Seckach tunnel (248 m)
76.4
Zimmer tunnel (175 m)
78.4
Adelsheim
79.3
Adelsheim tunnel (258 m)
Eastern fork railway from Jagstfeld
81.2
Osterburken
86.0
Rosenberg
88.8
Hirschlanden
93.1
Eubigheim
95.9
Eubigheim tunnel
104.1
Boxberg-Wölchingen
105.9
Schweigern
109.0
Unterschüpf
Tauber Valley Railway from Crailsheim
113.6
Königshofen
116.1
Lauda
Tauber Valley Railway to Wertheim
117.9
over the Tauber (81 m)
118.4
Gerlachsheim
122.9
Grünsfeld
126.5
Zimmern
131.1
Wittighausen tunnel (137 m)
131.7
Wittighausen
136.4
Baden / Bavaria border
137.2
Kirchheim b.W.
143.2
Geroldshausen
148.6
Reichenberg
153.7
Heidingsfeld
Line from Treuchtlingen
158.6
Würzburg-Sanderau
Line from Nuremberg
159.2
Würzburg
Main-Spessart railway to Aschaffenburg
Source: German railway atlas[1]

The Odenwald Railway (German: Odenwaldbahn) (sometimes referred to as the Baden Odenwald Railway to distinguish it from the Hessian line of the same name) was the name given to a Baden railway line in southwestern Germany built from between 1862 and 1866. It ran from Heidelberg via Neckargemünd and Meckesheim through the Little Odenwald mountains to Waibstadt, Mosbach, Osterburken and Lauda to Würzburg in Bavaria.

  1. ^ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas). Schweers + Wall. 2017. pp. 86–88, 159. ISBN 978-3-89494-146-8.