The North West Railway company (German: NordWestBahn GmbH, abbreviated to NWB) is a private railway company providing regional train services on several routes in northern and western Germany. It is a joint venture of Stadtwerke Osnabrück AG, Verkehr und Wasser GmbH in Oldenburg and Transdev Germany, Berlin. The head office of the company is in Osnabrück. NWB claims to be Germany's largest regional railway company.

NordWestBahn GmbH
Company typeGmbH
Founded1992
Headquarters,
Area served
Germany
ServicesPassenger transportation
ParentTransdev Germany
Stadtwerke Osnabrück
VWG Oldenburg
Websitewww.nordwestbahn.de
NordWestBahn trains at Osnabrück Hbf

Since 5 November 2000, NordWestBahn has operated, on behalf of the public transport company of Lower Saxony (Landesnahverkehrsgesellschaft Niedersachsen, abbreviated to LNVG), the Weser-Ems-Network in Lower Saxony. The company promptly pursued various other regional railway opportunities within the German market. During March 2008, NordWestBahn was selected to run the regional S-Bahn Bremen/Lower Saxony, having submitted a superior bid to the German national railway operator DB Regio; operation of these routes started in December 2010. Following a competitive tendering process in early 2019, the company retained operations in Bremen and Lower Saxony.[1] On 6 November 2018, NordWestBahn was awarded the contract to operate the S-Bahn regional trains around Hanover.[2]

History

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During 1999, NordWestBahn was established as a privately-owned railway operator.[2] During November of that year, it took over the first routes north of Osnabrück from the state-owned incumbent Deutsche Bahn (DB). Operationally, while NordWestBahn had established its own operations control center populated by its own employees, it needed to coordinate with the various pre-existing signal boxes, stations, and other facilities that remained in DB's hands.[3] The company has also coordinated with various other private entities, such as Abellio.[4] Over time, NordWestBahn has seen increased competition from emerging private railway companies.[5]

In March 2008, NordWestBahn won the tender to operate the regional S-Bahn services in Bremen and Lower Saxony, having submitted a more favourable bid than the incumbent operator DB Regio; the contract awarded was reportedly worth roughly 500 million euros.[6] The company commenced operation of these routes during December 2010.[1][7]

Throughout the 2010s, NordWestBahn secured further opportunities.[8][9] On 6 November 2018, NordWestBahn was awarded the contract to operate the S-Bahn regional trains serving Hannover.[2] Valued in excess of €1.5 billion, this was an important milestone for the company, being the single largest regional railways contract in its history, pertaining to the operation of the entire 385-kilometre-long (239 mi) network around Hannover for a duration of 12 and a half years, starting in December 2021.[10] To fulfil this demand, the company took on additional rolling stock in the form of Stadler FLIRT electric multiple units (EMUs).[11]

During April 2019, it was announced that NordWestBahn had succeeded in its bid to retain the Regional S-Bahn Bremen & Niedersachsen franchise; under the terms of the new contract, which commenced in December 2021, it is set to continue running this franchise through to December 2036. Furthermore, the network is to be expanded and several improvements, such as capacity increases and new rolling stock, are to be implemented during this period.[1] Later that same year, NordWestBahn agreed terms with the rolling stock leasor Alpha Trains for the latter to acquire 16 Stadler FLIRT EMUs for their use by the former around Bremen; the new fleet was introduced during late 2022.[12][13] The existing Alstom Coradia fleet was also refurbished for continued use.[14][15]

On 1 September 2022, substantial service changes were enacted. Specifically, those routes in the Rhein-Ruhr area formerly performed by NordWestBahn were split off from the core business, instead being operated by a separate company, Transdev RheinRuhr, which operates as RheinRuhrBahn.[16][17] By this time, NordWestBahn was carrying roughly 40 million passenger per year and operated 145 trains, covering 19.1 million kilometres (11.9 million miles) annually; it had a total of 850 employees.[2]

Services

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Network map of NWB routes in 2022.

NordWestBahn services

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The following services are currently operated under the NordWestBahn brand:

Line Name Route Contract dates
RE 18 Wilhelmshaven Hbf – Oldenburg (Oldb) Hbf – Osnabrück Hbf 11/2000 – 12/2026
RB 58 Bremen Hbf – Delmenhorst – Vechta – Osnabrück Hbf 11/2000 – 12/2026
RB 59 Wilhelmshaven Hbf – Jever – Wittmund – Esens 11/2000 – 12/2026
RS1 Bremen-Farge – Bremen Hbf – Verden 12/2011 – 12/2036
RS2 Bremerhaven-Lehe – Bremerhaven Hbf – Bremen Hbf – Twistringen 12/2010 – 12/2036
RS3 Formerly RE 19 Bremen Hbf – Oldenburg (Oldb) Hbf – Bad Zwischenahn 12/2003 – 12/2036
RS30 Bremen Hbf – Oldenburg Hbf – Bad Zwischenahn 12/2003 – 12/2036
RS6 Verden (Aller)Rotenburg 12/2022 – 12/2036
RS4 Bremen Hbf – Nordenham 12/2010 – 12/2036
RB 74 Senne-Bahn Bielefeld Hbf – Hövelhof – Paderborn Hbf 12/2003 – 12/2025
RB 75 Haller Willem Bielefeld Hbf – Halle (Westf.) – Dissen-Bad Rothenfelde – Osnabrück Hbf 12/2003 – 12/2025
RB 84 Egge-Bahn Paderborn Hbf – Ottbergen – Holzminden – Kreiensen - 12/2003 – 12/2025
RB 85 Oberweserbahn Ottbergen – Bodenfelde – Göttingen 12/2013 – 12/2025

RheinRuhrBahn services

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The following services were operated as NordWestBahn services until 1 September 2022, but are now branded as RheinRuhrBahn:

Line Name Route Contract dates
RE 14 Emscher-Münsterland-Express Borken (Westf) / Coesfeld (Westf) – Dorsten – Gladbeck – Bottrop Hbf – Essen Hbf - Essen-Steele 12/2006 – 12/2028
RE 10 Niers-Express Düsseldorf Hbf – Krefeld Hbf – Geldern – Kleve 12/2009 – 12/2025
RB 31 Der Niederrheiner Xanten – (Kamp-Lintfort South State Garden Show 2020) Moers – Duisburg Hbf 12/2009 – 12/2025
RB 36 Ruhrort-Bahn Duisburg-Ruhrort – Oberhausen Hbf 12/2010 – 12/2025
RE 44 Fossa-Emscher-Express Moers – Duisburg Hbf – Oberhausen Hbf – Bottrop Hbf 12/2010 – 12/2025

Fleet

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Class Image Cars per set Type Top speed Number Builder Built
km/h mph
VT 643   2 or 3 Diesel multiple unit 120 75 43 Bombardier Talent 2003-2006
VT 648   2 Diesel multiple unit 120 75 59 Alstom LINT-41 2000-2010
ET 440   3 or 5 Electric multiple unit 160 99 35 Alstom Coradia Continental 2010

Depots

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NordWestBahn has five depots to maintain its fleet. These are at Osnabrück, Dorsten, Mettmann (operated by RegioBahn), Bremerhaven and Kleve.

References

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  1. ^ a b c Cordero Sapién, Josephine (16 April 2019). "RSBN Franchise Goes to NordWestBahn Again". railway-news.com.
  2. ^ a b c d "NordWestBahn (NWB)". Transdev. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
  3. ^ "Uta Ehlert is known as the "Mom of the NordWest-Bahn" among colleagues". Transdev. 15 September 2022.
  4. ^ "Focused on highquality services". globalrailwayreview.com. 11 April 2012.
  5. ^ "Competition strengthens German rail sector". globalrailwayreview.com. 7 April 2015.
  6. ^ "Veolia to manage Bremen express system". Reuters. 2 September 2008.
  7. ^ "Regio-S-Bahn in Bremen gestartet" [Regio-S-Bahn started in Bremen]. Radio Bremen (in German). 12 December 2010. Archived from the original on 14 December 2010.
  8. ^ "NordWestBahn wins new Weser-Ems-Netz contract". Railway Gazette International. 31 October 2014.
  9. ^ "Germany: New contracts for Veolia Transport". International Union of Railways. 15 February 2010.
  10. ^ "Hannover's regional rail network to be operated by Transdev". globalrailwayreview.com. 8 November 2018.
  11. ^ "Stadler wins Hanover S-Bahn EMU order". railuk.com. 9 November 2018.
  12. ^ "Alpha Trains orders 16 Stadler Flirt trains for NordWestBahn". railway-technology.com. 24 October 2019.
  13. ^ "16 New Stadler FLIRT Trains for NordWestBahn". railway-news.com. 13 June 2019.
  14. ^ "Prototype refurbished Coradia Continental trains completed". globalrailwayreview.com. 29 July 2021.
  15. ^ "Modernization of the Coradia Continental train for the Bremen S-Bahn". railtarget.eu. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
  16. ^ "FAQ". rhein-ruhr-bahn.de (in German). Retrieved 20 August 2022.
  17. ^ "DMU operating contract awarded pending battery train deployment". Railway Gazette International. 27 August 2019.