The Regionalverkehr Ruhr-Lippe GmbH (RLG)[1] is a publicly owned company in Westphalia that operates several railway lines as a rail infrastructure company, conducts freight transport as rail transport company, and is active in bus transport.[2][3]
History
editFounded on January 24, 1979, in Soest, RLG is the successor to the AG Ruhr-Lippe-Eisenbahnen (RLE).[4][5]
The shareholders of this transport company are the Westfälische Verkehrsgesellschaft mbH, which also manages the business, as well as the districts of Hochsauerlandkreis and Kreis Soest.[6] Also involved are the cities of Arnsberg, Brilon, Erwitte, Hallenberg, Hamm, Marsberg, Medebach, Olsberg, Rüthen, Soest, Sundern, Warstein, Werl, and Winterberg, as well as the municipalities of Anröchte, Ense, Lippetal, Möhnesee, and Welver.
The following were consolidated in the company:
- The railway lines Hamm–Lippborg and Neheim-Hüsten–Arnsberg Süd of the RLE including the RLE bus operation
- The Neheim-Hüsten–Sundern railway line including bus operation
- The transport companies Kreis Brilon – Kleinbahn Steinhelle–Medebach – (bus operation only) and
- The partial operation Brilon–Warstein–Lippstadt of the bus service of the Westfälische Landes-Eisenbahn.
Operations management for rail freight traffic is located in Hamm and Hüsten Ost; for bus transport, the depots in Arnsberg, Brilon, Lippstadt, and Soest are responsible.
The operation of the remaining freight traffic of the Westfälische Landes-Eisenbahn in the urban area of Soest (taken over by the RLE from 1973) was relatively short-lived. It was carried out by Deutsche Bundesbahn from May 1987 and completely discontinued on December 31, 2001.
The rail network, serving only freight traffic, was 41.732 km long in 2012.
RLG operates two diesel locomotives, No. 54 (MaK G 1206, built in 2008) and No. 68 (KHD DG 1200 BBM, built in 1962).[7]
In bus transport, a total of 217 vehicles (including 107 own buses) were used in 2012 on a route network of 3,993 km in length, which annually transported around 12.7 million passengers in the district of Soest and in the Hochsauerlandkreis.
Since 2012, RLG, together with Hochsauerlandkreis, Kreis Soest, and BRS Busverkehr Ruhr-Sieg GmbH, has been implementing the mobil4you project. Planned was, among other things, an electric bus as a neighborhood bus in Winterberg and Medebach, which was partially operated between 2013 and 2016 (now replaced in Winterberg by a community bus).
In 2022, RLG had 12.8 million passengers.[8]
Route
editExpress bus lines
editLine | Route | Remarks | Frequency |
---|---|---|---|
S10 | Neheim – Arnsberg | Operates via A46 | Every 60 min |
S20 | Neheim – Neheim-Hüsten – Hachen – Stemel – Sundern | Runs parallel to R25 | Every 60 min |
S30 | Brilon – Altenbüren – Olsberg – Bigge – Küstelberg – Medebach | Connection guarantee to S40 in Niedersfeld | Every 60 min |
D30 | Brilon – Altenbüren – Olsberg – Bigge – Küstelberg – Medebach | Runs parallel to S30 in peak hours | Occasionally during peak hours |
S40 | Schmallenberg – Nordenau – Winterberg – Niedersfeld | Connection guarantee to S30 in Niedersfeld | Every 60 min |
S60 | Lippstadt – Erwitte – Anröchte – Belecke – Warstein | Runs parallel to R61 until Erwitte | Every 60 min, Every 30 min during peak hours until Erwitte |
Regional bus lines Soest
editLine | Route | Remarks | Frequency Monday–Friday + Saturday morning | Frequency Saturday afternoon + Sunday |
---|---|---|---|---|
R36 | Soest – Hovestadt – Herzfeld | Every 60 min | Irregular | |
R41 | Hamm-Rhynern – Werl | Connection guarantee to R47 / C5 | Every 60 min | Every 120 min |
R47 | Werl – Westönnen – Ostönnen | Continues as C5 | Every 60 min | Every 120 min |
R51 | Soest – Echtrop (- Körbecke) – Belecke – Warstein | Not all trips operate via Körbecke | Every 60 min | Every 120 min |
R54 | Neheim – Niederense – Ostönnen | Connection in Ostönnen to C5 / R47 | Every 60 min | Every 120 min |
Citybus Arnsberg
editLine | Route | Frequency |
---|---|---|
C1 | Neheim, Bus Station – Hüsten – Niedereimer – Arnsberg, Neumarkt
Continues as C3 Gierskämpen / Waldfriedhof |
Every 30 min |
C2 | Neheim, Bus Station – Moosfelde | Every 30 min |
C3 | Arnsberg Gierskämpen / Waldfriedhof – Neumarkt
Continues as C1 Neheim |
Every 30 min |
C4 | Neheim, Johanneskirche – Bus Station – Rusch | Every 30 min |
C5 | Neheim, Bus Station – Bergheim – Bachum – Voßwinkel | Every 60 min |
C6 | Neheim, Bus Station – Hüsten – Herdringen – Hüstener Markt | Every 60 min |
C7 | Neheim, Bus Station – Rumbecker Holz – Neheim-Hüsten, Train Station | Irregular |
C8 | Neheim-Hüsten, Train Station – Holzen – Oelinghauser Heide | Every 60 min |
C9 | Hüstener Markt – Flammberg | Every 60 min |
C10 | Arnsberg, Train Station – Von-Bernuth-Str. – Neumarkt – Obereiemer | Irregular |
Citybus Soest
editLine | Route | Frequency Monday–Friday and Saturday morning | Frequency Saturday afternoon and Sunday |
---|---|---|---|
C1 | Bus Station Hansaplatz – Südostsiedlung | Every 30 min | Every 60 min |
C2 | Bus Station Hansaplatz – Gotlandweg | Every 30 min | No service – served by Line C1 |
C3 | Bus Station Hansaplatz – Deiringser Weg | Every 60 min | No service |
C4 | Bus Station Hansaplatz – KlinikumStadtSoest – Günne
(Saturday afternoon and Sunday to Neheim – Sundern) |
Every 60 min | Every 120 min |
C5 | Bus Station Hansaplatz – KlinikumStadtSoest – Ostönnen | Every 60 min | Every 120 min |
C6 | Bus Station Hansaplatz – Train Station – Hermannstraße | Every 60 min | No service |
C7 | Bus Station Hansaplatz – Train Station – Dortmundweg | Every 60 min | No service |
C8 | Bus Station Hansaplatz – Train Station – Endloser Weg | Every 60 min | No service |
Other lines (Neheim/Arnsberg)
edit323 Neheim-Hüsten, Train Station – Hövel – Holzen (school service)
326 Neheim-Hüsten, Train Station – Neheim, Bus Station – Wimbern (school service)
412 Arnsberg – Schreppenberg – Wennigloh (school service)
413 Schreppenberg – Breitenbruch (school service)
414 Arnsberg, Neumarkt – Uentrop (school service)
N5 Arnsberg, Neumarkt – Niedereimer – Bruchhausen – Hüsten – Neheim, Bus Station – Bergheim – Bachum – Voßwinkel
N6 Sundern, Town Hall – Müschede – Herdringen – Neheim-Hüsten, Train Station – Neheim, Bus Station – Niederense – Bremen
Gallery
edit-
Express bus
-
City bus
-
Night bus
-
Regional bus
-
Battery bus
References
edit- ^ Railway Directory. Reed Business Publishing Limited. 2005. ISBN 978-0-617-01025-8.
- ^ "RLG präsentiert passgenaues ÖPNV-Konzept für Lippetal". www.soester-anzeiger.de (in German). 2024-01-24. Retrieved 2024-04-26.
- ^ Klee, Wolfgang (2001). Eisenbahnen in Westfalen: von den Anfängen bis zur Gegenwart (in German). Aschendorff. ISBN 978-3-402-05260-0.
- ^ "RLE - Ruhr-Lippe-Eisenbahnen AG, Soest". www.rangierdiesel.de. Retrieved 2024-04-26.
- ^ In der Heimat fest verwurzelt: Ruhr-Lippe-Eisenbahnen: Geschichte und Geschichten; 1898 - 1939: Ruhr-Lippe-Kleinbahnen; 1939 - 1980: Ruhr-Lippe-Eisenbahnen; (1900 - 1978 Kleinbahn Neheim - Hüsten - Sundern); (1902 - 1979 Verkehrsbetriebe Kreis Brilon); seit 1. Januar 1980 vereint in der Regionalverkehr Ruhr-Lippe GmbH (in German). Westf. Verkehrsges. 1983.
- ^ Kopmann, Von Beate. "Zerrüttetes Verhältnis: Wechsel in der Geschäftsführung der WVG". www.wn.de (in German). Retrieved 2024-04-26.
- ^ "Regionalverkehr Ruhr-Lippe GmbH (RLG)". www.privat-bahn.de. Retrieved 2024-04-26.
- ^ "Regionalverkehr Ruhr-Lippe GmbH zieht Bilanz". Radio Sauerland (in German). 21 July 2023. Retrieved 2024-04-26.
Literature
edit- Ketteler, Friedhelm, Paul Wambach (1980). In der Heimat fest verwurzelt. Die Ruhr-Lippe-Eisenbahnen: Geschichte und Geschichten. by Ketteler, Friedhelm u. Paul Wambach (in German)
- Richter, Karl-Arne, Georg Ringler (2002). Lexikon deutscher Privatbahnen. Strecken, Fahrzeuge und Betrieb zwischen Küste und Alpen. (in German). ISBN 3-7654-7174-7
- Wolff, Gerd (2000). Deutsche Klein- und Privatbahnen Band 6: Nordrhein-Westfalen, nordöstlicher Teil (in German). ISBN 3-88255-664-1
- Burkert, Raimund (2011). Bahn und Bus zwischen Ruhr und Lippe (in German). Podszun. ISBN 978-3-86133-589-4