S2 (Rhine-Main S-Bahn)

The S2 service of the S-Bahn Rhein-Main system bearing the KBS (German scheduled railway route) number 645.2 is a railway connection between the small Taunus town Niedernhausen and Dietzenbach.

S2
Overview
StatusOperational
OwnerRhein-Main-Verkehrsverbund
Line number2
LocaleFrankfurt Rhine-Main
Termini
Stations27
Service
TypeRapid transit, Commuter rail
SystemS-Bahn Rhein-Main
Services
Route number645.2
Operator(s)DB Regio
Depot(s)Frankfurt Hbf
Rolling stockDBAG Class 423
History
Opened28 May 1978 (1978-05-28)
Technical
Line length54.7 km (34.0 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
ElectrificationOverhead line

Usually DBAG Class 423 railcars are used on this service. Its predecessor class 420 is only used for shortened shuttle services.

According to a news report issued by Hessenschau, the S2 is the least punctual of the system, with only 83% of trains leaving on time.[1]

Routes edit

Main-Lahn railway edit

The service uses the tracks of the Main-Lahn Railway between Niedernhausen and Frankfurt Central Station. This route is also used by regional trains in the section Niedernhausen–Frankfurt-Höchst. Between Frankfurt-Höchst and Central Station this service shares the Main-Lahn line with freight and shunting operations. National and regional services use the parallel running Taunus railway in this section. The Main-Lahn railway was completed on 15 October 1877 and has been used by S-Bahn services since 1978.

City tunnel edit

The city tunnel is an underground, pure S-Bahn route used by almost all services (except for the S7 service which terminates at the central station). The tunnel was opened in four stages in 1978, 1983, 1990 and 1992. In a short section between Mühlberg and Offenbach-Kaiserlei the Frankfurt Schlachthof–Hanau railway is used. The section from Mühlberg to Offenbach Ost through the Offenbach City Tunnel was opened in 1995.

Rodgau railway edit

This line was opened in 1896 and has been used since 2003 only by S-Bahn services.

Offenbach-Bieber–Dietzenbach railway edit

This line was opened on 1 December 1898 and has been used since 2003 only by S-Bahn services.

History edit

Year Stations Route
1974 (R2) 11 Niedernhausen – Frankfurt Hbf
1978 13 (+2) Niedernhausen – Hauptwache
1983 14 (+1) Niedernhausen – Konstablerwache
1990 17 (+3) Niedernhausen – Frankfurt Süd
1992 16 (+1, -2) Niedernhausen – Mühlberg
1995 17 (+2, -1) Niedernhausen – Frankfurt Süd
2002 18 (+1) Niedernhausen – Frankfurt Süd
2003 26 (+10, -2) Niedernhausen – Dietzenbach
2007 27 (+1) Niedernhausen – Dietzenbach

The S2 was one of the first six services of the Rhine-Main S-Bahn system. In a prior test operation it ran between Niedernhausen and Frankfurt Central Station. The service was then called R2 where the letter "R" stands for regional. In 1975 the R2 was the system's first service employing the class 420 trainset. After the opening of the Frankfurt Citytunnel the service was renamed to S2 and extended to the new Hauptwache underground station. Further extensions of the tunnel followed in 1983 (Konstablerwache) and 1990 (Ostendstraße and Lokalbahnhof) so that the Südbahnhof (South station) became the service's eastern terminal. After the opening of the eastern Citytunnel branch to the Mühlberg station in 1992 the S2 started operation in this section shutting down its service to Lokalbahnhof and Südbahnhof until in 1995 the service resumed its pre-1992 operation. In 2002, Eppstein-Bremthal station was completed increasing the number of stations to 18.

In 2003 the Offenbach Citytunnel and the Rodgau railway was included. After two years of construction work this route was changed to S-Bahn operation. Since then the new eastern terminal station is Dietzenbach. In 2007 the new Frankfurt-Zeilsheim station was included to the S2 service.

Operation edit

  1. Niedernhausen – Dietzenbach
  2. Niedernhausen – Offenbach Ost
  3. Niedernhausen – Frankfurt Hbf
  4. Hofheim – Frankfurt Hbf
  5. Griesheim – Dietzenbach
  6. Offenbach Ost – Dietzenbach
 
End of the line at Niedernhausen
 
Crossing the valley at Eppstein
  Journey time Station Transfer S-Bahn service
since
1 2 3 4 5 6

Rheingau-Taunus-Kreis edit

0 Niedernhausen 1978

Main-Taunus-Kreis edit

3 +3 Eppstein-Niederjosbach 1978
5 +2 Eppstein-Bremthal 2002
7 +2 Eppstein 1978
12 +5 Hofheim-Lorsbach 1978
15 +3   Hofheim 1978
18 +3   Kriftel 1978

Frankfurt am Main edit

20 +2   Frankfurt-Zeilsheim 2007
23 +3 Farbwerke   1978
26 +3 Frankfurt-Höchst   1978
28 +2 Frankfurt-Nied   1978
31 +3 Frankfurt-Griesheim   1978
37 +6   Frankfurt Hbf                     1978
36 +5   Frankfurt Hbf (tief)                     1978
38 +2 Taunusanlage               1978
40 +2   Hauptwache                           1978
42 +2   Konstablerwache                       1983
43 +1 Ostendstraße               1990
45 +2   Mühlberg       1992

Offenbach edit

48 +3   Offenbach-Kaiserlei       1995
50 +2   Ledermuseum       1995
52 +2   Marktplatz       1995
55 +3   Offenbach Ost       1995
57 +3   Offenbach-Bieber   2003

Kreis Offenbach edit

61 +4   Heusenstamm 2003
64 +3   Dietzenbach-Steinberg 2003
66 +2   Dietzenbach-Mitte 2003
68 +2   Dietzenbach 2003

References edit

  1. ^ Germany, hessenschau de, Frankfurt (2020-01-12). "Fast jede zehnte S-Bahn kommt zu spät". hessenschau.de (in German). Retrieved 2020-10-02.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links edit