This was a guided tour of the future main station in Stuttgart called Stuttgart21.
More pictures: https://imgur.com/a/8QnDQrO
(Disclaimer: The descriptions could be wrong for the east/west orientation :P)
This was a guided tour of the future main station in Stuttgart called Stuttgart21.
More pictures: https://imgur.com/a/8QnDQrO
(Disclaimer: The descriptions could be wrong for the east/west orientation :P)
They started this project 14(!) years ago, planned to be finished 2019, costing over 11 billion Euros.
Nobody wants it.
The site is still under construction (thought to be finished next year).
Wait, nobody asked for a new station?
It’s “needed” to increase throughput.
The current head station is a head station meaning it ends here and then they do a U-turn and go back different direction.
Also it’s planned as a fully digital station which is supposed to increase the throughput as well as the trains can be dynamically throttled when enetering the station.
Current trackplan:
Stuttgart 21:
Planned changes on a map:
39 trains per hour with the old station is still more than 32 per hour with Stuttgart 21. Also groundwater, nature and referendum are totally meaningless words for anyone supporting this idea.
May be. I just thought the tour was interesting and wanted to share a bit what I was told.
But you aren’t wrong with your position.
Don’t get me wrong. I like the architecture too. Just trying to sneak in some facts.
Honestly it seems like a sensible change. If I’m not mistaken Frankfurt Hbf is also a head station and you lose a ton of time because of it.
If I remember our guide correct, the current max speed into the main station is 50kp/h max vs S21 being at 80kph.
Because it’s planned as the first fully digital station (meaning only digital equipped trains can pass due to signaling) it should be able to not require full stops or similar.
At least what the guide told us seemed all logical and dainty but it still is taking a ton of time and money.
Those track diagrams look super cool
Oh, there were ppl who wanted it, just not the people like you and me. They held a referendum: about 60% were against it.
Ugh, what was the point in the referendum then 🙄