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U3 (Nuremberg U-Bahn)

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Underground railway line in Nuremberg, Germany

U3
Overview
Termini
Stations14
Service
TypeRapid transit
SystemNuremberg U-Bahn
Operator(s)Verkehrs-Aktiengesellschaft Nürnberg
Rolling stockVAG Class DT3
History
Opened14 June 2008 (2008-06-14)
Latest extension15 October 2020 (2020-10-15)
Technical
Line length9.2 km (5.7 mi)
Number of trackstwo
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) standard gauge
Electrification750 V DC third rail
Route map

Legend
0.0 km Großreuth bei Schweinau
1.1 km Gustav-Adolf-Straße
1.7 km Sündersbühl
to Röthenbach U2
to Fürth Hauptbahnhof / Bamberg Deutsche Bahn S-Bahn
2.6 km Rothenburger Straße S-Bahn
to Fürth Hardhöhe U1
3.6 km Plärrer Nuremberg tramway
to Crailsheim Deutsche Bahn S-Bahn R-Bahn
to Roth
to Augsburg
Deutsche Bahn S-Bahn
Nürnberg-Steinbühl
Weißer Turm
4.4 km Opernhaus
Lorenzkirche
4.9 km Nürnberg Hauptbahnhof Deutsche Bahn S-Bahn R-Bahn Nuremberg tramway
to Langwasser Süd U1
Dürrenhof
to Regensburg Deutsche Bahn
to Feucht / Schwandorf S-Bahn
to Hersbruck Deutsche Bahn
Pegnitz River
5.7 km Wöhrder Wiese Nuremberg tramway
6.2 km Rathenauplatz Nuremberg tramway
to Flughafen U2 Airport interchange
7.2 km Maxfeld
7.6 km Kaulbachplatz
8.2 km Friedrich-Ebert-Platz Nuremberg tramway
8.7 km Klinikum Nord
9.1 km Nordwestring
9.2 km

The U3 is an underground line in Nuremberg. The line was opened on 14 June 2008. It is about 9.2 kilometres (5.7 mi) long, making it the shortest in the system. The number of stations is 14. The termini are Nordwestring and Großreuth. U3 trains are run driverless and have been since the opening of the line. U3 shares part of its route (from Rathenauplatz to Rothenburger Straße) with the older U2. Due to the circuitous horseshoe-shaped route, U3 is not always the fastest public transit option between its stations. For example, the buses that run along B4R are - per the official schedules - faster for getting from Nordwestring to Gustav Adolf Straße and the tramway line 4 is faster for getting from Friedrich Ebert Platz to Plärrer than the respective U3 connection.

History

While the original plans of the U-Bahn network to be all called for at least three main trunk lines on their entire dedicated corridors, financial constraints and the decision not to abandon the Tramway network as had been planned at the time the U-Bahn began construction, made it clear after the construction of U2 that a third trunk line would be economical only if the Tram network was abandoned after all. A political consensus emerged to keep the Tram network, but still expand the U-Bahn system, if a bit slower and more moderately. Therefore, it was decided to use parts of existing tunnels for the U3 instead of building an entire dedicated tunnel. However, as it was deemed impossible to reduce the frequency and the existing signalling system was at its limits along the line U2, the decision was taken to automate the existing line to allow for higher throughput. The new U3 thus opened as the first fully automated U-Bahn in Germany and has been fully driverless from its first day of commercial operations. The U2 was automated in the following two years whereas U1, the oldest and longest line in the system and the only one to operate outside the municipal boundaries of Nuremberg is still fully driver operated. U3 which forms a rough C-shape with both branches lying to the West of downtown has been extended twice on its northern branch, first in 2011 with the two new stations Kaulbachplatz and Friedrich Ebert Platz and then in 2017 with the two new stations Klinikum Nord and Nordwestring. The 2011 extension of the northern branch of the U3 led to the - to date - last major permanent shutdown of service on part of the Nuremberg tramway network, as service thru Pirckheimer Straße was shut down (while the rails and overhead wiring remained as a backup in case of closures on other routes) due to the potential of one line "cannibalizing" the ridership of the other. An extension of the southern branch towards Großreuth was opened on 15 October 2020. Further extensions are under construction along the southern branch of U3.

Planned extensions

Out of all Nuremberg U-Bahn lines, U3 is the youngest and the only one with extensions currently under construction. After the northern branch reached an endpoint for the time being at Nordwestring in May 2017, construction is ongoing along the southern branch. An extension west towards Großreuth bei Schweinau was opened on 15 October 2020. Further extensions towards Kleinreuth bei Schweinau and Gebersdorf are already under construction. There is a longstanding plan to use part or all of the old Bibertbahn right of way for further extensions. An expansion of the Northern branch is not planned as of 2018 but variously debated and suggested politically.

Stations

The Undergroundstation Wöhrder Wiese
Stations Transfers
U3
Gebersdorf planned opening 2025
Kleinreuth planned opening 2025
Großreuth
Gustav-Adolf-Straße Bus
Sündersbühl  
Rothenburger Straße U2 S1
Plärrer U1 U2 Nuremberg tramway Nuremberg tramway Nuremberg tramway Bus
Opernhaus U2
Hauptbahnhof U1 U2 S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S-Bahn R-Bahn Deutsche Bahn Nuremberg tramway Nuremberg tramway Nuremberg tramway Nuremberg tramway Bus
Wöhrder Wiese U2 Nuremberg tramway
Rathenauplatz U2 Nuremberg tramway Bus
Maxfeld Bus
Kaulbachplatz
Friedrich-Ebert-Platz Nuremberg tramway Nuremberg tramway Bus
Klinikum Nord
Nordwestring Bus

Operations

During the rush hour peak, trains on U3 leave every 3 1/3 minutes (200 seconds) which overlaps with U2 to a 100-second headway between Rathenauplatz and Rothenburger Straße. There is no service at night (roughly between 1 AM and 5 AM) not even on weekends. A few trains beginning on the U3 branches (Nordwestring and Großreuth) are routed to the U2 branch instead (Röthenbach and Airport respectively) and vice versa.

Opening dates

  • 28 January 1984: Plärrer ↔ Rothenburger Straße (as part of U2)
  • 23 September 1988: Plärrer ↔ Hauptbahnhof (as part of U2)
  • 24 September 1990: Hauptbahnhof ↔ Rathenauplatz (as part of U2)
  • 14 June 2008: Gustav-Adolf-Straße ↔ Rothenburger Straße (opening of U3)
  • 14 June 2008: Rathenauplatz ↔ Maxfeld (opening of U3)
  • 11 December 2011: Maxfeld ↔ Friedrich-Ebert-Platz
  • 22 May 2017: Friedrich Ebert Platz ↔ Nordwestring
  • 15 October 2020: Gustav-Adolf-Straße ↔ Großreuth bei Schweinau

Rolling stock

Due to having relied on automatic operation from day one, U3 has only ever had the VAG Class DT3 rolling stock, which was designed for automatic operation. The VAG Class G1 currently in use on U1 is capable of both automatic and manual operation and could in the future be used on U3 but isn't as of 2022.

See also

References

  1. "Nürnberg: Kehrt die Straßenbahn zurück in die Pirckheimerstraße?".
  2. "Straßenbahn-Reaktivierung: Eine Chance für die Linie 9?".
  3. "U3-Ausbau: Großauftrag für Max Bögl und Hochtief".
  4. "Vorstoß für U-Bahnverbindung nach Neu-Wetzendorf".
  5. "Jetzt nach Großreuth bei Schweinau: Verlängerung der Nürnberger U-Bahn". 15 October 2020.
  6. "Tunnelanschlag zur Verlängerung der U3 in Nürnberg". 7 August 2020.
  7. "Die Erweiterung der U-Bahnlinie U3 - Bauabschnitt 2.2 im Südwesten (Kleinreuth bei Schweinau bis Gebersdorf) - U-Bahnbau".
  8. "U3-Ausbau: Großauftrag für Max Bögl und Hochtief".
  9. "Jetzt nach Großreuth bei Schweinau: Verlängerung der Nürnberger U-Bahn". 15 October 2020.
  10. "Tunnelanschlag zur Verlängerung der U3 in Nürnberg". 7 August 2020.
  11. "Die Erweiterung der U-Bahnlinie U3 - Bauabschnitt 2.2 im Südwesten (Kleinreuth bei Schweinau bis Gebersdorf) - U-Bahnbau".
  12. "U3-Ausbau: Großauftrag für Max Bögl und Hochtief".
Nuremberg U-Bahn
Lines
  • U1
  • U2
  • U3
  • U11
    • defunct
  • U21
    • defunct
Rolling stock
Stations
Public Transport in Nuremberg
Nuremberg U-Bahn
  • U1
  • U2
  • U3
  • U11
    • defunct
  • U21
    • defunct
Nuremberg S-Bahn
  • S1
  • S2
  • S3
  • S4
  • S5
Nuremberg Tramway
  • Nuremberg tramway
  • Nuremberg tramway
  • Nuremberg tramway
  • Nuremberg tramway
  • Nuremberg tramway
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