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Trolleybuses in Solingen

Coordinates: 52°50′N 13°50′E / 52.833°N 13.833°E / 52.833; 13.833
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Solingen trolleybus system
A Hess trolleybus in Solingen, 2010
Operation
Locale
Open19 June 1952 (1952-06-19)
StatusOpen
Routes6
Operator(s)Stadtwerke Solingen
Infrastructure
Electrification600 V DC
Overview
System map, 2020.
Websitehttp://www.sobus.net Stadtwerke Solingen (in German)

The Solingen trolleybus (German: Oberleitungsbus Solingen), also known locally as Stangentaxi, serves the city of Solingen, in the federal state of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.

Opened on 19 June 1952, it is the largest of the three remaining trolleybus systems in Germany (the others being in Eberswalde and Esslingen am Neckar). The network centres on Graf-Wilhelm-Platz in Solingen city centre, and one of its lines extends into the neighbouring municipality of Wuppertal. It is operated by Stadtwerke Solingen, the municipal works company.

History

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The first trolleybus route was brought into service on 19 June 1952. The network was a conversion of the previous tram network. Conversion from tramway was completed on 2 December 1959. Extensions to the system were opened in 1981–82 – Schlagbaum to Hasselstraße (2.6 kilometres (1.6 mi)) and Höhscheid to Brockenberg (0.8 kilometres (0.50 mi)) respectively – and in 1993 from Aufderhöhe to Mangenberg/Graf-Wilhelm-Platz (8.2 kilometres (5.1 mi)).

The mid-1990s saw plans to replace the trolleybuses with diesel buses, but this was never pursued; trolleybuses being preferred over diesel vehicles because of superior acceleration and better suitability for the hilly terrain.

In 2009, the last non-articulated trolleybus was withdrawn from service. In November of the same year, route 683 was extended from its trolleybus turntable (which can't be used by articulated buses) in Unterburg to Burger Bahnhof using diesel motors of the then-newest Hess trolleybuses. In August 2014, route 683 was similarly extended on its northern end from Vohwinkel Schwebebahn station to Vohwinkel railway station using diesel motors.

In the late 2010s, the Batterie-Oberleitungs-Bus (BOB) project started to be developed. Using in-motion charging on non-electrified streets, Stadtwerke Solingen plans to convert all of its diesel bus lines to electric operation. The first diesel bus route to be converted this way has been route 695 from Gräfrath Abteiweg to Meigen, which started electric service on 31 October 2019. It uses the existing trolleybus wires between Unionstraße and Bahnhof Mitte, with only short new sections being constructed at junctions of route 695 and at its terminuses.

Network

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A Solingen trolleybus at Graf-Wilhelm-Platz

As of 2022, 7 lines are in operation, with weekday frequencies indicated:

Route Itinerary Frequency non-electrified sections
681 Solingen Hbf (Ohligs) – Merscheid – Mangenberg – Graf-Wilhelm-Platz – Solingen Mitte station – Hästen every 10 minutes wholly electrified
682 Solingen Hbf (Ohligs) – Wald – Central – Graf-Wilhelm-Platz – Solingen-Grünewald station – Höhscheid-Brockenberg every 10 minutes wholly electrified
683 Wuppertal-Vohwinkel station – Vohwinkel Schwebebahn – Gräfrath – Central – Graf-Wilhelm-Platz – Solingen Mitte station – Krähenhöhe – Burg Brücke (Unterburg) – Burger Bahnhof every 10 minutes, every 30 minutes between Krähenhöhe and Burg Vohwinkel station – Vohwinkel Schwebebahn;

Burg Seilbahn – Burger Brücke

684 Hasselstraße – Graf-Wilhelm-Platz – Solingen Mitte station – Schule Widdert every 15 minutes wholly electrified
685 Graf-Wilhelm-Platz – Klingenhalle – Schmalzgrube – Aufderhöhe every 30 minutes wholly electrified
686 Graf-Wilhelm-Platz – Mangenberg – Schmalzgrube – Aufderhöhe every 30 minutes wholly electrified
695 Gräfrath Abteiweg – Graf-Wilhelm-Platz – Solingen-Mitte station – Meigen every 30 minutes Abteiweg – Unionstraße;

Mitte station – Meigen

Routes 681 and 682 interchange with the city's principal railway station – Solingen Hbf – which lies in the western suburb of Ohligs. Line 683 – at 14.5 kilometres (9.0 mi), by far the network's longest – also connects to the Wuppertal Schwebebahn at Vohwinkel, the northern end of the route and the western terminus of the Schwebebahn. The southern extent of 683 is the town of Burg an der Wupper, which contains Schloss Burg (Burg Castle). Burg is also home to the only surviving trolleybus turntable in the world.

Parts of routes 683 and 695 are non-electrified and are operated using electricity saved from in-motion charging, or diesel motors.

Fleet

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As of early 2007 the fleet stands at 49 vehicles: 15 articulated Berkhof buses (2001/2), 20 articulated Van Hool buses (2002/3), and 14 three-axle MAN buses (1986-7). The latter are due for replacement during 2008. The power supply is 600 V DC.

See also

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References

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  • Kenning, Ludger; Lehmann, Jürgen (2011). Obusse in Deutschland [Trolleybuses in Germany] (in German). Vol. Band 2: Nordrhein-Westfalen, Hessen. Nordhorn: Kenning. ISBN 9783933613318.
  • Lehmann, Jürgen (2002). Der O-Bus in Solingen [The Trolleybus in Solingen] (in German). Nordhorn: Kenning. ISBN 3933613558.
  • Walther, Christian (2002). 50 Jahre Obus in Solingen [Fifty Years of Trolleybuses in Solingen] (in German). Freiburg: EK-Verlag. ISBN 3882558423.
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Media related to Trolleybuses in Solingen at Wikimedia Commons Media related to Trolleybuses in Wuppertal at Wikimedia Commons

52°50′N 13°50′E / 52.833°N 13.833°E / 52.833; 13.833