St. Gallen S-Bahn
St. Gallen S-Bahn | |
---|---|
Overview | |
Locale | St. Gallen, Switzerland |
Transit type | S-Bahn |
Number of lines | 22 |
Website | Ostwind.ch (in German) |
Operation | |
Began operation | 2001 |
Operator(s) | |
Technical | |
Track gauge |
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The St. Gallen S-Bahn (German: S-Bahn St. Gallen) is an S-Bahn-style commuter rail in Eastern Switzerland and neighbouring areas. The network connects stations in the Swiss cantons of Appenzell Ausserrhoden, Appenzell Innerrhoden, Glarus, Grisons, Schaffhausen, St. Gallen, Thurgau and Zürich, as well as a few stations in Austria (Bregenz, Vorarlberg) and Germany (Konstanz, Baden-Württemberg and Lindau, Bavaria). Some services also operate as part of the Bodensee S-Bahn.[1]
Services are operated by Appenzeller Bahnen (AB), Südostbahn (SOB), and THURBO. Within Switzerland and until Konstanz, services operate within the Tarifverbund Ostwind (Ostwind transit district) of northeastern Switzerland and Liechtenstein.[2]
Lines
[edit]S-Bahn
[edit]As of December 2023[update], the network consists of 22 lines, numbered 1‒2, 4‒7, 9‒10, 12, 14‒15, 17, 20‒26, 44 and 81‒82, using the "S" prefix typical for most S-Bahn systems. Only lines S1, S2, S4, S5, S20, S21, S22, S81 and S82 pass through or terminate in St. Gallen.
Unless stated otherwise, the lines are 1,435 mm or 4 ft 8 1⁄2 in standard gauge adhesion railways.[3][4][5]
The following S-Bahn services operating within the Ostwind transit district and connecting with services of St. Gallen S-Bahn are not part of the latter:
- The S2 (Buchs SG‒Schaan-Vaduz‒Feldkirch), S3 (St. Margrethen‒Bregenz) and R5 (St. Margrethen‒Dornbirn/Feldkirch) services, operated by ÖBB, belong to the Vorarlberg S-Bahn network
- The S6 (Konstanz‒Engen), named Seehas, belongs to Bodensee S-Bahn
- The S2 (Unterterzen/Ziegelbrücke‒Zürich Airport), S9 (Schaffhausen‒Uster), S12 (Schaffhausen/Wil‒Brugg AG), S23 (Romanshorn‒Zürich HB, peak-hour only), S24 (Thayngen/Weinfelden‒Zug), S25 (Linthal‒Zürich HB), S29 (Stein am Rhein‒Winterthur), S30 (Weinfelden‒Winterthur), S33 (Schaffhausen‒Winterthur), S35 (Wil‒Winterthur) and S40 (Rapperswil‒Einsiedeln) are part of Zürich S-Bahn network
- The S27 (Ziegelbrücke–Siebnen-Wangen), nicknamed March shuttle, is a peak-hour service operated by Südostbahn (SOB) which is not part of any S-Bahn network
- Three S-Bahn services (S62, S64, S65) between Schaffhausen and their respective German termini in Erzingen, Singen (Hohentwiel) and Jestetten, are operated by THURBO/SBB GmbH and part of Schaffhausen S-Bahn
RegioExpress
[edit]A RegioExpress (RE) between Herisau and Konstanz (Germany), nicknamed der Konstanzer, supports the S-Bahn network.[6] The S-Bahn network is further complemented by InterRegio (IR) services, such as the IR Voralpen-Express (operated by Südostbahn between St. Gallen and Luzern) and IR 13 of Swiss Federal Railways (Zürich HB–Winterthur–St. Gallen–Sargans–Chur), which stop at all major stations.
# | Route | Notes | Operator |
---|---|---|---|
RE1 | Herisau–St. Gallen–Romanshorn–Kreuzlingen Hafen–Konstanz | Hourly RegioExpress (RE, express train) service supplementing the S-Bahn network. Continues as S14 from Konstanz | THURBO |
Nighttime services
[edit]During weekends, in the night from Friday to Saturday and from Saturday to Sunday, there are nighttime S-Bahn services (designated SN followed by the route number). As of the December 2023 timetable change,[update] the following night routes existed:[7]
- SN14: Weinfelden–Konstanz
- SN15: Frauenfeld–Wil
- SN22: Winterthur–St. Margrethen
- SN30: Winterthur–Romanshorn
- SN71: Kreuzlingen–Romanshorn
- SN72: St. Gallen–Romanshorn
Previous services
[edit]- S3: St. Gallen–St. Margrethen (until 2021, merged with the former S5 into the current S5 of St. Gallen S-Bahn)
- S8: Schaffhausen–Romanshorn–St. Gallen (until 2021, merged with the former S1 into the current S1 of St. Gallen S-Bahn)
- S11: St. Gallen–Gossau SG–Wil SG (until 2018, operated only during peak hour)
- S55: Weinfelden–Sulgen–Gossau SG–St. Gallen (until 2018, operated only during peak hour)
Network map
[edit]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "S-Bahn Bodensee" (in German). Retrieved 18 May 2023.
- ^ "Ostwind zone maps". Retrieved 19 May 2024.
- ^ "Regionalverkehr Ostschweiz" (PDF). Swiss Federal Railways. 13 December 2020. Retrieved 26 December 2020.
- ^ "FahrplanNetzkarte 2024" (PDF). THURBO. 10 December 2023. Retrieved 16 December 2023.
- ^ "Liniennetzplan Südostbahn" (PDF). Südostbahn. 13 December 2020. Retrieved 26 December 2020.
- ^ THURBO.ch: https://www.thurbo.ch/en/travelling/regioexpress/
- ^ Ostwind (10 December 2023). "Nachnetz" (PDF) (in German). Retrieved 13 January 2024.
External links
[edit]- Tarifverbund Ostwind (in German)