Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe
The Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe is the main public transport company of Berlin, the capital city of Germany. It manages the city's Berlin U-Bahn, tram, bus, replacement services and ferry networks, but not the Berlin S-Bahn urban rail system.
The generally used abbreviation, BVG, has been retained from the company's original name, Berliner Verkehrs-Aktiengesellschaft. Subsequently, the company was renamed Berliner Verkehrs-Betriebe. During the division of Berlin, the BVG was split between BVG and BVB. After reunification, the current formal name was adopted.
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History
The Berliner Verkehrs Aktiengesellschaft was formed in 1928, by the merger of the Allgemeine Berliner Omnibus AG, the Gesellschaft für Elektrische Hoch- und Untergrundbahnen and the Berliner Straßenbahn-Betriebs-GmbH. On 1 January 1938, the company was renamed Berliner Verkehrs-Betriebe, but the acronym BVG was retained.In 1933, the State Commissioner for Berlin, Julius Lippert, appointed the NSDAP politician and later Waffen SS soldier Johannes Engel as head of the BVG Supervisory Board. The board of directors and most of the senior staff were dismissed or disempowered. During World War II, the BVG used some 4000 forced laborers, for whom the company built its own barracks camp.
From 1 August 1949, the BVG networks in West Berlin and East Berlin were operated separately. The two operators were originally known as BVG and BVG, but from 1 January 1969 the eastern operator was renamed as the Kombinat Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe or BVB. After the reunification of Berlin, the two operators were recombined into the Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe on 1 January 1992.
Prior to the division of Berlin, tram lines existed throughout the city, but BVG abandoned all the tram lines in its part of the city, replacing them all by buses by 1967. However BVG retained its tram lines, and on the reunification of Berlin the BVG inherited a considerable network of routes in the eastern half of Berlin.
On 9 January 1984, BVG took over the responsibility for operation of the Berlin S-Bahn services in West Berlin. This urban rail network had previously been operated in both halves of Berlin by the Deutsche Reichsbahn, the state rail operator of East Germany, but had been subject to a boycott in the west after the building of the Berlin Wall. With the reunification of Berlin, responsibility for the S-Bahn reverted to Deutsche Bahn AG, the state rail operator of Germany. The S-Bahn is currently managed by the S-Bahn Berlin GmbH, a subsidiary company of DBAG.
BVG also took part in the Berlin M-Bahn project, an urban maglev system, in the period between 1984 and 1992. The project used a section of the U-Bahn right of way that was out of service due to the building of the Berlin Wall, and was dropped with the fall of that wall.
During the division of East Berlin, numbering were set as follows:
- 101 - BVG Class E Triebwagen
- 102 - BVG Class E Triebwagen
- 103 - BVG Class E Triebwagen
- 104 - BVG Class E Triebwagen
- 105 - BVG Class E Triebwagen
- 110 - BVG Class D
- 125 - BVG Class A1 Triebwagen
- 126 - BVG Class A1U Triebwagen
- 127 - BVG Class A2 Triebwagen
- 128 - BVG Class A2U Triebwagen
- 135 - BVG Class G
- 151 - BVG Class E Beiwagen
- 152 - BVG Class E Beiwagen
- 153 - BVG Class E Beiwagen
- 154 - BVG Class E Beiwagen
- 155 - BVG Class E Beiwagen
- 175 - BVG Class A1 Beiwagen
- 176 - BVG Class A1U Beiwagen
- 177 - BVG Class A2 Beiwagen
- 178 - BVG Class A2U Beiwagen
- 201 - Mitteleinstiegwagen Typ TM 33 and TM 36
- 217 - Rekotriebwagen Typ TE
- 218 - Großraumtriebwagen Typ TDE
- 219 - Tatrawagen Typ KT4D
- 223 - Rekowagen Typ TZ
- 254 - Gothawagen Typ BF 59
- 267 - Rekowagen Typ BE
- 268 - Großraumbeiwagen Typ BDE
- 269 - Rekobeiwagen Typ BZ
- 721 - Arbeitstrieb- and Arbeitsbeiwagen
- 724 - Fahrschulwagen
- 729 - Schleif- and Rangiertriebwagen
In September 2019, BVG launched first in the world large scale Mobility as a service project "Jelbi" together with a Lithuanian mobility startup Trafi.
Operations
BVG operates the U-Bahn, an urban rapid transit rail system. The U-Bahn now comprises nine lines with 173 stations and a total length of. Trains run every two to five minutes during peak hours, every five minutes for the rest of the day and every ten minutes in the evening and on Sunday.U-Bahn service is provided by 1266 carriages, of which 500 are used on the earlier small-profile lines and 766 are used on the later large-profile lines. These cars travel 132 million km, carrying 400 million passengers, over the year.
Trams
BVG operates a tram network comprising 22 tram lines with 377 stops and measuring in length. Of these, nine are designated as part of the MetroNetz, which provide a high frequency service in areas poorly served by the U-Bahn and S-Bahn. These MetroTram tram lines are recognisable by an M prefix to their route number, and are the only tram routes to operate 24 hours a day.Tram service is provided by 391 carriages, of which 154 are modern low floor carriages and 237 are older carriages. Virtually all of the remaining network is within the confines of the former East Berlin, as all the routes in the former West Berlin were abandoned during the period of the city's partition. However, there have been some extensions of routes across the former border since reunification, most remarkably to the city's new main railway station Berlin Hauptbahnhof.
Buses
BVG operates a network of 149 daytime bus routes serving 2634 stops and a total route length of, together with a night bus network of 63 bus routes serving 1508 stops and a total route length of. Seventeen of BVG's bus routes are designated as part of the MetroNetz, which provides a high frequency service in areas poorly served by the U-Bahn and S-Bahn. Like the MetroTram tram routes, these MetroBus routes can be recognised by an M prefix to their route number. A further 13 BVG-operated bus routes are express routes with an X prefix to their route number.BVG bus service is provided by a fleet of 1349 buses, of which no fewer than 407 are double-decker buses. Whilst such buses are common in Ireland and the United Kingdom, their use elsewhere in Europe is extremely uncommon.
Route 218 is partially operated by ex-BVG vintage vehicles now in preservation but used in revenue-earning service. The services depart from Theodor-Heuss Platz every two hours from 11:15 to 19:15 and return from Pfaueninsel from 10:00 to 20:00.
Ferries
Berlin has an extensive network of waterways within its city boundaries, including the Havel, Spree and Dahme rivers, and many linked lakes and canals. These are crossed by six passenger ferry routes that are operated by the BVG.Service
In 2021 a Petition was started against "discrimination and violence by security personnel in public transport" under the hashtag #BVGWeilWirUnsFürchten. In the last decades there have been repeated uses of violence for seemingly racist reasons, as well as racist insults.Fares
VBB
The BVG is a member of the Verkehrsverbund Berlin-Brandenburg, the transport association run by public transport providers in the German states of Berlin and Brandenburg. This body provides a common fare structure that allows travel on various operators in and around Berlin.All BVG services form part of the VBB's common public transport fare structure. This covers the city of Berlin and approximately beyond the city boundaries. The area is split into three zones. Zone A is the central parts of the city, and zone B is the outer parts of Berlin City. Zone C covers an area beyond the city boundaries. Ticket fares have a slight price difference between these three zones. For instance in June 2010, a one-day ticket for zone A+B was priced at €6.10, a zone B+C one-day travel ticket was €6.30, and for all three zones A+B+C, the price was €6.50.