Klingenberg-Colmnitz station
Klingenberg-Colmnitz station is a station on the Dresden–Werdau railway and the start of two former 750 mm gauge railways, the Klingenberg-Colmnitz–Oberdittmannsdorf and the Klingenberg-Colmnitz–Frauenstein railways, in the municipality of Klingenberg in the German state of Saxony. The station is the top station of the Tharandter Steige.
History
The station was built on 11 August 1862 with the opening of the Dresden-Werdau railway. Immediately after the opening, the station at the top of the Tharandter Steige, which was feared by the operators of steam trains, was of great importance, as almost all the trains had to be assisted by bank engines from Tharandt station. Trains had to climb 230 metres of altitude from the valley station on a twelve kilometre-long section.The station initially had fewer regional connections, but it was important as a point for the detachment of bank engines after the completion of the climb. A photograph of the station shows it with only one platform, but, in another photograph, the same area is visible looking towards Freiberg with two platforms. The freight train tracks look rather modest with a total of five tracks.
This changed on 14 September 1898 with the opening of the Klingenberg-Colmnitz–Frauenstein narrow-gauge railway, which was supplemented by the Klingenberg-Colmnitz–Oberdittmannsdorf narrow-gauge railway in 1923. The station precinct was now larger as they can be seen on the depicted track plan. Until the beginning of the 1970s, the railway lines remained in this form. For the exchange of goods, there was only one transhipment hall and two loading cranes, one in the station forecourt and one at the exit of the narrow-gauge railway towards Frauenstein and towards Oberdittmannsdorf. Rollbock devices and transporter wagons were never used on the Klingenberg-Colmnitz–Frauenstein railway and transporter wagons were used only as far as Naundorf on the railway to Oberdittmannsdorf. In addition, a shed with two tracks, each capable of holding two locomotives, a coal shed and a coal store were built in the narrow-gauge section of the station. This locomotive depot had already been built by the opening of the line to Frauenstein. This meant that the track layout of the station was essentially complete.
It was not until 1927 that the two signal boxes W1 and B2 were built to take control of the standard gauge section north of the station building. Around 1930, here was a facility for turning locomotives to the east of the station's workshops. The turntable had three rails and could be used to turn narrow-gauge locomotives.
The standard-gauge tracks were electrified on 25 September 1966. When the two narrow-gauge lines were closed in 1972, the narrow-gauge tracks were removed at Klingenberg-Colmnitz station, but the standard-gauge tracks remained essentially the same. Instead of the possibility of transferring it to a narrow-gauge line, one crane was transferred to a steel construction company and the other was dismantled. The remaining buildings from the narrow-gauge railways were a loading hall and the stand for a transfer crane. The four tracks in the narrow-gauge area were used for dispatching wagons. In 2000, the station was connected to an electronic interlocking. This was the occasion for thoroughly modernising the station to meet modern requirements. The station forecourt was converted into a combined bus station and car park. Since then, the station has been operated with three through tracks; two tracks are adjacent to the entrance building, including one with an outside platform, and there is also a northern overtaking track. An underpass with a lift was built between the two outside platforms. The connection to track 7 is still preserved, as is the standard-gauge track on the former narrow-gauge side of the station. It is no longer usable. In 2009, the freight shed was demolished. The abandoned signal boxes have now been demolished. A functional relic from the narrow-gauge era is the coal shed, which can still be seen in photos in 2011.