Bavarian Zugspitze Railway
The Bavarian Zugspitze Railway is one of four rack railways still working in Germany, along with the Wendelstein Railway, the Drachenfels Railway and the Stuttgart Rack Railway. The metre gauge line runs from Garmisch in the centre of Garmisch-Partenkirchen to the Zugspitzplatt, approximately 300 metres below Zugspitze, the highest mountain in Germany. The line culminates at 2,650 metres above sea level, which makes it the highest railway in Germany and the third highest in Europe. It is also the railway in Europe with the biggest height difference:, the lower half being open-air and the upper half being underground.
The line is operated by the Bayerische Zugspitzbahn Bergbahn AG, whose majority owner is the Garmisch-Partenkirchen Municipal Works. In 2007 the Zugspitze Railway was nominated for a award.
The Zugspitze is accessible via the Seilbahn Zugspitze from Eibsee Lake or Tyrolean Zugspitze Cable Car.
History
Opening of the line
The railway was built between 1928 and 1930 and opened in three stages. The first was the long centre section between Grainau and the Eibsee which went into operation on 19 February 1929. On 19 December 1929 it was followed by the long section between Garmisch and Grainau, including the important tourist connection to the main railway network of the Deutsche Reichsbahn. On 8 July 1930 the last long section between the Eibsee and the – now closed – summit station of Schneefernerhaus was opened, including the final long Zugspitze Tunnel.New summit section since 1987
In 1987 the route of the railway in the summit area was changed and the long "Rosi Tunnel" opened. The tunnel was named after the skier, Rosi Mittermaier, who was the tunnel patroness at the time. The tunnel branches from the 1930-built Zugspitze Tunnel about three-quarters of the way along it, and runs to the somewhat lower Zugspitzplatt plateau at. Here, below the Sonn-Alpin Restaurant is the new Glacier Station in the middle of the ski area.In 1985, during the construction of this uppermost section of the new railway tunnel to the Zugspitzplatt ski area, massive ice was unexpectedly encountered across the entire tunnel cross-section, extending for 19 meters. At the altitude of 2570 meters, the bedrock lays within a permafrost region, the ice temperatures were −1.5 °C. The ice was evidently part of an ice-filled cave system within the extensive karst region of the Zugspitze. The stability of the rack railway tracks was ensured by extensive insulation of the track bed and the entire tunnel cross-section. With this new section, the overall length of the Zugspitze Railway was extended from to its current. For five years, both termini were worked in parallel, but since November 1992 the old route to the Schneefernerhausis is no longer routinely worked.
Route
[Image:Zugspitztunnel.svg|200px|left|thumb|Detailed diagram of the Zugspitze Tunnel]The Zugspitze Railway starts in the quarter of Garmisch at a height of. Here the BZB runs its own terminal station which is operationally entirely separate from the adjacent standard gauge station of the Deutsche Bahn AG. Moreover, it is still just called Garmisch, whereas the DB station bears the double-barrelled name of Garmisch-Partenkirchen, reflecting the contentious merger, formally in 1935, of the two municipalities.For the first, as far as Grainau, the Zugspitze Railway runs as an adhesion line. Of this section, the first run parallel to the Ausserfern Railway, built in 1913. The mountain section begins in Grainau station, is equipped with a Riggenbach rack system, and is long.
[Image:Profil_Zugspitzbahn.png|200px|left|thumb|Simplified profile of the line]The railway climbs steeply uphill from Grainau, passes Eibsee station and finally arrives at the halt of Riffelriss. Immediately after the halt is the entrance to the Zugspitze Tunnel, which together with the Rosi Tunnel takes trains to the current terminus at Zugspitzplatt. About a kilometre before it reaches the terminus, the underground section of the line passes almost exactly below the summit of the Zugspitze, and a few metres away from the border with the Austrian state of Tyrol.