Arth–Rigi
Rail car on the Arth–Rigi line, shortly before its arrival at Rigi-Kulm.
Overview
OwnerRigi Railways
Line number602
Termini
Technical
Line length8.55 km (5.31 mi)
Number of tracks1
Rack systemRiggenbach
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Minimum radius120 m (390 ft)
Electrification1500 V DC
Maximum incline20.1%
Route map

km
0.0
Arth
Kirchfeld
Hof
Feld
1.4
Oberarth
Schöntal
Fabrik
Mühlefluh tunnel
Bergstrasse
Bergstrasse
Harmettlen
3.0
Arth-Goldau (station forecourt)
1892–1897
519 m
0.0
Arth-Goldau RB (high level)
519 m
connecting track
Goldau depot
Goldau Eichmatt
(1875–1892 and 2010–2017)
0.6
Goldau A4
543 m
2.1
Kräbel
789 m
Aerial cable car Kräbel-Rigi Scheidegg
Rothenfluh tunnel (67 m)
4.2
Fruttli
1152 m
Federnwald tunnel (48 m)
5.8
Rigi Klösterli
1315 m
6.8
Rigi First
1484 m
7.7
Rigi Staffel
1603 m
8.5
Rigi Kulm
1752 m
Source: Swiss railway atlas[1]

The Arth–Rigi railway line is a Swiss standard gauge rack railway that runs from Arth-Goldau RB to Rigi. It was built by the eponymous Arth-Rigi-Bahn (lit.'Arth-Rigi Railways') between 1873–1875 and operated by that company until its merger with the Vitznau-Rigi-Bahn in 1992 to form Rigi Railways.

History

When the people of Art, canton of Schwyz, heard that a railway to Rigi was to be built from the Lucerne side, they sought and received a concession in 1870 from the Cantonal Council of Schwyz to build lines on the Schwyz route between Staffelhöhe (Rigi Staffel) and Rigi Kulm and between Arth, Oberarth and Kulm. They commissioned the two engineers, Olivier Zschokke and Niklaus Riggenbach, to build the line. The Arter Aktiengesellschaft (Art Ltd.) immediately started building the line from Staffelhöhe to Rigi Kulm (1752 m above sea level). The Vitznau–Rigi Railway company line connected its line with this line in the summer of 1873 and it had to pay fees for the use of the Staffelhöhe–Rigi Kulm section until the merger of the two companies in 1992.

Kulm station of the Arth–Rigi railway line (rack section)
Former track of the valley railway: supporting structure of the first Rigiaa bridge

Construction of the line from Goldau (518 m asl) – those days not more than a hamlet – to Staffel via Kräbel and Klösterli (1315 m asl) started in 1873 and work on the Art-Ober Art-Goldau section started in 1874. On 4 June 1875, the Art-Rigi Railway (Art-Rigi-Bahn) was able to commence operations along the whole line. Although it had lost the race against the Vitznau–Rigi Railway, the line had glorious views and more luxurious coaches. The mountain railway started operating in winter between Goldau and Rigi-Kulm in 1928.

Originally, the standard gauge line began in Art on the shores of Lake Zug.[2] This ran as an adhesion railway to the Goldau station. It was separated from the rack railway in 1881 and run separately as tram, but a connecting track remained. This branch was closed in 1959 and the tracks were dismantled.

Initially, most passengers travelled by boat over Lake Zug. From 1882, the platforms of the ARB were placed parallel to those of the Gotthard Railway on its station forecourt.[2] As the latter, however, claimed more and more space for its rail tracks, the ARB built its notable wrought iron high-level platform over the Gotthard Railway’s tracks in 1897. Now, the majority of the ARB's passengers arrived by train.[2] From 2011 to 2013, a new, two-track station layout was built before the high-level platform and the heritage-listed platform was rebuilt as an entrance hall. Originally, the opening of a new station parallel to the SBB route had been considered, but this had to be discarded because the SBB needed more space in this area due to the building of the Gotthard Base Tunnel.

On 1 May 1907, the ARB was the first standard-gauge rack railway in the world converted to electric traction. The bottom station of the cable car to Rigi Scheidegg (1568 above sea level) is in Kräbel. Earlier the mountain had also been connected by the metre-gauge Rigi–Scheidegg Railway (Rigi-Kaltbad-Scheidegg-Bahn, RSB), but this was dismantled in 1942.

On 3 June 2000, the Arth–Rigi Railway celebrated its 125th anniversary with a steam festival.

View from the entrance hall to the former high-level platform onto the platform area

During the night of 19–20 January 2014, the high-level platform in Arth-Goldau station was raised by two metres so that it could be reconstructed on site.[3] After this renovation, it was lowered by 1.3 m. In July 2017, the new station hall for the high-level platform went into operation and the provisional platforms were dismantled. In the same year, the rectifier in Klösterli was replaced by a more modern, higher current device.

Electrical system

Equipment for electrical operation: 2 rectifier plants
Supply with three-phase current: 15 kV/50 Hz
DC voltage: 1,500 V
Rectifier current: 3,550 kW

Speed

Ascent: 21 km/h
Descent (0–14.4 %): 17 km/h
Descent (14.5–20.0 %): 14 km/h
Travel time Goldau–Rigi Kulm: 35 minutes
Capacity: 1,000 people/h

Rolling stock

BCFhe 2/3 ARB railcar no 6, Rigi Staffel
  • 4 electric push-pull trains of 508 kW (no. 11–14)
  • 1 electric push-pull trains of 824 kW (no. 15)
  • 1 electric railcar of 390 kW (no. 6), test run: 30 August 1911, oldest still operational electric rack train of the world, last general restoration in 1990
  • 1 electric railcar of 448 kW (no. 7)
  • 1 electric locomotive with electric snow blower of 448 kW (no. 8)
  • 4 passenger cars
  • 10 freight wagons, official vehicles, snow plough etc.

Former rolling stock

  • H 1/2, the rack steam locomotives for the mountain line
  • E 3/3 no. 11, the steam locomotive used for the valley line

References

Footnotes

  1. Eisenbahnatlas Schweiz [Swiss railway atlas]. Schweers + Wall. 2012. p. 22. ISBN 978-3-89494-130-7.
  2. 1 2 3 "Talbahn" (in German). Eingestellte Bahnen der Schweiz. Archived from the original on 9 July 2019. Retrieved 9 July 2019.
  3. "Anhebung des Rigi-Bahn-Hochperrons verlief problemlos" (in German). caboruivo.ch. 8 July 2019.

Sources

  • Inäbnit, Florian (2000). Rigi-Bahnen; Zahnradbahn Arth–Rigi (in German). Leissigen: Prellbock Druck & Verlag. ISBN 3-907579-18-6.
  • Sigrist, Sandro (1998). Talbahn Arth–Goldau (in German). Leissigen: Prellbock Druck & Verlag. ISBN 3-907579-08-9.
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