Template:Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt–Nördlingen railway

km
0.000
Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt
222 m
2.300
Stuttgart Nürnberger Straße junction
2.510
Stuttgart Nürnberger Straße
250 m
4.487
Stuttgart-Sommerrain
272 m
6.183
Fellbach
282 m
6.183
Waiblingen
269 m
to Schwäbisch Hall-Hessental
8.700
Waiblingen
(until 1876)
10.512
Rommelshausen
262 m
11.300
Beinstein
12.985
Stetten-Beinstein
(formerly Stetten (Remstal))
247 m
Haldenbach viaduct
14.367
Endersbach
239 m
15.598
Beutelsbach
234 m
18.130
Grunbach
237 m
19.680
Geradstetten
240 m
22.822
Winterbach (b. Schorndorf)
245 m
24.395
Weiler (Rems)
248 m
26.381
Schorndorf
29.946
Urbach (b Schorndorf)
259 m
31.860
Plüderhausen
263 m
35.370
Waldhausen (b Schorndorf)
273 m
39.873
Lorch (Württ)
290 m
43.900
Deinbach
1905 to 1962
47.469
Schwäbisch Gmünd
319 m
Schwäbisch Gmünd Ost
(planned)[1]
52.600
Hussenhofen
1889 to 1975
57.278
Böbingen (Rems)
(formerly Unterböbingen)
381 m
60.766
Mögglingen (Gmünd)
410 m
66.419
Essingen (b. Aalen)
(former station)
464 m
Aalen-West
(planned)[2]
72.165
Aalen
431 m
74.2
Wasseralfingen
430 m
76.0
Hofen (b Aalen)
443 m
78.9
Goldshöfe
469 m
81.5
Frankenreute
(until 2 June 1991)
83.9
Westhausen
88.2
Lauchheim
515 m
91.9
Röttingen (Württ)
(until 28 May 1972)
Bildwasen Tunnel (573.6 m)
95.9
Aufhausen (Württ)
99.2
Bopfingen
485 m
103.6
Trochtelfingen (b Bopfingen)
446 m
104.3
106.5
Pflaumloch
107.8
Baden-Württemberg
Bavaria
state border
110.3
Eger
formerly from Wemding
111.5
70.1
Nördlingen
430 m
km
Source: German railway atlas[3]

This is a route-map template for the Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt–Nördlingen railway, a railway in Germany.

Note: Per consensus and convention, most route-map templates are used in a single article in order to separate their complex and fragile syntax from normal article wikitext. See these discussions [1],[2] for more information.

References

edit
  1. ^ Scheiderer, Eckard (25 February 2016). "Bahnhalt Aalen-West soll 2019 fertig sein". Schwäbische Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 21 July 2020.
  2. ^ "Neuer Bahnhalt Aalen-West auf gutem Weg" (Press release) (in German). Ministerium für Verkehr Baden-Württemberg. 17 November 2016. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
  3. ^ Railway Atlas 2017, pp. 94–95, 168.