Trolleybuses in Poland

The first trolleybus network in Poland opened in Poznań in 1930. There were 7 municipal systems operational after World War Two, partially inherited after the Germans; the trolleybus transportation reached its climax in the early 1960s, with some 130 vehicles in Warsaw alone. Most systems were closed in the 1970s. Currently there are 3 networks in service, in Gdynia, Lublin and Tychy. The total number of vehicles operational is about 260.

trolleybus in Warsaw, mid-1950s

History

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trolleybus in Poznań, 1930

The first trolleybus line in Poland was opened in Poznań in 1930, though in what is now Poland the first line briefly operated in Breslau (now Wrocław) in 1912-1913. During World War Two new systems, mostly reduced to single lines, were opened in Allenstein (now Olsztyn),[1] Gotenhafen (before and now Gdynia), [2] Landsberg (now Gorzów Wielkopolski),[3] Liegnitz (now Legnica), [4] and Waldenburg (now Wałbrzych),[5] with other openings planned.[6] The network in Gorzów was discontinued, but the other ones kept operating also after 1945.

In the early post-war period there were 7 municipal trolleybus systems operational: except the ones opened earlier, new networks were launched in Warsaw (1946) and Lublin (1953). Though the Legnica network was closed in 1956, the trolleybus transportation enjoyed its heyday in the early 1960s, when the total number of vehicles exceeded 300: some 130 trolleybuses served in Warsaw, 40-60 in Gdynia, Lublin and Wałbrzych each, and around 20 in Olsztyn and Poznań each. [7]

In the late 1960s the trolleybus transportation in Poland went into decline. The networks started to shrink; the Poznań one was closed in 1970 (after 40 years of service), the Olsztyn one in 1971 (after 32 years), the Wałbrzych one in 1973 (after 29 years) and the Warsaw one in 1973 (after 27 years). Existing systems in Gdynia and Lublin were being reduced, kept deteriorating and local municipal authorities considered scrapping them altogether.[8]

In the 1980s trolleybus networks were opened or re-opened in Dębica,[9] Tychy, Słupsk and Warszawa. Most of them proved ephemeral and reduced to few lines except Tychy, where the system survived and following the period of stagnation it started to grow. The trolleybus transportation turned the corner in the 1990s: new lines were being opened and fleets were getting renewed. Today all 3 networks are deemed indispensable components of municipal public transport systems. However, except Olsztyn no other city considered launch of a new trolleybus network.[10]

Currently operational systems

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As of 2020 there were 3 trolleybus networks operational in Poland, in Gdynia (with 3 lines reaching to Sopot), Lublin and Tychy.[11] In all cities public transport is provided also by buses and trains.

category measure Gdynia Lublin Tychy
date established year 1943 1953 1982
operator name PKT Gdynia MPK Lublin TLT Tychy
operator focus type trolleybus-only municipal transport trolleybus-only
ownership type municipal municipal municipal
total supply vehicle-km 5.383.116 5.028.500 1.292.000
catenary km 87 146 44
fleet[12] # of vehicles 103 139 21
regular lines[13] # of routes 12 13 7
average vehicle annual mileage km 56.074 41.558 56.174
density of supply vehicle-km/inhabitants 19,1 14,8 10,1
average energy consumption kWh/km 1,98 2,24 1,87
catenary independence % 8,71 2,25 2,57
cost PLN/vehicle-km 10,58 10,20 10,45

See also

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Footnotes

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  1. ^ two lines, length unknown, Anna Powałka, Maria Tkocz, Zlikwidowane sieci trolejbusowe w Polsce, [in:] Acta Geographica Silesiana 7 (2010), p. 57
  2. ^ 1 line, length 11 km, Marcin Połom, Tadeusz Palmowski, Rozwój komunikacji trolejbusowej w Gdyni, Pelplin 2009, ISBN 978-83-7380-776-1p. 58
  3. ^ 2 lines, total length 15 km, Powałka, Tkocz 2010, p. 56
  4. ^ 1 line, length 8 km, Przemysław Nadolski, Dariusz Walczak, Zbigniew Danyluk, Bohdan Turżański, Tramwaje dolnośląskie, vol. 2 (Historia tramwajów i trolejbusów w Legnicy), Rybnik 2015, ISBN 978-83-63652-14-2, p. 118
  5. ^ Powałka, Tkocz 2010, p. 58
  6. ^ wiring has been completed in Jelenia Góra and Bydgoszcz, but the Soviets arrived before the trolleys did
  7. ^ Powałka, Tkocz 2010, pp. 57-58
  8. ^ Tomasz T. Pieńkowski, Trolejbusy w historii i kulturze Lublina, [in:] Kultura Współczesna 2 (2012), p. 88
  9. ^ the Dębica network was the only one in Poland not launched by public administration; it was operated by Igloopol, a local plant for food industry, largely to facilitate transport of its employees, Krzysztof Czuchra: 30 lat temu na ulice Dębicy i Straszęcina wyjechały trolejbusy, [in:] Ziemia Debicka service 2018 [accessed September 15, 2021].
  10. ^ Tomasz Kurs, odpadają, jest szansa na tramwaje, [in:] Gazeta Wyborcza 27.09.2007 [dostęp 25. września 2021]
  11. ^ unless footnote is provided against a specific category, all data is for the year of 2019 and comes from Marcin Wołek, Agnieszka Szmelter-Jarosz, Marcin Koniak, Transformation of Trolleybuses Transport in Poland. Does In-Motion Charging (Technology) Matter?, [in:] Research Gate service 2020
  12. ^ sites of local operators in Gdynia, Lublin, Tychy
  13. ^ sites of local operators in Gdynia, Lublin, Tychy

Further reading

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  • Marcin Połom, Tadeusz Palmowski, Rozwój komunikacji trolejbusowej w Gdyni, Pelplin 2009, ISBN 978-83-7380-776-1, p. 58
  • Anna Powałka, Maria Tkocz, Zlikwidowane sieci trolejbusowe w Polsce, [in:] Acta Geographica Silesiana 7 (2010), pp. 55-70
  • Marcin Wołek, Agnieszka Szmelter-Jarosz, Marcin Koniak, Transformation of Trolleybuses Transport in Poland. Does In-Motion Charging (Technology) Matter?, [in:] Research Gate service 2020
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