Leipziger Verkehrsbetriebe

Leipziger Verkehrsbetriebe
Parent 100 % Local authority (Stadt Leipzig, "City of Leipzig"), through the municipal undertaking Leipziger Versorgungs- und Verkehrsgesellschaft (LVV, "Leipzig Supply and Public Transport Company")
Headquarters

Leipziger Verkehrsbetriebe (LVB) GmbH,
Georgiring 3 • 04103 Leipzig

Germany
Stops ca. 606 Motorbus stops
ca. 515 Tramcar stops
Website www.l.de/verkehrsbetriebe
This article is a translation of the German article Leipziger Verkehrsbetriebe. Images are those that appear in the German-language article. See also: Trams in Leipzig

The Leipziger Verkehrsbetriebe or LVB, literally translated into English as the Leipzig Transport Company, operates the tramway and bus transport services in Leipzig, Germany. The LVB route network is a part of the regional public transport association Mitteldeutscher Verkehrsverbund. LVB was formed by the merger, from 1 January 1917, of two predecessor undertakings, the Großen Leipziger Straßenbahn (GLSt, "Greater Leipzig Tramway Company") and the Leipziger Elektrischen Straßenbahn (LESt, "Leipzig Electric Tramway Company"). The merged undertaking was also known as GLSt until it was reorganized and renamed as the LVB, from 29 July 1938.

Organization

Built by LVB: The Leoliner

The company is organized as a holding company. LVB owns infrastructure such as track, depots and land, and all vehicles. It holds the concession ("license") for public transport in Leipzig, and is responsible for organization, planning and management of public transport. It provides these services through its various subsidiary undertakings. The LVB Group consists of the following undertakings:

These subsidiaries were organized to facilitate tendering of public transport and reduction of public subsidies. They serve outside clients in addition to LVB.

Lines

LVB three-car formation (Großzug) of modernized Tatra T4D-M stock with reconstructed low-floor trailer

Bus route letters were replaced by route numbers with the timetable change effective 5 October 1997. In addition, the tramway service network was again revised from 2001 and a marketing campaign began under the name Das Neue Netz ("The New Network"). Thus the following numbering scheme applies currently in Leipzig:

Tramway Lines

Tram network
Goerdelerring tramway station, served by 87 trams per hour during weekdays.
Angerbrücke Depot

The Leipzig tramway network is the second-largest in Germany (after Berlin) and has a radial lattice structure. In contract to a tangential network, here all lines form the shape of a star. With the exception of line 2, all lines operate via Leipzig Central Station (Hauptbahnhof) and serve at least one of the three city center stops on Goerdelerring, Augustusplatz or Wilhelm-Leuschner-Platz. With the exception of line 14, the tramway services provide a basic 10-minute interval (15-minute interval during evening and weekend service hours). As the result of overlay of lines, central segments are served as frequently as 2–3 minutes. Line 3 provides a 10-minute interval between Knautkleeberg and Heiterblick, branching to serve different terminals in the north. Some services are short workings and are designated with a letter "E" adjacent to the line number. These operate to and from intermediate terminal points. Line 4E works through at Hauptbahnhof (Central Station) to or from Line 12. Lines 12 and 4E operate to their respective central terminals during peak periods (Prager-/Riebeckstraße or Riebeck-/Stötteritzer Straße), where line numbers are changed.

Vehicles

Tramcars

Tatra T4D-M-train with low-floor trailer (NB4), Leipzig

External link: Straßenbahnfuhrpark der Leipziger Verkehrsbetriebe ("LVB Tramcar Fleet") (German)

Motorbuses

MB O 530 Citaro (»Silberpfeil«)

External link: Busfuhrpark der Leipziger Verkehrsbetriebe ("LVB Motorbus Fleet") (German)

History

On 18 May 1872, the Leipziger Pferdeeisenbahn (LPE, "Leipzig Horse Railway) opened service. The Reudnitz tram depot was the first in Leipzig and the location of the LPE head office. Twenty-five years after opening, the LPE owned 1,013 horses, 172 tramcars and five depots. A competing tramway enterprise, the Leipziger Elektrische Straßenbahn (LESt, "Leipzig Electric Tramway Company") started construction of an electric tramway network in 1895. This prompted the LPE to begin electrification. The Große Leipziger Straßenbahn (GLSt, "Greater Leipzig Tramway Company") organized as the legal successor to the LPE, managed to open the first electric tramway in Leipzig on 17 April 1896. The LESt opened service soon thereafter, on 20 May 1896. To the regret of many residents, the last horse tramway service operated on 16 April 1897.

Suburban lines were developed from 1900, and motorbus services from 1913. After the First World War, the privately owned companies were dissolved and replaced by a municipal undertaking, which operated under the old name Große Leipziger Straßenbahn (GLSt). This was renamed Leipziger Verkehrsbetriebe (LVB, "Leipzig Transport Company") from 1938, incorporating motorbus, trolleybus and taxi services. In 1949, following establishment of the DDR, LVB was integrated with other (formerly private) enterprises taken into state ownership. It became part of the (nationalized) transport undertakings operated as Volkseigener Betrieb Kombinate ("People's Collective Enterprises") in 1970. Following the fall of the DDR, LVB was reorganized as a company with limited liability (GmbH), owned by the Leipzig local authority and the district (Landkreis) of Leipzig.

A detailed overview of the development of the Leipzig tramway, segment by segment, may be found in the article Leipzig Tramway Network History.

Historic Tramcars

Motor Tram Type 13:

Technical Data
Series 416-505
In Service 5 November 1906
Builder GLSt central workshops, Leipzig
Electrical Equipment AEG / LEW
Controller Two, Type K26w
Motors Two, BM 20/600, 16 kW
Brakes Air, hand

Motor Tram Type 27:

Technical Data for Motor Tram Number 981
Built 1913/1929
Seats 18 (cross seats)
Standing places 20
Mass 11.9 tonnes
Length 8.86 m
Axlebase (wheelbase) 2 m
Brakes Air (motor compressor), electric, hand
Controller Schleifringfahrschalter AEG-FB3sp41
Motors Two, AEG-USL253a, 34 kW

Motor Tram Type 29:

Technical Data
Series 1001-1056
In Service 18 June 1930
Builder Linke-Hofmann-Busch AG, Bautzen
Electrical Equipment Sachsenwerk, Dresden-Niedersedlitz
Controllers Two, Type SNF
Motors Four, GBv 237, 45 kW
Brakes Air, electric, hand, track

Motor Tram Type 30:

Technical Data
Series 1601-1615
In Service 13 October 1951

See also

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