Trams in Zurich

Trams in Zurich
Bahnhofstrasse, Zurich's premier shopping street
Operation
LocaleZürich
Open1882 (142 years ago) (1882)
StatusOperational
Routes15[1]
Owner(s)City of Zurich
Operator(s)Verkehrsbetriebe Zürich
Infrastructure
Track gauge1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) metre gauge
Propulsion system(s)Electric
Electrification600 V DC overhead
Stock258
Statistics
Track length (double)72.9 km (45.3 mi)[2]
Track length (total)171.9 km (106.8 mi)[2]
Route length118.7 km (73.8 mi)[2]
Passengers in 2019203.2 million[3]
Overview
Websitehttp://www.vbz.ch/ www.vbz.ch

Trams make an important contribution to public transport in the city of Zurich in Switzerland. The tram network serves most city neighbourhoods, and is the backbone of public transport within the city, albeit supplemented by the inner sections of the Zurich S-Bahn, along with urban trolleybus and bus routes, as well as two funicular railways, one rack railway and passenger boat lines on the river and on the lake. The trams and other city transport modes operate within a fare regime provided by the cantonal public transport authority Zürcher Verkehrsverbund (ZVV), which also covers regional rail and bus services.[4][5][6]

The city's trams are operated by the Verkehrsbetriebe Zürich (VBZ), which also manages the tramway infrastructure within the city, but the city's tram tracks are also used by two other operations. The Glattalbahn tram services to the Glattal area to the north of the city interwork with the city tram services and are also operated by the VBZ, although in this case it does so as a sub-contractor to the Verkehrsbetriebe Glattal (VBG). Trains of the independent Forchbahn (FB) light railway also use the city's tram lines to reach their city centre terminus.[7]

Trams have been a consistent part of Zurich's streetscape since the 1880s, when the first horse tram ran. Electrified from the 1890s, they have seen off challenges including proposals to replace them by trolleybuses and by a metro or U-Bahn. With a relatively static city network from the 1930s to the late 1970s, the city's trams have been expanding again since then. Recent expansions have taken the network into the suburbs beyond the city boundary, covering areas it retreated from in the first part of the 20th century. Further extensions have been approved, both to the city tram network itself, and by the introduction of a new light rail system in the Limmat Valley that will interwork with the city trams.

History[edit]

Beginnings[edit]

One of Zürich's horse trams in 1900

Various projects to introduce trams to Zurich were proposed from the 1860s onwards. It was not until 1882, however, that the first tram operated in the city. These initial trams were operated by the Zürcher Strassenbahn Gesellschaft [de] (ZStG), a private company, and were of standard gauge (1,435 mm or 4 ft 8+12 in gauge) and horse-drawn.[8]

By 1888 the first electric tramway in Switzerland (the Vevey–Montreux–Chillon tramway) had opened, and, in 1894, another private company, the Elektrische Strassenbahn Zürich [de] (EStZ), started operating metre gauge (3 ft 3+38 in gauge) electric trams in Zurich. The EStZ only survived for two years before it was taken over by the City of Zurich, who renamed it the Städtische Strassenbahn Zürich (StStZ). The following year, the horse trams of the ZStG were acquired.[8]

Further tramway companies were founded, some operating entirely within the city, some connecting the city with its nearer suburbs, and some running in rural areas entirely beyond the city, but still linked by connections with other lines to the city. Like the EStZ, all these lines were electrified and were built to the metre gauge. The StStZ gradually took over those companies that had significant city operations, usually closing any cross-boundary lines, whilst leaving those lines entirely beyond the city to their own devices.[8]

The mix of routes in 1899, distinguishing city owned (Stadt) and private (Privat), and horse (Pferdebahn) and electric (elektrisch)

Heyday of the StStZ[edit]

A Swiss Standard Tram, at the city's tramway museum

By the mid-1930s, the StStZ had acquired all the companies that had operated tramways within the city boundaries, with the single exception of the Dolderbahn, which had closed its short tramway in 1930. The standard gauge horse tram lines had all been converted to metre gauge and electrified. The StStZ had also built many tram extensions, resulting in a dense network of tramlines serving most city neighbourhoods.[8]

However, in 1927, the StStZ had introduced its first motor bus route, and this was to be followed in 1939 by the first of the city's trolleybus routes. Initially these modes complemented the trams, but at various times they have threatened to replace parts of the tram system, and sometimes succeeded in doing so.[8]

In 1940, the StStZ started a modernisation of its trams, introducing the first prototypes of the Swiss Standard Tram [de; fr]. Despite Switzerland's neutrality, the economic effects of the Second World War slowed down the program, but by 1953 the VBZ, as the StStZ had become in 1950, had taken delivery of 177 such trams.[6][8]

Lines closed[edit]

The WMB in Grüningen, prior to 1950

While the tram network within the city of Zurich has seen relatively few line closures, the same cannot be said for the lines beyond the city. The StStZ routinely closed any out-of-city lines belonging to the companies it took over.[6] In other cases, private sector operated lines succumbed without StStZ involvement. Out of town closures included:

  • The Schlieren to Dietikon and Schlieren to Weinigen lines of the LSB company, closed in 1928 and 1931 respectively.[9]
  • The Oerlikon to Schwamendingen and Seebach to Glattbrugg lines of the ZOS company, closed in 1931.[10]
  • The Uster to Langholz line of the UOeB company, closed in 1949.[11]
  • The Wetzikon to Meilen line of the WMB company, closed in 1950.[12]

In the city, the initial threat to the tram came from its perceived inflexibility and susceptibility to the growing traffic congestion in the city streets. One proposed solution was the conversion of the less busy lines to trolleybus routes, and the first step in this direction was the conversion of tram route 1, from Burgwies to Hardplatz (1954-1956). This was followed by the Farbhof to Schlieren section of route 2 (1956-8) which became a westward extension of the same trolleybus route. In practice, the trolleybus service struggled to cope with peak loadings and punctuality did not improve. No further conversions of tram routes to trolleybuses have taken place.[6]

Underground proposals[edit]

A pair of Mirage trams at Paradeplatz, operating on the surface where they were originally intended to be underground

In the 1950s, as well as proposing the conversion of less busy lines to trolleybus, plans were also made to place the busier lines in tunnel, in a form called the Tiefbahn. The recently delivered Swiss Standard trams were not seen as suitable for this, because they had doors on their tapered car ends that would not have aligned with the proposed underground station platforms. In order to overcome this limitation, several new designs of tram were introduced. The first design, known as the P16 or Karpfen, could not run on some existing routes, and only one batch of 15 motor tram and trailer pairs was built. A later design, which used articulation to avoid the problems of the P16, was eventually more successful and 126 vehicles were delivered by 1969. This car became popularly known as the Mirage.[6]

Despite the planning and new rolling stock, a referendum in 1962 rejected the Tiefbahn. However the proponents of going underground instead proposed a full scale metro, the Zurich U-Bahn system. This would have been standard gauge and electrified using a third rail, and hence incompatible with the tram system. The lines would have extended further into the suburbs and provided faster transit times than the tramways, which would have been curtailed so as not to compete with the U-Bahn. However this would have been at the expense of a coarser grained network, with much longer distances between U-Bahn stations than between the tram stops they replaced.[6][8]

In 1973, the U-Bahn proposal too was rejected in a referendum, but not before several stretches of U-Bahn tunnel had been built. One section of the putative U-Bahn has since been adapted, as described below, for use by trams, whilst another now forms the terminus of the Uetliberg and Sihltal railway lines under the Hauptbahnhof.[6][8]

Extensions and a new model[edit]

Tram 2000 tram at Waldgarten stop in the tunnel section built for the U-Bahn

In 1976, the first tram extension since 1954 took place, with the extension of route 4 from Hardturm to Werdhölzli. Unlike the older lines, this extension was built mostly on reserved track, a precedent to be followed by most subsequent extensions.[6]

The Werdhölzli extension was followed in 1986 by the extension of routes 7 and 9 into new residential areas to the north-east of Zurich. This used one of the stretches of tunnel that had been built for the rejected U-Bahn, between Milchbuck and Schwamendingen. The tram route was extended through the tunnel before splitting at Schwamendingen to serve the area beyond, using new surface track. Because the tunnels and stations had been built with island platforms, whilst Zurich trams only have doors on their nearside, the section through the tunnel uses left-hand running.[6]

From 1976 onwards, the VBZ tram fleet was further updated, with the introduction of Zurich's variant of the Tram 2000 design used by several Swiss tram systems. Several sub-classes of the Tram 2000 were purchased, including articulated and non-articulated variants, and some without drivers cabs that could only operate in multiple with other cars. Eventually 171 of these vehicles were delivered, with the last of the class delivered in 1992.[6][8]

From the 1980s onwards, the system was increasingly acclaimed for its success in maintaining a high share of the modal split, and the Zurich model of transport provision was named after it. Beyond the tramway, the Zurich S-Bahn rail network was introduced to serve the region beyond the city boundaries, taking on some of the role that was originally planned for the U-Bahn. In 1990, the city's urban and regional transport were integrated by the introduction of the ZVV and its zone-based common fare structure.[6]

Low floors and the Glattalbahn[edit]

A Bombardier Cobra low-floor tram on typical VBZ street track

In 2001, the VBZ took delivery of the first prototypes of a brand-new low-floor design of tram, known as the Cobra.[8] Despite many teething problems with the prototypes, which were eventually extensively rebuilt, there are now 88 of these trams in service, with the last delivered in 2010. In order to increase the number of low-floor trams in service, 23 trams from the otherwise high-floor Tram 2000 fleet were rebuilt between 2001 and 2005 with the addition of a low-floor centre section.

The Glattalbahn

From the 1950s onwards, the Glattal region to the north of Zurich experienced a rapid boom as population and industry spilled over from nearby Zurich, partly driven by the presence of Zurich Airport. Whilst the airport is served by the city's S-Bahn rail network, the economic growth and resulting congestion led to a need for a finer-grained form of public transport. The responsible transport authority (the Verkehrsbetriebe Glattal or VBG) responded by constructing a new light rail system, the Glattalbahn. This was built to be compatible with Zurich's tram network, with which it connects at several points on the city boundary. The system opened in stages between 2006 and 2010. The VBG contracted the VBZ to operate the network, and several tram routes now operate across both networks.[1][7][13]

The arrival of new trams between 2001 and 2010 led to the departure of older vehicles. The Karpfen last ran in regular service in 2006, and the Mirage in 2010. Many members of both classes have been transferred to Vinnytsia in Ukraine.[14][15][16]

More extensions and Mirages make a comeback[edit]

Tram Zürich West, an extension from Escher-Wyss-Platz to Bahnhof Altstetten Nord, in the city of Zurich, opened in December 2011. The resulting reorganisation of routes included a new route 17 from Hauptbahnhof to Werdhölzli via Escher-Wyss-Platz, and the diversion of route 4, which had previously served Werdhölzli, to Altstetten.[1][7][17]

In 2017, route 8 was extended from Hardplatz to Hardturm, via a new track over Hardbrücke, the first tram line to cross the main railway line through Zurich (project Tram Hardbrücke).[18][19] An extension of the tracks from Hardbrücke to Bucheggplatz and Milchbuck (project Rosengartentram und Rosengartentunnel), along with the opening of two new tram routes, was rejected by a referendum in 2020, however.[20] This project would have also included a loop tunnel for the cars between Hardbrücke and Bucheggplatz.

In September 2019, city route 2 was extended from Farbhof to Geissweid (Schlieren), a distance of 2.9 kilometres (1.8 mi) with seven stops. The new route operates over the first section of the so-called Limmatalbahn, not to be confused with the now expired Limmattal tramway, and replaces trolleybus route 31 over that section (line 31 now terminates at Hermetschloo station). The second section of the Limmattalbahn opened in December 2022. The Limmattalbahn is a light rail service (route 20) from Altstetten railway station to Killwangen-Spreitenbach railway station. It is operated by Aargau Verkehr AG (AVA).[21]

The extension of route 2, together with a delay to the delivery of the Bombardier Flexity trams on order (see Future developments), required a reorganisation of other routes in order to free up trams for route 2. In addition two Mirage trams, withdrawn from service nearly ten years earlier but held in reserve, were reinstated to cover some peak workings. The first of the new Flexity trams arrived in Zurich on 13 November 2019, but it is not expected to enter passenger service until the summer of 2020.[22][23]

The next extension of the urban route network, from Radiostudio to Holzerhurd (called Tram Affoltern), is currently planned and expected to open in 2029.[24] Tram route 11 will operate on this section to Zürich Affoltern and replace the trolleybus route 32 on that section (route 32 will terminate at Bucheggplatz). At the same time, tram route 15 will be extended from Bucheggplatz to Auzelg on the tracks currently used by route 11. Also under discussion is the so-called Tram Nordtangente, a tram line from Zurich Affoltern to Schwamendingen via Oerlikon.[25]

Other extensions (after 2035) are under discussion, including the reenactment of tram route 1 from Hauptbahnhof to Altstetten (served by trolleybus route 31 since the original route 1 was terminated and its tracks removed in the 1950s).[26]

History preserved[edit]

The Zurich Tram Museum, located at the former tram depot at Burgwies (on tram route 11), preserves many examples of Zurich's former tramcar fleet, along with other related exhibits.

Current and historic operators[edit]

Current and historic operators of trams in and around Zurich are summarised in the table below. Names of companies whose lines were entirely outside the current city boundaries are shown in italic type. Those which still operate tram or other light rail services are shown in bold type.

Trams in Zürich
Limmattalbahn
2 Geissweid
Schlieren Zentrum, Bahnhof
Wagonfabrik
Gasometer Brücke
Mülligen
Micafil
Farbhof
Bachmattstrasse
Lindenplatz
Grimselstrasse
Kappeli
Freihofstrasse
Seidelhof
Letzigrund
20 Bhf Altstetten
4 Bhf Altstetten Nord
Flughafen
Fracht
10 12
Würzgraben
Aargauerstrasse
Sportweg
Toni-Areal
Technopark
3 Albisrieden
Unterried
Am Ring
Fellenbergstrasse
Neugut
Ringwiesen
Siemens
Bäuler
Bhf Stettbach 7 12
Hubertus
Mattenhof
Altes Krematorium
Probstei
Albisriederplatz
Herti
Glattwiesen
13 Frankental
Lindbergh-
platz
11 Auzelg
Roswiesen
Wartau
Hirzenbach 9
Zwielplatz
Altried
Meierhofplatz
Luchswiesen
Schwert
Luegisland
Alte Trotte
Seebacher-
platz
Oerlikerhus
Heerenwiesen
Eschergutweg
Felsenrain-
strasse
Leutschen-
bach
Schwamendingerplatz
Waidfussweg
Messe/Hallenstadion
Wipkingerplatz
Überlandpark
17 Werdhölzli
Sternen
Oerlikon
Waldgarten
Bändliweg
Tierspital
Grünaustrasse
Tüffenwies
Regensberg-
brücke
Bernina-
platz
Hardhof
Hirschwiesen-
strasse
8 Hardturm
Bad
Allenmoos
Bernoulli-Häuser
Brunnenhof
Fischerweg
Buchegg-
platz
15
Förrlibuckstrasse
Laubiweg
Guggach-
strasse
Escher-Wyss Platz
Universität Zürich Irchel
Schiffbau
Langmauerstrasse
Löwenbräu
Schaffhau-
serplatz
Letzistrasse
Quellenstrasse
Kinkelstrasse
Limmatplatz
Seilbahn Rigiblick
Museum für Gestaltung
Kronen-
strasse
Winkelriedstrasse
Sihlquai/HB
Beckenhof
Rösli-
strasse
Haldenbach
Bhf Hardbrücke
Stampfen-
bachplatz
Ottiker-
strasse
ETH/
Universitätsspital
Hardplatz
Sonneggstrasse
Güterbahnhof
Haldenegg
Zoo 6
Bäckeranlage
Susenberg-
strasse
Zürichberg-
strasse
Toblerplatz
10 Bahnhofplatz/HB
Kirche Fluntern 5
Voltastrasse
Löwenplatz