I took the 12:02 pm S-Bahn from Liesing to Meidling, bought a round-trip ticket to Břeclav for €17.20 and went up to platform 5. A train made up of six blue-white Czech railcars pulled up to the station. Instead of taking a seat in coach, I went straight to the cafe/restaurant car. My train, EC 70, the Gustav Mahler, departed Wien Meidling station at 12:34 pm, two minutes late. I ordered a coffee as the train was passing the partially opened Wien Hauptbahnhof. Instead of taking the Stammstrecke through the city, all intercity trains heading for the Northern Railway leave and enter Wien via the Laa Eastern Railway through Simmering, connecting to the Northern Railway at Süßenbrunn junction. After a quick stop at Simmering, the Gustav Mahler started to pick up speed. As we crossed the mighty Danube on the Eastern Railway Bridge I ordered eggs and ham with ice tea.
On the north side of the Danube, snow started to stick as the train was traveling through a light snowy drizzle. Once we connected to the Northern Railway the Mahler really took up speed. Once we blew by Gänsendorf, the end of the S-Bahn, we turned north towards the Czech Republic. The Wien-Břeclav railway was the first railway in Austria. Built by Austria-Hungary in 1837, as part of a railway project to Warsaw, the Northern Railway has been an important artery of Austria ever since. The train skipped Bernhardsthal, the last town in Austria, before crossing into the Czech Republic. After crossing the River Thaya the Gustav Mahler arrived at Břeclav station on track 3. Once I stepped on the the platform a gust of cold wind hit my exposed face. The train had about 15 minutes at the station so I decided to wait for it to depart. A few minutes after we arrived EC 77, the Antonín Dvořák (Praha-Wien), met our train. I took pictures of both trains as they departed and then started to explore the station.
EC 77, Antonín Dvořák, waiting to depart Břeclav on track 2. |
Břeclav is an important junction on the Czech railways. Trunk lines to Praha, Wien, Ostrava and Bratislava as well as a less frequented line to Znojmo and a branch line to Lednice converge in this small town. The station itself is also quite large for a town this size. There are seven through tracks with four platforms as well as three terminus tracks with two platforms. A large rail yard just north of the town handles quite a lot of freight traffic as several freight trains passed the station in the half hour I spent there. To the east of the station is are several tracks used for storage as a long line of obsolete yard switches waited to be put out of their misery.
Once I took a satisfying amount of pictures I went inside to the station building. The weather was quite cold so everyone was waiting inside, making the platforms look desolate. I wanted to pick up a few Czech railway timetables so I went over to the information booth, only to find out that the woman working there didn't speak a word of English or German. Very ironic, I know. With the help of Google translate and a few hand gestures I was able to buy a nice Czech railway magazine named "Draha". I also managed to pick up timetables of trains running to Praha, Brno and Kuty. I then stet out to explore the town itself. A few taxi drivers waiting to pick up passengers waited in the cold weather smoking cigarettes and talking to each other. Břeclav wasn't the most active place I've been to as the town was quite void of human life. As I walked into a nice park covered in snow, I only saw two people on the street. Several cars drove down the street adjacent to the park however. Even though it was a Saturday, I still expected the town to be more lively. After an hour and a half of walking around the small town I decided to head back to the railway station. The sun was just about to set so I took out my camera and snapped a few more shots while I still had natural light.
ĈD Os 4223 to Přerov waits to depart on track 6 with an old smokestack in the background. (B'Tian Dorsam) |
Once I took a satisfying amount of pictures I went inside to the station building. The weather was quite cold so everyone was waiting inside, making the platforms look desolate. I wanted to pick up a few Czech railway timetables so I went over to the information booth, only to find out that the woman working there didn't speak a word of English or German. Very ironic, I know. With the help of Google translate and a few hand gestures I was able to buy a nice Czech railway magazine named "Draha". I also managed to pick up timetables of trains running to Praha, Brno and Kuty. I then stet out to explore the town itself. A few taxi drivers waiting to pick up passengers waited in the cold weather smoking cigarettes and talking to each other. Břeclav wasn't the most active place I've been to as the town was quite void of human life. As I walked into a nice park covered in snow, I only saw two people on the street. Several cars drove down the street adjacent to the park however. Even though it was a Saturday, I still expected the town to be more lively. After an hour and a half of walking around the small town I decided to head back to the railway station. The sun was just about to set so I took out my camera and snapped a few more shots while I still had natural light.
When I got back to the station I saw EC 72 "Smetana" to Praha on track 1 and ÖBB R2353 to Payerbach-Reichenau (via Wien) on track 3. The weather got even colder so I considered hopping on R2353 back to Wien, which departs at 4:26 pm, but remembered that it was a local until Gänsendorf. So I decided to wait and extra 30 minutes for EC 173, the "Vindobona" from Hamburg-Altoona to Wien. I recorded the departure of both aforementioned trains at the expense of not feeling my fingers. The sky started to get dark as it made taking pictures of moving trains more difficult. About ten minutes after wandering around a Regional train from Brno arrived to pick up passengers and start it's return journey.
R5 to Brno waits on track 1. (B'Tian Dorsam) |
Břeclav was an interesting trip for me. Albeit Regional trains take their time to get there, EuroCity trains make the trip quite quickly. I will go back sometime in the near future.
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