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World
Herz — World Desk · · 30s summary · 1 min read
The Cologne-Wuppertal railway line in Germany is facing approximately two additional months of disruptions following a complete five-month renovation phase. The cause: renovation of a nearly 80-year-old bridge spanning the Wupper River. Until the end of September 2026, all long-distance and regional trains must share a single track at this location. Deutsche Bahn has stated it aims to minimize train cancellations during this period.
The Cologne-Wuppertal railway line is facing additional disruptions of approximately two months following a complete five-month renovation phase. According to Die Zeit, these new works concern a nearly 80-year-old bridge spanning the Wupper River.
Until the end of September 2026, all long-distance and regional trains must share a single track at the bridge location.
Deutsche Bahn has announced its intention to minimize train cancellations as much as possible during the work.
The two-month duration remains an estimate; no precise end date is confirmed beyond "end of September 2026." The German term Generalsanierung, used to describe the large-scale renovation phase completed on this line, has no verified official definition in the consulted sources.
A nearly 80-year-old bridge spanning the Wupper must be renovated separately from the main line renovation. This work is causing approximately two additional months of disruptions.
Until the end of September 2026, long-distance and regional trains must share a single track at the bridge location over the Wupper.
Deutsche Bahn has stated it intends to minimize train cancellations as much as possible, without specifying an exact number.
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