Following the construction of the
Bavarian Forest railway from
Plattling via
Deggendorf to
Bayerisch Eisenstein, completed in 1877, and the Ilz Valley railway from
Passau to
Freyung, finished in 1892, the local communities situated between these routes, including
Aicha, Eging and
Tittling, also strove to have a railway. They favoured a stub line from
Vilshofen to the north. But there was a realisation that against that, one the one hand, the land rose steeply from the
Danube valley and, on the other, it would need a bridge across the Danube. After wrestling with the problem for a long time the
Royal Bavarian State Railways decided to build a cross-country route between the two existing railways as the most cost-effective solution. So the Bavarian state parliament, the
Landtag, decided to build a single-tracked cross-country line from Deggendorf via Eging to Kalteneck with a junction to the Ilz Valley railway, passing the requisite law on 26 June 1908. This route could also link up the harbour at Deggendorf and the market at
Hengersberg to the railway network. The liability for contentious land acquisition was taken on by Deggendorf, Hengersberg and Passau on behalf of the state railway. Construction began in summer 1910 at both ends of the line. As a result, the 11.62 km long section from Deggendorf to Hengersberg and the 20.75 km long stretch from Kalteneck to Eging were opened as early as 26 November 1913 with great celebrations. The centre section, 21.66 km long, went into service on 1 August 1914 on the eve of the
First World War without much ado. == Rail traffic ==