train near Pfarrwerfen. train near Pfarrwerfen. railcar near Brixen im Thale Up to today, the Salzburg-Tyrol Railway is the only east–west railway link to Tyrol that runs entirely on Austrian territory. The fact that there is no parallel
motorway link on national territory gave the line great importance, especially before
Austria's accession to the EU in 1995. However, its significance is increasingly on the wane, partly because it has the characteristics of an Alpine railway with steep hills and tight curves, hence
high-speed rail transport is not possible. Austrian east-west trains therefore usually use the route from Salzburg via
Rosenheim station in Germany to Innsbruck, transiting the
Deutsches Eck link. The line is important, though, especially for regional services, as part of the connection from Innsbruck to the state capitals
Klagenfurt and
Graz as well as part of the line from Salzburg to Graz (via the Enns Valley Railway). In addition, the only Austrian
coach transport service from North Tyrol to
Lienz in
East Tyrol leaves from
Kitzbühel station on the Salzburg-Tyrol Railway. The line is also fairly important as an alternative route for international rail traffic on the east–west axis, but it is more significant as a feeder for the Tauern Railway crossing the
Hohe Tauern range of the
Central Eastern Alps from north to south. The Salzburg-Tyrol Railway is also used by
sleeping car trains. The night train from
Bregenz to Vienna used to run on this line until December 2008, in order to achieve journey times that enabled passengers to spend enough time in the sleepers and to save the rail tolls charged by German
Deutsche Bahn railway company for using the
Deutsches Eck transport link. The railway is also important for local services in the central region of Salzburg and in North Tyrol. Between Salzburg Hauptbahnhof and
Golling-
Abtenau the line is served every half-an-hour and from Golling to Schwarzach every hour by the S3 line of the Salzburg S-Bahn network. The section from Wörgl to
Saalfelden is served by the S6 line of
Tyrol S-Bahn system. == See also ==