The Munich U-Bahn operates eight lines. • Off-peak: every 10 minutes. • Early mornings and late evenings: every 20 minutes or more, though overlapping lines often reduce waiting times.
U1 Line U1 opened in 1980 together with the former U8 (now U2). Initially it operated on part of the U2 route, but became a separate line after the branch to
Rotkreuzplatz was completed. Today the line is long and serves 15 stations. It runs from
Olympia-Einkaufszentrum in Moosach, where line U3 also terminates on a different level, to
Mangfallplatz in the south. The line colour is green. From Olympia-Einkaufszentrum the line runs along
Hanauer Straße to
Georg-Brauchle-Ring, designed by artist Franz Ackermann, and continues via
Westfriedhof,
Gern, and Rotkreuzplatz, which was the terminus from 1983 to 1998. It then proceeds beneath
Nymphenburger Straße to
Maillingerstraße and
Stiglmaierplatz before joining the U2 at
Hauptbahnhof. On the busy city section, U1 and U2 run with coordinated 5-minute intervals. At Hauptbahnhof, interchange to all
S-Bahn lines and lines U4/U5 is available. South of Hauptbahnhof, U1 continues to
Sendlinger Tor, where the U1/U2 platforms are located in separate tunnels linked by a pedestrian passage. At
Fraunhoferstraße, close to the
Isar, large support pillars define the station's design. At
Kolumbusplatz, U1 branches off from U2. The southern extension opened in 1997. It includes
Candidplatz,
Wettersteinplatz, and
St.-Quirin-Platz, the last of which has a glass-and-steel shell roof that extends nearly to track level. The line terminates at Mangfallplatz beneath Naupliastraße.
U2 The route of the U2 line has undergone more changes than any of the other Munich underground lines. It also changed its name as it was first called U8. It is the only line that runs or ran on all three "line families" (U1/U2, U3/U6 and U4/U5). Today it has a length of and 27 stations. The line's colour is red. The U2 starts in the north at
Feldmoching, where it connects to the S1 to
Freising/
Airport. The station there is decorated with rural and urban motives of Feldmoching's history. Below
Hasenbergl, a district which had been known for its social problems, it goes to
Dülferstraße, which provides access to the eastern Hasenbergl and a newly built area on Panzerwiese. Dülferstraße was the terminus from 1993 till 1996. Via the stations
Harthof and
Am Hart, the U2 reaches
Frankfurter Ring. In the tunnel between Am Hart and Frankfurter Ring, there is a white and blue wave pattern, which is the only installation of art in a Munich U-Bahn tunnel outside of stations. After
Milbertshofen station the U2 touches the U3 line at
Scheidplatz, where cross-platform interchange is possible. Before the opening of the section to Dülferstraße in 1993, U2 went from Scheidplatz to
Olympiazentrum, sharing the track with the U3. Through the district of Maxvorstadt the U2 continues to downtown Munich, reaching the stations
Hohenzollernplatz,
Josephsplatz,
Theresienstraße und
Königsplatz. At Königsplatz one can find artworks from the nearby
Glyptothek on the platform. At
München Hauptbahnhof (Munich Central Station), the U2 meets the U1, with which it shares tracks until
Kolumbusplatz (see above). After Kolumbusplatz the U2 continues eastward and reaches the stations
Silberhornstraße,
Untersbergstraße and
Giesing station, with an interchange possibility to S3 and S7. The next stations are
Karl-Preis-Platz and
Innsbrucker Ring, where cross-platform interchange to the U5 is possible. Until 1999, when the branch to the Messestadt stations was opened, the U2 ran from here to Neuperlach. Via the stations
Josephsburg and
Kreillerstraße the U2 reaches
Trudering, which features two platforms in separate tunnels, connected by two transversal tunnels. In 1994, during the construction of this section, an accident happened: the ceiling of the new tunnel collapsed due to the intrusion of water and a bus fell into the crater. Two passengers and one construction worker died and the construction was delayed. Via
Moosfeld, the U2 reaches
Messestadt West and its terminus
Messestadt Ost. These stations are located between the fairgrounds (Messestadt) in the north and a development area and the
Bundesgartenschau 2005 in the south.
U3 The U3 is the original Olympic line; the first section was opened for the
Olympic Summer Games 1972. Today the line has a total of length of and 25 stations. The line's colour is orange. Today the U3 starts in the north at
Moosach, Munich's 100th U-Bahn station, where passengers can change to the S1 to
Freising/
Airport. From here the line runs east to
Moosacher St.-Martins-Platz and
Olympia-Einkaufszentrum, where a change to the U1 is possible. After passing through
Oberwiesenfeld station, the U3 reaches its original northern terminus at
Olympiazentrum. From 1972 until 2007, this station was the end of the original Olympic line. When Munich was awarded the
Olympic Summer Games 1972 in 1965, the U-Bahn network concept (which was adopted only one year earlier) had to be revised to speed up the construction of a connection to the Olympic venues at
Olympic grounds. The Olympic connector (now U3) was redesigned as a branch of the U6 line, because the original plan of a direct connection to the Olympic ground from Munich Central Station was not feasible in the new timeframe. This original U3 sections consists of four stations (from north to south):
Olympiazentrum,
Petuelring,
Scheidplatz, where cross-platform interchange to the U2 (the line originally supposed to serve the Olympic venues) is possible since 1980, and
Bonner Platz. After Bonner Platz the U3 reaches
Münchner Freiheit, where it joins the U6 to run together through the inner city section to
Implerstraße (for this section see U6 below). After leaving the three-track junction station Implerstraße, where the U6 heads west towards Harras before ending up in Großhadern suburb, the U3 reaches
Brudermühlstraße (near the picturesque Flaucher section of the Isar river),
Thalkirchen (Zoo) (a short walk from the large city zoo) and
Obersendling, which is built higher than the Thalkirchen station, because it is located on the "Hochufer" (western tread) of the
River Isar. Here, interchange to the S-Bahn at
Siemenswerke station is possible. The U3 continues west via
Aidenbachstraße and
Machtlfinger Straße, before reaching
Forstenrieder Allee,
Basler Straße, and eventually the terminus
Fürstenried West. This southern-eastern section was opened on 28 October 1989, as can be seen from huge date numbers on the western entrance of Obersendling station.
U4 With only and 13 stations, the U4 is Munich's shortest U-Bahn line. This line has originally been planned as U9 and is the only line that operates regularly with 4-car sets rather than the full 6-car set. The exceptions are Fridays in the late afternoon and during the
Oktoberfest. The line's colour is mint green. The U4 begins in the west in the Laim neighbourhood at
Westendstraße station, which it shares with the U5 line. Both U4 and U5 are the only lines of a joint line "family", which only branch out on one end of the common line, as an originally planned western extension of the U4 was first put on hold and was subsequently cancelled altogether. From Westendstraße the U4 runs east to
Heimeranplatz, which connects to S7 and S20 S-Bahn lines. The next two stations,
Schwanthalerhöhe (originally called Messegelände, the German for "exhibition grounds"; the name was changed when the exhibition centre relocated to Riem in 1998) and
Theresienwiese, are gateways to the
Oktoberfest, and are therefore highly loaded during this event. Between both aforementioned stations, there is a track that links to
Implerstraße to provide a connection to the depot in
Fröttmaning.
Theresienwiese is one of only two U-Bahn stations in Munich (besides
Fröttmaning station which serves
Allianz Arena) to have the command centre booth opened during the
Oktoberfest for supervising the masses of passengers. The southern exit of the station leads to the northern entrance of Oktoberfest. U4 trains arriving from the east often terminate at Theresienwiese rather than continue to Westendstraße even during peak hours due to low traffic volume east of Hauptbahnhof. After Theresienwiese the U4 reaches
München Hauptbahnhof (Munich Central Station); passengers can transfer to U1/U2 lines as well as to all S-Bahn lines (except S20) here. The next station is
Karlsplatz (Stachus) with shorter and easier connections to S-Bahn (S1 to S8). Karlsplatz is the deepest station in Munich's U-Bahn network ( below the surface). From this point on, the U4 runs north of the S-Bahn cross-city tunnel. After passing
Odeonsplatz, where an interchange to U3/U6 trains is possible, and
Lehel, the U4 crosses the
River Isar in a tunnel, and reaches
Max-Weber-Platz, the last station that is shared with the U5. Here, the U4 branches off to the north, while the U5 runs south. Before terminating at
Arabellapark, the U4 passes the stations
Prinzregentenplatz,
Böhmerwaldplatz, and
Richard-Strauss-Straße, the latter being the only station of the line to be equipped with side platforms instead of an island platform. The original plan called for an extension to
Johanneskirchen station (where easy transfer to the S8 S-Bahn line would be possible) via Fideliopark, but was never built, due to low current ridership in the area north of Max-Weber-Platz. The extension of the tram line in the area in 2011 made the plan even more unlikely to materialise. A possible extension in the west to Blumenau is even more improbable. In the evenings from around 20.40 to the close of operations, the U4 only operates between
Odeonsplatz and
Arabellapark.
U5 The U5 currently begins at
Laimer Platz; an extension to is under construction. The total length currently is . The line's colour is brown. Via
Friedenheimer Straße, the U5 reaches
Westendstraße. From there, the U5 shares the tracks with the U4 to
Max-Weber-Platz (see above). At
Max-Weber-Platz, the U5 branches off to the south to
Ostbahnhof (East Station), where changing to all S-Bahn lines is possible. The next station,
Innsbrucker Ring, allows cross-platform interchange to the U2. The U5 continues south to
Michaelibad,
Quiddestraße, and
Neuperlach Zentrum, which is the centre of the satellite town of
Neuperlach, built during the 1960s and 1970s. Going on to
Therese-Giehse-Allee, the U5 comes above ground and reaches its terminus
Neuperlach Süd, where it allows cross-platform interchange with S-Bahn line
S7. South-east of Neuperlach-Süd is a large parking yard (Betriebsanlage Süd) used to park trains which can't be parked at the technical base in Fröttmaning or within the network.
U6 The U6 is the oldest U-Bahn line of the network and also features the oldest tunnel built: the section below the
Lindwurmstraße (between Sendlinger Tor and including the station Goetheplatz) was already built 1938–1941 as part of a planned S-Bahn network. For this reason Goetheplatz has a platform longer than the standard . Today the line has a length of . Its colour is blue. Since 2006 the northern terminus of the U6 is
Garching-Forschungszentrum; via
Garching it reaches
Garching-Hochbrück. These three stations are outside the city limits of Munich in the city of
Garching. The distance of to the next station at
Fröttmaning is the longest distance between two stations in Munich's U-Bahn network. Fröttmaning has been expanded to two island platforms and four tracks to cater for the
Allianz Arena football stadium, built for the
2006 FIFA World Cup. The technical base of the U-Bahn is located at Fröttmaning, too. After passing
Kieferngarten station, which has two island platforms as well, it crosses over a rail bridge to
Freimann and
Studentenstadt. Between these two stations is a connection to mainline railway tracks, which is used to bring new trains into the network. The bridge was originally used by the
tram and was the only tram track to be converted to be part of the U-Bahn network. The U6 then continues underground for the rest of its way south. Via
Alte Heide,
Nordfriedhof (station with side platforms), and
Dietlindenstraße, the U6 reaches
Münchner Freiheit, where it joins the U3 on the shared inner city tunnel. Passing
Giselastraße and
Universität (University), it arrives at
Odeonsplatz, where it connects to the U4/U5 lines. Continuing to Marienplatz, it crosses the S-Bahn lines. During peak hours this station is can get overcrowded, which is why additional pedestrian tunnels were built between 2003 and 2006. At
Sendlinger Tor the U3/U6 crosses the U1/U2 line, and interchange is possible. The line now uses the tunnel built in 1941 mentioned above as far as
Goetheplatz. The next station,
Poccistraße was added belatedly, constructed between the two existing tunnels which stayed operational. At
Implerstraße the U3 and U6 separate again. To the north of the station, facing north, there is a branch to the U4/U5 at
Schwanthalerhöhe, which is not used for passenger transport. At
Harras the U6 connects to the S-Bahn lines S7 and S20, and to regional trains to the south. The section via
Partnachplatz and
Westpark to
Holzapfelkreuth was constructed for the
Internationale Gartenbauausstellung (IGA) in 1983 was therefore dubbed "flower line", which is reflected in the design of these stations. Passing
Haderner Stern and
Großhadern, the U6 reaches its current southern terminus at
Klinikum Großhadern, where the entrance to the station is covered by a glass pyramid. An extension to Martinsried, which is only approx. west of the current terminus, is under construction, and is supposed to open in 2027.
U7 This booster line (it only operates during rush hours) was added in December 2011 along with the new tram extension to St. Emmeram. The U7 runs between
Olympia-Einkaufszentrum and
Neuperlach Zentrum via
München Hauptbahnhof and
Innsbrucker Ring: it shares the tracks with the U1 from Olympia-Einkaufszentrum to
Kolumbusplatz, the U2 from München Hauptbahnhof to Innsbrucker Ring, and the U5 from Innsbrucker Ring to its southern terminus Neuperlach Zentrum.
U8 This booster line started operations in December 2013. It only operates on Saturday afternoons. The U8 begins in the north at
Olympiazentrum and shares the tracks with the U3 as far as
Scheidplatz, where it continues along the U2 tracks to
Innsbrucker Ring and terminates at
Neuperlach Zentrum. It is only running on Saturdays to ease crowding on the U2 and U3 lines, and to provide people an easier access to the
Olympic Park from Munich Central Station. == Rolling stock ==