Opening of the line The Voreifel Railway was opened on 7 June 1880. The station buildings at
Bonn-Duisdorf, Kottenforst,
Meckenheim (Bz Köln),
Rheinbach,
Odendorf and
Kuchenheim (spelt Cuchenheim until 1936) were built at this time. The other buildings stations between Duisdorf and Kottenforst were based on designs by Johannes Richter (1842–1889) and built from
clinker brick. The station buildings of Duisdorf, Odendorf and Kuchenheim were built on the same plan. The station buildings of Meckenheim and Rheinbach were built to a slightly modified plan with Meckenheim and Rheinbach built in mirror-image to each other. The line was originally built as a branch line and upgraded in later years as a main line. The maximum development of the line and its stations was achieved in the 1930s and 1940s. The line was then slowly downgraded to its present condition. In the postwar years, the line was called the
Kappes-Express ("Cabbage Express") as it met the fate of many other lines: the second track was removed on more and more sections and passenger numbers declined as the timetable continued to be thinned in line with demand. At the end of the 1970s, the Voreifel Railway was still used by 3,000 passengers each day. Services on the line were threatened with more cuts in the short term and with closure in the medium term. In 1979, the service was temporarily intensified significantly to provide trains every half-hour during the daytime on week days and hourly on weekends. As a result, passenger numbers rose significantly.
Changes to the line • From 1880: Bonn Hbf (
West Rhine Railway) – Duisdorf – (Meckenheim-)Kottenforst – Meckenheim – Rheinbach – Odendorf – Cuchenheim – Euskirchen (Eifel Railway) • From September 1881: Bonn Hbf – Duisdorf – Impekoven (Witterschlick) [km 7.9] – Kottenforst – Meckenheim – Rheinbach – Odendorf – Cuchenheim – Euskirchen • From October 1890: Bonn Hbf – Duisdorf – Impekoven (Witterschlick) – Kottenforst – Meckenheim – Rheinbach – Odendorf – Cuchenheim – Euskirchen;other trains ran partly over the
Börde Railway to
Düren • From August 1903: Bonn Hbf – Bonn-Duisdorf – Impekoven [km 7.9] – Witterschlick [km 9.8] – Kottenforst – Meckenheim – Rheinbach – Odendorf – Cuchenheim – Euskirchen;other trains ran partly over the Börde Railway to Düren • From January 1923 to June 1923: duplication of the line with material from the unfinished Neuss–Rheinbach–Dernau railway (the Strategische Bahndamm—
Strategic Railway Embankment): Bonn Hbf = Bonn-Duisdorf = Impekoven = Witterschlick = Kottenforst = Meckenheim = Rheinbach = Odendorf = Cuchenheim = Euskirchen;other trains ran partly over the Börde Railway to Düren • At the end of the 1960s with the beginning of the reduction of the line to single-track Bonn Hbf = Bonn-Duisdorf – (Alfter-)Witterschlick – (Meckenheim-)Kottenforst = Meckenheim = Rheinbach – (Swisttal-)Odendorf – (Euskirchen-)Kuchenheim = Euskirchen;other trains ran partly over the Börde Railway to Düren and continued to
Aachen • From 1996: Bonn Hbf = Bonn-Duisdorf – (Alfter-)Witterschlick – (Meckenheim-)Kottenforst (only Sat/Sun) = Meckenheim (Bz Köln)-Industriepark = Meckenheim = Rheinbach – (Swisttal-)Odendorf – (Euskirchen-)Kuchenheim = Euskirchen;some trains continue over the
Erft Valley Railway to
Bad Münstereifel. Continuation from Bonn via
Remagen and the
Ahr Valley Railway to
Ahrbrück is considered.
Explanation: - single-track section = double track section The names in brackets are municipalities that are not officially included in the name of the station (which is usual practice in Germany).
Development since the rail reform The city of Bonn in 1994 used the railway reform to improve transport services by funding additional services. From 1994 services ran at 15-minute intervals during the peak between Bonn and Witterschlick; in 1995 this service was extended to Rheinbach. As a result, passenger numbers soared. In 1996, the new Meckenheim Industriepark station opened. The
Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Sieg (Rhine-Sieg Transport Association, VRS) in 1996 called for tenders to operate diesel services on the Voreifel Railway,
Eifel Railway and the
Oberbergische Bahn (Upper Bergian Railway) service from
Cologne to
Marienheide. Since June 1998, the line has been operated by
DB Regio NRW with newly acquired
Talent (class 644) diesel multiple units. In addition, the upgrading of the line began. With the exception of Meckenheim station, the line is completely equipped with high platforms. Bonn-Duisdorf station, which was reduced to a single platform in 1993, was rebuilt between 2003 and 2004 as a two-platform station. The signal equipment was renewed and rebuilt with high platforms. In September 2011, an
electronic interlocking was completed in Euskirchen. As a result, the seven old signal boxes on the line were closed. ==Planning==