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SBB introduced individual numbering for InterCity routes with the December 2017 timetable change, with the numbers (in general) corresponding to the routes of Switzerland's motorways. [4] As of the December 2022 timetable change, [update] there are eleven InterCity routes in Switzerland, ten of which carry numbers.
Swiss Federal Railways (German: Schweizerische Bundesbahnen, SBB; [b] French: Chemins de fer fédéraux suisses, CFF; [c] Italian: Ferrovie federali svizzere, FFS [d]) [1] is the national railway company of Switzerland.
SBB GmbH, SBB's German subsidiary, also operates a regional line, named the Seehas, and one line of Basel S-Bahn entirely on German territory close to the Swiss border. France. There are a few railway lines crossing the France–Switzerland border, the most-frequented ones being the Lyon–Geneva railway and the Strasbourg–Basel railway lines.
Route map 1: Dreirosenbrücke – Brausebad - Bahnhof SBB (– Badischer Bahnhof) 7.31 kilometres (4.54 mi) BVB 2: Binningen Kronenplatz – Badischer Bahnhof - Eglisee (– Riehen Fondation Beyeler) 9.26 kilometres (5.75 mi) BVB 3: Saint-Louis Burgfelderhof – Breite - Birsfelden Hard 9.58 kilometres (5.95 mi) BVB 6
The S-Bahn is operated by the Swiss Federal Railways (SBB CFF FFS), its German subsidiary SBB GmbH, the German DB, and the French SNCF Voyageurs. The responsible transport authorities are the Swiss cantons of Basel-City , Basel-Country , Aargau , Solothurn , Jura ; the German state of Baden-Württemberg and the French region of Grand Est .
The Zurich S-Bahn (German: S-Bahn Zürich) system is a network of rail lines that has been incrementally expanded to cover the ZVV area, which comprises the entire canton of Zurich and portions of neighbouring cantons (Aargau, Glarus, Schaffhausen, Schwyz, St. Gallen, Thurgau and Zug), with a few lines extending into or crossing the territory of southern Germany.
Services are operated by SBB GmbH, Swiss Federal Railways' German subsidiary, and Thurbo. Regional railway services in the city of Schaffhausen and other nearby towns are complemented by services of Zürich S-Bahn ( S9 , S12 , S24 , S29 , S33 ), St. Gallen S-Bahn ( S1 ), the Seehas (S6), and RB30 of Basel S-Bahn . [ 2 ]
The 57.1 km (35.5 mi) long line was opened between 1855 and 1856 in four stages by the former St. Gallen-Appenzell Railway (St. Gallisch-Appenzellische Eisenbahn, SGAE) and belongs to the Swiss Federal Railways (SBB). It is part of the West-East main line in Switzerland.