EuroCity

Eurocity logo

EuroCity (EC) is an international train category and brand for European inter-city trains that cross international borders and meet criteria covering comfort, speed, food service, and cleanliness.[1][2] Each EC train is operated by more than one European Union or Swiss rail company, under a multilateral co-operative arrangement, and all EC trains link important European cities with each other.[3]

The EuroCity label replaced the older Trans Europ Express (TEE) name for border-crossing trains in Europe. Whereas TEE services were first-class only, EuroCity trains convey first- and second-class coaches.[2]

Criteria

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EuroCity Zurich-Venice
operated by SBB
EuroCity Prague-Hamburg
operated by ČD
Eurocity Hamburg-Basel
operated by DB

The criteria EuroCity trains are required to meet include the following:[citation needed]

  • train through two or more countries
  • all cars air-conditioned
  • stop only at stations serving major cities
  • stops scheduled to last no more than five minutes, in special cases up to 15 minutes
  • food and beverages available onboard (preferably from a dining car)
  • conductors speak at least two languages, one of which must be English, French, or German
  • average speed (including stops) above 90 kilometres per hour (56 mph), exceptions for routes including mountainous terrain and train ferries

The EuroCity schedule was designed with train pairs running one train in both directions,[clarification needed] thus resulting in a more frequent service than the TEE, which normally ran only once a day.[citation needed] In 1993 it was decided that EuroCity trains must complete their journey between 6:00 am and midnight. The night services are operated as EuroNight since 23 May 1993.[4]

During the pre-Schengen era, passport checks were conducted on EC trains while in motion, rather than while parked at a station or requiring the passengers to disembark, as was sometimes the case for non-EC trains. A few require pre-reservation (though this is possible and recommended for all other trains) and in some countries a supplemental charge.[citation needed]

Naming

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Originally all EuroCity trains carried names, and many still do, continuing the practice started with luxury trains of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The names are printed on brochures showing the times of arrival and departure at every stop and details of the journey; these are placed on the seats by the train staff. A few trains have used the names of the earlier Trans Europ Express or InterCity trains that they replaced on the same route, for example Iris for Brussels to Zürich. The names were mostly related to the cities and region the trains served and chosen from historical or mythological figures, geographical and botanical names or regional products. In 1991, the decision was made to name the EuroCity services after famous Europeans,[5] which in some cases resulted in the renaming of existing services, e.g. the EC trains between Germany and Denmark.

On 29 July 1991, the European Community decided to reorganise the legal structure of the railways in order to stimulate commercial operation and reduce government subsidies. The directive, in force in 1993, stated that railway services and infrastructure should be split and operators should be able to offer their services everywhere in Europe using the national infrastructure. After 20 years the implementation is still ongoing, but it has affected the railway operators already. High-speed services that have been introduced subsequently, using both new rolling stock and some newly built line sections, have all used brand names that are applied to all trains of their class or category, rather than naming every single service. As a consequence of this trend, the named EC trains on the Paris–Brussels–Amsterdam route disappeared in 1995–96, replaced by unnamed TGV trains and later by Thalys service. Between the Netherlands and Germany the Intercity-Express (ICE) was introduced in 2000, resulting in the near disappearance of the EuroCity brand on those train routes, and with it the use of train names. For marketing reasons, the four EuroCity services between Germany and Poland were advertised as the Berlin–Warszawa Express effective 29 September 2002, thus marketing a product instead of naming individual trains. Preparations for privatisation of Deutsche Bahn led to the discontinuation of names for the EuroCity services in Allgäu on 15 December 2002, and for the other German-operated EC trains on 12 December 2004. The French–Swiss TGV services lost their individual names on 17 May 2003, when "Lyria" was chosen as the brand name used collectively for those TGVs. After the collapse of Cisalpino on 13 December 2009, the named trains between Italy and Switzerland disappeared as well. Farther east, all EC services continue to carry names.

Network

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EuroCity network, 1987
EuroCity network, 2015

On 31 May 1987 the EuroCity network started with 64 EuroCity trains, serving 200 cities in 13 countries.[2][6] They were made up of 56 day services and eight night services. The network included the international TGVs between France and Switzerland, shown in orange on the 1987 map. Night services are shown in blue on the map, with the exception of the boat-train Benjamin Britten (London–Amsterdam), whose overnight portion was by ferry, not by train. The other EuroCity trains are shown in green on the map. The TEE Gottardo is shown in red on the map, because it was converted to EuroCity only one year later. Three international InterCity trains did not qualify as EuroCity and are shown on the map in grey.

The network was set up by the national railways of Norway, Sweden, Austria, Switzerland, and the European Community. One year later Hungary joined as well. The network grew from 64 services in 1987 to 76 services in 1990, and in 1991 the frequency was improved, resulting in an expansion to 102 services by 1991. Until then it was a mainly West European network but from 1991 it began expanding beyond Hungary in the east. After the historic developments occurring in Central and Eastern Europe regarding the fall of Communism around that time, Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia became part of the system in 1991, and Poland in 1992. In the following years Czechoslovakia and later Yugoslavia were split and their parts became individual members too. In 1993 the night services were rebranded as the EuroNight network, the start of a gradual decline in the number of EuroCity trains in Western Europe. When high-speed lines opened in France, Italy, Spain, Germany, and Belgium/Netherlands/Luxembourg, the EuroCity services were replaced by high-speed trains, mostly with their own brands and therefore not classified as EuroCity. In Central and Eastern Europe more services were introduced, and over a period of 25 years the centre of the EC network had shifted east.

EuroCity-Express

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Since December 2017, the EuroCity label is supplemented by the new classification EuroCity-Express (ECE). Initially, this will only be used for a single service; the Frankfurt (Main) to Milan service operated by SBB with their ETR 610 high-speed tilting train.[7] This classification is only used in Germany; in Switzerland and Italy, these trains run as EC. This is due to tariff reasons: in Germany, EC normally are classified below ICE, the highest class, and thus slightly cheaper. ECE however are the same rank as ICE, and are priced as such, as the Deutsche Bahn claims them to provide similar levels of comfort.

List of EuroCity services

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See also

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References

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Notes

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  1. ^ Schulz, Hans; Basler, Otto; Strauss, Gerhard (2004). Deutsches Fremdwörterbuch: in 12 Bänden [German Book of Foreign Words: in 12 Volumes] (in German). Vol. 5: Eau De Cologne – Futurismus. Berli: Walter de Gruyter. p. 31. ISBN 3110180219.
  2. ^ a b c Saltzman, Marvin L. (6 March 1988). "INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL : Europe's Trains on a Roll in Price Competition". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2 April 2013.
  3. ^ Haas, Hans-Dieter; Eschlbeck, Daniela (2006). Internationale Wirtschaft: Rahmenbedingungen, Akteure, räumliche Prozesse [International Business: Environment, Actors, Spatial Processes] (in German). München: Oldenbourg Verlag. p. 307. ISBN 3486579436.
  4. ^ "International Services from May 23" (changes taking effect). Thomas Cook European Timetable (May 1–22, 1993 edition), p. 3. Peterborough, UK: Thomas Cook Publishing.
  5. ^ M. Mertens and J.P. Malaspina (2007). La légende des Trans Europ Express, p. 130. Vannes.
  6. ^ Das grosse TEE Buch p. 131
  7. ^ Doll, Nikolaus (17 October 2017). "Warum Deutsche Bahn jetzt einen ECE auf dem Gleise schickt" (in German). Die Welt. Retrieved 26 October 2017.

Further reading

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  • Brunhouse, Jay (17 May 1987). "The New Age Dawns on Train Travel in Europe". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 24 February 2013.
  • Malaspina, Jean-Pierre (2005). Intercity, Eurocity, EURegio, EuroNight, City Night Line, Auto-trains. Trains d'Europe (in French). Vol. 2. Paris: La Vie du Rail. ISBN 2915034494.
  • Rufer, Fritz (1993). Die neuen Eurocity-Wagen der SBB: Wechsel im RIC-Wagenpark der SBB [The New SBB-CFF-FFS EuroCity Coaches: Transition in the SBB-CFF-FFS Coach Fleet] (in German). Münchenbuchsee: Fritz Rufer. OCLC 600897699.
  • Trautsamwieser, Herbert (1998). Vom Dampfwagen zum EuroCity: 160 Jahre Eisenbahn in Österreich, 160 Jahre Menschen im Zug [From Steam Engines to EuroCity: 160 Years of Railways in Austria, 160 Years of People by Train] (in German). Krems: Malek. ISBN 3901207228.
  • EC-Verkehr – 1987 bis heute der EuroCity-Verkehr bei der DB, der Deutschen Bahn AG, den ÖBB und der SBB [EC-Traffic – 1987 to today the EuroCity-Traffic on the DB, the Deutsche Bahn AG, the ÖBB and the SBB-CFF-FFS]. BahnProfil (in German). Vol. 23. Berlin: adk. 2001. OCLC 76217533.
  • EuroCity: Qualität der Bahn [EuroCity: Quality of the Rails]. Bahn-Akzente (in German). Frankfurt/M: Deutsche Bundesbahn. 1987. OCLC 315382922.
  • Fernreise-System Bahn: Informationen zu InterCityExpress, InterCity, EuroCity und deren Vernetzung [Long Distance Rail Travel System: Information about InterCityExpress, InterCity, EuroCity and their Networking]. Reisen mit der Bahn (in German). Mainz: Deutsche Bundesbahn; Deutsche Reichsbahn. 1992. OCLC 311761936.
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