Aigen im Mühlkreis was a municipality in the district of Rohrbach in the Austrian state of Upper Austria. Continue reading... From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
2. Altstadt SteyrSteyr Altstadt is the German language word for old town, and generally refers to the historical town or city centre within the old town or city wall, in contrast to younger suburbs outside. Neustadt , the logical opposite of Altstadt, mostly stands for a part of the Altstadt in modern sense, sometimes only a few years younger than the oldest part, sometimes a late medieval enlargement. Most German towns have an Altstadt, even though the ravages of war have destroyed many of them, especially during the Thirty Years' War . In the War of the Palatinian Succession of 1688, the order to Brûlez le Palatinat! was executed by Mélac, devastating many cities and large parts of South Western Germany, like the Heidelberg Castle. Allied Strategic bombing during World War II destroyed nearly all large citie... From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Summer Specials in Eastern Austria, July & August 2008
Steam, diesel and electric specials, some with rarely used (combinations of) locos. One scene from May with 629.01 pulling the weekend ErlebnisWeltBahn special to Ernstbrunn near Vienna, strange-looking DT 1.07 (3071.07) with the same special at a nearby location in August, some regular traffic in Marchfeld at sunrise, old railbus 5042.14 on the freight only branch line Vienna Liesing - Waldmühle, 1044.40 in nostalgic livery pulling a EuroCity to Croatia and 4061.13 with special at Vienna Atzgersdorf, 2050.04 GM-Henschel Diesel at Wiener Neustadt and 2050.04 & .02 double header at Vienna Hernals, Absdorf-Hippersdorf and in a race with modern 2016 diesel at Vienna Speising where also some scenes with regular traffic (Greece-Taurus, DB 151, 185) were taken. Finally a great steam special with 93.1420 & .1421 celebrating the 120 year anniversary of the Mühlkreis line Linz - Aigen-Schlägl with several scenes including one of the steepest standard gauge sections in Austria (which surprisingly isn't located in the Alps ;-)) and as conclusion the combined road-rail bridge across the River Danube in Linz only used for transferring trains (the same line also crosses the tram tracks shortly before reaching the bridge).