Berlin-Warszawa-Express


The Berlin-Warszawa-Express is a cross-border train service that connects Berlin and Warsaw via Frankfurt, operated jointly by Deutsche Bahn and Polish State Railways. The service, classed as EuroCity, runs four times per day in each direction, with the services given the numbers 40–47. Total journey time is 5 hours, 24 minutes.

History

The Berlin-Warszawa-Express brand began in 2002, replacing the names of individual services which had been added to the EuroCity network over the previous decade. There were four pairs of services linking Berlin Zoologischer Garten and Warsaw Wschodnia, plus a fifth, which only ran from Berlin to Poznań, and as such didn't take the BWE name. This additional service was dropped in 2004, but restored in 2007, and since 2012, continues from Poznań to Gdańsk and Gdynia, under the name Berlin-Gdynia Express.
The service began to serve Berlin Hauptbahnhof after its opening in 2006, no longer serving Berlin Zoo.

Rolling stock

Each train is six coaches long, using specially branded carriages provided by both DB and PKP - the livery is white, as per DB Intercity, but with a dark blue stripe instead of the normal red. Four of them are provided by PKP, Restaurant/1st class and first class are delivered by DB.
Since December 2010 the train has been hauled by Siemens EuroSprinter locomotives, provided by PKP and known in Poland as Class EU 44 Husarz. Prior to this the DB Class 180 was the most common traction, with Class 186 and Class 232 seen on occasion. In 2016, carriages are mainly provided by PKP Intercity, only restaurant carriage is provided by Deutsche Bahn. By 2017, all German restaurant carriages were returned to Deutsche Bahn. All carriages are provided by PKP Intercity.

Summary of services