Submitted by jarvum t3_11i1j4e in dataisbeautiful
Comments
Bickel09 t1_jb0qe3b wrote
But still the system is shit, trains are late smell like piss and only weirdos on the trains
EspritFort t1_jb0sjb5 wrote
Pretty cool!
Truly remote areas just don't seem to exist in Middle Europe.
Now if only the pricing of train rides were competitive...
Also, welcome back to reddit?!
Mark8472 t1_jb0tld9 wrote
U on one of them? \s
moglito t1_jb10yp0 wrote
Nice visualization! If would be cool to also visualize how "connected" one would be from those stations. Most of those stations are regional stations where only local trains run. It would be nice to see how long it would take to get from any point on the map to, say, the next city with >1M citizens, or a weighted average of getting to three such cities.
allIsayislicensed t1_jb186yx wrote
trains are nice
*laughs in antarctican*
Kaionacho t1_jb1mfu5 wrote
> Truly remote
This is really a perspective thing, but I doubt many are going to circle 10+ KM just to catch a train. Most are just going to use their car for the whole way.
zootayman t1_jb4d9e6 wrote
another posting here a few months ago was of the rail systems in Europe, and Germany had the most (a real web) and the poster said it was because railroads in Germany were government-built for their big iron industry and construction make work projects in the late 1800s
Enola_Gay_B29 t1_jb72mus wrote
I feel like the dark blue spot north of Trier should have some train station in Luxembourg or Belgium that is actually closer than the nearest German one. Is there a way to check that?
jarvum OP t1_jaw4sz0 wrote
Source: Haltestellen (Stand 01/2020) from DB OpenData/DB Station&Service AG licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (https://data.deutschebahn.com/dataset/data-haltestellen.html)
Source: Vector data from Natural Earth released into the public domain.
Used tools: QGIS and GIMP