In 1873 the RhE replaced its original Rheinhausen–Hochfeld train ferry by the Duisburg-Hochfeld rail bridge. Subsequently the Ruhrort–Homberg ferry quickly lost traffic. In consequence, the line between Duisburg-Homberg and Hohenbudberg became increasingly unimportant. The Ruhrort–Homberg ferry closed on 19 May 1907. The railway line between Homberg and Trompet was damaged in the Second World War and not returned to service. Today, the only traffic north of Trompet is to the siding of the Sachtleben Chemie company. The opening of the Lower Rhine line in 1904 established a connection between Rheinhausen and Trompet, which proved to be more profitable, especially as it included a direct rail link to the Hohenbudberg marshalling yard. The original line between Trompet and Uerdingen was eventually closed for passenger on 30 September 1961; the closure of freight traffic followed a day later, on 1 October 1961.
Realignment in Viersen
In 1917 the current track in the Viersen area was laid. Originally the line ran from the location of the modern Viersen-Helenabrunn station initially parallel to the line that is now the Mönchengladbach freight bypass and then running directly between Helenabrunn and Heimer to Viersen BME station. Helenabrunn station was in the higher part of Helenabrunn and Heimer. The line was moved further north, where it connected with the Neuss–Viersen line, which was originally built by the Rhenish Railway Company, to run to Viersen RhE station. After the realignment, the BME station was abandoned and demolished. As a replacement for the Helenabrunn station, Viersen-Helenabrunn station was built in Neuwerker Straße on the outskirts of modern Mönchengladbach.
Current situation
Although the first section of the line from Homberg to Hohenbudberg no longer exists, the greater part of the line is still in operation. Together with the western part of the Osterath–Dortmund Süd line of the former Rhenish Railway Company and its branch line from Duisburg RHE station—now part of Duisburg Hauptbahnhof—it has developed into a major regional route. The main line from Duisburg Hauptbahnhof via Duisburg-Hochfeld Süd and Hohenbudberg to Mönchengladbach Hbf is now consistently double track and electrified. Lack of modernisation prevents more intensive use of the line; between Duisburg Hauptbahnhof and Rheinhausen only four trains per hour can operate, one of which continues towards Moers and Xanten on the Lower Rhine line. Furthermore, the line’s tracks cross the tracks of the Lower Left Rhine lineon the level in the vicinity of Krefeld station. There is a similar crossing on the level with the Mönchengladbach–Düsseldorf line near Mönchengladbach station.
Rail services
The line is served every hour by a Regional-Express service, the Niers-Haard-Express, connecting Mönchengladbach and the Lower Rhine to the western and central Ruhr area and Münster. Only slightly slower are two Regionalbahn services, the Rhein-Niers-Bahn and the Emscher-Niederrhein-Bahn, each running hourly, with alternating routings, one connecting Aachen, Mönchengladbach and Duisburg and the other connecting Mönchengladbach, Duisburg and Wesel.