Railway stations in Duisburg
This list of train stations in Duisburg gives an overview of existing and already closed train stations in the city of Duisburg . Today's urban area of Duisburg was created through a number of incorporations. This is criss-crossed by railway lines from various (nominally) private railway companies of the 19th century ( Cologne-Mindener Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft , Rheinische Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft , Bergisch-Märkische Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft ) and many works railways from various collieries and steel production companies.
passenger traffic
Long-distance stops
Main station of Duisburg and remote transport hub of the Lower Rhine is the main station of Duisburg , both in long-distance passenger and in rail transport he uses the
- Railway line Duisburg - Düsseldorf - Cologne-Deutz (ICE, IC, D, RE, RB, S 1 ),
- Railway line Duisburg - Wanne-Eickel - Dortmund (ICE, IC, D, RE, RB, S 2 ),
- Railway line Duisburg - Essen - Dortmund (ICE, IC, D, RE, RB, S 1 ),
-
Railway line Duisburg - Rheinhausen and further
- Railway line ... - Rheinhausen - Mönchengladbach (RE, RB),
- Railway line ... - Rheinhausen - Xanten (RB) ** Saturdays - Sundays and public holidays Rheinhausen - Kamp-Lintfort Süd Landesgartenschau 2020 (RB), ** Monday-Friday Fossa-Emscher-Express line Rheinhausen - Moers (RE), * railway line Duisburg - Duisburg duck catching (- Ratingen) (RB).
Regional traffic stops
In addition to the main station, Duisburg has another hub station: The district with the Rheinhausen station only came to Duisburg in 1975 as part of the municipal reform and has not (yet) been renamed. It's up to the
-
Duisburg - Rheinhausen railway line ; in the further course in Rheinhausen branching out as
- Rheinhausen - Mönchengladbach railway line (RE, RB),
- Rheinhausen - Xanten (RB) railway line .
There is also at the
- Railway line Duisburg - Rheinhausen the stops of the RB 33 " Rhein-Niers-Bahn ":
- Rheinhausen - Xanten railway line, the stops of the RB 31 " Der Niederrheiner ":
- Monday-Friday to * Moers train station and Monday-Sunday to ** Duisburg railway line Bottrop main station - Duisburg main station - * (Moers station) The stops of the RE 44 " Fossa-Emscher-Express ": Bottrop - Oberhausen - ** Duisburg * - ( Rheinhausen - Moers train station)
- Connection curve to the Osterath – Dortmund Süd railway line :
- the former stop of the Duisburg Regattabahn .
-
Railway line Duisburg - Duisburg-Entenfang (- Ratingen) the stops of the RB 37 " Der Wedauer ":
- Duisburg-Wedau train station ,
- Stop at Duisburg-Bissingheim (part of the train station in Duisburg-Wedau),
- Stop at Duisburg-Entenfang (part of the train station in Duisburg-Wedau).
- Railway line Oberhausen-Duisburg-Ruhrort the stops of the RB 36 " Ruhrort-Bahn ",
S-Bahn stops
- Stop at Duisburg-Schlenk S 1
- Stop at Duisburg-Buchholz S 1
- Bahnhof Duisburg-Großenbaum S 1
- Stop at Duisburg-Rahm S 1
Freight transport
Freight stations (transshipment and shunting yards )
- Duisburg-Wedau (currently being demolished, was a two-sided marshalling yard )
- Duisburg freight yard (canceled, see also the accident at the Love Parade 2010 )
- Duisburg-Hochfeld Süd (formerly sloping station on the Rheinische Bahn , after decommissioning the drainage system still in operation as a freight station for local traffic)
- Hamborn-Neumühl (canceled)
- Duisburg-Beeck (broken off, provisional on a railway site heaped up for a large marshalling yard)
- Hohenbudberg (broken off, was formerly in Krefelder and today in Duisburg city area, originally three shunting systems , formerly the second largest shunting yard of the Deutsche Bundesbahn with approx. 35 ha)
- Bergheim (canceled)
Port stations
- Duisburg-Ruhrort Hafen station (new)
- Duisburg-Ruhrort Hafen (old, abandoned)
- Duisburg harbor
Factory stations
-
Railways and ports ( ThyssenKrupp )
- Bruckhausen forecourt
- Grünstrasse
- Meerbergstrasse
- Honey road
-
Hüttenwerke Krupp Mannesmann
- Duisburg-Huckingen
literature
- Contemporary witness exchange Duisburg: The Duisburg railways in historical photographs , Sutton Verlag Erfurt, 2017, ISBN 978-3-95400-789-9