Berlin Raoul-Wallenberg-Strasse train station
Berlin Raoul-Wallenberg-Strasse | |
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Platform edge on the Marzahn – Ahrensfelde track (2007)
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Data | |
Operating point type | Breakpoint |
Platform tracks | 2 |
abbreviation | BRW |
IBNR | 8089035 |
Price range | 5 |
opening | December 15, 1980 |
Profile on Bahnhof.de | Raoul-Wallenberg-Strasse |
location | |
City / municipality | Berlin |
Place / district | Marzahn |
country | Berlin |
Country | Germany |
Coordinates | 52 ° 33 '2 " N , 13 ° 32' 51" E |
Railway lines | |
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Railway stations in Berlin |
Berlin Raoul-Wallenberg-Straße is a S-Bahn station in the Berlin district of Marzahn .
The breakpoint is located in the west of Marzahn on the Wriezener Bahn and is bordered to the east by Märkische Allee , from the west Otto-Rosenberg-Strasse leads to the train station. It has an exit in the middle of the platform.
history
At the 8th party congress of the SED in 1971 it was decided to solve the "housing issue as a social problem until 1990". For this purpose, residential construction began in 1977 for the planned Marzahn housing estate. The new residential buildings were built in several sections from south to north. Since an efficient local transport connection was required, an S-Bahn line from Friedrichsfelde Ost via Springpfuhl to the new settlement was to be put into operation. On 15 December 1980, the route was from the station Marzahn to S-Bahn station Otto Winzer Street (now Mehrower Avenue) extended and the S-Bahn station Bruno-Leuschner -Straße: put into operation (working title Marzahn center). Initially, only the out-of-town track went into operation; from September 1, 1981, the inner-town track as far as Bruno-Leuschner-Straße was also available. An extension of this track to Otto-Winzer-Straße was not yet possible because the long-distance trains on the Wriezener Bahn turned at the western edge of the platform . Since no track changes were planned between Marzahn and Otto-Winzer-Straße, both tracks were operated as two single-track lines. The train group P (Paula) drove on the eastern track and the amplifier train group R (Richard) on the western track. With the extension of the S-Bahn line to Ahrensfelde and the relocation of the long-distance railway terminus there, continuous double-track operation began.
The original name of the station Bruno-Leuschner-Straße was changed on January 31, 1992, like the name of the street, to Raoul-Wallenberg-Straße. Raoul Wallenberg , a Swedish diplomat, helped hundreds of Hungarian Jews to flee in 1944 by means of a self-designed protection pass.
Connection
The S 7 line of the S-Bahn Berlin stops at Raoul-Wallenberg-Straße station and there is a transition to the bus lines X54 and 154 of the Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe .
line | course |
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Potsdam Central Station - Babelsberg - Griebnitzsee - Wannsee - Nikolassee - Grunewald - Westkreuz - Charlottenburg - Savignyplatz - Zoological Garden - Tiergarten - Bellevue - Central Station - Friedrichstrasse - Hackescher Markt - Alexanderplatz - Jannowitzbrücke - Ostbahnhof - Warschauer Strasse - Ostkreuz - Nöldnerplatz - Lichtenberg - Friedrichsfelde Ost - Springpfuhl - Poelchaustraße - Marzahn - Raoul-Wallenberg-Straße - Mehrower Allee - Ahrensfelde |
Web links
- Information about the train station at stadtschnellbahn.de
- Information from the Berlin S-Bahn to the station
Individual evidence
- ↑ Station price list 2020. In: Deutsche Bahn. Deutsche Bahn, January 1, 2020, accessed on July 11, 2020 .
- ↑ Query of the course book route 200.7 at Deutsche Bahn.
- ↑ Peter Bley: The Wriezener Bahn . In: Berliner Verkehrsblätter . No. 10-11 , 1983, pp. 216-222 .
- ^ Mike Straschewski: Raoul-Wallenberg-Strasse. In: stadtschnellbahn-berlin.de. October 26, 2008, accessed February 15, 2015 .