Brest-Aspe train station

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Brest-Aspe is a single-track stop on the Bremerhaven – Buxtehude railway line and belongs to the HVV area . The station is located north of Brest and southeast of Aspe in its own settlement and belongs to the municipality of Brest. It is on the street Zum Bahnhof (K 58). In addition, the station was the end point of the Bevertalbahn .

Brest Aspe
Bahnhof-Brest-Aspe.jpg
Former station building
Data
Operating point type Breakpoint
Platform tracks 1
abbreviation AAE
opening 1902
location
City / municipality Brest
country Lower Saxony
Country Germany
Coordinates 53 ° 27 '38 "  N , 9 ° 22' 58"  E Coordinates: 53 ° 27 '38 "  N , 9 ° 22' 58"  E
Height ( SO ) 29  m
Railway lines
Railway stations in Lower Saxony
i16 i18

history

In February 1902, the Bremerhaven-Buchholz railway line was “as a full-track branch line with the stations Bargstedt, Beckdorf, Brest-Aspe, Drestedt, Harsefeld, Hollenstedt, Kutenholz, Sprötze Nord and Staersbeck-Moisburg for passenger, baggage, express, and piece goods -, wagonload, cattle and private telegram traffic put into operation ". The Brest-Aspe train station was also built during this period. The railway line was connected to the Stade – Osterholz – Scharmbeck railway in Bremervörde . On May 26, 1968, the personnel traffic between Bremerhaven and Buchholz was stopped.

After the merger of the Elbe-Weser (EVB) railways and transport company with the Buxtehuder-Harsefelder Eisenbahn and the takeover of the DB Bremerhaven – Buchholz route, EVB changed the timetable on September 26, 1993 and did not stop the passenger trains from Bremerhaven Stade, but to Buxtehude. Passenger traffic took place again in Brest-Aspe .

Until 2007/08 the EVB trains ran as far as Neugraben (connection to the Hamburg S-Bahn ), but then the S 3 S-Bahn line was extended to Stade and the EVB only ran as far as Buxtehude (connection to the S 3).

The station has a side platform , four parking spaces and 14 bicycle racks.

Bevertalbahn

The Brest-Aspe station was the end point of the so-called Bever talbahn , a field railway that was used to transport raw materials. The light railway was branched off from the Bremerhaven – Buxtehude railway line using a special switch . There were several vehicles:

A dump truck that was built around 1910 has also been preserved. On March 29, 1992 it was taken over by the Aumühler Feldbahn . It was last used in the brickworks in Lamstedt .

Today's train station

After the railway was closed on October 15, 2011, the locomotives were sold to a museum in Osnabrück .

The railway was named after the valley of the Bever river , which flows through the municipality of Brest and flows into the Oste .

Trivia

Parts of the film " 13 little donkeys and the Sonnenhof " were shot at the Brest-Aspe train station.

Railway lines

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Newspaper of the Association of German Railway Administrations , Vol. 42, Issue 9, p. 158
  2. ^ VVM - Association of Traffic Amateurs and Museum Railways e. V. (non-profit). Retrieved June 27, 2018 .
  3. ^ VVM - Association of Traffic Amateurs and Museum Railways e. V. (non-profit). Retrieved June 27, 2018 .