Coesfeld (Westf) train station

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coesfeld (Westf)
Entrance building of the station
Entrance building of the station
Data
Operating point type railway station
Location in the network Crossing station
Design Through station
Platform tracks 4th
abbreviation ECMF
IBNR 8000066
opening August 1, 1875
Profile on Bahnhof.de Coesfeld__Westf_
location
City / municipality Coesfeld
country North Rhine-Westphalia
Country Germany
Coordinates 51 ° 56 '22 "  N , 7 ° 9' 52"  E Coordinates: 51 ° 56 '22 "  N , 7 ° 9' 52"  E
Height ( SO ) 81  m
Railway lines
Railway stations in North Rhine-Westphalia
i16 i18

The Coesfeld (Westf) train station is the most important train station in the city of Coesfeld and an important transport hub in the western Münsterland in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia .

The Coesfelder station is a junction station at the Dortmund-Enschede railway , the railway Dorsten-Coesfeld and the railway Coesfeld-Münster (called Baumberge Railway ).

history

The Dortmund-Gronau-Enscheder Railway Company (DGE) began building its main line from Dortmund in 1874 . On August 1, 1875, it opened the Coesfeld (Westf) station at the end of the section from Dülmen Ost. Almost two months later, another section to Gronau was inaugurated, and the terminus became a through station .

The Wanne-Eickel-Hamburg line of the Cologne-Mindener Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft was of great national importance, the Rheinische Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft (RhE) planned its Duisburg-Quakenbrück line as a competitor. With the completion of the latter on July 1, 1879, Coesfeld became a crossing station . The Rhenish route originally crossed the DGE route south of Coesfeld.

In 1880 the RhE was first nationalized, in 1903 the DGE also joined the Prussian State Railways (PSE) as one of the last (nominally) private railway companies . The company had already started to build a railway line from Empel to Borken at the turn of the century . Coesfeld was reached on October 1, 1904, and the new line crossed the two existing lines again south of the station. The construction to Billerbeck took place until March 1, 1908, with the last section to Havixbeck, the building project was completed on May 1, 1908.

The original in timbered held station building was demolished in 1910 and replaced by a new building.

Coesfeld station track plan
BSicon STR.svgBSicon .svgBSicon .svg
Main track from Ahaus / Gronau
BSicon STR.svgBSicon STR + l.svgBSicon STRq.svg
Main track from Lutum (/ Rheine)
BSicon STR.svgBSicon STR.svgBSicon exSTR + l.svg
Former track from Lutum / Münster
BSicon ABZgl.svgBSicon STRl + r.svgBSicon xABZg + r.svg
(new alignment from 1993/4)
BSicon BHF.svgBSicon BHF.svgBSicon BHF.svg
today's platforms
BSicon xABZgl.svgBSicon ABZgl + r.svgBSicon ABZg + r.svg
(new route from 1997)
BSicon exSTRl.svgBSicon eKRZu.svgBSicon exKRZl.svg
Main track to Dülmen / Dortmund
BSicon exSTRq.svgBSicon eKRZu.svgBSicon exSTRr.svg
former track to Borken / Bocholt
Route - straight ahead
Main track to Dorsten (/ Duisburg)

In the second half of the 20th century, the number of travelers in Westmünsterland decreased. None of the railway lines had ever played a greater, supra-regional role. First, on May 26, 1974, passenger traffic on the western part of the Baumberbahn from Isselburg-Anholt to Coesfeld was stopped. Ten years later this followed on the northern section from Coesfeld to Rheine of the Rhenish route.

At the beginning of the 1990s, several modifications to the track system began. On August 28, 1993, the exit from the Coesfeld train station in the direction of Ahaus (VzG 2100) was re-routed. The track of the Baumberbahn to Münster (VzG 2265) was shut down on November 13, 1994 to Lutum route change , in return the one to Rheine (VzG 2273) was put back into operation up to this point. The section from Lutum to St. Arnold was completely shut down on January 1, 1996 and has since been partially dismantled.

There was now no continuous passenger traffic either on the Baumberbahn or on the Duisburg – Quakenbrück railway. The time-consuming southern exit from the train station without intersections was thus superfluous. The exit towards Dülmen (VzG 2100) was relocated to the route of the former route to Borken (VzG 2265) on November 30, 1997 .

In 2008, the Coesfeld (Westf) Cf interlocking was built , an electronic interlocking of the SIMIS-D and ZSB 2000 type. In the years that followed, up to 2012, it took over the tasks of the three mechanical predecessors and remote control of the Steinfurt-Burgsteinfurt train stations (October 26, 2008 ), Altenberge (November 9, 2008), Gronau (Westf) and Ochtrup (both October 12, 2008), Beelen , Telgte and Warendorf (all three October 26, 2009), Ahaus and Epe (Westf) (November 22, 2010) , and most recently Billerbeck and Havixbeck (January 29, 2012).

After the renovation carried out for 6.5 million euros, in the course of which the old tunnel was replaced with a new underpass, three elevators were installed and tracks were laid, Coesfeld is now a modern and barrier-free train station. It was inaugurated on January 18, 2013 in the presence of the then North Rhine-Westphalian Transport Minister Michael Groschek .

On December 19, 2018, the City Council of Coesfeld approved plans to demolish the historic reception building. The aim is to create space for a multi-purpose building which, in addition to a reception hall and a travel center, will also provide gastronomic offers and bicycle parking spaces as well as residential and business premises. The project was recently highly controversial in Coesfeld because with the building and its striking turret, another piece of historically significant building fabric is irretrievably lost.

Stop at the Coesfeld school center

Stop at Coesfeld School Center, 2012

The Coesfeld School Center stop was reopened on June 10, 2011.

Formally, the stop is not on the Empel-Rees – Münster railway line (VzG 2265), whose track between the Coesfeld station and the Lutum branch has been closed, but on the track of the former line to Rheine (VzG 2273).

service

In rail transport is Coesfeld (Westphalia) Station of three regional trains operated:

line Line course Tact operator
RB 45 The Coesfelder :
Coesfeld (Westf)  - Maria-Veen  - Reken  - Klein Reken  - Lembeck  - Wulfen (Westf)  - Hervest-Dorsten  - Dorsten  from / to Essen Hbf as RE 14
status: timetable change December 2019
60 min NWB
RB 51 Westmünsterlandbahn :
Dortmund Hbf  - Dortmund-Kirchderne  - Dortmund-Derne  - Prussia  - Lünen Hbf  - Bork  - Selm-Beifang  - Selm  - Lüdinghausen  - Dülmen  - Lette  - Coesfeld  - Rosendahl-Holtwick  - Legden  - Ahaus  - Epe  - Gronau  - Glanerbrug  - Enschede De Eschmarke  - Enschede
Status: timetable change December 2015
60 min DB Regio
RB 63 Baumberge-Bahn :
Coesfeld  - Coesfeld School Center  - Lutum  - Billerbeck  - Havixbeck  - Münster-Roxel  - Münster (Westf) Hbf  - Münster Zentrum Nord
Status: timetable change December 2015
60 min DB Regio
  1. Increased cycle times Mon – Fri in high season to 30 min

(As of 2019)

literature

  • Daniel Hörnemann: Coesfeld (Westf). Railway junction in West Munsterland . Sutton Verlag, 2007, ISBN 978-3-86680-173-8 .

Web links

Commons : Bahnhof Coesfeld  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Deutsche Bahn AG:

NRWbahnarchiv by André Joost:

Individual evidence

  1. Description of the signal box Coesfeld (Westf) Cf
  2. Viola ter Horst: Official inauguration on the tracks / modernization for 6.5 million euros "money well spent". Big station for Groschek. In: Allgemeine Zeitung Coesfeld. January 18, 2013, accessed December 20, 2017 .
  3. ^ WDR from December 20, 2018: New train station for Coesfeld
  4. Allgemeine Zeitung of December 18, 2018: Yet another striking face
  5. ^ Opening of the new Coesfeld School Center station. (No longer available online.) In: coesfeld.de. June 10, 2011, archived from the original on February 26, 2016 ; accessed on February 26, 2016 .