Stendal main station
Stendal Hbf | |
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Stendal station (2018)
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Data | |
Location in the network | Crossing station |
Design | Through station |
Platform tracks | 8th |
abbreviation | LS |
IBNR | 8010334 |
Price range | 3 |
opening | 1871 |
Profile on Bahnhof.de | Stendal central station |
location | |
City / municipality | Stendal |
country | Saxony-Anhalt |
Country | Germany |
Coordinates | 52 ° 35 ′ 41 ″ N , 11 ° 51 ′ 17 ″ E |
Height ( SO ) | 32 m above sea level NHN |
Railway lines | |
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Railway stations in Saxony-Anhalt |
Stendal Hauptbahnhof (until December 14, 2019: Stendal station ) is one of three train stations in the city of Stendal in Saxony-Anhalt. It is an important rail hub for regional trains and is also regularly served by Intercity and Intercity Express trains. Until the 2012 winter timetable, Stendal station was only served by Deutsche Bahn trains. The Ostdeutsche Eisenbahn (ODEG) has been operating at the station since December 2012, as has the Hanseatic Railway and Abellio Rail Mitteldeutschland since December 9, 2018 .
history
On July 7, 1849, the town of Stendal got its first railway connection, as the Magdeburg-Wittenberg Ash Railway Company , the Magdeburg-Wittenberge railway opened. This led along the eastern edge of the village, where the train station was initially located.
In the course of the construction work for the Stendal – Uelzen railway and the Berlin-Lehrter Railway around 1870, however, the station had to be relocated to the southern edge of the city in order to enable travelers to switch between the three lines. The Magdeburg-Wittenbergesche Bahn was also relocated to be connected to the new train station and has since circumnavigated the city in the west. The present reception building was built between 1869 and 1871.
In April 1886 the station was connected to the Stendal-Tangermünder Railway .
In June 1892 a tram connection was opened between the station forecourt and the Uenglinger Tor ; in October 1909 another was added, which also led to Uenglinger Tor, but from there to what was then the Ostbahnhof. Both tram routes were shut down in October 1926 and replaced by a bus connection .
In autumn 1908 the station was connected with the Stendal – Arendsee small railway , and in May 1914 with the Stendal – Arneburg small railway after it had been converted from meter gauge to standard gauge . The line to Arendsee was gradually shut down between 1978 and 1995. All rail operations on the route to Arneburg ended in October 1972.
From January 1977 the trains on the new Stendal – Niedergörne railway ended in the station, the line was intended as a connection for the never completed Stendal nuclear power plant . Since the end of passenger transport at the end of 1995, this route has only been used by freight trains.
In 1984, with the electrification of the line to Magdeburg, Stendal was connected to the electrical railway network.
Between 1994 and 1998, the high-speed line from Hanover to Berlin was built parallel to the Berlin-Lehrter Bahn . Contrary to the wishes of the city, a southern bypass of Stendal was created, which is still used by most of the long-distance trains on the route. Nevertheless, the first ICE stopped at Stendal station on September 27, 1998.
In January 2015 the pedestrian underpass was extended to the south side. It was planned to renew the central platforms and build elevators from 2016 so that the station would be barrier-free. A total of 5 million euros should be invested for this. The start of construction will, however, be delayed until 2019, so that completion is not expected until 2021. Construction started on June 13, 2019.
With the timetable change on December 15, 2019, the station was given the suffix “Hauptbahnhof”.
The Stendal area is to be equipped with digital interlockings and ETCS by 2030 as part of the “starter package” of Digital Rail Germany , as part of the TEN core network corridor Scandinavia-Mediterranean .
investment
The station has eight platform tracks, five of which are through tracks and three butt tracks. Track 1, which can be used continuously, is on the house platform, tracks 2–5 on two central platforms. Head tracks 6 and 7 are located to the east and west of the reception building and can be reached via the house platform. The third head track 8 connects to the central platform 2/3 in an easterly direction. The following table shows the length and height of the platforms.
track | Length (in m) | Height (in cm) |
---|---|---|
1 | 400 | 76 |
2 | 290 | 26th |
3 | 360 | 26th |
4th | 233 | 34 |
5 | 233 | 34 |
6th | 138 | 76 |
7th | 170 | 28 |
8th | 58 | 26th |
There is a large parking area to the west of the station .
Several bus routes operated by Stendalbus operate on the station forecourt , and there is also a taxi stand there.
Transport links
Long-distance transport
line | Line course | Tact | EVU |
---|---|---|---|
ICE 10 | Berlin - Stendal - Wolfsburg - Hanover - Bielefeld - Hamm - (Ruhr area) - Cologne / Düsseldorf | individual trains | DB long-distance transport |
IC 32 | Cologne - Düsseldorf - Dortmund - Bielefeld - Hanover - Wolfsburg - Stendal - Berlin - Eberswalde - Prenzlau - Stralsund | Indent | DB long-distance transport |
IC 56 | Leipzig - Leipzig / Halle Airport - Halle - Magdeburg - Stendal - Wittenberge - Schwerin - Rostock - Warnemünde | Indent | DB long-distance transport |
IC 77 | Berlin - Stendal - Wolfsburg - Hanover - Minden - Osnabrück - Rheine - Hengelo - Amersfoort - Amsterdam / Münster |
120 min | DB long-distance transport |
Regional traffic
line | Line course | Tact | EVU |
---|---|---|---|
IRE 1 | Berlin - Stendal - Salzwedel - Uelzen - Lüneburg - Hamburg | individual trains | DB Regio |
RE 4 | Stendal - Rathenow - Wustermark - Berlin - Ludwigsfelde - Jüterbog | Indent | East German Railway |
RE 20 | Magdeburg - Tangerhütte - Stendal - Hohenwulsch - Salzwedel - Uelzen | 120 | DB Regio Southeast |
RB 32 | Stendal - Kläden - Hohenwulsch - Brunau-Packebusch - Salzwedel |
120 (Sat-Sun) |
60 (Mon-Fri)DB Regio Southeast |
RB 33 | Stendal - Tangermünde | 60 | Hanseatic Railway |
RB 34 | Stendal - Schönhausen - Rathenow | 120 | Hanseatic Railway |
RB 35 | Stendal - Uchtspringe - Gardelegen - Mieste - Oebisfelde - Wolfsburg |
120 (Sat-Sun) |
60 (Mon-Fri)Abellio Rail Central Germany |
S 1 | Wittenberge - Osterburg - Stendal - Tangerhütte - Magdeburg - Schönebeck-Bad Salzelmen | 60 | DB Regio Southeast |
Local public transport
The bus station , from which city and regional bus lines run by stendalbus , is located at the station forecourt . The state bus 900 runs every hour to Glöwen via Schönhausen , Klietz and Havelberg .
Web links
- Track systems and some permissible speeds of the station on the OpenRailwayMap
- Delivery to the Stendal station in the holdings of the Reichsbahndirektion Magdeburg in the State Archives Saxony-Anhalt, Dessau department
Individual evidence
- ↑ DB Station & Service AG: Station price list 2018. (PDF) (No longer available online.) Archived from the original on January 23, 2018 ; accessed on April 3, 2018 .
- ↑ a b c d The history of the Hanseatic city of Stendal. Retrieved January 14, 2011 .
- ↑ Query of the course book route 202 at Deutsche Bahn.
- ↑ Querying the course book route 301 from Deutsche Bahn.
- ↑ a b Query of the course book route 305 at Deutsche Bahn.
- ↑ Query of the course book route 269 at Deutsche Bahn.
- ↑ Stendal. In: Saxony-Anhalt station program. Retrieved January 23, 2016 .
- ↑ Refurbishment by 2021: Stendaler Bahnhof should become barrier-free. (No longer available online.) In: mdr.de. Archived from the original on August 20, 2017 ; accessed on August 21, 2017 .
- ↑ Start of construction for the barrier-free conversion of the Stendal transport station. Deutsche Bahn, June 13, 2019, accessed on June 18, 2019 .
- ↑ That brings the 2020 rail timetable in Saxony-Anhalt. In: mdr.de. December 10, 2019, accessed December 23, 2019 .
- ↑ Digital Rail Germany #####. (PDF) The future of the railroad. In: deutschebahn.com. Deutsche Bahn, September 2019, p. 10 f. , accessed on May 2, 2020 .
- ↑ Stendal. In: deutschebahn.com. December 21, 2018, accessed January 19, 2019 .