Lichtenfels station
Through station | |
East facade of the entrance building | |
Location |
Am Bahnhofsplatz 3, Lichtenfels, Bavaria Germany |
Coordinates | 50°8′46″N 11°3′35″E / 50.14611°N 11.05972°ECoordinates: 50°8′46″N 11°3′35″E / 50.14611°N 11.05972°E |
Line(s) | |
Platforms | 6 |
Construction | |
Architect | Gottfried von Neureuther |
Architectural style | Neo-Renaissance |
Other information | |
Station code | 3700[1] |
DS100 code | NLF[2] |
IBNR | 8000228 |
Category | 3[1] |
Website | www.bahnhof.de |
History | |
Opened | 15 February 1846 |
Lichtenfels station is in the town of Lichtenfels in Upper Franconia in the German state of Bavaria. It is a regional rail hub and an ICE stop on the Hamburg–Berlin Munich route and is classified by Deutsche Bahn as a station of category 3.
Location
Lichtenfels station is 31.9 km from Bamberg on the Bamberg–Hof railway and 150.9 from Eisenach on the Werra Railway at a height of 262.4 metres above sea level and is located west of the town centre and east of the Main river.
History
Planning of the Bamberg–Lichtenfels section of the Ludwig South-North Railway began in the summer of 1841, and work started shortly later. The line had to penetrate the town’s wall, which had to be rebuilt with a new Coburger Tor ("Coburg gate") over the line. The station, together with a depot, was first connected to the line in January 1846. The official opening ceremony followed on 15 February 1846. On 15 October 1846 the line was extended to Neuenmarkt and on 1 November 1848 the line reached its terminus in Hof. The first massive entrance building was a temporary wooden structure built between 1847 and 1850. In January 1859 the Werra Railway was extended to Lichtenfels, making the station a railway hub and requiring the upgrading of the station in 1862 to provide separate tracks for the Werra Railway Company and the Royal Bavarian State Railways. The station gained new significance with the opening of the Franconian Forest Railway to Probstzella in October 1885, part of a new long-distance route to Berlin. The acquisition of the assets of the Werra Railway by the Prussian government in the 1890s was followed by an extensive expansion and restructuring of the railway facilities. The number of running tracks was increased to eleven, with 17 signalman’s posts replaced by four signal boxes. Lichtenfels’ station area covered about 30 hectares and the railways employed about 29 percent of the city’s workforce in 1914. The Coburger Tor was demolished in 1889. In 1896 the Coburger Straße pedestrian bridge was built over the railway tracks; it was demolished in 1934.
From 1934 to 1936 extensive works were carried out in preparation for the electrification of the line, including the building of a pedestrian underpass to the platforms, a road underpass for Coburger Straße, the raising of the level of the tracks and the installation of modern signal boxes and interlockings. Electric train operations were included in schedules from 15 May 1939.
During the Second World War, the depot was destroyed in an air raid on 23 February 1945. The German army demolished the switches and water cranes on 11 April 1945. 95 percent of the damage had been repaired by the end of 1945.[3]
In the autumn of 1983 a new central interlocking was commissioned to the design of Lorenz.[4] At the beginning of the 21st century this was followed by a further reorganisation of the station. The platforms were redesigned and they received a new roof, lifts, and 76 cm high platforms.
Passenger services
Long-distance
In Long-distance traffic ICE services on line 28, Hamburg–Berlin–Leipzig–Jena–Nürnberg–Munich, stop every two hours.
With the start of the Ebensfeld–Erfurt high-speed railway in December 2017, it will to lose its status as a station for long-distance trains.[5] To what extent additional regional services will be offered as a substitute cannot be predicted, according to Deutsche Bahn (status: August 2013).[6] The new line runs a few kilometres to the west of Lichtenfels. There will be a connection with Coburg station, which will be served by ICE services.
Line | Route | Frequency |
---|---|---|
ICE 28 | (Hamburg –) Berlin – Leipzig – Jena Paradies – Lichtenfels – Nuremberg – Ingolstadt / Augsburg – Munich | Every 2 hours |
IC 28 | Berlin – Leipzig – Lichtenfels – Nuremberg – Augsburg – Munich | Individual services |
According to a traffic modelling on behalf of the Coburg Chamber of Commerce in 2014, the station would handle 520 ICE passengers daily, 170 of those changing trains and 340 starting or finishing their journeys at the station.[7]
Regional services
In regional transport, Lichtenfels is a hub with hourly connections to Upper Franconia and South Thuringia. The station is the start or end point for Regionalbahn connections and a through station for an agilis connection and three Regional-Express services:
Train class | Route | Frequency | Rolling stock | |
---|---|---|---|---|
RE | Franken-Thüringen-Express: Nuremberg – Fürth – Erlangen – Bamberg |
– Lichtenfels – Coburg – Sonneberg | Hourly | class 442 (Talent 2) (some times double-deck) |
– Lichtenfels – Saalfeld – Jena | Every 2 hours | |||
RE | Main-Saale-Express: (Bamberg –) Lichtenfels – Neuenmarkt-Wirsberg – Hof / Bayreuth (– Nuremberg) |
Hourly | BR 641 | |
RB | (Saalfeld –) Kronach – Lichtenfels – Bamberg | Hourly | class 442 (Talent 2) (some times Silberling) | |
Bad Rodach – Coburg – Lichtenfels – Kulmbach – Neuenmarkt-Wirsberg – Bayreuth | Hourly | class 650 (Regio-Shuttle RS1) |
Since December 2013, the regional express service, Würzburg–Bamberg–Lichtenfels–Bayreuth/Hof, has been divided into two lines. DB Regio Franken won the tender for services from 2015 in the Main-Spessart region and now operates to Bamberg, some services extended to Frankfurt via Würzburg. The Bamberg– Lichtenfels–Bayreuth/Hof route continues to be operated by DB Regio Oberfranken.
Tracks
The station has eleven through tracks, some without access to platforms. On its three island platforms lie platform tracks 1 and 2 (170 m long), 3 and 5 (370 m) and 6 and 7 (210 m). These are accessed by an underpass, connected by stairs and elevators. There is no longer a platform attached to the main building.
In the roundhouse of the old railway depot contains some locomotives of the Nuremberg Transport Museum.
Entrance building
The entrance building was built in 1848 and 1849 to an 1847 design of the architect Gottfried Neureuther. It consisted of a three-story central building with four windows and on both sides it had three-storey wings. In 1859/60 the wings were extended. In 1862 the station building was completely reconstructed in a Renaissance Revival style. It was south of an additional building that was designed similar to the old central building and connected to it by a three-storey building. In 1886 a symmetrical reception building was added. The station building is now listed as a monument by the Bavarian government.
Notes
- 1 2 "Stationspreisliste 2016" [Station price list 2017] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 18 November 2016. Retrieved 14 December 2016.
- ↑ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2009/2010 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
- ↑ Ulrich Rockelmann/Thomas Naumann: Die Frankenwaldbahn. Die Geschichte der Steilrampe über den Frankenwald. EK-Verlag Freiburg 1997. ISBN 3-88255-581-5, p. 95
- ↑ Steffen Dietsch, Stefan Goldschmidt, Hans Löhner: Die Werrabahn. Verlag Eisenbahnfreunde Steinachtalbahn-Coburg, Coburg 2008, ISBN 978-3-9810681-3-9, p. 183
- ↑ Manuel Rehkopf (26 August 2013). Vollständige Inbetriebnahme der Neu-/Ausbaustrecke VDE 8, Angebotskonzept DB Fernverkehr AG (in German). p. 7. (presentation)
- ↑ "Fragezeichen hinterm ICE-Halt". Neue Presse (in German). 30 August 2013. p. 3. Retrieved 19 June 2016.
- ↑ "Erstellung eines kleinteiligen Verkehrsmodells mit Potentialanalyse für den ICE-Systemhalt Coburg: Zusammenfassung" (PDF) (Press release) (in German). Hannover: IHK zu Coburg. 28 January 2015. pp. 3, 5.
References
- Dippold, Günter (April 2001). "Eisenbahn und Kleinstadt - Auswirkungen des Knotenpunktes auf Lichtenfels im 19. und frühen 20. Jahrhundert" (PDF, 1.56 MB). Heimatbeilage zum Oberfränkischen Schulanzeiger (in German). Bayreuth (281). Retrieved 1 January 2011.
- Ulrich, Werner; Pohlmann, Dieter; Kaetzke, Friedrich (1982). "Erhaltung der Hochbauten, dargestellt an den Empfangsgebäuden der Bahnhöfe Nürnberg, Regensburg und Lichtenfels". ETR (in German). 32 (1/2): 58–61.
- Schäfer, Hans-Peter (1990). "Über die Durchgangsstation zum Eisenbahnknoten Lichtenfels – Zu den Anfängen der Eisenbahngeschichte am Obermain". In Dippold, Günter; Urban, Josef. Im oberen Maintal, auf dem Jura, an Rodach und Itz. Landschaft, Geschichte, Kultur (in German). Lichtenfels: self-published by Kreissparkasse Lichtenfels. pp. 197–224.
External links
- "Stationssteckbrief Lichtenfels" (in German). Retrieved 1 January 2011.
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