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Basel SBB railway station

Basel SBB railway station (German: Bahnhof Basel SBB, or in earlier times Centralbahnhof or Schweizer Bahnhof) is the central railway station in the city of Basel, Switzerland. Opened in 1854, and completely rebuilt in 1900–1907, it is Europe's busiest international border station. Basel SBB is owned by the Swiss Federal Railways (SBB CFF FFS). The other major railway station is Basel Badischer Bahnhof, operated by the German railway company Deutsche Bahn, on the north side of the Rhine from the city centre.

Basel SBB

Bâle CFF
Central pass-through railway station
Main north entrance
General information
LocationCentralbahnplatz
Basel
Switzerland
Coordinates47°32′49″N 7°35′24″E / 47.54694°N 7.59000°E / 47.54694; 7.59000
Elevation276 m (906 ft)
Owned bySwiss Federal Railways
Line(s)
Platforms9
Tracks22 (German: Gleise: 12 pass-through (3 non-stop), 7 SBB terminal, 3 SNCF terminal)
Connections
Construction
Structure typeAt-grade
Architect
  • 1854/1860: Ludwig Maring
  • 1907: Emil Faesch, Emanuel La Roche
  • 1999: Herzog & de Meuron
  • 2003: Cruz y Ortiz Arquitectos
Other information
Fare zone
WebsiteBahnhof Basel SBB
History
Opened19 December 1854; 169 years ago (1854-12-19)
Rebuilt
  • 4 June 1860; 163 years ago (1860-06-04)
    (total rebuilt)
  • 24 June 1907; 116 years ago (1907-06-24)
    (total rebuilt)
  • 1998/99; 2003 years ago (1998/99)
    (railway control center)
  • 2003; 21 years ago (2003)
    (renovation, Passarelle, underground car/bicycle park)
Previous names
  • Centralbahnhof (1854–1902)
  • Schweizer Bundesbahnhof (1902bis)
Key dates
1902-03 (1902-03)Demolition of the first non-wooden station
1902-07 (1902-07)Provisional railway station in place
Passengers
2018111,000 per working day[4]
Services
Preceding station Swiss Federal Railways Following station
Basel Badischer EuroCity Olten
Terminus Olten
Basel Badischer Liestal
Zürich Hauptbahnhof
Terminus
Terminus IC 3 Zürich Hauptbahnhof
towards Chur
IC 6 Olten
towards Brig
IC 21 Olten
towards Lugano
Laufen
towards Biel/Bienne
IC 51 Terminus
Terminus IC 61 Liestal
IR 27 Liestal
towards Lucerne
IR 36 Rheinfelden
IR 37 Liestal
Preceding station Südostbahn Following station
Terminus IR 26 Olten
towards Locarno
Preceding station DB Fernverkehr Following station
Reverses direction ICE 12 Basel Badischer
Liestal
Zürich HB
towards Chur
ICE 20
Liestal
One-way operation
Basel Badischer
Preceding station TGV Lyria Following station
Mulhouse
towards Paris-Lyon
Paris to Zürich Zürich Hauptbahnhof
Terminus
Preceding station ÖBB Following station
Basel Badischer Nightjet Zürich Hbf
Terminus
Basel Badischer
towards Berlin Hbf
Preceding station TER Grand Est Following station
Saint-Louis
towards Strasbourg
A01 Terminus
Basel St. Johann
towards Mulhouse
A15
Preceding station Basel trinational S-Bahn Following station
Terminus S1 Muttenz
towards Laufenburg or Frick
Basel Dreispitz
towards Porrentruy
S3 Muttenz
towards Olten
Terminus S6 Basel Bad Bf
Location

Trains operated by SBB CFF FFS use Basel SBB to link Basel with destinations within Switzerland and Italy, as do Deutsche Bahn Intercity-Express (ICE) trains to and from Germany, Zürich and Interlaken, most SNCF TGV trains to and from Paris, and some regional trains to and from Alsace. Additionally, the station is served by three lines of the Basel S-Bahn.

The 1907 neo-baroque station building is a heritage site of national significance.[5] It also contains Bâle SNCF (shown in SBB CFF FFS online timetables as Basel SBB Gl. 30–35, and in other online timetables as Basel SNCF), which is located through a border crossing and is used by other trains to and from France. Directly outside the station building is the Centralbahnplatz, which is a major hub of the Basel tramway network, and the Basel terminus of a direct bus service to the EuroAirport.

Location edit

The station area is situated at the southern side of the city centre, in an elongated area between the Zoological Garden to the west and the Brüglinger Ebene [de] to the east.

The borders of four of Basel's districts come together at the station area. However, the area is, according to the Statistical Office, divided between only two districts: the station itself is located in Gundeldingen [de], while most of the tracks on the eastern side of the station (including the goods station), along with the Centralbahnplatz in front of the station (including the BIS Tower), are attributed to the St. Alban quarter [de].

The Elisabethenanlage in front of the Centralbahnplatz belongs to Vorstädte [de], while the Markthalle [de] opposite Basel SNCF is part of the Am Ring [de] district.

History edit

Beginnings edit

 
Basel's first railway station, 1847.

The first railway to reach Basel, the Chemin de fer Strasbourg Bâle [fr] (StB; Strasbourg Basel Railway), arrived there in 1844. The following year, 1845, the Elsässerbahn (Alsatian Railway) built the first station in the Basel metropolitan area, within the city walls. Basel thereby became the first Swiss city to be connected to the new means of transport.[6]

After the arrival of the railway, there was a passionate debate in Basel about the pros and cons of the railway and its possible continuation towards Lucerne and from there through the Gotthard towards Italy.[6]

Meanwhile, the Rheintalbahn from Mannheim and Karlsruhe also approached Basel from the north; in 1851 it reached Haltingen (a district of Weil am Rhein), on the Swiss border.

In 1853, the Schweizerische Centralbahn railway company (SCB) was founded in Basel. Its purpose was the establishment of a link between the city of Basel and the economic centres of the Mittelland cantons, and perhaps even also the expansion of the transport corridor from Lucerne to the Gotthard.

The Viaduktstrasse in Basel – including the Birsig Viaduct [de], which is adjacent to the Zoo Basel parking lot – was also the formation of the Elsässerbahn until 1902. Today, the viaduct serves tram lines 1 and 8, as well as motor vehicle traffic, and a plaque on the bridge railing recalls its earlier role as a rail bridge.

Provisional station edit

In 1854, construction on the future Hauenstein railway line began. Right up until the opening of the first section of the route from Basel to Liestal, the controversial question of the site and design of the Basel railway station remained unresolved.

However, to accommodate the commencement of railway operations on 19 December 1854, the Centralbahn built a simple temporary timber structure, according to plans developed by chief architect Ludwig Maring. By the opening day, all of the temporary station buildings had been completed, including a timber train shed.

This modest provisional station, equipped with makeshift facilities, was made up of individual detached buildings and was used only for just under six years. The station site consisted of the station building, a goods shed, a carriage and locomotive shed and a turntable at the railhead. As the station building stood on the northeastern side of the station, alongside the station yard, the station was not configured as a terminus.

The provisional station served only as the starting point of the SCB lines, and had no connection with either the French station or the Badischer Bahnhof, which was opened in 1855 as the terminus of the Rheintalbahn.

Centralbahnhof edit

On 29 June 1857, the Grand Council of Basel-Stadt agreed to the construction of a link between the French line and the Centralbahn and the erection of a through station in the field in front of the Elisabethen-Bollwerk. The city bore the cost of the land purchase.

At the start of 1859, the SCB began construction work on the site of the new station, to a design by Maring. In addition to a passenger station, the new station yard featured a goods station relocated to the Gundeldingen district, and two new locomotive sheds, one of them for the SCB, and the other for the Chemins de fer de l'Est, which had taken over the StB in 1854.

On 4 June 1860, railway operations began at the new Basel Centralbahnhof. However, it was not until May 1861 that all the new facilities were completed.

The Centralbahnhof was a joint station, with the northern facade of its station building facing the newly created Centralbahnplatz. On each side of the station building were the boarding halls, each with two tracks – on the eastern side for the Swiss trains and on the western side and for the French trains. To the south of the station building were the goods shed and two large warehouses, with an access road from the Güterstrasse.

In subsequent years, modifications were made to the Centralbahnhof to enable it to deal with its substantially increasing traffic, including trains entering and leaving Basel along a number of new lines:

However, the Centralbahnhof eventually ran out of capacity to handle any further additional traffic.

In 1875, as a first measure of relief, the marshalling of freight trains was relocated to a makeshift yard to the east of the station, on an open field known as "auf dem Wolf". At around that time, discussions began with the aim of lowering the tracks and replacing the troublesome urban level crossings on the Elsässerbahn and at the Centralbahnhof. In 1874, provisional timber pedestrian bridges had already been built at Margarethenstrasse und Heumattstrasse; they were later replaced by iron structures. From 1879, the Pfeffingerstrasse passed underneath the station in a tunnel near the present location of the Peter Merian Bridge.

Finally, in 1898, following the referendum on the nationalisation of Switzerland's railways, the Swiss Federal Council decided to go ahead with the following:

  • construction of a new Centralbahnhof on the existing site;
  • lowering of the whole station area by 2.7 metres (8 ft 10 in);
  • relocation of the Elsässerbahn to a cutting, in a wide arc around the city;
  • relocation of the entire freight and warehouse facility to the provisional marshalling yard at "auf den Wolf".

Provisional new Centralbahnhof edit

The definitive project for a new Centralbahnhof in Basel was developed in 1899. On 16 March 1900, the Federal Council gave approval to the plans.

The lowering of the whole station area and the access lines required careful planning. The first step was the relocation of goods traffic to the Wolf station, and on 12 May 1901 the Alsace line was reopened in its new lower position and wide arc.

On the vacated, lowered, area south of the original Centralbahnhof, the provisional station was built, and on 2 June 1902 it went into operation.

Access to the provisional station was also from the south, via Güterstrasse. To facilitate access, various streets were extended, as were two tram lines. The provisional station remained in operation until 24 June 1907. The provisional facilities and access roads were then dismantled and the two tram lines laid into Güterstrasse. A station underpass to Gundeldingen was built roughly in the location of the provisional access road.

In 1902–1903, the old station was torn down.

Basel SBB station edit

In 1902, the Schweizerische Centralbahn was absorbed by the newly formed Swiss Federal Railways (SBB CFF FFS). The new station, which from then onwards was referred to as Schweizer Bundesbahnhof or Basel SBB, was one of the new Federal Railways' first large building projects. Designed by Emil Faesch and Emmanuel La Roche, the new station was inaugurated on 24 June 1907.

 
The station building viewed from Centralbahnhofplatz, June 2008.

The Basel SBB station building is characterized by its extraordinary length: Basel SNCF, with its customs facility for the international transit traffic, is "attached" to its western side. The asymmetrical layout of the station creates an external appearance representative of the federal buildings of the time. The station building is aligned to the centre line of the Centralbahnplatz, and features a huge glazed tudor arch window between two clock towers under curved domes.

 
View of the ticket hall.

Behind the facade, one might suspect a terminus, but that is not the case in Basel. Through the entrances in the clock towers, travellers reach the ticket hall under a timber-lined steel-arch structure. Like the rest of the interior, the ticket hall is broad and high. Large murals dating from the 1920s advertise tourist destinations in Switzerland. The ticket and currency exchange offices are embedded in the side wall. The baggage check-in and hand luggage storage facilities were formerly also located here, but today they are in the basement, and accessed by means of an escalator and stairs.

 
The remaining station restaurant.

In the eastern part of the station, the baggage claim was formerly to be found where the travel centre is now located. The first/second class restaurants (now Migros) and the third class facility (now a brasserie/kiosk) were in the north west wing. The station was previously known for its station buffets, but these were gradually closed down in the 1990s. The high rooms, their walls decorated with murals, now house other commercial uses together with the sole remaining specialty restaurant.

A separate entrance, on the Centralbahnstrasse west of the Centralbahnplatz, leads to the Alsace-bound trains at Basel SNCF.

 
Inside the train shed.

Initially, the platform allocation at Basel SBB corresponded to the private railway age, because the platforms were separated according to the direction of travel. The station originally had 10 tracks, of which the three bay platforms 1 to 3 were previously reserved for local traffic. Tracks 1 to 10 are spanned by a five aisle train shed, which was created in 1905 by Albert Buss & Cie. [de] of Pratteln in Basel. The train shed is 93 m (305 ft) wide, and has a length of 120 m (390 ft) (tracks 1/2), 230 m (750 ft) (tracks 3/4) and 200 m (660 ft) (tracks 5–10). Track 4 goes through to Basel SNCF, where it becomes track 30 and the catenary can be switched from the Swiss operating current of 15 kV 16.7 Hz AC to its French equivalent, 25 kV 50 Hz AC.

On the southern side of the station, a double track line, located at a lower level, connects the Basel and Muttenz marshalling yards with the line to France, and is devoted mainly to through freight trains.

 
The Passerelle.

Due to the lowering of the tracks at the time of rebuilding, it was difficult to extend the station with additional tracks. On the South side, the platform system has nevertheless been augmented several times: tracks 11 and 12 have been added, the pedestrian underpass has been extended to Gundeldingen, and, in 2003, the new Passerelle was constructed to the new tracks 14 and 15. These changes, together with the introduction of a clock-face timetable in 1982 and the Rail 2000 project, achieved an increase in the station's capacity. Finally, in June 2008, the new tracks 16 and 17 went into operation.

The Passerelle is an element of the new SBB CFF FFS commercial concept known as RailCity. Designed by architects Cruz and Ortiz, it runs over the tracks from the ticket hall at the western end of the train shed to the district of Gundeldingen, and links the platforms with each other. A walkway with shopping opportunities, it is 185 m (607 ft) long, 30 m (98 ft) wide, and replaced the pedestrian underpass. Today, the former underpass is used for operational and logistical purposes.

With the construction of the Passerelle, the RailCenter and the information display were relocated from the ticket hall to the former luggage hall. Additionally, the 1987-built customer service ticket pavilion in the ticket hall was removed, and since then the ticket hall has been able to unfold its ambience to its fullest extent.

Meanwhile, in 1998 and 1999, a new signal box was constructed on behalf of the SBB CFF FFS. The architects of this striking building were Herzog & de Meuron.

Connections edit

Overview edit

 
A train awaits departure for Italy.

About 1,000 trains depart from the station daily. Nearly every 90 seconds, a passenger train leaves or stops at the station. Additionally, freight trains still use the through tracks, and post office trains enter and exit the underground postal station.

International long-distance trains edit

An ICE departs from Basel SBB every hour to Berlin or Hamburg and a number of other German cities. There is also a daily ICE International connection to Amsterdam. Several times a day, EuroCitys run to Milan, and TGVs to Paris. Night connections exist with Berlin, and Hamburg. There used to be a direct connection to Moscow but as of 2014 this has been discontinued.

National long-distance trains edit

Several times hourly, InterCity trains run to Zürich HB, Bern and Olten. At least hourly, Zürich–Chur, Olten–LucerneBellinzonaLugano, Olten–Bern–Interlaken/VispBrig, and DelémontBiel/BienneNeuchâtelLausanne/Geneva can be reached.

Trinational regional trains edit

As a border station, Basel SBB is also aligned with regional services to Germany, France, and Switzerland. The Basel Regional S-Bahn network ranges from Frick/Laufenburg in the east, Olten in the south, and Porrentruy in the west to Mulhouse in the north west and Zell im Wiesental in the north east.

Services edit

 
A TGV meets a reflection of an ICE.
 
An Re 460 awaits departure with a domestic long-distance train.

As of the December 2022 timetable change, the following services stop at Basel SBB:[7]

Trams edit

  • 1: Dreirosenbrücke – Bahnhof St. Johann Basel – Kannenfeldplatz – Schützenhaus – Bahnhof SBB/SNCF (– Kunstmuseum – Messeplatz – Bad. Bahnhof Basel)
  • 2: Binningen Kronenplatz – Margarethen – Bahnhof SBB/SNCF – Kunstmuseum – Messeplatz – Bad. Bahnhof Basel – Eglisee (– Riehen)
  • 8: Neuweilerstrasse – Schützenhaus – Bahnhof SBB/SNCF – Aeschenplatz – Barfüsserplatz – Schifflände – Claraplatz – Feldbergstrasse – Kleinhüningen – Weil am Rhein (D)
  • 10: Dornach Bahnhof – Arlesheim Dorf – Münchenstein Dorf – Neue Welt – Dreispitz – Bahnhof SBB/SNCF – Aeschenplatz – Theater – Zoo – Binningen Schloss – Bottmingen – Therwil – Ettingen – Witterswil – Bättwil – Flüh (– Leymen (F) – Rodersdorf) (longest tramway line of Europe)
  • 11: Aesch Dorf – Reinach Dorf – Gartenstadt Münchenstein – Dreispitz – Bahnhof SBB/SNCF – Aeschenplatz – Barfüsserplatz – Schifflände – Volteplatz – St. Louis Grenze
  • 16: Bruderholz – Jakobsberg – Heiliggeistkirche – Bahnhof SBB/SNCF Bahnhofeingang Gundeldingen – Heuwaage – Barfüsserplatz – Schifflände

Buses edit

Buses at Basel SBB serve the station on Centralbahnhofstrasse:[8]

  • 30 Bahnhof SBB/SNCF – Spalentor – UKBB – Feldbergstrasse – Bad. Bahnhof Basel (– Wettsteinallee – Tinguely Museum – Hoffmann La Roche – Wettsteinallee – Bad. Bahnhof Basel)
  • 42 Bahnhof SBB/SNCF – Tinguely Museum – (Hoffmann La Roche –) Wettsteinallee – Bahnhof Niederholz – Bettingen Dorf
  • 48 Bahnhof SBB/SNCF – Schützenhaus – Gartenstrasse– Bachgraben
  • 50 Bahnhof SBB/SNCF – Brausebad – Kannenfeldplatz – EuroAirport

In popular culture edit

The station entrance and a platform is seen in the film The Cassandra Crossing (1976) which passes as the "Geneva railway station".[9]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "Liniennetz: Basel und Umgebung" (PDF). Tarifverbund Nordwestschweiz. 13 December 2020. Retrieved 9 January 2021.
  2. ^ "RVL Tarifzonenplan" (in German). Regio Verkehrsverbund Lörrach [de]. Retrieved 9 January 2021.
  3. ^ "Zonen- und Linienplan" (PDF) (in German). Tarifverbund Nordwestschweiz. 13 December 2020. Retrieved 9 January 2021.
  4. ^ "Passagierfrequenz (2018)". Berne, Switzerland: SBB CFF FFS. 7 October 2019. Retrieved 2019-11-06 – via data.sbb.ch – SBB DATA PORTAL.
  5. ^ Swiss inventory of cultural property of national and regional significance (1995), p. 79.
  6. ^ a b Burckhardt, Paul (1942). Geschichte der Stadt Basel von der Zeit der Reformation bis zur Gegenwart. Basel: Helbing & Lichtenhahn. p. 263.
  7. ^ "Abfahrt: Bahnhof Basel SBB" (PDF) (in German). Swiss Federal Railways. 11 December 2022. Retrieved 11 December 2022.
  8. ^ Swiss Federal Railways (December 2023). "Basel SBB" (PDF) (in German). Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  9. ^ "Travelling in Switzerland." myswissalps.com. Retrieved 3 February 2012.

Further reading edit

  • Huber, Dorothee (2004). Bahnhof Basel SBB [Basel SBB Railway Station]. Schweizerische Kunstführer, Serie 76, Nr. 754 (in German). Bern: Gesellschaft für Schweizerische Kunstgeschichte. ISBN 3-85782-754-8.
  • Kunz, Fritz (1990). Der Bahnhof Europas [Europe's Railway Station]. Basler Schriften, 29 (in German) (2nd ed.). Basel: Pharos-Verlag, H. Schwabe. ISBN 3723002218.
  • Scholz, Roland W.; Krütli, Pius; Bügl, Robert; Loukopoulos, Peter; Bösch, Sandro (2005). Bahnhöfe in der Stadt Basel: Nachhaltige Bahnhofs- und Stadtentwicklung in der trinationalen Agglomeration [Railway Stations in the City of Basel: sustainable station and urban development in the tri-national agglomeration]. UNS-Fallstudie (in German). Zürich: Rüegger. ISBN 978-3-7253-0831-6.
  • Stutz, Werner (1983). Bahnhöfe der Schweiz: Von den Anfangen bis zum Ersten Weltkrieg [The Railway Stations of Switzerland: from the beginning to World War I] (in German) (revised ed.). Zürich: Orell Füssli. ISBN 3-280-01405-0.

External links edit

  • Basel SBB railway station – SBB
  • Interactive station plan (Basel SBB)
  • Station plan (Basel SBB) (PDF, 1.9 MB)

basel, railway, station, german, bahnhof, basel, earlier, times, centralbahnhof, schweizer, bahnhof, central, railway, station, city, basel, switzerland, opened, 1854, completely, rebuilt, 1900, 1907, europe, busiest, international, border, station, basel, own. Basel SBB railway station German Bahnhof Basel SBB or in earlier times Centralbahnhof or Schweizer Bahnhof is the central railway station in the city of Basel Switzerland Opened in 1854 and completely rebuilt in 1900 1907 it is Europe s busiest international border station Basel SBB is owned by the Swiss Federal Railways SBB CFF FFS The other major railway station is Basel Badischer Bahnhof operated by the German railway company Deutsche Bahn on the north side of the Rhine from the city centre Basel SBBBale CFFCentral pass through railway stationMain north entranceGeneral informationLocationCentralbahnplatzBaselSwitzerlandCoordinates47 32 49 N 7 35 24 E 47 54694 N 7 59000 E 47 54694 7 59000Elevation276 m 906 ft Owned bySwiss Federal RailwaysLine s Basel Connecting LineHauenstein lineBozberg lineRhine Valley LineStrasbourg Basel railwayBasel Biel railwayPlatforms9Tracks22 German Gleise 12 pass through 3 non stop 7 SBB terminal 3 SNCF terminal ConnectionsTram lines 1 2 8 10 11 16 BVB bus lines 1 ConstructionStructure typeAt gradeArchitect1854 1860 Ludwig Maring1907 Emil Faesch Emanuel La Roche1999 Herzog amp de Meuron2003 Cruz y Ortiz ArquitectosOther informationFare zone8 RVL de 2 10 tnw 3 WebsiteBahnhof Basel SBBHistoryOpened19 December 1854 169 years ago 1854 12 19 Rebuilt4 June 1860 163 years ago 1860 06 04 total rebuilt 24 June 1907 116 years ago 1907 06 24 total rebuilt 1998 99 2003 years ago 1998 99 railway control center 2003 21 years ago 2003 renovation Passarelle underground car bicycle park Previous namesCentralbahnhof 1854 1902 Schweizer Bundesbahnhof 1902bis Key dates1902 03 1902 03 Demolition of the first non wooden station1902 07 1902 07 Provisional railway station in placePassengers2018111 000 per working day 4 ServicesPreceding station Swiss Federal Railways Following station Basel Badischertowards Frankfurt Main Hbf EuroCity Oltentowards Milano Porta Garibaldi Terminus Oltentowards Milano Centrale Basel Badischertowards Hamburg Altona Liestaltowards Interlaken Ost Zurich HauptbahnhofTerminus Terminus IC 3 Zurich Hauptbahnhoftowards Chur IC 6 Oltentowards Brig IC 21 Oltentowards Lugano Laufentowards Biel Bienne IC 51 Terminus Terminus IC 61 Liestaltowards Interlaken Ost IR 27 Liestaltowards Lucerne IR 36 Rheinfeldentowards Zurich Airport IR 37 Liestaltowards Zurich Hauptbahnhof Preceding station Sudostbahn Following station Terminus IR 26 Oltentowards Locarno Preceding station DB Fernverkehr Following station Reverses direction ICE 12 Basel Badischertowards Berlin Ostbahnhof or Hamburg Hbf Liestaltowards Interlaken Ost Zurich HBtowards Chur ICE 20 LiestalOne way operation Basel Badischertowards Hamburg Altona or Kiel Hbf Preceding station TGV Lyria Following station Mulhousetowards Paris Lyon Paris to Zurich Zurich HauptbahnhofTerminus Preceding station OBB Following station Basel Badischertowards Amsterdam Centraal or Hamburg Altona Nightjet Zurich HbfTerminus Basel Badischertowards Berlin Hbf Preceding station TER Grand Est Following station Saint Louistowards Strasbourg A01 Terminus Basel St Johanntowards Mulhouse A15 Preceding station Basel trinational S Bahn Following station Terminus S1 Muttenztowards Laufenburg or Frick Basel Dreispitztowards Porrentruy S3 Muttenztowards Olten Terminus S6 Basel Bad Bftowards Zell Wiesental Location Trains operated by SBB CFF FFS use Basel SBB to link Basel with destinations within Switzerland and Italy as do Deutsche Bahn Intercity Express ICE trains to and from Germany Zurich and Interlaken most SNCF TGV trains to and from Paris and some regional trains to and from Alsace Additionally the station is served by three lines of the Basel S Bahn The 1907 neo baroque station building is a heritage site of national significance 5 It also contains Bale SNCF shown in SBB CFF FFS online timetables as Basel SBB Gl 30 35 and in other online timetables as Basel SNCF which is located through a border crossing and is used by other trains to and from France Directly outside the station building is the Centralbahnplatz which is a major hub of the Basel tramway network and the Basel terminus of a direct bus service to the EuroAirport Contents 1 Location 2 History 2 1 Beginnings 2 2 Provisional station 2 3 Centralbahnhof 2 4 Provisional new Centralbahnhof 2 5 Basel SBB station 3 Connections 3 1 Overview 3 2 International long distance trains 3 3 National long distance trains 3 4 Trinational regional trains 4 Services 4 1 Trams 4 2 Buses 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Citations 7 3 Further reading 8 External linksLocation editThe station area is situated at the southern side of the city centre in an elongated area between the Zoological Garden to the west and the Bruglinger Ebene de to the east The borders of four of Basel s districts come together at the station area However the area is according to the Statistical Office divided between only two districts the station itself is located in Gundeldingen de while most of the tracks on the eastern side of the station including the goods station along with the Centralbahnplatz in front of the station including the BIS Tower are attributed to the St Alban quarter de The Elisabethenanlage in front of the Centralbahnplatz belongs to Vorstadte de while the Markthalle de opposite Basel SNCF is part of the Am Ring de district History editBeginnings edit nbsp Basel s first railway station 1847 The first railway to reach Basel the Chemin de fer Strasbourg Bale fr StB Strasbourg Basel Railway arrived there in 1844 The following year 1845 the Elsasserbahn Alsatian Railway built the first station in the Basel metropolitan area within the city walls Basel thereby became the first Swiss city to be connected to the new means of transport 6 After the arrival of the railway there was a passionate debate in Basel about the pros and cons of the railway and its possible continuation towards Lucerne and from there through the Gotthard towards Italy 6 Meanwhile the Rheintalbahn from Mannheim and Karlsruhe also approached Basel from the north in 1851 it reached Haltingen a district of Weil am Rhein on the Swiss border In 1853 the Schweizerische Centralbahn railway company SCB was founded in Basel Its purpose was the establishment of a link between the city of Basel and the economic centres of the Mittelland cantons and perhaps even also the expansion of the transport corridor from Lucerne to the Gotthard The Viaduktstrasse in Basel including the Birsig Viaduct de which is adjacent to the Zoo Basel parking lot was also the formation of the Elsasserbahn until 1902 Today the viaduct serves tram lines 1 and 8 as well as motor vehicle traffic and a plaque on the bridge railing recalls its earlier role as a rail bridge Provisional station edit In 1854 construction on the future Hauenstein railway line began Right up until the opening of the first section of the route from Basel to Liestal the controversial question of the site and design of the Basel railway station remained unresolved However to accommodate the commencement of railway operations on 19 December 1854 the Centralbahn built a simple temporary timber structure according to plans developed by chief architect Ludwig Maring By the opening day all of the temporary station buildings had been completed including a timber train shed This modest provisional station equipped with makeshift facilities was made up of individual detached buildings and was used only for just under six years The station site consisted of the station building a goods shed a carriage and locomotive shed and a turntable at the railhead As the station building stood on the northeastern side of the station alongside the station yard the station was not configured as a terminus The provisional station served only as the starting point of the SCB lines and had no connection with either the French station or the Badischer Bahnhof which was opened in 1855 as the terminus of the Rheintalbahn Centralbahnhof edit On 29 June 1857 the Grand Council of Basel Stadt agreed to the construction of a link between the French line and the Centralbahn and the erection of a through station in the field in front of the Elisabethen Bollwerk The city bore the cost of the land purchase At the start of 1859 the SCB began construction work on the site of the new station to a design by Maring In addition to a passenger station the new station yard featured a goods station relocated to the Gundeldingen district and two new locomotive sheds one of them for the SCB and the other for the Chemins de fer de l Est which had taken over the StB in 1854 On 4 June 1860 railway operations began at the new Basel Centralbahnhof However it was not until May 1861 that all the new facilities were completed The Centralbahnhof was a joint station with the northern facade of its station building facing the newly created Centralbahnplatz On each side of the station building were the boarding halls each with two tracks on the eastern side for the Swiss trains and on the western side and for the French trains To the south of the station building were the goods shed and two large warehouses with an access road from the Guterstrasse In subsequent years modifications were made to the Centralbahnhof to enable it to deal with its substantially increasing traffic including trains entering and leaving Basel along a number of new lines The connecting line between Basel Badischer Bahnhof and the Centralbahnhof which was handed over to traffic on 3 November 1873 The Bozberg railway line which was opened on 2 August 1875 built by the Botzberg Railway a joint venture of the SCB and the Schweizerische Nordostbahn it linked Basel with Zurich via Pratteln and Rheinfelden The Jura Railway which from 25 September 1875 formed a connection from Basel into western Switzerland and the Franche Comte via its junction at Delemont and branches to Biel Bienne and Delle respectively However the Centralbahnhof eventually ran out of capacity to handle any further additional traffic In 1875 as a first measure of relief the marshalling of freight trains was relocated to a makeshift yard to the east of the station on an open field known as auf dem Wolf At around that time discussions began with the aim of lowering the tracks and replacing the troublesome urban level crossings on the Elsasserbahn and at the Centralbahnhof In 1874 provisional timber pedestrian bridges had already been built at Margarethenstrasse und Heumattstrasse they were later replaced by iron structures From 1879 the Pfeffingerstrasse passed underneath the station in a tunnel near the present location of the Peter Merian Bridge Finally in 1898 following the referendum on the nationalisation of Switzerland s railways the Swiss Federal Council decided to go ahead with the following construction of a new Centralbahnhof on the existing site lowering of the whole station area by 2 7 metres 8 ft 10 in relocation of the Elsasserbahn to a cutting in a wide arc around the city relocation of the entire freight and warehouse facility to the provisional marshalling yard at auf den Wolf Provisional new Centralbahnhof edit The definitive project for a new Centralbahnhof in Basel was developed in 1899 On 16 March 1900 the Federal Council gave approval to the plans The lowering of the whole station area and the access lines required careful planning The first step was the relocation of goods traffic to the Wolf station and on 12 May 1901 the Alsace line was reopened in its new lower position and wide arc On the vacated lowered area south of the original Centralbahnhof the provisional station was built and on 2 June 1902 it went into operation Access to the provisional station was also from the south via Guterstrasse To facilitate access various streets were extended as were two tram lines The provisional station remained in operation until 24 June 1907 The provisional facilities and access roads were then dismantled and the two tram lines laid into Guterstrasse A station underpass to Gundeldingen was built roughly in the location of the provisional access road In 1902 1903 the old station was torn down Basel SBB station edit In 1902 the Schweizerische Centralbahn was absorbed by the newly formed Swiss Federal Railways SBB CFF FFS The new station which from then onwards was referred to as Schweizer Bundesbahnhof or Basel SBB was one of the new Federal Railways first large building projects Designed by Emil Faesch and Emmanuel La Roche the new station was inaugurated on 24 June 1907 nbsp The station building viewed from Centralbahnhofplatz June 2008 The Basel SBB station building is characterized by its extraordinary length Basel SNCF with its customs facility for the international transit traffic is attached to its western side The asymmetrical layout of the station creates an external appearance representative of the federal buildings of the time The station building is aligned to the centre line of the Centralbahnplatz and features a huge glazed tudor arch window between two clock towers under curved domes nbsp View of the ticket hall Behind the facade one might suspect a terminus but that is not the case in Basel Through the entrances in the clock towers travellers reach the ticket hall under a timber lined steel arch structure Like the rest of the interior the ticket hall is broad and high Large murals dating from the 1920s advertise tourist destinations in Switzerland The ticket and currency exchange offices are embedded in the side wall The baggage check in and hand luggage storage facilities were formerly also located here but today they are in the basement and accessed by means of an escalator and stairs nbsp The remaining station restaurant In the eastern part of the station the baggage claim was formerly to be found where the travel centre is now located The first second class restaurants now Migros and the third class facility now a brasserie kiosk were in the north west wing The station was previously known for its station buffets but these were gradually closed down in the 1990s The high rooms their walls decorated with murals now house other commercial uses together with the sole remaining specialty restaurant A separate entrance on the Centralbahnstrasse west of the Centralbahnplatz leads to the Alsace bound trains at Basel SNCF nbsp Inside the train shed Initially the platform allocation at Basel SBB corresponded to the private railway age because the platforms were separated according to the direction of travel The station originally had 10 tracks of which the three bay platforms 1 to 3 were previously reserved for local traffic Tracks 1 to 10 are spanned by a five aisle train shed which was created in 1905 by Albert Buss amp Cie de of Pratteln in Basel The train shed is 93 m 305 ft wide and has a length of 120 m 390 ft tracks 1 2 230 m 750 ft tracks 3 4 and 200 m 660 ft tracks 5 10 Track 4 goes through to Basel SNCF where it becomes track 30 and the catenary can be switched from the Swiss operating current of 15 kV 16 7 Hz AC to its French equivalent 25 kV 50 Hz AC On the southern side of the station a double track line located at a lower level connects the Basel and Muttenz marshalling yards with the line to France and is devoted mainly to through freight trains nbsp The Passerelle Due to the lowering of the tracks at the time of rebuilding it was difficult to extend the station with additional tracks On the South side the platform system has nevertheless been augmented several times tracks 11 and 12 have been added the pedestrian underpass has been extended to Gundeldingen and in 2003 the new Passerelle was constructed to the new tracks 14 and 15 These changes together with the introduction of a clock face timetable in 1982 and the Rail 2000 project achieved an increase in the station s capacity Finally in June 2008 the new tracks 16 and 17 went into operation The Passerelle is an element of the new SBB CFF FFS commercial concept known as RailCity Designed by architects Cruz and Ortiz it runs over the tracks from the ticket hall at the western end of the train shed to the district of Gundeldingen and links the platforms with each other A walkway with shopping opportunities it is 185 m 607 ft long 30 m 98 ft wide and replaced the pedestrian underpass Today the former underpass is used for operational and logistical purposes With the construction of the Passerelle the RailCenter and the information display were relocated from the ticket hall to the former luggage hall Additionally the 1987 built customer service ticket pavilion in the ticket hall was removed and since then the ticket hall has been able to unfold its ambience to its fullest extent Meanwhile in 1998 and 1999 a new signal box was constructed on behalf of the SBB CFF FFS The architects of this striking building were Herzog amp de Meuron Connections editOverview edit nbsp A train awaits departure for Italy About 1 000 trains depart from the station daily Nearly every 90 seconds a passenger train leaves or stops at the station Additionally freight trains still use the through tracks and post office trains enter and exit the underground postal station International long distance trains edit An ICE departs from Basel SBB every hour to Berlin or Hamburg and a number of other German cities There is also a daily ICE International connection to Amsterdam Several times a day EuroCitys run to Milan and TGVs to Paris Night connections exist with Berlin and Hamburg There used to be a direct connection to Moscow but as of 2014 this has been discontinued National long distance trains edit Several times hourly InterCity trains run to Zurich HB Bern and Olten At least hourly Zurich Chur Olten Lucerne Bellinzona Lugano Olten Bern Interlaken Visp Brig and Delemont Biel Bienne Neuchatel Lausanne Geneva can be reached Trinational regional trains edit As a border station Basel SBB is also aligned with regional services to Germany France and Switzerland The Basel Regional S Bahn network ranges from Frick Laufenburg in the east Olten in the south and Porrentruy in the west to Mulhouse in the north west and Zell im Wiesental in the north east Services edit nbsp A TGV meets a reflection of an ICE nbsp An Re 460 awaits departure with a domestic long distance train As of the December 2022 timetable change update the following services stop at Basel SBB 7 TGV Lyria InterCity half hourly service to Zurich Hauptbahnhof service every two hours or better to Chur and every two hours to Paris Lyon Intercity Express service every two hours to Cologne Hauptbahnhof two round trips per day between Hamburg Altona and Chur EuroCity InterCity ICE half hourly service to Spiez Most northbound trains terminate in Basel a single EuroCity continues to Hamburg Altona another to Frankfurt Main Hauptbahnhof and two ICEs continue to Berlin Ostbahnhof Most southbound trains continue to Interlaken Ost one train every two hours continues to Brig Four EuroCity trains continue from Brig to Milano Centrale EuroCity InterCity InterRegio hourly service to Bellinzona and every two hours to Locarno or Lugano two trains per day continue from Lugano to Milano Centrale Nightjet overnight service between Zurich Hauptbahnhof and Berlin Hauptbahnhof or Hamburg Hauptbahnhof InterCity hourly service to Biel Bienne InterRegio three trains per hour to Zurich Hauptbahnhof and hourly service to Zurich Airport hourly service to Lucerne Transport express regional TER half hourly service to Strasbourg Ville and Mulhouse Ville in addition to some omnibus trains to Mulhouse Ville Basel trinational S Bahn S1 half hourly service to Stein Sackingen and hourly service from there to Frick or Laufenburg S3 half hourly service between Olten and Laufen and hourly service from Laufen to Porrentruy S6 half hourly service to Zell Wiesental Trams edit Main article Trams in Basel 1 Dreirosenbrucke Bahnhof St Johann Basel Kannenfeldplatz Schutzenhaus Bahnhof SBB SNCF Kunstmuseum Messeplatz Bad Bahnhof Basel 2 Binningen Kronenplatz Margarethen Bahnhof SBB SNCF Kunstmuseum Messeplatz Bad Bahnhof Basel Eglisee Riehen 8 Neuweilerstrasse Schutzenhaus Bahnhof SBB SNCF Aeschenplatz Barfusserplatz Schifflande Claraplatz Feldbergstrasse Kleinhuningen Weil am Rhein D 10 Dornach Bahnhof Arlesheim Dorf Munchenstein Dorf Neue Welt Dreispitz Bahnhof SBB SNCF Aeschenplatz Theater Zoo Binningen Schloss Bottmingen Therwil Ettingen Witterswil Battwil Fluh Leymen F Rodersdorf longest tramway line of Europe 11 Aesch Dorf Reinach Dorf Gartenstadt Munchenstein Dreispitz Bahnhof SBB SNCF Aeschenplatz Barfusserplatz Schifflande Volteplatz St Louis Grenze 16 Bruderholz Jakobsberg Heiliggeistkirche Bahnhof SBB SNCF Bahnhofeingang Gundeldingen Heuwaage Barfusserplatz Schifflande Buses edit Buses at Basel SBB serve the station on Centralbahnhofstrasse 8 30 Bahnhof SBB SNCF Spalentor UKBB Feldbergstrasse Bad Bahnhof Basel Wettsteinallee Tinguely Museum Hoffmann La Roche Wettsteinallee Bad Bahnhof Basel 42 Bahnhof SBB SNCF Tinguely Museum Hoffmann La Roche Wettsteinallee Bahnhof Niederholz Bettingen Dorf 48 Bahnhof SBB SNCF Schutzenhaus Gartenstrasse Bachgraben 50 Bahnhof SBB SNCF Brausebad Kannenfeldplatz EuroAirportIn popular culture editThe station entrance and a platform is seen in the film The Cassandra Crossing 1976 which passes as the Geneva railway station 9 See also edit nbsp Trains portal nbsp Architecture portal nbsp Switzerland portal History of rail transport in Switzerland Rail transport in SwitzerlandReferences editNotes edit Citations edit Liniennetz Basel und Umgebung PDF Tarifverbund Nordwestschweiz 13 December 2020 Retrieved 9 January 2021 RVL Tarifzonenplan in German Regio Verkehrsverbund Lorrach de Retrieved 9 January 2021 Zonen und Linienplan PDF in German Tarifverbund Nordwestschweiz 13 December 2020 Retrieved 9 January 2021 Passagierfrequenz 2018 Berne Switzerland SBB CFF FFS 7 October 2019 Retrieved 2019 11 06 via data sbb ch SBB DATA PORTAL Swiss inventory of cultural property of national and regional significance 1995 p 79 a b Burckhardt Paul 1942 Geschichte der Stadt Basel von der Zeit der Reformation bis zur Gegenwart Basel Helbing amp Lichtenhahn p 263 Abfahrt Bahnhof Basel SBB PDF in German Swiss Federal Railways 11 December 2022 Retrieved 11 December 2022 Swiss Federal Railways December 2023 Basel SBB PDF in German Retrieved 13 January 2024 Travelling in Switzerland myswissalps com Retrieved 3 February 2012 Further reading edit Huber Dorothee 2004 Bahnhof Basel SBB Basel SBB Railway Station Schweizerische Kunstfuhrer Serie 76 Nr 754 in German Bern Gesellschaft fur Schweizerische Kunstgeschichte ISBN 3 85782 754 8 Kunz Fritz 1990 Der Bahnhof Europas Europe s Railway Station Basler Schriften 29 in German 2nd ed Basel Pharos Verlag H Schwabe ISBN 3723002218 Scholz Roland W Krutli Pius Bugl Robert Loukopoulos Peter Bosch Sandro 2005 Bahnhofe in der Stadt Basel Nachhaltige Bahnhofs und Stadtentwicklung in der trinationalen Agglomeration Railway Stations in the City of Basel sustainable station and urban development in the tri national agglomeration UNS Fallstudie in German Zurich Ruegger ISBN 978 3 7253 0831 6 Stutz Werner 1983 Bahnhofe der Schweiz Von den Anfangen bis zum Ersten Weltkrieg The Railway Stations of Switzerland from the beginning to World War I in German revised ed Zurich Orell Fussli ISBN 3 280 01405 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Basel SBB railway station Basel SBB railway station SBB Interactive station plan Basel SBB Station plan Basel SBB PDF 1 9 MB Portal nbsp Switzerland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Basel SBB railway station amp oldid 1218217640, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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