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Köln Messe/Deutz station

Köln Messe/Deutz station (called Köln-Deutz until November 2004, Colognian: Düx, pronounced [dʏks]) is an important railway junction for long-distance rail and local services in the Cologne district of Deutz in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia. It is situated close to the eastern bank of the Rhine and connected via the Hohenzollern Bridge to Köln Hauptbahnhof, the city's main station, which is just a few hundred metres away. The Cologne Trade Fair (German: Koelnmesse) grounds are directly north of the station, hence the Messe in the station's name. The Stadtbahn station of Deutz/Messe is nearby and connected by a pedestrian tunnel.

Köln Messe/Deutz station
Through station
Overview of Köln Messe/Deutz station
General information
LocationOttoplatz 7
Innenstadt (Deutz), Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia
Germany
Coordinates50°56′27″N 6°58′30″E / 50.94083°N 6.97500°E / 50.94083; 6.97500Coordinates: 50°56′27″N 6°58′30″E / 50.94083°N 6.97500°E / 50.94083; 6.97500
Line(s)
Other information
Station code3329
DS100 code
  • KKDZ[1][2] (high, platforms 1–8)
  • KKDZB[1][3] (S-Bahn, platforms 9–10)
  • KKDT[1][4] (low, platforms 11–12)
IBNR8003368
Category1[5]
Fare zoneVRS: 2100[6]
Websitewww.bahnhof.de
History
Opened
Services
Preceding station ÖBB Following station
Düsseldorf Hbf
Terminus
Nightjet
auto-train
Koblenz Hbf
Preceding station DB Fernverkehr Following station
Düsseldorf Hbf
Terminus
Frankfurt Airport
towards München Hbf
Düsseldorf Hbf
lower platforms (tief)
Cologne/Bonn Airport
Terminus
Düsseldorf Hbf
lower platforms tief)
Frankfurt Airport
Düsseldorf Hbf
towards Dortmund Hbf
lower platforms (tief)
Cologne/Bonn Airport
Preceding station DB Regio NRW Following station
Köln Hbf Porz (Rhein)
towards Koblenz Hbf
Köln Hbf
towards Aachen Hbf
Porz (Rhein)
towards Siegen Hbf
Köln Hbf
towards Trier Hbf
Terminus
Köln Hbf
towards Gerolstein
Köln Hbf Köln-Trimbornstraße
towards Lüdenscheid
Köln Hbf Cologne/Bonn Airport
towards Koblenz Hbf
Köln Hbf
towards Bedburg
Terminus
Preceding station National Express Germany Following station
Köln Hbf
towards Aachen Hbf
RE 1 (NRW-Express)
Köln-Mülheim
Köln Hbf
towards Koblenz Hbf
RE 5 (Rhein-Express)
Köln-Mülheim
towards Wesel
Köln Hbf
RE 6 (Rhein-Weser-Express)
Cologne/Bonn Airport
towards Minden
Köln Hbf
towards Krefeld Hbf
RE 7 (Rhein-Münsterland-Express)
Köln-Mülheim
towards Rheine
Köln Hbf
towards Bonn-Mehlem
RB 48 (Rhein-Wupper-Bahn)
Köln-Mülheim
Preceding station Trans Regio Following station
Köln Hbf
towards Mainz Hbf
Terminus
Preceding station Rhine-Ruhr S-Bahn Following station
Köln Hbf
towards Köln-Nippes
S6 Köln-Buchforst
towards Essen Hbf
Köln Hbf S11
Köln-Buchforst
Köln Hbf
towards Horrem
S12 Köln-Trimbornstraße
towards Au (Sieg)
Köln Hbf
towards Düren
S13 Köln-Trimbornstraße
towards Troisdorf
S19 Köln-Trimbornstraße
towards Au (Sieg)
Preceding station Cologne Stadtbahn Following station
Deutzer Freiheit Line 1 Deutz Technische Hochschule
towards Bensberg
Deutzer Freiheit
towards Sülz Hermeskeiler Platz
Line 9 Deutz Technische Hochschule
towards Königsforst
Suevenstraße Line 3 Koelnmesse
towards Thielenbruch
Suevenstraße
towards Bocklemünd
Line 4 Koelnmesse
towards Schlebusch
Location
Köln Messe/Deutz station
Location within North Rhine-Westphalia

The station is a junction station, which has platforms on two levels: the high-level platforms are used by trains running in the east-west direction across the Hohenzollern Bridge to and from Köln Hauptbahnhof. The lower level (Köln Messe/Deutz tief) is used by trains running in a north-south direction bypassing the Hauptbahnhof from Köln-Mülheim station towards Troisdorf.[7] It serves an important function in providing some relief for the Köln Hauptbahnhof bottleneck—some ICE services call at Köln-Deutz instead of Köln Hbf, eliminating the need for changing direction, while many regional trains from the west terminate here to prevent them blocking the Hauptbahnhof.[8]

History

 
Köln Messe/Deutz station building

The current Köln Messe/Deutz station was developed from several predecessors built from 1845 and the basic structure of the current station was opened on 11 November 1913. It gradually replaced the four stations of the competing companies, the Cologne-Minden Railway Company (Cöln-Mindener Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft, CME), and the Bergisch-Märkische Railway Company (Bergisch-Märkische Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft, BME). The reception building, a three-wing structure with a central dome, was designed by architect Hugo Röttcher and built in 1914.[9]

In anticipation of the building of a bridge, or at least a steam ferry, across the Rhine to the station of the Rhenish Railway Company (Rheinische Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft, RhE) at Trankgasse (at the south-eastern end of the current Hauptbahnhof) on the opposite bank with connections to Aachen and Antwerp, a terminus was completed as a starting point of the CME's line to Düsseldorf southwest of the present station near the Rhine on 20 December 1845. Two through tracks to the Rhine are also visible on old maps. The line was later extended via Duisburg and Dortmund to Minden, connecting to Berlin.

In 1859, the station also became the starting point of the Deutz–Gießen railway, which was being built.[10][11] At the same time, the first permanent bridge was built across the Rhine since Roman times, the Cathedral Bridge, popularly known as the Mouse Trap (Kölsch: Muusfall, pronounced [ˈmus²fal]), between Deutz and Cologne in order to connect the railway lines on the east and west side of the Rhine. The old station facilities were expanded and supplemented to provide platforms on the new line. Deutz station remained as a terminal station for normal passenger trains, while National Express trains ran to Cologne Hauptbahnhof. Originally a simple interchange station for services to and from Deutz, Cologne, Minden and Gießen was planned nearby at Köln-Deutzerfeld, which later became the site of a shunting and marshalling yard, but this was not implemented.[12]

On 1 October 1886, the platforms of the Cologne-Minden terminal station that was built in 1845 were closed and passenger trains were directed to the Bergisch-Märkische station at Schiffbrücke.[13] Until the rebuilding of the railway infrastructure at Deutz, in particular the construction of the Deutzerfeld marshalling and shunting between 1911 and 1913, the old terminus was mainly used as a freight yard.[14]

In 1913, the stations known since the nationalisation of the Bergisch-Märkische railway and its absorption into the (Prussian state railways, PSE) in 1882, as Deutzerfeld (Deutz field) and Schiffbrücke (floating bridge), were demolished and the lines were connected to the new Deutz station. The former Deutzerfeld station, sometimes also referred to as Deutz-Nord, was in the area of the later trade fair, now the RTL building. Schiffbrücke station, also called Brückenbahnhof (bridge station), was at the floating bridge that crossed the Rhine to Cologne at the site of the current Deutz Suspension Bridge between 1822 and 1915. The name Deutzer Feld was later applied to the shunting and marshalling yard of Köln-Deutzerfeld, which is further to the east.

After the destruction of the Second World War, the station was simplified and rebuilt without the large platform area. Subsequent modifications and extensions followed.[15]

During the Nazi period, almost all Jews living in Cologne were deported to extermination camps from the low level of Deutz station. The first such transport occurred in October 1941 and the last known movement was on 1 October 1944 to the Theresienstadt concentration camp. The exhibition halls were used as a transit camp.

The three spans of the train shed, which had iron and glass elements, were destroyed in the Second World War and were replaced after the war by concrete platform canopies. Parts of the system of tunnels and the entire station forecourt (Ottoplatz) are registered in the list of monuments of the city of Cologne.

 
Upper and lower platforms of Köln Messe/Deutz station

From 1988, the city of Cologne developed a concept plan for reshaping Intercity-Express (ICE) operations in the Cologne area as part of the planned high-speed line to Frankfurt. The core of the plan was the use of the Köln-Deutz station as an ICE station.[16]

The Council of the City of Cologne (another source indicates it was the CEO of Deutsche Bahn AG[17]) decided in 1996 that Deutz station would be rebuilt as a terminal for ICE services at the end of 1997. Deutsche Bahn determined that some new ICE services on the planned Cologne-Rhine/Main high-speed line would start or terminate at Deutz station. In December 1997, the Management Board of Deutsche Bahn (DB) agreed to the redevelopment of the station in several stages.[18] When finally in 1998 the Cologne Trade Fair decided to build a new building for its administration, it was decided to establish a public-private partnership in 1999 involving DB Station&Service, the city and the Trade Fair.

In mid-1999, the Köln-Messe/Deutz ICE terminal was submitted to an international architectural competition and received 57 proposals. Both urban and transport issues were taken into account. Eight finalists were selected. The project affected 22 hectares of land and 150,000 square metres of floor area. The objectives included the extension and adaptation of the two low level platforms for ICE traffic and the duplication of the access track. An expansion to four ICE platforms was considered. The plan also included an 800-metre-long, covered moving walkway that would have connected the station to Cologne Hauptbahnhof.[19][20] This competition was judged by DB, the city of Cologne and the Cologne Trade Fair and was concluded in 2000.[21] The development scheme was submitted for planning approval in October 2000.[22] The estimated cost of the overall concept of 140 million Marks was funded by DB, the city of Cologne and the Trade Fair. A glass roof with a length of 120 metres, which should span the entire station was calculated to cost an additional DM 40 million.[23]

On 8 November 2001 construction began on the modernisation of the low-level platforms 11 and 12. The renovated track layout allowed an hourly ICE train to run in each direction to and from the Bahnhof Köln-Deutz from the opening of the new line in December 2002.[24] Later, this number should be increased to three to four trains per hour.[25] €10.9 million was invested in the modernisation of the two outer platforms of the low-level station and other measures.[26]

The station was named Köln-Deutz until 11 December 2004, but then as a result of a campaign by the Cologne Trade Fair, which is located next to the station, it was renamed. The cost of the renaming of the station was borne by the Trade Fair, which hoped to gain greater patronage as a result of the renaming. Since 3 November 2006 the trade fair is directly connected via the newly constructed south entrance to the station. The distance to the closest entrance of the fair halls is about 120 meters.

Infrastructure

 
Roof of the station building with the installation of new slate (2008)
 
An ICE service from Köln Messe/Deutz (tief) running to the south and an S-Bahn service in the background from the S-Bahn station running towards the Hauptbahnhof
 
S-Bahn platform with a view of Cologne Cathedral (left) and Colonius telecommunications tower (right)

The high level section of Köln Messe/Deutz station consists of six platform tracks on three platforms and two through tracks without access to platforms. Directly next to it is the S-Bahn station of Köln Messe/Deutz Hp, which has two platform tracks at its own platform and was built between 1985 and 1990 during the development of the Cologne S-Bahn network and the associated construction of the third set of double tracks on the Hohenzollern Bridge.

Köln Messe/Deutz tief (low level) station was completely rebuilt during the construction of the Cologne–Frankfurt high-speed rail line. It is served by ICE lines 10 (BerlinCologne/Bonn Airport) and 41 (EssenMunich) on two tracks. These run directly to the north or south without passing through the Hauptbahnhof to save running twice over the Hohenzollern Bridge and reversing.

The access from the north to Köln Messe/Deutz tief was duplicated up to December 2007 and the speed limit was raised to 100 km/h. The low-level station was closed from 10 December 2006 to 8 December 2007 to carry out the upgrade. The southern connection to Gummersbacher Straße junction was initially single track but a second track was added at the beginning of 2010.

DB's operating locations directory uses the station codes of KKDZ (Köln Messe/Deutz) and KKDT (Köln Messe/Deutz tief) and KKDZB (the S-Bahn stop of Köln Messe/Deutz Hp).[1]

Planning

The Zweckverband Nahverkehr Rheinland (association for local transport of the Rhineland) has agreed that the Köln Messe/Deutz station will be retrofitted with four lifts to allow barrier-free access to all platforms (currently only tracks 10 and 11 are accessible by wheelchair). It will be possible to reach platform track 12 in the low-level station without passing through barriers (and without the previous, major detour from the Stadtbahn tunnel), as an additional access from the Stadtbahn tunnel to track 12 will also be built.

At a summit of DB, the federal government and the state of North Rhine-Westphalia on 31 March 2010 in Düsseldorf, it was decided that the station should be extended up to 2019 for €11 million. The entrance from the Trade Fair to the station will be extended to a side platform to the S-Bahn to accelerate entry and exit. However, it is still being considered whether two new S-Bahn tracks will also be needed, as is planned at the Hauptbahnhof.[27]

Train services

 
Platforms and tracks on elevated level.
Front of the trade fair halls in the background behind the row of trees.
Cologne/Bonn Airport S-Bahn service

The station is served by the following services:[28][29]

  • International ÖBB NightJet Service (NJ 420/421) Innsbruck – München – Frankfurt – Köln – Düsseldorf
  • Intercity Express services (ICE 10) Köln/Bonn Airport – Düsseldorf – Essen – Dortmund – Hamm – Hanover – Berlin
  • Intercity Express services (ICE 41) Dortmund – Essen – Düsseldorf – Cologne – Frankfurt – Nürnberg – Munich
  • Intercity Express services (ICE 47) Dortmund – Essen – Düsseldorf – Köln/Bonn Airport – Frankfurt Flughafen – Mannheim – Stuttgart
  • Intercity services (IC 55) Dresden – Dresden-Neustadt – Riesa – Leipzig – Flughafen Leipzig/Halle – Halle – Köthen – Schönebeck – Magdeburg – Helmstedt – Braunschweig – Hannover – Minden – Bad Oeynhausen – Herford – Bielefeld – Gütersloh – Hamm – Dortmund – Hagen – Wuppertal – Solingen – Cologne
  • Regional services RE 1 NRW-Express Aachen – Cologne – Düsseldorf – Duisburg – Essen – Dortmund – Hamm – Paderborn
  • Regional services RE 5 Rhein-Express Wesel – Oberhausen – Duisburg – Düsseldorf – Cologne – Bonn – Koblenz
  • Regional services RE 6 Rhein-Weser-Express Minden (Westf) – Bielefeld – Hamm (Westf) – Dortmund – Essen – Duisburg – Düsseldorf – Neuss – Cologne – Cologne/Bonn Airport
  • Regional services RE 7 Rhein-Münsterland-Express Krefeld – Neuss – Cologne – Solingen – Wuppertal – Hagen – Hamm – Münster – Rheine
  • Regional services RE 8 Rhein-Erft-Express Mönchengladbach – Cologne – Troisdorf – Neuwied – Koblenz-Stadtmitte – Koblenz
  • Regional services RE 9 Rhein-Sieg-Express Aachen – Düren – Cologne – Troisdorf – Au – Siegen
  • Regional services RE 12 Eifel-Mosel-Express Trier – Gerolstein – Kall – Euskirchen – Cologne
  • Regional services RE 22 Eifel-Express Gerolstein – Kall – Euskirchen – Cologne
  • Regional services RB 24 Eifelbahn Kall – Euskirchen – Cologne
  • Local services RB 25 Oberbergische Bahn Cologne – Overath – Gummersbach – Marienheide
  • Local services RB 26 MittelrheinBahn Cologne – Bonn – Remagen – Andernach – Koblenz
  • Local services RB 27 Rhein-Erft-Bahn Cologne – Köln/Bonn Airport – Troisdorf – Neuwied – Engers – Koblenz
  • Local services RB 38 Erft-Bahn Düsseldorf – Neuss – Grevenbroich – Bedburg – Cologne
  • Local services RB 48 Rhein-Wupper-Bahn Bonn-Mehlem – Bonn – Cologne – Solingen – Wuppertal
  • Rhein-Ruhr S-Bahn services S6 Essen – Kettwig – Düsseldorf – Cologne – Köln-Nippes
  • Rhein-Ruhr S-Bahn services S11 Düsseldorf Airport Terminal – Düsseldorf – Neuss – Cologne – Bergisch Gladbach
  • Köln S-Bahn services S12 Horrem – Cologne – Troisdorf – Siegburg/Bonn – Au
  • Köln S-Bahn services S13 Horrem – Cologne – Köln/Bonn Airport – Troisdorf
  • Köln S-Bahn services S19 Düren – Horrem – Cologne – Köln/Bonn Airport – Troisdorf – Siegburg/Bonn – Au

Stadbahn services

 
Stadtbahn tracks

Immediately below tracks 1–10 is the Stadtbahn station Deutz/Messe. This station serves the lines 1 and 9. A shopping area connects it to the Stadtbahn station Deutz/LANXESSarena, where the line 3 and 4 depart.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2009/2010 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  2. ^ a b c "Köln Messe-Deutz operations". NRW Rail Archive (in German). André Joost. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
  3. ^ "Köln-Messe/Deutz Hp operations". NRW Rail Archive (in German). André Joost. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
  4. ^ "Köln-Messe/Deutz (tief) operations". NRW Rail Archive (in German). André Joost. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
  5. ^ "Stationspreisliste 2023" [Station price list 2023] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 28 November 2022. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  6. ^ "VRS-Gemeinschaftstarif" (PDF) (in German). Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Sieg. 20 April 2020. p. 202. Retrieved 9 May 2020.
  7. ^ "Station map" (PDF) (in German). Retrieved 21 November 2013.
  8. ^ Großmann. "Köln-Deutz". Bahnhöfe A-Z (in German). Geramond Verlag. p. 5. (loose-leaf)
  9. ^ "Empfangsgebäude des Bahnhofs Köln-Deutz mit Vorplatz" (in German). Bilderbuch Köln. Retrieved 2 July 2018.
  10. ^ Scheiner (1865). Bauanlagen der Köln-Gießener Eisenbahn und der Zweigbahn von Betzdorf nach Siegen (in German). Siegburg Rheinlandia. p. 3.
  11. ^ "Plan of Deutz yard" (in German). Poller Heimatmuseum, Deutz. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
  12. ^ Scheiner (1865). Bauanlagen der Köln-Gießener Eisenbahn und der Zweigbahn von Betzdorf nach Siegen (in German). Siegburg Rheinlandia. p. 55.
  13. ^ "Unknown". Centralblatt der Bauverwaltung (in German). Berlin: Ministerium der öffentlichen Arbeiten (38 Bahnanlagen am Rheinufer in Deutz): 355 ff. 17 September 1887.
  14. ^ Großmann. "Köln-Deutz". Bahnhöfe A-Z (in German). Geramond Verlag. (loose-leaf)
  15. ^ "Deutz history, Deutz stations" (in German). Poller Heimatmuseum, Deutz. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
  16. ^ "Grußwort". Zum Thema (in German). Frankfurt am Main: DBProjekt Köln–Rhein/Main (1/2000): 3. February 2000.
  17. ^ Köln–Rhein/Main, Projektleitung, ed. (February 2000). Neubaustrecke Köln–Rhein/Main: Bauabschnitt Nord: Köln–Sankt Augustin (in German). Frankfurt am Main: DBProjekt GmbH. p. 15. (brochure, 18 pages)
  18. ^ Bahnhöfe der Zukunft an den neuen Hochgeschwindigkeitsstrecken (in German). Cologne: Stadtplanungsamt der Stadt Köln. c. 1998. p. 25.
  19. ^ "Architektenwettbewerb ICE-Terminal Köln-Messe/Deutz". Zum Thema (in German). Frankfurt am Main: DBProjekt Köln–Rhein/Main (1/2000): 6. February 2000.
  20. ^ "Aufforstung; Durchschlag Limburger Tunnel; Taufe Siegauen-Tunnel; Brücken fertig gestellt; Architektenwettbewerb". Zum Thema (in German). Frankfurt am Main: DBProjekt Köln–Rhein/Main (4/1999): 8. August 1999.
  21. ^ Fritz Schramma (April 2001). "Grußwort". Zum Thema (in German). Frankfurt am Main: DBProjekt Köln–Rhein/Main (2/2001): 3.
  22. ^ "Im Norden viel Neues – aktueller Stand der Arbeiten im Bauabschnitt Nord". Zum Thema (in German). Frankfurt am Main: DBProjekt Köln–Rhein/Main (2/2001): 4–6. April 2001.
  23. ^ "Argumente und Ansichten". Zum Thema (in German). Frankfurt am Main: DBProjekt Köln–Rhein/Main (2/2001): 12. February 2000.
  24. ^ "Umbau am Bahnhof Köln-Deutz (tief)". Zum Thema (in German). Frankfurt am Main: DBProjekt Köln–Rhein/Main (1/2002): 9. February 2002.
  25. ^ "Argumente und Ansichten". Zum Thema (in German). Frankfurt am Main: DBProjekt Köln–Rhein/Main (5/2000): 12. October 2000.
  26. ^ "Hochgeschwindigkeitsstrecke Köln – Rhein/Main". Eisenbahn-Revue International (in German) (10/2002): 456–459. ISSN 1421-2811.
  27. ^ "S 11 Zugpferd für Kölner Ausbau". Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger (in German). 9 April 2010. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
  28. ^ Timetables for Köln Messe/Deutz station
  29. ^ "Köln Messe/Deutz station". NRW Rail Archive (in German). André Joost. 21 November 2013.

External links

  •   Media related to Bahnhof Köln Messe/Deutz at Wikimedia Commons

köln, messe, deutz, station, called, köln, deutz, until, november, 2004, colognian, düx, pronounced, dʏks, important, railway, junction, long, distance, rail, local, services, cologne, district, deutz, german, state, north, rhine, westphalia, situated, close, . Koln Messe Deutz station called Koln Deutz until November 2004 Colognian Dux pronounced dʏks is an important railway junction for long distance rail and local services in the Cologne district of Deutz in the German state of North Rhine Westphalia It is situated close to the eastern bank of the Rhine and connected via the Hohenzollern Bridge to Koln Hauptbahnhof the city s main station which is just a few hundred metres away The Cologne Trade Fair German Koelnmesse grounds are directly north of the station hence the Messe in the station s name The Stadtbahn station of Deutz Messe is nearby and connected by a pedestrian tunnel Koln Messe Deutz stationThrough stationOverview of Koln Messe Deutz stationGeneral informationLocationOttoplatz 7Innenstadt Deutz Cologne North Rhine WestphaliaGermanyCoordinates50 56 27 N 6 58 30 E 50 94083 N 6 97500 E 50 94083 6 97500 Coordinates 50 56 27 N 6 58 30 E 50 94083 N 6 97500 E 50 94083 6 97500Line s Cologne Duisburg KBS 415 450 6 West Rhine Railway Gruiten Cologne Deutz KBS 455 Cologne Bergisch Gladbach KBS 450 11 Sieg Railway KBS 450 12 13 460 East Rhine Railway via Sieg Railway KBS 465 Cologne Frankfurt HSL via Sieg Railway KBS 472 Other informationStation code3329DS100 codeKKDZ 1 2 high platforms 1 8 KKDZB 1 3 S Bahn platforms 9 10 KKDT 1 4 low platforms 11 12 IBNR8003368Category1 5 Fare zoneVRS 2100 6 Websitewww bahnhof deHistoryOpened20 December 1845 CME 2 11 November 1913 PSE 2 ServicesPreceding station OBB Following stationDusseldorf HbfTerminus Nightjetauto train Koblenz Hbftowards Innsbruck HbfPreceding station DB Fernverkehr Following stationDusseldorf HbfTerminus ICE 2 Frankfurt Airporttowards Munchen HbfDusseldorf Hbftowards Aachen Hbf Koblenz Hbf or Oldenburg Hbf ICE 10lower platforms tief Cologne Bonn AirportTerminusDusseldorf Hbftowards Dortmund Hbf or Essen Hbf ICE 41lower platforms tief Frankfurt Airporttowards Munchen Hbf or Garmisch PartenkirchenDusseldorf Hbftowards Dortmund Hbf ICE 47lower platforms tief Cologne Bonn Airporttowards Stuttgart HbfPreceding station DB Regio NRW Following stationKoln Hbftowards Monchengladbach Hbf RE 8 Porz Rhein towards Koblenz HbfKoln Hbftowards Aachen Hbf RE 9 Porz Rhein towards Siegen HbfKoln Hbftowards Trier Hbf RE 12 TerminusKoln Hbftowards Gerolstein RE 22RB 24Koln Hbftowards Koln Hansaring RB 25 Koln Trimbornstrassetowards LudenscheidKoln Hbftowards Monchengladbach Hbf RB 27 Cologne Bonn Airporttowards Koblenz HbfKoln Hbftowards Bedburg RB 38 TerminusPreceding station National Express Germany Following stationKoln Hbftowards Aachen Hbf RE 1 NRW Express Koln Mulheimtowards Hamm Westf HbfKoln Hbftowards Koblenz Hbf RE 5 Rhein Express Koln Mulheimtowards WeselKoln Hbftowards Cologne Bonn Airport RE 6 Rhein Weser Express Cologne Bonn Airporttowards MindenKoln Hbftowards Krefeld Hbf RE 7 Rhein Munsterland Express Koln Mulheimtowards RheineKoln Hbftowards Bonn Mehlem RB 48 Rhein Wupper Bahn Koln Mulheimtowards Wuppertal OberbarmenPreceding station Trans Regio Following stationKoln Hbftowards Mainz Hbf RB 26 TerminusPreceding station Rhine Ruhr S Bahn Following stationKoln Hbftowards Koln Nippes S6 Koln Buchforsttowards Essen HbfKoln Hbftowards Dusseldorf Airport Terminal S11 Koln Buchforsttowards Bergisch GladbachKoln Hbftowards Horrem S12 Koln Trimbornstrassetowards Au Sieg Koln Hbftowards Duren S13 Koln Trimbornstrassetowards TroisdorfS19 Koln Trimbornstrassetowards Au Sieg Preceding station Cologne Stadtbahn Following stationDeutzer Freiheittowards Koln Weiden West Line 1 Deutz Technische Hochschuletowards BensbergDeutzer Freiheittowards Sulz Hermeskeiler Platz Line 9 Deutz Technische Hochschuletowards KonigsforstSuevenstrassetowards Gorlinger Zentrum Line 3 Koelnmessetowards ThielenbruchSuevenstrassetowards Bocklemund Line 4 Koelnmessetowards SchlebuschLocationKoln Messe Deutz stationLocation within North Rhine WestphaliaThe station is a junction station which has platforms on two levels the high level platforms are used by trains running in the east west direction across the Hohenzollern Bridge to and from Koln Hauptbahnhof The lower level Koln Messe Deutz tief is used by trains running in a north south direction bypassing the Hauptbahnhof from Koln Mulheim station towards Troisdorf 7 It serves an important function in providing some relief for the Koln Hauptbahnhof bottleneck some ICE services call at Koln Deutz instead of Koln Hbf eliminating the need for changing direction while many regional trains from the west terminate here to prevent them blocking the Hauptbahnhof 8 Contents 1 History 2 Infrastructure 3 Planning 4 Train services 4 1 Stadbahn services 5 References 6 External linksHistory Edit Koln Messe Deutz station building The current Koln Messe Deutz station was developed from several predecessors built from 1845 and the basic structure of the current station was opened on 11 November 1913 It gradually replaced the four stations of the competing companies the Cologne Minden Railway Company Coln Mindener Eisenbahn Gesellschaft CME and the Bergisch Markische Railway Company Bergisch Markische Eisenbahn Gesellschaft BME The reception building a three wing structure with a central dome was designed by architect Hugo Rottcher and built in 1914 9 In anticipation of the building of a bridge or at least a steam ferry across the Rhine to the station of the Rhenish Railway Company Rheinische Eisenbahn Gesellschaft RhE at Trankgasse at the south eastern end of the current Hauptbahnhof on the opposite bank with connections to Aachen and Antwerp a terminus was completed as a starting point of the CME s line to Dusseldorf southwest of the present station near the Rhine on 20 December 1845 Two through tracks to the Rhine are also visible on old maps The line was later extended via Duisburg and Dortmund to Minden connecting to Berlin In 1859 the station also became the starting point of the Deutz Giessen railway which was being built 10 11 At the same time the first permanent bridge was built across the Rhine since Roman times the Cathedral Bridge popularly known as the Mouse Trap Kolsch Muusfall pronounced ˈmus fal between Deutz and Cologne in order to connect the railway lines on the east and west side of the Rhine The old station facilities were expanded and supplemented to provide platforms on the new line Deutz station remained as a terminal station for normal passenger trains while National Express trains ran to Cologne Hauptbahnhof Originally a simple interchange station for services to and from Deutz Cologne Minden and Giessen was planned nearby at Koln Deutzerfeld which later became the site of a shunting and marshalling yard but this was not implemented 12 On 1 October 1886 the platforms of the Cologne Minden terminal station that was built in 1845 were closed and passenger trains were directed to the Bergisch Markische station at Schiffbrucke 13 Until the rebuilding of the railway infrastructure at Deutz in particular the construction of the Deutzerfeld marshalling and shunting between 1911 and 1913 the old terminus was mainly used as a freight yard 14 In 1913 the stations known since the nationalisation of the Bergisch Markische railway and its absorption into the Prussian state railways PSE in 1882 as Deutzerfeld Deutz field and Schiffbrucke floating bridge were demolished and the lines were connected to the new Deutz station The former Deutzerfeld station sometimes also referred to as Deutz Nord was in the area of the later trade fair now the RTL building Schiffbrucke station also called Bruckenbahnhof bridge station was at the floating bridge that crossed the Rhine to Cologne at the site of the current Deutz Suspension Bridge between 1822 and 1915 The name Deutzer Feld was later applied to the shunting and marshalling yard of Koln Deutzerfeld which is further to the east After the destruction of the Second World War the station was simplified and rebuilt without the large platform area Subsequent modifications and extensions followed 15 During the Nazi period almost all Jews living in Cologne were deported to extermination camps from the low level of Deutz station The first such transport occurred in October 1941 and the last known movement was on 1 October 1944 to the Theresienstadt concentration camp The exhibition halls were used as a transit camp The three spans of the train shed which had iron and glass elements were destroyed in the Second World War and were replaced after the war by concrete platform canopies Parts of the system of tunnels and the entire station forecourt Ottoplatz are registered in the list of monuments of the city of Cologne Upper and lower platforms of Koln Messe Deutz station From 1988 the city of Cologne developed a concept plan for reshaping Intercity Express ICE operations in the Cologne area as part of the planned high speed line to Frankfurt The core of the plan was the use of the Koln Deutz station as an ICE station 16 The Council of the City of Cologne another source indicates it was the CEO of Deutsche Bahn AG 17 decided in 1996 that Deutz station would be rebuilt as a terminal for ICE services at the end of 1997 Deutsche Bahn determined that some new ICE services on the planned Cologne Rhine Main high speed line would start or terminate at Deutz station In December 1997 the Management Board of Deutsche Bahn DB agreed to the redevelopment of the station in several stages 18 When finally in 1998 the Cologne Trade Fair decided to build a new building for its administration it was decided to establish a public private partnership in 1999 involving DB Station amp Service the city and the Trade Fair In mid 1999 the Koln Messe Deutz ICE terminal was submitted to an international architectural competition and received 57 proposals Both urban and transport issues were taken into account Eight finalists were selected The project affected 22 hectares of land and 150 000 square metres of floor area The objectives included the extension and adaptation of the two low level platforms for ICE traffic and the duplication of the access track An expansion to four ICE platforms was considered The plan also included an 800 metre long covered moving walkway that would have connected the station to Cologne Hauptbahnhof 19 20 This competition was judged by DB the city of Cologne and the Cologne Trade Fair and was concluded in 2000 21 The development scheme was submitted for planning approval in October 2000 22 The estimated cost of the overall concept of 140 million Marks was funded by DB the city of Cologne and the Trade Fair A glass roof with a length of 120 metres which should span the entire station was calculated to cost an additional DM 40 million 23 On 8 November 2001 construction began on the modernisation of the low level platforms 11 and 12 The renovated track layout allowed an hourly ICE train to run in each direction to and from the Bahnhof Koln Deutz from the opening of the new line in December 2002 24 Later this number should be increased to three to four trains per hour 25 10 9 million was invested in the modernisation of the two outer platforms of the low level station and other measures 26 The station was named Koln Deutz until 11 December 2004 but then as a result of a campaign by the Cologne Trade Fair which is located next to the station it was renamed The cost of the renaming of the station was borne by the Trade Fair which hoped to gain greater patronage as a result of the renaming Since 3 November 2006 the trade fair is directly connected via the newly constructed south entrance to the station The distance to the closest entrance of the fair halls is about 120 meters Infrastructure Edit Roof of the station building with the installation of new slate 2008 An ICE service from Koln Messe Deutz tief running to the south and an S Bahn service in the background from the S Bahn station running towards the Hauptbahnhof S Bahn platform with a view of Cologne Cathedral left and Colonius telecommunications tower right The high level section of Koln Messe Deutz station consists of six platform tracks on three platforms and two through tracks without access to platforms Directly next to it is the S Bahn station of Koln Messe Deutz Hp which has two platform tracks at its own platform and was built between 1985 and 1990 during the development of the Cologne S Bahn network and the associated construction of the third set of double tracks on the Hohenzollern Bridge Koln Messe Deutz tief low level station was completely rebuilt during the construction of the Cologne Frankfurt high speed rail line It is served by ICE lines 10 Berlin Cologne Bonn Airport and 41 Essen Munich on two tracks These run directly to the north or south without passing through the Hauptbahnhof to save running twice over the Hohenzollern Bridge and reversing The access from the north to Koln Messe Deutz tief was duplicated up to December 2007 and the speed limit was raised to 100 km h The low level station was closed from 10 December 2006 to 8 December 2007 to carry out the upgrade The southern connection to Gummersbacher Strasse junction was initially single track but a second track was added at the beginning of 2010 DB s operating locations directory uses the station codes of KKDZ Koln Messe Deutz and KKDT Koln Messe Deutz tief and KKDZB the S Bahn stop of Koln Messe Deutz Hp 1 Planning EditThe Zweckverband Nahverkehr Rheinland association for local transport of the Rhineland has agreed that the Koln Messe Deutz station will be retrofitted with four lifts to allow barrier free access to all platforms currently only tracks 10 and 11 are accessible by wheelchair It will be possible to reach platform track 12 in the low level station without passing through barriers and without the previous major detour from the Stadtbahn tunnel as an additional access from the Stadtbahn tunnel to track 12 will also be built At a summit of DB the federal government and the state of North Rhine Westphalia on 31 March 2010 in Dusseldorf it was decided that the station should be extended up to 2019 for 11 million The entrance from the Trade Fair to the station will be extended to a side platform to the S Bahn to accelerate entry and exit However it is still being considered whether two new S Bahn tracks will also be needed as is planned at the Hauptbahnhof 27 Train services Edit Platforms and tracks on elevated level Front of the trade fair halls in the background behind the row of trees Cologne Bonn Airport S Bahn serviceLegend Koln Hansaring Koln Hbf Hohenzollern Bridge Koln Messe Deutz Koln Trimbornstrasse Koln Frankfurter Strasse Koln Airport Businesspark Koln Steinstrasse Cologne Bonn Airport Porz Rhein Porz Wahn Spich Troisdorf Siegburg Bonn The station is served by the following services 28 29 International OBB NightJet Service NJ 420 421 Innsbruck Munchen Frankfurt Koln Dusseldorf Intercity Express services ICE 10 Koln Bonn Airport Dusseldorf Essen Dortmund Hamm Hanover Berlin Intercity Express services ICE 41 Dortmund Essen Dusseldorf Cologne Frankfurt Nurnberg Munich Intercity Express services ICE 47 Dortmund Essen Dusseldorf Koln Bonn Airport Frankfurt Flughafen Mannheim Stuttgart Intercity services IC 55 Dresden Dresden Neustadt Riesa Leipzig Flughafen Leipzig Halle Halle Kothen Schonebeck Magdeburg Helmstedt Braunschweig Hannover Minden Bad Oeynhausen Herford Bielefeld Gutersloh Hamm Dortmund Hagen Wuppertal Solingen Cologne Regional services RE 1 NRW Express Aachen Cologne Dusseldorf Duisburg Essen Dortmund Hamm Paderborn Regional services RE 5 Rhein Express Wesel Oberhausen Duisburg Dusseldorf Cologne Bonn Koblenz Regional services RE 6 Rhein Weser Express Minden Westf Bielefeld Hamm Westf Dortmund Essen Duisburg Dusseldorf Neuss Cologne Cologne Bonn Airport Regional services RE 7 Rhein Munsterland Express Krefeld Neuss Cologne Solingen Wuppertal Hagen Hamm Munster Rheine Regional services RE 8 Rhein Erft Express Monchengladbach Cologne Troisdorf Neuwied Koblenz Stadtmitte Koblenz Regional services RE 9 Rhein Sieg Express Aachen Duren Cologne Troisdorf Au Siegen Regional services RE 12 Eifel Mosel Express Trier Gerolstein Kall Euskirchen Cologne Regional services RE 22 Eifel Express Gerolstein Kall Euskirchen Cologne Regional services RB 24 Eifelbahn Kall Euskirchen Cologne Local services RB 25 Oberbergische Bahn Cologne Overath Gummersbach Marienheide Local services RB 26 MittelrheinBahn Cologne Bonn Remagen Andernach Koblenz Local services RB 27 Rhein Erft Bahn Cologne Koln Bonn Airport Troisdorf Neuwied Engers Koblenz Local services RB 38 Erft Bahn Dusseldorf Neuss Grevenbroich Bedburg Cologne Local services RB 48 Rhein Wupper Bahn Bonn Mehlem Bonn Cologne Solingen Wuppertal Rhein Ruhr S Bahn services S6 Essen Kettwig Dusseldorf Cologne Koln Nippes Rhein Ruhr S Bahn services S11 Dusseldorf Airport Terminal Dusseldorf Neuss Cologne Bergisch Gladbach Koln S Bahn services S12 Horrem Cologne Troisdorf Siegburg Bonn Au Koln S Bahn services S13 Horrem Cologne Koln Bonn Airport Troisdorf Koln S Bahn services S19 Duren Horrem Cologne Koln Bonn Airport Troisdorf Siegburg Bonn AuStadbahn services Edit Stadtbahn tracks Immediately below tracks 1 10 is the Stadtbahn station Deutz Messe This station serves the lines 1 and 9 A shopping area connects it to the Stadtbahn station Deutz LANXESSarena where the line 3 and 4 depart References Edit a b c d Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland German railway atlas 2009 2010 ed Schweers Wall 2009 ISBN 978 3 89494 139 0 a b c Koln Messe Deutz operations NRW Rail Archive in German Andre Joost Retrieved 21 November 2013 Koln Messe Deutz Hp operations NRW Rail Archive in German Andre Joost Retrieved 21 November 2013 Koln Messe Deutz tief operations NRW Rail Archive in German Andre Joost Retrieved 21 November 2013 Stationspreisliste 2023 Station price list 2023 PDF in German DB Station amp Service 28 November 2022 Retrieved 14 December 2022 VRS Gemeinschaftstarif PDF in German Verkehrsverbund Rhein Sieg 20 April 2020 p 202 Retrieved 9 May 2020 Station map PDF in German Retrieved 21 November 2013 Grossmann Koln Deutz Bahnhofe A Z in German Geramond Verlag p 5 loose leaf Empfangsgebaude des Bahnhofs Koln Deutz mit Vorplatz in German Bilderbuch Koln Retrieved 2 July 2018 Scheiner 1865 Bauanlagen der Koln Giessener Eisenbahn und der Zweigbahn von Betzdorf nach Siegen in German Siegburg Rheinlandia p 3 Plan of Deutz yard in German Poller Heimatmuseum Deutz Retrieved 21 November 2013 Scheiner 1865 Bauanlagen der Koln Giessener Eisenbahn und der Zweigbahn von Betzdorf nach Siegen in German Siegburg Rheinlandia p 55 Unknown Centralblatt der Bauverwaltung in German Berlin Ministerium der offentlichen Arbeiten 38 Bahnanlagen am Rheinufer in Deutz 355 ff 17 September 1887 Grossmann Koln Deutz Bahnhofe A Z in German Geramond Verlag loose leaf Deutz history Deutz stations in German Poller Heimatmuseum Deutz Retrieved 21 November 2013 Grusswort Zum Thema in German Frankfurt am Main DBProjekt Koln Rhein Main 1 2000 3 February 2000 Koln Rhein Main Projektleitung ed February 2000 Neubaustrecke Koln Rhein Main Bauabschnitt Nord Koln Sankt Augustin in German Frankfurt am Main DBProjekt GmbH p 15 brochure 18 pages Bahnhofe der Zukunft an den neuen Hochgeschwindigkeitsstrecken in German Cologne Stadtplanungsamt der Stadt Koln c 1998 p 25 Architektenwettbewerb ICE Terminal Koln Messe Deutz Zum Thema in German Frankfurt am Main DBProjekt Koln Rhein Main 1 2000 6 February 2000 Aufforstung Durchschlag Limburger Tunnel Taufe Siegauen Tunnel Brucken fertig gestellt Architektenwettbewerb Zum Thema in German Frankfurt am Main DBProjekt Koln Rhein Main 4 1999 8 August 1999 Fritz Schramma April 2001 Grusswort Zum Thema in German Frankfurt am Main DBProjekt Koln Rhein Main 2 2001 3 Im Norden viel Neues aktueller Stand der Arbeiten im Bauabschnitt Nord Zum Thema in German Frankfurt am Main DBProjekt Koln Rhein Main 2 2001 4 6 April 2001 Argumente und Ansichten Zum Thema in German Frankfurt am Main DBProjekt Koln Rhein Main 2 2001 12 February 2000 Umbau am Bahnhof Koln Deutz tief Zum Thema in German Frankfurt am Main DBProjekt Koln Rhein Main 1 2002 9 February 2002 Argumente und Ansichten Zum Thema in German Frankfurt am Main DBProjekt Koln Rhein Main 5 2000 12 October 2000 Hochgeschwindigkeitsstrecke Koln Rhein Main Eisenbahn Revue International in German 10 2002 456 459 ISSN 1421 2811 S 11 Zugpferd fur Kolner Ausbau Kolner Stadt Anzeiger in German 9 April 2010 Retrieved 21 November 2013 Timetables for Koln Messe Deutz station Koln Messe Deutz station NRW Rail Archive in German Andre Joost 21 November 2013 External links Edit Media related to Bahnhof Koln Messe Deutz at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Koln Messe Deutz station amp oldid 1140800063, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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