fbpx
Wikipedia

Berlin Hauptbahnhof

Berlin Hauptbahnhof (listen) (English: Berlin Central Station[5][6][7][8][9][10]) is the main railway station in Berlin, Germany.[11] It came into full operation two days after a ceremonial opening on 26 May 2006. It is located on the site of the historic Lehrter Bahnhof, and on the Berlin S-Bahn suburban railway. The station is operated by DB Station&Service, a subsidiary of Deutsche Bahn AG, and is classified as a Category 1 station, one of 21[12] in Germany and four in Berlin, the others being Berlin Gesundbrunnen, Berlin Südkreuz and Berlin Ostbahnhof.

Berlin Hauptbahnhof
Hbf
East facade of Berlin Hauptbahnhof
General information
Other namesLehrter Bahnhof
LocationEuropaplatz 1
10557 Berlin
Mitte, Berlin, Berlin
Germany
Coordinates52°31′30″N 13°22′09″E / 52.52493°N 13.369181°E / 52.52493; 13.369181Coordinates: 52°31′30″N 13°22′09″E / 52.52493°N 13.369181°E / 52.52493; 13.369181
Owned byDeutsche Bahn
Operated by
Line(s)
Platforms
  • 3 island platforms (Stadtbahn)
  • 4 island platforms (North–South mainline)
  • 1 island platform (U-Bahn)
Tracks
  • 6 (Stadtbahn)
  • 8 (North–South mainline)
  • 2 (U-Bahn)
Train operators
Connections
  • : M5, M8, M10
  • : 120, 123, 142, 147, 245, N5, N20, N40
  • : M41, M85
Construction
Structure type
  • Elevated (Stadtbahn)
  • Underground (North–South mainline, U-Bahn)
Bicycle facilitiesCall a Bike
Disabled accessYes
ArchitectMeinhard von Gerkan of Gerkan, Marg and Partners
Other information
Station code1071
DS100 codeBLS (main line, upper level), BL (main line, lower level), BHBF (S-Bahn)[1]
IBNR8011160
Category1[2]
Fare zone: Berlin A/5555[3]
Websitewww.bahnhof.de
History
Opened26 May 2006; 16 years ago (2006-05-26)
Passengers
300,000 per day[4]
Services
Preceding station   DB Fernverkehr   Following station
towards Düsseldorf or Cologne
ICE 10
via Düsseldorf/Wuppertal - Hamm (Westf) - Hannover
reverses out
Terminus
ICE 11
via Stuttgart - Frankfurt - Erfurt - Leipzig - Berlin
towards Munich
ICE 12
Terminus
ICE 13
towards Warnemünde
ICE 15
via Halle (Saale) - Erfurt
towards Frankfurt
ICE 18
via Nürnberg - Erfurt - Halle (Saale) - Berlin
towards Munich
ICE 28
via Nürnberg - Erfurt - Leipzig - Berlin
ICE 29
via Nürnberg - Erfurt - Halle (Saale)
towards Warnemünde
IC 17
via Berlin
towards Dresden
IC/EC 27
towards Prague
towards Stuttgart
IC/EC 32
Terminus
IC 56
towards Cottbus
towards Berlin Ost
IC 77
towards Amsterdam
TerminusEC 95
Preceding station Following station
Terminus FLX 10 Berlin Südkreuz
Berlin-Spandau
towards Aachen Hbf
FLX 30 Berlin Südkreuz
towards Leipzig Hbf
Preceding station DB Regio Nordost Following station
Terminus Flughafen-Express Berlin Gesundbrunnen
Berlin Zoologischer Garten RE 1 Berlin Friedrichstraße
Berlin Gesundbrunnen RE 3 Berlin Potsdamer Platz
Berlin Gesundbrunnen RE 5 Berlin Potsdamer Platz
Berlin Zoologischer Garten
towards Dessau Hbf
RE 7 Berlin Friedrichstraße
Berlin Jungfernheide
towards Nauen
RB 10 Berlin Potsdamer Platz
Berlin Zoologischer Garten
towards Nauen
RB 14 Berlin Friedrichstraße
Berlin Zoologischer Garten
towards Wustermark
RB 21 Berlin Friedrichstraße
Terminus
Berlin Zoologischer Garten RB 22
Preceding station Ostdeutsche Eisenbahn Following station
Berlin Zoologischer Garten
towards Wismar
RE 2 Berlin Friedrichstraße
towards Cottbus Hbf
Berlin Jungfernheide
towards Rathenow
RE 4 Berlin Potsdamer Platz
towards Jüterbog
Preceding station Berlin S-Bahn Following station
Bellevue
towards Spandau
Friedrichstraße
towards Erkner
Bellevue
towards Westkreuz
Friedrichstraße
Bellevue
towards Potsdam Hbf
Friedrichstraße
towards Ahrensfelde
Bellevue
towards Spandau
Friedrichstraße
Preceding station Berlin U-Bahn Following station
Terminus Bundestag
towards Hönow
Location
Berlin Hauptbahnhof
Location within Berlin
Berlin Hauptbahnhof
Location within Germany
Berlin Hauptbahnhof
Location within Europe

Lehrter Bahnhof (Lehrte Station) opened in 1871 as the terminus of the railway linking Berlin with Lehrte, near Hanover, which later became Germany's most important east–west main line. In 1882, with the completion of the Stadtbahn (City Railway, Berlin's four-track central elevated railway line, which carries both local and main line services), just north of the station, a smaller interchange station called Lehrter Stadtbahnhof was opened to provide connections with the new line. This station later became part of the Berlin S-Bahn. In 1884, after the closure of nearby Hamburger Bahnhof (Hamburg Station), Lehrter Bahnhof became the terminus for trains to and from Hamburg.

Following heavy damage during World War II, limited services to the main station were resumed, but then suspended in 1951. In 1957, with the railways to West Berlin under the control of East Germany, Lehrter Bahnhof was demolished, but Lehrter Stadtbahnhof remained as a stop on the S-Bahn. In 1987, it was extensively renovated to commemorate Berlin's 750th anniversary. After German reunification, it was decided to improve Berlin's railway network by constructing a new north–south main line, to supplement the east-west Stadtbahn. Lehrter Stadtbahnhof was considered to be the logical location for a new central station.

Location

The station is located in the Moabit district, in the Mitte constituency. To the north is Europaplatz and Invalidenstraße, and to the south is Washingtonplatz and the Spree. South of the station is the Spreebogenpark, the Bundeskanzleramt, and the Paul-Löbe-Haus. To the east is the Mitte district and the Humboldthafen.

Function

 
Panorama
 
Elevated platforms
 
Underground platforms

Berlin Hauptbahnhof is part of the mushroom concept in Berlin, in which the station forms a connecting point for converging and intersecting lines of different modes of public transport.

The station's length is 430 metres, though some of the platforms are 80 metres long.

Structurally, the entire station complex is a tower station, while operationally it is a crossing station similar to all central stations. The complex consists of several independent operating points:

  • Tracks 1 to 8 are underground and are used for regional and intercity services on the Berlin North–South mainline.
  • Tracks 9 and 10 are underground and will be used for the future S21 S-Bahn line.
  • Tracks 11 to 14 are elevated and are used for regional and intercity services on the Berlin Stadtbahn.
  • Tracks 15 and 16 are elevated and are used for S-Bahn services on the Stadtbahn.
  • Tracks U1 and U2 are separate from the main station and are used for U-Bahn line U5.

Construction and techniques

Building

The station building has two platform levels and three connecting and business levels. Compared to Raffles Place MRT station and Taipei main station, it is one of the most densely packed stations. The upper platform level serves the Berlin Stadtbahn, and consists of six elevated tracks on four bridge structures, served by three island platforms ten metres high. The outer bridges carry one track each, while the inner bridges carry two each. The lower platform level serves the Berlin North–South mainline, and consists of eight underground tracks served by four island platforms 15 metres deep. To the east are two tracks and an island platform serving U-Bahn line U5 (formerly line U55). Further to the east, a similar double track platform is being built as part of the S21 project.

The bridges carrying the Stadtbahn are approximately 680 metres long, and span not only the station area, but also the adjacent Humboldthafen. Due to the way the Stadtbahn is aligned, they are curved, and due to the broadening from four to six tracks and the additional platforms, the total width has increased from 39 to 66 metres wide. The Humboldthafen Bridge spans the Humboldthafen with a span of 60 metres. It consists of a bow with steel tubes and pre-stressed concrete beam as upper flange.

The upper platform hall, which runs east–west, is 321 metres long and consists of the arched, column-free, glass roof structure, which is supported by the two outer railway overpass structures. In the glass surface, a 2700 square metre photovoltaic system with a capacity of 330 kilowatts was integrated. The hall is between 46 and 66 metres wide and a maximum of 16 metres high. It consists of three sections, with the western segment 172 metres and the eastern 107 metres long. In between lies the 50 metres wide and 180 metres long north–south roof, whose barrel vaults with the main roof form a flat viaduct. Parallel to the north–south roof, the two "ironing structures" span the main roof of the platform hall and carry the north–south roof. These ironing structures contain 42,000 square metres of office space.

On the northeastern part of the two diagonally opposite station terraces, the sculpture of Rolling Horse, erected in 2007 by Jürgen Goertz, artificially complements the building and is reminiscent to Lehrter Bahnhof and Lehrter Stadtbahnhof. There are integrated artificial elements, which can be viewed through four portholes.

From the southwestern terrace, it rises the disguised chimney located underneath the Tunnel Tiergarten Spreebogen.

During Cyclone Kyrill, on 18 January 2007, the 8.4 metre long, 1.35 ton horizontal strut 40 metres high, crashed from the lattice-like exterior onto a staircase, onto the southwestern part of the building, another strut was torn from the anchorage. These decorative elements had only been hung up and should only hold their own weight. As a remedy, small sheets were placed above the carrier to prevent further carrier dissolution.

History

Lehrter Bahnhof from 1871 to 1958

 
The station building seen from southeast in 1879
 
Lehrter Bahnhof in 1879, showing the train shed
 
Attention passengers! Last stop in the direction of the Soviet sector.
 
Lehrter Stadtbahnhof platform in 1992 after its 1987 renovation.
 
View of the station building and south plaza
 
Berlin Hauptbahnhof has railway tracks on two levels, running perpendicular with each other. The levels between them are used for entry and exit from the building and for shopping and other services.

Between 1868 and 1871, a 239 kilometre railway was built between Hannover and Berlin via Lehrte by the Magdeburg Halberstädter railway company. Lehrter Bahnhof was constructed as the Berlin terminus. It was adjacent to Hamburger Bahnhof, just outside what was then Berlin's boundary at the Humbolthafen port on the river Spree. Its architects were Alfred Lent, Bertold Scholz, and Gottlieb Henri Lapierre.

In contrast to earlier railway stations, built with brick façades, and in keeping with then-current trends, Lehrter Bahnhof was designed in the French Neo-Renaissance style. Its originally planned stone façade was replaced with glazed tiles to save money. With its magnificent architecture, the station was known as a "palace among stations".

The train shed was 188 metres long and 38 metres wide. Its roof was a long barrel vault with steel supports. As was common for the period, the station was divided into an arrival side on the west, and a departure side on the east. Originally there were five tracks, four of which ended at the side and the central platform; the fifth track had no platform and served as a turnaround for the locomotives. At the turn of the century this track was removed to accommodate the widening of the central platform.

Although the front of the building was ornate and had a grand entrance, most passengers entered and left via the east side, where horse-drawn carriages were able to stop.

In 1882 the metropolitan railway, predecessor of the S-Bahn, began service along two of the Stadtbahn tracks; long-distance traffic commenced in 1884 along the other two. With the expansion of Lehrter Bahnhof, it was able to take over the functions of Hamburger Bahnhof. A 300 m connector line was built; on 14 October 1884, traffic towards Hamburg, northeast Germany, and Scandinavia was diverted to Lehrter Bahnhof, and Hamburger Bahnhof closed.

In 1886, the Berlin-Lehrte railway, and with it Lehrter Bahnhof, was nationalized and subsequently came under the control of the Prussian State Railways.

Even in its early years, the line was known as one of the country's fastest: in 1872, express trains could attain a speed of 90 km/h (56 mph). 19 December 1932 marked the maiden voyage of the famous diesel-powered Fliegender Hamburger (Flying Hamburger), which whisked passengers to Hamburg at 160 km/h (99 mph).

In the Second World War the station was severely damaged. After the war, the shell was repaired such that it could be used temporarily. During the late 1940s it became a frequent spot for Group of Soviet Occupation Forces in Germany soldiers to sexually assault passengers.[13] However, the postwar division of Germany spelled the end for most of West Berlin's mainline stations. On 28 August 1951 the final train departed from Lehrter Bahnhof, heading for Wustermark and Nauen. On 9 July 1957 demolition began, and on 22 April 1958 the main entrance was blown up. The biggest challenge in the demolition of the station was to preserve the viaducts of the Stadtbahn, which ran directly overhead. Work was completed in the summer of 1959.

Lehrter Stadtbahnhof from 1882 to 2002

On 15 May 1882, Lehrter Stadtbahnhof opened, situated on the Stadtbahn viaduct at the northern end of Lehrter Bahnhof's concourse. This four-track station on the Stadtbahn was used mainly by suburban trains. The main purpose of the Stadtbahn was to connect central areas of Berlin with the Lehrter Bahnhof, the Schlesischer Bahnhof termini with nearby Charlottenburg, then still a separate city. It also provided an east–west railway connection across the centre of Berlin.

Because of steadily increasing traffic to Lehrter Stadtbahnhof and its location on a bridge crossing the north end of Lehrter Bahnhof, elaborate changes were made to the track structure in 1912 and again in 1929. On 1 December 1930, the newly electrified suburban trains were given the designation S-Bahn, making the Lehrter Stadtbahnhof an S-Bahnhof.

During the War, in April 1943 the station was bombed by the Polish sabotage and diversionary squad "Zagra-lin".

The Stadtbahnhof survived WWII intact, but came to lose its pre-war significance due to the division of Berlin; with Lehrter Bahnhof closed, the Stadtbahnhof served only a relatively underpopulated area near the border with East Berlin. It was the final stop in West Berlin; the next station, Berlin Friedrichstraße, was in East Berlin, although it served as a stop on the West Berlin S- and U-Bahn systems; these parts of the station were sealed off and inaccessible to East Berliners. The S-Bahn, like the mainlines leading to West Berlin, was run by the East German railway, the Deutsche Reichsbahn. The 1961 construction of the Berlin Wall further isolated the station, and led to a boycott of the S-Bahn in West Berlin that lasted until the 1980s, when operation of the West Berlin S-Bahn lines was transferred to the West Berlin transit authority, the BVG.

Berlin’s 750th-anniversary celebration in 1987 saw the station, now under West Berlin control, renovated at a cost of about DM 10 million. Because it had largely been preserved in its original condition, it became a listed building.

However, in 2002, Lehrter Stadtbahnhof was demolished to make way for the new central station, despite its listed status. The argument was that Bellevue and Hackescher Markt stations were architecturally similar. Hackescher Markt, in former East Berlin, had been restored in 1994–1996, after German reunification.

Planning the new station

Soon after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, city planners began work on a transport plan for reunified Berlin. One element of this became the "Pilzkonzept" (mushroom concept), in which a new north–south railway line intersecting the Stadtbahn was to be constructed. The name derived from the shape formed by the new line and existing lines, which vaguely resembles a mushroom.

In June 1992 the federal government decided that the new station should be built on the site of Lehrter Bahnhof. While close to the centre of Berlin and government buildings, the area was still not heavily populated. The following year, a design competition for the project was held, which was won by the Hamburg architecture firm Gerkan, Marg and Partners.

The design called for five levels. The highest level, on a bridge 10 metres above street level, was to have platforms for both long-distance and S-Bahn trains on the existing Stadbahn. The lowest level, 15 metres underground, was to have platforms served by new tunnels to Potsdamer Platz under the Spree and the Tiergarten, forming a new north–south line running to the northern part of the S-Bahn ring around central Berlin. Platforms for the planned extension to U-Bahn line 5 were also included.

The planning approval for the station and the north–south connection was made on 12 September 1995. In 1997, a financing agreement was signed between Perleberger Straße and Spreebogen, between the federal government and the railway in the total amount of €700 million. The federal share amounted to €500 million. Any additional cost increases were supposed to be broken down according to a defined key.

New York-based Tishman Speyer Properties was commissioned by Bahn AG to develop the station. Execution planning and construction supervision were carried out by the Stuttgart engineering consultants Schlaich, Bergermann and Partner.

The Hauptbahnhof was planned to have platforms for the cancelled Transrapid maglev train at track 8. Later on, it was replaced by normal railway tracks.

Building the new station

The building work took place in several stages. In 1995 the construction of the Tiergarten tunnels began, and this work was finished in 2005 with the completion of the last station tunnel. The tunnels provide four tubes for long-distance and regional services and two tubes in a separate alignment for the U-Bahn, in addition to a road tunnel ventilated by a 60-metre-high (200 ft) tower completed in 2004. During its construction, the course of the Spree had to be diverted (1996–1998). Water leaks in the tunnels caused over one year's delay to the construction work.

In 1998, the construction of the station proper began. About 1.5 million cubic meters of material were excavated for the pits, which are 90,000 square meters in total and about 20 meters deep. In their place, 227,000 cubic meters of concrete and 13,000 tons of steel reinforcement were installed. With 27-meter-long buoyancy anchors (a total of 250 kilometres) and 180 kilometres of inclined anchors, the foundation was anchored against the buoyant pressure of groundwater (200 kilonewtons per square meter).

On 9 September 1998, the foundation stone was laid symbolically by Federal Minister of Transport Wissmann, railway director Ludewig and Berlin's governing mayor Eberhard Diepgen in the then 17-metre-deep excavation pit. The commissioning date was in 2003. Construction costs were estimated at 800 million DM (€409 million). Over 50 million long-distance passengers and 86 million regional passengers were projected to use the station each year.

After groundwater had penetrated into the excavation pit as a result of a leak, the completion date was postponed in the spring of 1999. The incident necessitated a far-reaching change in the safety concept during the construction phase, in order to keep the groundwater lying about three meters below the ground. Under the new schedule, the station's shell should have been finished in 2003, and trial operations should have begun in 2004. In the middle of 2001, commissioning for 2006 was expected.

Construction of the bridges for the new S-Bahn route began in 2001. These needed to span not only the entire length of the station, but also the adjacent Humboldthafen port, and are 450 metres (1,480 ft) long. Because of the alignment of the S-Bahn they are curved, and each pair of tracks has a separate bridge. Bridges of this type had never been built before, and represented a special challenge for the Egyptian engineer Hani Azer, the chief construction engineer since 2001.

The main station hall is spanned by a similarly curved glass roof with a surface area of about 85 metres (279 ft) by 120 metres (390 ft), which was installed in February 2002. A photovoltaic system was integrated into the glass surface. The steel and glass construction was a difficult task for the engineers, particularly as the glass roofs were shortened by approximately 100 metres to speed up construction.

Over the first weekend of July 2002 the bridges and main station hall were brought into service so that traffic could be diverted onto the new alignment. The old Lehrter Stadtbahnhof S-Bahn station was closed and rapidly demolished to make way for further construction. On 9 September 2002 the station was renamed "Berlin Hauptbahnhof – Lehrter Bahnhof".

The main concourse, supported by two towers, provides roughly 44,000 square metres (470,000 sq ft) of commercial space. Construction of the towers began in 2005. On two separate weekends, 29 July and 13 August 2005, structural frames were installed, supporting the structure above the east–west tracks. This was built using a new technique: the frames, each weighing 1250 t, were lowered by steel cables at a rate of 6 metres (20 ft) per hour; the remaining 20 millimetres (0.79 in) gap between the bow frames upon completion of the lowering process was subsequently closed.

During summer 2003 a survey commissioned by Peter Strieder, Berlin's Senator for City Development and Traffic, and Deutsche Bahn director Hartmut Mehdorn was conducted among Berlin residents with the intention of selecting a name for the station. Of the three possibilities listed on the survey, the majority of participants opted for Lehrter Bahnhof; nevertheless, the station remained "Berlin Hauptbahnhof – Lehrter Bahnhof", an option that was not listed. It was decided early in 2005 that the station would be renamed "Berlin Hauptbahnhof" on the date of its opening, 28 May 2006, to avoid confusing rail passengers. On the same day, Berlin Papestraße station, which was rebuilt as the city's second-largest station, opened officially under its new name, Berlin Südkreuz (South Cross), similar to the existing Ostkreuz and Westkreuz stations. It is also on the new north–south route. Although it was intended to open a further station as Berlin-Nordkreuz (North Cross), the name Berlin-Gesundbrunnen was retained for what became Berlin's fourth biggest railway station for commuter and long-distance trains, located in a more northern part of Berlin, where the circle and north–south-line of the S-Bahn cross each other.

In 2005 the bridging segments, which cross over the roof of the station, were lowered. This was the first time this unique method to build later office rooms was applied.

The architect Meinhard von Gerkan filed a complaint against Deutsche Bahn in October 2005 after Deutsche Bahn altered the station construction timeline without proper approval.[14] The complaint was upheld in late 2006. There may therefore be further construction on the station in the future.

In addition, Deutsche Bahn decided to implement a slightly different version of the "Pilzkonzept" by running intercity trains through the new Tiergarten tunnels rather than via the Stadtbahn. This move was unpopular for its effect on Berlin's two previous main stations; Bahnhof Berlin Zoologischer Garten (Zoo Station) was downgraded to a regional railway station, and the number of mainline services to Berlin Ostbahnhof (East Station) was drastically reduced.[15]

Opening ceremony

On 26 May 2006, the station was ceremonially opened by Chancellor Angela Merkel, who arrived together with transport minister Wolfgang Tiefensee in a specially chartered InterCityExpress from Leipzig.[16] A "Symphony of Light" was performed immediately following the dedication. Reamonn and BAP performed at the station, and there were also events at the other new stations: Gesundbrunnen, Potsdamer Platz and Südkreuz. Berlin Hauptbahnhof officially went into operation on 28 May 2006.

The opening ceremony was marred by an attack by a drunken 16-year-old wielding a knife, who stabbed members of the public leaving the ceremony. Forty-one people were wounded,[17] six seriously, before the youth was arrested.[18] According to police, the youth said he could not remember his act of violence and denied it. One of the first stabbing victims was HIV-positive, leading to worries that other victims may have been infected, although this did not prove to be the case. The youth was charged with attempted murder,[19] and was sentenced to seven years in prison for attempted manslaughter in 33 cases in 2007.

Since opening

On 18 January 2007, two steel beams of the south-west façade were torn loose during European windstorm Kyrill. One of them, an 8.4 metre long beam weighing 1.35 tonnes, dropped 40 metres onto a staircase below, and the other impacted and damaged a third beam. The station had suffered some flooding and had been evacuated due to the complete cancellation of train service in Germany. Consequently, nobody was injured and the station was cleared for reopening the following day. The beams had not been welded or bolted in place[20] but laid down like shelves in a bookcase.[21] In the next days extra lugs were welded to the remaining beams to secure them in place[22] and the station declared stormproof on 23 January.[23]

The Berlin U-Bahn line U55 opened in August 2009, connecting Hauptbahnhof with the Brandenburger Tor station. In December 2020 the line was extended to Alexanderplatz and it became part of line U5.

The airport express line was connected to the new Berlin Brandenburg Airport in 2020. It still has a travel time of 30 minutes.

The rail bridge construction leading into the upper level of the station forms a curve, and some of the screws holding it in place have loosened. This required a €25 million reconstruction which involved the closure of the upper level rail tracks during a 3-month period in summer 2015.[24]

In 2022, the train station became a key gateway for tens of thousands of refugees fleeing Ukraine and entering Germany. The station's basement became a makeshift processing point where refugees received supplies and directed to temporary accommodation or their next destination.[25]

Operational usage

The upper level of the station has six tracks (two of which are used for the Berlin S-Bahn) served by three island platforms. The lower level has eight tracks served by four island platforms for main-line trains, plus a further island platform for the Berlin U-Bahn. The lower level is often denoted by 'tief' on travel guides, etc. (thus the calling point may be "Berlin Hbf (tief)"). There is no rail connection between the upper and lower level track in the station area (or anywhere else nearby). 1,800 trains call at the station per day and the daily number of passengers is estimated to be at 350,000.

As of 2011, the station is used by InterCityExpress, Intercity, Interregioexpress, RegionalExpress, RegionalBahn and S-Bahn trains. The station also hosts several international trains, and the most distant cities reached are Novosibirsk (Russia) and Astana (Kazakhstan), with an express named "Sibirjak". The upper part of the station, with the east–west tracks, is part of the Berlin Stadtbahn, with trains leading to locations like Hanover or Cologne. The subterranean station, which lies in the north-south Tiergarten tunnel, offers long-distance services to Hamburg, Leipzig or Munich.

S-Bahn

 
The S-Bahn platforms at Berlin Hauptbahnhof

For the north–south connection is in the course of S21 S-platform in the tunnel level initially in a northerly direction with the Ringbahn, later of a continuation as a tunnel section with the Potsdamer Platz are connected. The construction of the northern section began in January 2010 and was initially scheduled to be completed by 2015. The realization of the southern section is after completion of the construction work on the extension of U5 expected to end of 2020.[26]

U-Bahn

 
Night view of the Berlin Hauptbahnhof

The U-Bahn tracks are served by the U5, running from Hauptbahnhof to Hönow via Alexanderplatz. It was opened on 8 August 2009 as line U55, a shuttle to Brandenburger Tor via Bundestag, the only intermediate station. This line was operated as a single-track shuttle, and only one of the two platform tracks was used, the other being behind a metal fence, mounted in the ground. Construction of a 2.2 kilometres (1.4 mi) connection to line U5 commenced in April 2010 and opened to the public on 4 December 2020.[27] In the long term it is planned to extend the U5 from the main station towards the west to Turmstraße and Jungfernheide. Due to lack of funds from the state of Berlin, the northwestern continuation is not expected in the near future.

The underground station is in the second level of the main station, and east of the deep north–south train platforms (tracks 1–8). It has a central platform, which is covered with granite. To exit the platform are three stairs, an escalator and a lift. In addition, the station is equipped with tactile paving for accessibility.

The platform hall has a length of 140 metres, 11 metres in height and 19 metres in width. The wall cladding consists of enamel plates which are decorated with photographs of the former Berlin head stations. Furthermore, colored lighting illuminates the ceiling space above the platform.

Since it is the terminus of the U5, a short two-pronged branch railway was built to the north. One of the two sweeping tracks is located at a lockable manhole, through which the U-Bahn carriages can be replaced if necessary with a crane.

Zoning for the underground line U11 under the Invalidenstraße is provided for at the station, however construction of this line has not yet commenced.

Trams

In 2009, the approval process was started to build a tram track connecting Hauptbahnhof to the existing tram network. After some legal hurdles by residents,[28][29] construction started in the spring of 2011.[30] On 14 December 2014, line M5 was extended from S Hackescher Markt to Hauptbahnhof.[31]

On 29 August 2015, lines M8 and M10 were also extended from S Nordbahnhof to Hauptbahnhof.

There are plans to extend the tram network and line M10 further to the west, to Turmstraße U-Bahn station on line U9.

Train services

The station is served by the following services:[32]

Long distance

Line Route Level Interval
ICE 10 Berlin Gesundbrunnen Berlin Hbf – Hanover – Bielefeld – Hamm – Dortmund – Duisburg – Düsseldorf (– Cologne Messe/Deutz Cologne/Bonn Airport) Low Hourly, portions from Hamm
Hagen – Wuppertal – Cologne (– Bonn Koblenz)
ICE 11 (Hamburg – /Berlin Gesundbrunnen –) Berlin Hbf – Lutherstadt Wittenberg – Leipzig – Erfurt – Fulda – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Augsburg – Munich Low Every 2 hours
ICE 11 Berlin – Magdeburg – Brunswick – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Würzburg – Munich Low One train each week night
ICE 12 Berlin Ostbahnhof Berlin Hbf – Wolfsburg – Brunswick – Göttingen – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Fulda – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Freiburg – Basel (– Bern – Interlaken Ost) High Every 2 hours
ICE 13 Berlin Ostbahnhof – Berlin Hbf – Brunswick – Göttingen – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Fulda – Frankfurt South Frankfurt Airport High Every 2 hours
ICE 15 (Warnemünde –) Berlin Gesundbrunnen – Berlin Hbf – Halle – Erfurt – Frankfurt Low Every 2 hours
ICE 18 (Hamburg – /Berlin Gesundbrunnen –) Berlin Hbf – Bitterfeld – Halle – Erfurt – Erlangen – Nuremberg – Ingolstadt / Augsburg – Munich Low Every 2 hours
ICE 28 Hamburg – Berlin – Lutherstadt Wittenberg – Leipzig – Erfurt – Bamberg – Nuremberg – Ingolstadt / Augsburg – Munich Low Every 2 hours
ICE 29 Berlin Gesundbrunnen – Berlin Hbf – Halle – Erfurt – Nuremberg – Munich Low 5 train pairs daily
ICE 91 (Rostock – Berlin Gesundbrunnen –) Berlin Hbf – Halle – Erfurt  – Nuremberg – Passau – Linz – Vienna Low One train pair daily
EC 27 Hamburg – Berlin – Dresden – PragueBrno (– Budapest) Low Every 2 hours
IC 32 (Berlin – Hanover –) (Münster – Recklinghausen) or (Dortmund –) Duisburg – Aachen – Cologne – Koblenz – Mannheim – Stuttgart (– Lindau – Innsbruck / Tübingen) Low Individual services
IC 56 Emden Außenhafen Oldenburg – Bremen – Magdeburg – Berlin – Cottbus High One train pair
IC 77 Berlin Ostbahnhof – Berlin Hbf – Wolfsburg – Hanover – Osnabrück (– Münster)/ – Rheine – Amersfoort – Amsterdam High Every 2 hours
EC 95 Berlin Hbf – Berlin Ostbahnhof – Frankfurt – Poznań – Warsaw High Four train pairs daily
NJ ÖBB Nightjet

Berlin-Charlottenburg – Berlin Hbf – Berlin Ostbahnhof – Frankfurt – Wrocław – Ostrava – Vienna

High One train pair daily
NJ ÖBB Nightjet
Hamburg-Altona – Berlin – Halle – Frankfurt South – Karlsruhe – Freiburg – Basel – Zürich
Low One train pair daily
300/301 Snälltåget

Berlin Hbf – Hamburg – Høje Taastrup stationMalmö Central StationStockholm Central Station

Low One train daily (seasonal)
EN Moscow – Berlin – Paris
Moscow – Vyazma – Smolensk – Orsha – Minsk – Baranavichy – Brest – Terespol – Warsaw – Poznań – Rzepin – Frankfurt – Berlin-Lichtenberg – Berlin Hbf – Erfurt – Frankfurt South – Karlsruhe – Strasbourg – Paris Est
Low 3 train pairs/week
FLX 10 Berlin Hbf – Berlin Südkreuz – Halle (Saale) – Erfurt – Gotha – Eisenach – Fulda – Frankfurt South – Darmstadt – Weinheim – Heidelberg – Stuttgart Low 1–2 train pairs daily
FLX 30 Leipzig – Lutherstadt Wittenberg – Berlin Südkreuz – Berlin Hbf – Berlin-Spandau – Hanover – Bielefeld – Dortmund – Essen – Duisburg – Düsseldorf – Cologne – Aachen Low 1-2 train pairs daily

Regional services

  • Regional services RE 1 Magdeburg – Brandenburg – Potsdam – Berlin – Erkner – Fürstenwalde – Frankfurt (Oder) (– Cottbus)
  • Regional services RE 2 Wismar – Schwerin – Wittenberge – Nauen – Berlin – Königs Wusterhausen – Lübben – Cottbus
  • Regional services RE 3 Stralsund – Greifswald – Pasewalk – Angermünde – Berlin – Ludwigsfelde – Jüterbog – Falkenberg – Elsterwerda
  • Regional services RE 3 Schwedt – Angermünde – Eberswalde – Berlin – Ludwigsfelde – Jüterbog – Lutherstadt Wittenberg
  • Regional services RE 4 (Stendal -) Rathenow – Wustermark – Berlin – Ludwigsfelde – Jüterbog
  • Regional services RE 5 Rostock / Stralsund – Neustrelitz – Berlin – Wünsdorf-Waldstadt – Elsterwerda
  • Regional services RE 7 Dessau – Bad Belzig – Michendorf – Berlin – Berlin-Brandenburg Airport – Wünsdorf-Waldstadt
  • Local services RB 10 Nauen – Falkensee – Berlin - Berlin Südkreuz
  • Local services RB 14 Nauen – Falkensee – Berlin – Berlin-Brandenburg Airport
  • Local services RB 21 Berlin – Potsdam – Golm – Wustermark
  • Local services RB 22 Berlin – Potsdam – Golm – Saarmund – Berlin-Brandenburg Airport - Königs Wusterhausen
  • Berlin S-Bahn services   Spandau - Westkreuz – Hauptbahnhof – Alexanderplatz – Ostbahnhof – Karlshorst – Köpenick – Erkner
  • Berlin S-Bahn services   Westkreuz - Hauptbahnhof - Alexanderplatz - Ostbahnhof - Lichtenberg - Strausberg Nord
  • Berlin S-Bahn services   Potsdam - Wannsee - Westkreuz - Hauptbahnhof - Alexanderplatz - Ostbahnhof - Lichtenberg - Ahrensfelde
  • Berlin S-Bahn services   Spandau - Westkreuz - Hauptbahnhof - Alexanderplatz - Ostbahnhof - Schöneweide - Flughafen Brandenburg

See also

References

  1. ^ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2017 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2017. ISBN 978-3-89494-146-8.
  2. ^ "Stationspreisliste 2023" [Station price list 2023] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 28 November 2022. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  3. ^ "Alle Zielorte" (PDF). Verkehrsverbund Berlin-Brandenburg. 1 January 2021. p. 61. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
  4. ^ (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Archived from the original on 12 March 2010. Retrieved 13 May 2011.
  5. ^ On track for tomorrow. Public Works Planning and Projects in Transport in Germany. DB's publication for the International Transportation Workshop, May 2012. "Berlin Central Station" is their station project example. Accessed 14 August 2013
  6. ^ Business Travel - News from Deutsche Bahn, Spring 2013 25 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed 14 August 2013
  7. ^ Your perfect connections from the airport directly to your destination at www.bahn.com. Accessed 14 August 2013
  8. ^ Berlin Central Station at Structurae, international database and gallery of structures. Accessed 14 August 2013
  9. ^ Edwards, Brian (2011). Sustainability and the Design of Transport Interchanges, Routledge, Oxford & New York, p. 149 etc. ISBN 978-0-415-46449-9
  10. ^ Patterson, Michael Robert (2008). Structural Glass Facades: A Unique Building Technology, Pro Quest, Ann Arbor, UMI 1454120[ISBN missing]
  11. ^ "Second world war bomb defused near Berlin's main railway station". The Guardian. 3 April 2013.
  12. ^ (PDF). DB Station&Service AG. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 February 2015. Retrieved 25 September 2015.
  13. ^ Naimark, Norman M. (1995). The Russians in Germany: A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945–1949. Cambridge: Belknap Press. p. 89.
  14. ^ 16th Berlin Superior Court of Justice, AZ 16 O 240/05
  15. ^ Gabriel M. Ahlfeldt, "The Train has Left the Station: Do Markets Value Intra-City Access to Inter-City Rail Connections", March 2009.
  16. ^ "Merkel opens Berlin Hauptbahnhof". Railway Gazette International. 1 July 2006.
  17. ^ "Mutmaßlicher Amokläufer bittet Opfer um Verzeihung". RP Online. Archived from the original on 26 May 2012. Retrieved 30 May 2006.
  18. ^ Erik Kirschbaum and Claudia Kade. "Man stabs 28 after opening of Berlin train station". Reuters. Retrieved 3 June 2006.[dead link]
  19. ^ . Radio New Zealand. 28 May 2006. Archived from the original on 4 February 2012. Retrieved 30 May 2006.
  20. ^ "Berlins Pannen-Bahnhof – künftig ab Windstärke acht geschlossen". Spiegel online (in German). itz/AP/ddp/dpa. 19 January 2007. Retrieved 20 August 2010.
  21. ^ German: "wie Regalbretter", "Berliner Hauptbahnhof erneut gesperrt". sueddeutsche.de (in German). AP/dpa. 21 January 2007. Retrieved 20 August 2010.
  22. ^ "Der Berliner Hauptbahnhof – jetzt bald sturmsicher". sueddeutsche.de (in German). AFP/dpa/AP. 22 January 2007. Retrieved 20 August 2010.
  23. ^ kt (23 January 2007). "Hauptbahnhof ist jetzt sturmsicher". Der Tagesspiegel (in German). Retrieved 20 August 2010.
  24. ^ "Neuer Ärger für Fahrgäste der Bahn". Berliner Zeitung (in German). 18 April 2013.
  25. ^ Grieshaber, Kirsten (17 March 2022). "Berlin train station turns into refugee town for Ukrainians". Associated Press. Retrieved 26 March 2022.
  26. ^ Klaus Kurpjuweit (21 November 2017). "Die Bohrarbeiten für die U5 kommen voran" (in German). Tagesspiegel.
  27. ^ "Urban rail news in brief – May 2010". Railway Gazette International. Retrieved 14 May 2011.
  28. ^ Peter Neumann (12 May 2009). "Neue Invalidenstraße - es wird geplant und geklagt" [Tenants and landlords feared onslaught of cars: New Invalidenstraße - it is planned and appealed]]. Berliner Zeitung (in German).
  29. ^ tagesspiegel.de.: Tram to the main station: Court approves expansion of Invalidenstrasse In:. Der Tagesspiegel , 22 December 2010
  30. ^ Central Station gets a new S-Bahn and tram connections: fast to the train . In:. Berliner Zeitung , 7 June 2011
  31. ^ tagesspiegel.de.: In December drives the first tram to the main train station In:. Der Tagesspiegel , 9 November 2014
  32. ^ Timetables for Berlin Hauptbahnhof (in German)

External links

  • "Current departure time in Berlin Hbf". Deutsche Bahn. Retrieved 27 December 2013.
  • Berlin Hauptbahnhof | Deutsche Bahn AG - Official DB site (in English).
  • Berlin Central Station am Washingtonplatz Berlin Germany – Interactive panorama in front of the station
  • Berlin Central Station at Structurae
  • In pictures: Berlin's new station - BBC pictures of the station and opening
  • Eröffnung Hauptbahnhof Berlin - Pictures & Videos of the opening (in German)

berlin, hauptbahnhof, station, known, between, 1987, 1998, berlin, ostbahnhof, listen, english, berlin, central, station, main, railway, station, berlin, germany, came, into, full, operation, days, after, ceremonial, opening, 2006, located, site, historic, leh. For the station known as Berlin Hauptbahnhof between 1987 and 1998 see Berlin Ostbahnhof Berlin Hauptbahnhof listen English Berlin Central Station 5 6 7 8 9 10 is the main railway station in Berlin Germany 11 It came into full operation two days after a ceremonial opening on 26 May 2006 It is located on the site of the historic Lehrter Bahnhof and on the Berlin S Bahn suburban railway The station is operated by DB Station amp Service a subsidiary of Deutsche Bahn AG and is classified as a Category 1 station one of 21 12 in Germany and four in Berlin the others being Berlin Gesundbrunnen Berlin Sudkreuz and Berlin Ostbahnhof Berlin HauptbahnhofHbfEast facade of Berlin HauptbahnhofGeneral informationOther namesLehrter BahnhofLocationEuropaplatz 110557 BerlinMitte Berlin BerlinGermanyCoordinates52 31 30 N 13 22 09 E 52 52493 N 13 369181 E 52 52493 13 369181 Coordinates 52 31 30 N 13 22 09 E 52 52493 N 13 369181 E 52 52493 13 369181Owned byDeutsche BahnOperated byDB Netz DB Station amp ServiceLine s Stadtbahn North South mainline U5Platforms3 island platforms Stadtbahn 4 island platforms North South mainline 1 island platform U Bahn Tracks6 Stadtbahn 8 North South mainline 2 U Bahn Train operatorsDB Fernverkehr DB Regio Nordost FlixTrain Ostdeutsche Eisenbahn S Bahn BerlinConnections M5 M8 M10 120 123 142 147 245 N5 N20 N40 M41 M85ConstructionStructure typeElevated Stadtbahn Underground North South mainline U Bahn Bicycle facilitiesCall a BikeDisabled accessYesArchitectMeinhard von Gerkan of Gerkan Marg and PartnersOther informationStation code1071DS100 codeBLS main line upper level BL main line lower level BHBF S Bahn 1 IBNR8011160Category1 2 Fare zone Berlin A 5555 3 Websitewww bahnhof deHistoryOpened26 May 2006 16 years ago 2006 05 26 Passengers300 000 per day 4 ServicesPreceding station DB Fernverkehr Following stationBerlin Spandautowards Dusseldorf or CologneICE 10via Dusseldorf Wuppertal Hamm Westf Hannoverreverses outBerlin GesundbrunnenTerminusBerlin Spandautowards Hamburg AltonaICE 11via Stuttgart Frankfurt Erfurt Leipzig BerlinBerlin Sudkreuztowards MunichBerlin Spandautowards Interlaken OstICE 12Berlin OstbahnhofTerminusBerlin Spandautowards Frankfurt AirportICE 13Berlin Gesundbrunnentowards WarnemundeICE 15via Halle Saale ErfurtBerlin Sudkreuztowards FrankfurtBerlin Spandautowards Hamburg AltonaICE 18via Nurnberg Erfurt Halle Saale BerlinBerlin Sudkreuztowards MunichICE 28via Nurnberg Erfurt Leipzig BerlinBerlin Gesundbrunnentowards Berlin GesundbrunnenICE 29via Nurnberg Erfurt Halle Saale Berlin Gesundbrunnentowards WarnemundeIC 17via BerlinBerlin Sudkreuztowards DresdenBerlin Spandautowards Hamburg AltonaIC EC 27Berlin Sudkreuztowards PragueBerlin Spandautowards StuttgartIC EC 32Berlin SudkreuzTerminusBerlin Wannseetowards Norddeich MoleIC 56Berlin Osttowards CottbusBerlin Spandautowards Berlin OstIC 77Berlin Osttowards AmsterdamTerminusEC 95Berlin Osttowards Warszawa WschodniaPreceding station Following stationTerminus FLX 10 Berlin Sudkreuztowards Stuttgart HbfBerlin Spandautowards Aachen Hbf FLX 30 Berlin Sudkreuztowards Leipzig HbfPreceding station DB Regio Nordost Following stationTerminus Flughafen Express Berlin Gesundbrunnentowards BER Airport Terminal 1 2Berlin Zoologischer Gartentowards Brandenburg Hbf or Magdeburg Hbf RE 1 Berlin Friedrichstrassetowards Cottbus Hbf or Frankfurt Oder Berlin Gesundbrunnentowards Stralsund Hbf or Schwedt RE 3 Berlin Potsdamer Platztowards Falkenberg Elster or Lutherstadt Wittenberg HbfBerlin Gesundbrunnentowards Rostock Hbf or Stralsund Hbf RE 5 Berlin Potsdamer Platztowards Elsterwerda or Finsterwalde Niederlausitz Berlin Zoologischer Gartentowards Dessau Hbf RE 7 Berlin Friedrichstrassetowards Wunsdorf WaldstadtBerlin Jungfernheidetowards Nauen RB 10 Berlin Potsdamer Platztowards Berlin SudkreuzBerlin Zoologischer Gartentowards Nauen RB 14 Berlin Friedrichstrassetowards BER Airport Terminal 1 2Berlin Zoologischer Gartentowards Wustermark RB 21 Berlin FriedrichstrasseTerminusBerlin Zoologischer Gartentowards Konigs Wusterhausen RB 22Preceding station Ostdeutsche Eisenbahn Following stationBerlin Zoologischer Gartentowards Wismar RE 2 Berlin Friedrichstrassetowards Cottbus HbfBerlin Jungfernheidetowards Rathenow RE 4 Berlin Potsdamer Platztowards JuterbogPreceding station Berlin S Bahn Following stationBellevuetowards Spandau Friedrichstrassetowards ErknerBellevuetowards Westkreuz Friedrichstrassetowards Strausberg NordBellevuetowards Potsdam Hbf Friedrichstrassetowards AhrensfeldeBellevuetowards Spandau Friedrichstrassetowards BER Airport Terminal 1 2Preceding station Berlin U Bahn Following stationTerminus Bundestagtowards HonowLocationBerlin HauptbahnhofLocation within BerlinShow map of BerlinBerlin HauptbahnhofLocation within GermanyShow map of GermanyBerlin HauptbahnhofLocation within EuropeShow map of EuropeLehrter Bahnhof Lehrte Station opened in 1871 as the terminus of the railway linking Berlin with Lehrte near Hanover which later became Germany s most important east west main line In 1882 with the completion of the Stadtbahn City Railway Berlin s four track central elevated railway line which carries both local and main line services just north of the station a smaller interchange station called Lehrter Stadtbahnhof was opened to provide connections with the new line This station later became part of the Berlin S Bahn In 1884 after the closure of nearby Hamburger Bahnhof Hamburg Station Lehrter Bahnhof became the terminus for trains to and from Hamburg Following heavy damage during World War II limited services to the main station were resumed but then suspended in 1951 In 1957 with the railways to West Berlin under the control of East Germany Lehrter Bahnhof was demolished but Lehrter Stadtbahnhof remained as a stop on the S Bahn In 1987 it was extensively renovated to commemorate Berlin s 750th anniversary After German reunification it was decided to improve Berlin s railway network by constructing a new north south main line to supplement the east west Stadtbahn Lehrter Stadtbahnhof was considered to be the logical location for a new central station Contents 1 Location 2 Function 3 Construction and techniques 3 1 Building 4 History 4 1 Lehrter Bahnhof from 1871 to 1958 4 2 Lehrter Stadtbahnhof from 1882 to 2002 4 3 Planning the new station 4 4 Building the new station 4 5 Opening ceremony 4 6 Since opening 5 Operational usage 5 1 S Bahn 5 2 U Bahn 5 3 Trams 6 Train services 6 1 Long distance 6 2 Regional services 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksLocation EditThe station is located in the Moabit district in the Mitte constituency To the north is Europaplatz and Invalidenstrasse and to the south is Washingtonplatz and the Spree South of the station is the Spreebogenpark the Bundeskanzleramt and the Paul Lobe Haus To the east is the Mitte district and the Humboldthafen Function Edit Panorama Elevated platforms Underground platforms Berlin Hauptbahnhof is part of the mushroom concept in Berlin in which the station forms a connecting point for converging and intersecting lines of different modes of public transport The station s length is 430 metres though some of the platforms are 80 metres long Structurally the entire station complex is a tower station while operationally it is a crossing station similar to all central stations The complex consists of several independent operating points Tracks 1 to 8 are underground and are used for regional and intercity services on the Berlin North South mainline Tracks 9 and 10 are underground and will be used for the future S21 S Bahn line Tracks 11 to 14 are elevated and are used for regional and intercity services on the Berlin Stadtbahn Tracks 15 and 16 are elevated and are used for S Bahn services on the Stadtbahn Tracks U1 and U2 are separate from the main station and are used for U Bahn line U5 Construction and techniques EditBuilding Edit The station building has two platform levels and three connecting and business levels Compared to Raffles Place MRT station and Taipei main station it is one of the most densely packed stations The upper platform level serves the Berlin Stadtbahn and consists of six elevated tracks on four bridge structures served by three island platforms ten metres high The outer bridges carry one track each while the inner bridges carry two each The lower platform level serves the Berlin North South mainline and consists of eight underground tracks served by four island platforms 15 metres deep To the east are two tracks and an island platform serving U Bahn line U5 formerly line U55 Further to the east a similar double track platform is being built as part of the S21 project The bridges carrying the Stadtbahn are approximately 680 metres long and span not only the station area but also the adjacent Humboldthafen Due to the way the Stadtbahn is aligned they are curved and due to the broadening from four to six tracks and the additional platforms the total width has increased from 39 to 66 metres wide The Humboldthafen Bridge spans the Humboldthafen with a span of 60 metres It consists of a bow with steel tubes and pre stressed concrete beam as upper flange The upper platform hall which runs east west is 321 metres long and consists of the arched column free glass roof structure which is supported by the two outer railway overpass structures In the glass surface a 2700 square metre photovoltaic system with a capacity of 330 kilowatts was integrated The hall is between 46 and 66 metres wide and a maximum of 16 metres high It consists of three sections with the western segment 172 metres and the eastern 107 metres long In between lies the 50 metres wide and 180 metres long north south roof whose barrel vaults with the main roof form a flat viaduct Parallel to the north south roof the two ironing structures span the main roof of the platform hall and carry the north south roof These ironing structures contain 42 000 square metres of office space On the northeastern part of the two diagonally opposite station terraces the sculpture of Rolling Horse erected in 2007 by Jurgen Goertz artificially complements the building and is reminiscent to Lehrter Bahnhof and Lehrter Stadtbahnhof There are integrated artificial elements which can be viewed through four portholes From the southwestern terrace it rises the disguised chimney located underneath the Tunnel Tiergarten Spreebogen During Cyclone Kyrill on 18 January 2007 the 8 4 metre long 1 35 ton horizontal strut 40 metres high crashed from the lattice like exterior onto a staircase onto the southwestern part of the building another strut was torn from the anchorage These decorative elements had only been hung up and should only hold their own weight As a remedy small sheets were placed above the carrier to prevent further carrier dissolution History EditLehrter Bahnhof from 1871 to 1958 Edit The station building seen from southeast in 1879 Lehrter Bahnhof in 1879 showing the train shed Attention passengers Last stop in the direction of the Soviet sector Lehrter Stadtbahnhof platform in 1992 after its 1987 renovation View of the station building and south plaza Berlin Hauptbahnhof has railway tracks on two levels running perpendicular with each other The levels between them are used for entry and exit from the building and for shopping and other services Between 1868 and 1871 a 239 kilometre railway was built between Hannover and Berlin via Lehrte by the Magdeburg Halberstadter railway company Lehrter Bahnhof was constructed as the Berlin terminus It was adjacent to Hamburger Bahnhof just outside what was then Berlin s boundary at the Humbolthafen port on the river Spree Its architects were Alfred Lent Bertold Scholz and Gottlieb Henri Lapierre In contrast to earlier railway stations built with brick facades and in keeping with then current trends Lehrter Bahnhof was designed in the French Neo Renaissance style Its originally planned stone facade was replaced with glazed tiles to save money With its magnificent architecture the station was known as a palace among stations The train shed was 188 metres long and 38 metres wide Its roof was a long barrel vault with steel supports As was common for the period the station was divided into an arrival side on the west and a departure side on the east Originally there were five tracks four of which ended at the side and the central platform the fifth track had no platform and served as a turnaround for the locomotives At the turn of the century this track was removed to accommodate the widening of the central platform Although the front of the building was ornate and had a grand entrance most passengers entered and left via the east side where horse drawn carriages were able to stop In 1882 the metropolitan railway predecessor of the S Bahn began service along two of the Stadtbahn tracks long distance traffic commenced in 1884 along the other two With the expansion of Lehrter Bahnhof it was able to take over the functions of Hamburger Bahnhof A 300 m connector line was built on 14 October 1884 traffic towards Hamburg northeast Germany and Scandinavia was diverted to Lehrter Bahnhof and Hamburger Bahnhof closed In 1886 the Berlin Lehrte railway and with it Lehrter Bahnhof was nationalized and subsequently came under the control of the Prussian State Railways Even in its early years the line was known as one of the country s fastest in 1872 express trains could attain a speed of 90 km h 56 mph 19 December 1932 marked the maiden voyage of the famous diesel powered Fliegender Hamburger Flying Hamburger which whisked passengers to Hamburg at 160 km h 99 mph In the Second World War the station was severely damaged After the war the shell was repaired such that it could be used temporarily During the late 1940s it became a frequent spot for Group of Soviet Occupation Forces in Germany soldiers to sexually assault passengers 13 However the postwar division of Germany spelled the end for most of West Berlin s mainline stations On 28 August 1951 the final train departed from Lehrter Bahnhof heading for Wustermark and Nauen On 9 July 1957 demolition began and on 22 April 1958 the main entrance was blown up The biggest challenge in the demolition of the station was to preserve the viaducts of the Stadtbahn which ran directly overhead Work was completed in the summer of 1959 Lehrter Stadtbahnhof from 1882 to 2002 Edit On 15 May 1882 Lehrter Stadtbahnhof opened situated on the Stadtbahn viaduct at the northern end of Lehrter Bahnhof s concourse This four track station on the Stadtbahn was used mainly by suburban trains The main purpose of the Stadtbahn was to connect central areas of Berlin with the Lehrter Bahnhof the Schlesischer Bahnhof termini with nearby Charlottenburg then still a separate city It also provided an east west railway connection across the centre of Berlin Because of steadily increasing traffic to Lehrter Stadtbahnhof and its location on a bridge crossing the north end of Lehrter Bahnhof elaborate changes were made to the track structure in 1912 and again in 1929 On 1 December 1930 the newly electrified suburban trains were given the designation S Bahn making the Lehrter Stadtbahnhof an S Bahnhof During the War in April 1943 the station was bombed by the Polish sabotage and diversionary squad Zagra lin The Stadtbahnhof survived WWII intact but came to lose its pre war significance due to the division of Berlin with Lehrter Bahnhof closed the Stadtbahnhof served only a relatively underpopulated area near the border with East Berlin It was the final stop in West Berlin the next station Berlin Friedrichstrasse was in East Berlin although it served as a stop on the West Berlin S and U Bahn systems these parts of the station were sealed off and inaccessible to East Berliners The S Bahn like the mainlines leading to West Berlin was run by the East German railway the Deutsche Reichsbahn The 1961 construction of the Berlin Wall further isolated the station and led to a boycott of the S Bahn in West Berlin that lasted until the 1980s when operation of the West Berlin S Bahn lines was transferred to the West Berlin transit authority the BVG Berlin s 750th anniversary celebration in 1987 saw the station now under West Berlin control renovated at a cost of about DM 10 million Because it had largely been preserved in its original condition it became a listed building However in 2002 Lehrter Stadtbahnhof was demolished to make way for the new central station despite its listed status The argument was that Bellevue and Hackescher Markt stations were architecturally similar Hackescher Markt in former East Berlin had been restored in 1994 1996 after German reunification Planning the new station Edit Soon after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 city planners began work on a transport plan for reunified Berlin One element of this became the Pilzkonzept mushroom concept in which a new north south railway line intersecting the Stadtbahn was to be constructed The name derived from the shape formed by the new line and existing lines which vaguely resembles a mushroom In June 1992 the federal government decided that the new station should be built on the site of Lehrter Bahnhof While close to the centre of Berlin and government buildings the area was still not heavily populated The following year a design competition for the project was held which was won by the Hamburg architecture firm Gerkan Marg and Partners The design called for five levels The highest level on a bridge 10 metres above street level was to have platforms for both long distance and S Bahn trains on the existing Stadbahn The lowest level 15 metres underground was to have platforms served by new tunnels to Potsdamer Platz under the Spree and the Tiergarten forming a new north south line running to the northern part of the S Bahn ring around central Berlin Platforms for the planned extension to U Bahn line 5 were also included The planning approval for the station and the north south connection was made on 12 September 1995 In 1997 a financing agreement was signed between Perleberger Strasse and Spreebogen between the federal government and the railway in the total amount of 700 million The federal share amounted to 500 million Any additional cost increases were supposed to be broken down according to a defined key New York based Tishman Speyer Properties was commissioned by Bahn AG to develop the station Execution planning and construction supervision were carried out by the Stuttgart engineering consultants Schlaich Bergermann and Partner The Hauptbahnhof was planned to have platforms for the cancelled Transrapid maglev train at track 8 Later on it was replaced by normal railway tracks Building the new station Edit The building work took place in several stages In 1995 the construction of the Tiergarten tunnels began and this work was finished in 2005 with the completion of the last station tunnel The tunnels provide four tubes for long distance and regional services and two tubes in a separate alignment for the U Bahn in addition to a road tunnel ventilated by a 60 metre high 200 ft tower completed in 2004 During its construction the course of the Spree had to be diverted 1996 1998 Water leaks in the tunnels caused over one year s delay to the construction work In 1998 the construction of the station proper began About 1 5 million cubic meters of material were excavated for the pits which are 90 000 square meters in total and about 20 meters deep In their place 227 000 cubic meters of concrete and 13 000 tons of steel reinforcement were installed With 27 meter long buoyancy anchors a total of 250 kilometres and 180 kilometres of inclined anchors the foundation was anchored against the buoyant pressure of groundwater 200 kilonewtons per square meter On 9 September 1998 the foundation stone was laid symbolically by Federal Minister of Transport Wissmann railway director Ludewig and Berlin s governing mayor Eberhard Diepgen in the then 17 metre deep excavation pit The commissioning date was in 2003 Construction costs were estimated at 800 million DM 409 million Over 50 million long distance passengers and 86 million regional passengers were projected to use the station each year After groundwater had penetrated into the excavation pit as a result of a leak the completion date was postponed in the spring of 1999 The incident necessitated a far reaching change in the safety concept during the construction phase in order to keep the groundwater lying about three meters below the ground Under the new schedule the station s shell should have been finished in 2003 and trial operations should have begun in 2004 In the middle of 2001 commissioning for 2006 was expected Construction of the bridges for the new S Bahn route began in 2001 These needed to span not only the entire length of the station but also the adjacent Humboldthafen port and are 450 metres 1 480 ft long Because of the alignment of the S Bahn they are curved and each pair of tracks has a separate bridge Bridges of this type had never been built before and represented a special challenge for the Egyptian engineer Hani Azer the chief construction engineer since 2001 The main station hall is spanned by a similarly curved glass roof with a surface area of about 85 metres 279 ft by 120 metres 390 ft which was installed in February 2002 A photovoltaic system was integrated into the glass surface The steel and glass construction was a difficult task for the engineers particularly as the glass roofs were shortened by approximately 100 metres to speed up construction Over the first weekend of July 2002 the bridges and main station hall were brought into service so that traffic could be diverted onto the new alignment The old Lehrter Stadtbahnhof S Bahn station was closed and rapidly demolished to make way for further construction On 9 September 2002 the station was renamed Berlin Hauptbahnhof Lehrter Bahnhof The main concourse supported by two towers provides roughly 44 000 square metres 470 000 sq ft of commercial space Construction of the towers began in 2005 On two separate weekends 29 July and 13 August 2005 structural frames were installed supporting the structure above the east west tracks This was built using a new technique the frames each weighing 1250 t were lowered by steel cables at a rate of 6 metres 20 ft per hour the remaining 20 millimetres 0 79 in gap between the bow frames upon completion of the lowering process was subsequently closed During summer 2003 a survey commissioned by Peter Strieder Berlin s Senator for City Development and Traffic and Deutsche Bahn director Hartmut Mehdorn was conducted among Berlin residents with the intention of selecting a name for the station Of the three possibilities listed on the survey the majority of participants opted for Lehrter Bahnhof nevertheless the station remained Berlin Hauptbahnhof Lehrter Bahnhof an option that was not listed It was decided early in 2005 that the station would be renamed Berlin Hauptbahnhof on the date of its opening 28 May 2006 to avoid confusing rail passengers On the same day Berlin Papestrasse station which was rebuilt as the city s second largest station opened officially under its new name Berlin Sudkreuz South Cross similar to the existing Ostkreuz and Westkreuz stations It is also on the new north south route Although it was intended to open a further station as Berlin Nordkreuz North Cross the name Berlin Gesundbrunnen was retained for what became Berlin s fourth biggest railway station for commuter and long distance trains located in a more northern part of Berlin where the circle and north south line of the S Bahn cross each other In 2005 the bridging segments which cross over the roof of the station were lowered This was the first time this unique method to build later office rooms was applied The architect Meinhard von Gerkan filed a complaint against Deutsche Bahn in October 2005 after Deutsche Bahn altered the station construction timeline without proper approval 14 The complaint was upheld in late 2006 There may therefore be further construction on the station in the future In addition Deutsche Bahn decided to implement a slightly different version of the Pilzkonzept by running intercity trains through the new Tiergarten tunnels rather than via the Stadtbahn This move was unpopular for its effect on Berlin s two previous main stations Bahnhof Berlin Zoologischer Garten Zoo Station was downgraded to a regional railway station and the number of mainline services to Berlin Ostbahnhof East Station was drastically reduced 15 Opening ceremony Edit On 26 May 2006 the station was ceremonially opened by Chancellor Angela Merkel who arrived together with transport minister Wolfgang Tiefensee in a specially chartered InterCityExpress from Leipzig 16 A Symphony of Light was performed immediately following the dedication Reamonn and BAP performed at the station and there were also events at the other new stations Gesundbrunnen Potsdamer Platz and Sudkreuz Berlin Hauptbahnhof officially went into operation on 28 May 2006 The opening ceremony was marred by an attack by a drunken 16 year old wielding a knife who stabbed members of the public leaving the ceremony Forty one people were wounded 17 six seriously before the youth was arrested 18 According to police the youth said he could not remember his act of violence and denied it One of the first stabbing victims was HIV positive leading to worries that other victims may have been infected although this did not prove to be the case The youth was charged with attempted murder 19 and was sentenced to seven years in prison for attempted manslaughter in 33 cases in 2007 Since opening Edit On 18 January 2007 two steel beams of the south west facade were torn loose during European windstorm Kyrill One of them an 8 4 metre long beam weighing 1 35 tonnes dropped 40 metres onto a staircase below and the other impacted and damaged a third beam The station had suffered some flooding and had been evacuated due to the complete cancellation of train service in Germany Consequently nobody was injured and the station was cleared for reopening the following day The beams had not been welded or bolted in place 20 but laid down like shelves in a bookcase 21 In the next days extra lugs were welded to the remaining beams to secure them in place 22 and the station declared stormproof on 23 January 23 The Berlin U Bahn line U55 opened in August 2009 connecting Hauptbahnhof with the Brandenburger Tor station In December 2020 the line was extended to Alexanderplatz and it became part of line U5 The airport express line was connected to the new Berlin Brandenburg Airport in 2020 It still has a travel time of 30 minutes The rail bridge construction leading into the upper level of the station forms a curve and some of the screws holding it in place have loosened This required a 25 million reconstruction which involved the closure of the upper level rail tracks during a 3 month period in summer 2015 24 In 2022 the train station became a key gateway for tens of thousands of refugees fleeing Ukraine and entering Germany The station s basement became a makeshift processing point where refugees received supplies and directed to temporary accommodation or their next destination 25 Operational usage EditThe upper level of the station has six tracks two of which are used for the Berlin S Bahn served by three island platforms The lower level has eight tracks served by four island platforms for main line trains plus a further island platform for the Berlin U Bahn The lower level is often denoted by tief on travel guides etc thus the calling point may be Berlin Hbf tief There is no rail connection between the upper and lower level track in the station area or anywhere else nearby 1 800 trains call at the station per day and the daily number of passengers is estimated to be at 350 000 As of 2011 update the station is used by InterCityExpress Intercity Interregioexpress RegionalExpress RegionalBahn and S Bahn trains The station also hosts several international trains and the most distant cities reached are Novosibirsk Russia and Astana Kazakhstan with an express named Sibirjak The upper part of the station with the east west tracks is part of the Berlin Stadtbahn with trains leading to locations like Hanover or Cologne The subterranean station which lies in the north south Tiergarten tunnel offers long distance services to Hamburg Leipzig or Munich S Bahn Edit The S Bahn platforms at Berlin Hauptbahnhof For the north south connection is in the course of S21 S platform in the tunnel level initially in a northerly direction with the Ringbahn later of a continuation as a tunnel section with the Potsdamer Platz are connected The construction of the northern section began in January 2010 and was initially scheduled to be completed by 2015 The realization of the southern section is after completion of the construction work on the extension of U5 expected to end of 2020 26 U Bahn Edit Night view of the Berlin Hauptbahnhof The U Bahn tracks are served by the U5 running from Hauptbahnhof to Honow via Alexanderplatz It was opened on 8 August 2009 as line U55 a shuttle to Brandenburger Tor via Bundestag the only intermediate station This line was operated as a single track shuttle and only one of the two platform tracks was used the other being behind a metal fence mounted in the ground Construction of a 2 2 kilometres 1 4 mi connection to line U5 commenced in April 2010 and opened to the public on 4 December 2020 27 In the long term it is planned to extend the U5 from the main station towards the west to Turmstrasse and Jungfernheide Due to lack of funds from the state of Berlin the northwestern continuation is not expected in the near future The underground station is in the second level of the main station and east of the deep north south train platforms tracks 1 8 It has a central platform which is covered with granite To exit the platform are three stairs an escalator and a lift In addition the station is equipped with tactile paving for accessibility The platform hall has a length of 140 metres 11 metres in height and 19 metres in width The wall cladding consists of enamel plates which are decorated with photographs of the former Berlin head stations Furthermore colored lighting illuminates the ceiling space above the platform Since it is the terminus of the U5 a short two pronged branch railway was built to the north One of the two sweeping tracks is located at a lockable manhole through which the U Bahn carriages can be replaced if necessary with a crane Zoning for the underground line U11 under the Invalidenstrasse is provided for at the station however construction of this line has not yet commenced Trams Edit In 2009 the approval process was started to build a tram track connecting Hauptbahnhof to the existing tram network After some legal hurdles by residents 28 29 construction started in the spring of 2011 30 On 14 December 2014 line M5 was extended from S Hackescher Markt to Hauptbahnhof 31 On 29 August 2015 lines M8 and M10 were also extended from S Nordbahnhof to Hauptbahnhof There are plans to extend the tram network and line M10 further to the west to Turmstrasse U Bahn station on line U9 Train services EditThe station is served by the following services 32 Long distance Edit Line Route Level IntervalICE 10 Berlin Gesundbrunnen Berlin Hbf Hanover Bielefeld Hamm Dortmund Duisburg Dusseldorf Cologne Messe Deutz Cologne Bonn Airport Low Hourly portions from HammHagen Wuppertal Cologne Bonn Koblenz ICE 11 Hamburg Berlin Gesundbrunnen Berlin Hbf Lutherstadt Wittenberg Leipzig Erfurt Fulda Frankfurt Mannheim Stuttgart Augsburg Munich Low Every 2 hoursICE 11 Berlin Magdeburg Brunswick Kassel Wilhelmshohe Wurzburg Munich Low One train each week nightICE 12 Berlin Ostbahnhof Berlin Hbf Wolfsburg Brunswick Gottingen Kassel Wilhelmshohe Fulda Frankfurt Mannheim Freiburg Basel Bern Interlaken Ost High Every 2 hoursICE 13 Berlin Ostbahnhof Berlin Hbf Brunswick Gottingen Kassel Wilhelmshohe Fulda Frankfurt South Frankfurt Airport High Every 2 hoursICE 15 Warnemunde Berlin Gesundbrunnen Berlin Hbf Halle Erfurt Frankfurt Low Every 2 hoursICE 18 Hamburg Berlin Gesundbrunnen Berlin Hbf Bitterfeld Halle Erfurt Erlangen Nuremberg Ingolstadt Augsburg Munich Low Every 2 hoursICE 28 Hamburg Berlin Lutherstadt Wittenberg Leipzig Erfurt Bamberg Nuremberg Ingolstadt Augsburg Munich Low Every 2 hoursICE 29 Berlin Gesundbrunnen Berlin Hbf Halle Erfurt Nuremberg Munich Low 5 train pairs dailyICE 91 Rostock Berlin Gesundbrunnen Berlin Hbf Halle Erfurt Nuremberg Passau Linz Vienna Low One train pair dailyEC 27 Hamburg Berlin Dresden Prague Brno Budapest Low Every 2 hoursIC 32 Berlin Hanover Munster Recklinghausen or Dortmund Duisburg Aachen Cologne Koblenz Mannheim Stuttgart Lindau Innsbruck Tubingen Low Individual servicesIC 56 Emden Aussenhafen Oldenburg Bremen Magdeburg Berlin Cottbus High One train pairIC 77 Berlin Ostbahnhof Berlin Hbf Wolfsburg Hanover Osnabruck Munster Rheine Amersfoort Amsterdam High Every 2 hoursEC 95 Berlin Hbf Berlin Ostbahnhof Frankfurt Poznan Warsaw High Four train pairs dailyNJ OBB Nightjet Berlin Charlottenburg Berlin Hbf Berlin Ostbahnhof Frankfurt Wroclaw Ostrava Vienna High One train pair dailyNJ OBB NightjetHamburg Altona Berlin Halle Frankfurt South Karlsruhe Freiburg Basel Zurich Low One train pair daily300 301 Snalltaget Berlin Hbf Hamburg Hoje Taastrup station Malmo Central Station Stockholm Central Station Low One train daily seasonal EN Moscow Berlin ParisMoscow Vyazma Smolensk Orsha Minsk Baranavichy Brest Terespol Warsaw Poznan Rzepin Frankfurt Berlin Lichtenberg Berlin Hbf Erfurt Frankfurt South Karlsruhe Strasbourg Paris Est Low 3 train pairs weekFLX 10 Berlin Hbf Berlin Sudkreuz Halle Saale Erfurt Gotha Eisenach Fulda Frankfurt South Darmstadt Weinheim Heidelberg Stuttgart Low 1 2 train pairs dailyFLX 30 Leipzig Lutherstadt Wittenberg Berlin Sudkreuz Berlin Hbf Berlin Spandau Hanover Bielefeld Dortmund Essen Duisburg Dusseldorf Cologne Aachen Low 1 2 train pairs dailyRegional services Edit Regional services RE 1 Magdeburg Brandenburg Potsdam Berlin Erkner Furstenwalde Frankfurt Oder Cottbus Regional services RE 2 Wismar Schwerin Wittenberge Nauen Berlin Konigs Wusterhausen Lubben Cottbus Regional services RE 3 Stralsund Greifswald Pasewalk Angermunde Berlin Ludwigsfelde Juterbog Falkenberg Elsterwerda Regional services RE 3 Schwedt Angermunde Eberswalde Berlin Ludwigsfelde Juterbog Lutherstadt Wittenberg Regional services RE 4 Stendal Rathenow Wustermark Berlin Ludwigsfelde Juterbog Regional services RE 5 Rostock Stralsund Neustrelitz Berlin Wunsdorf Waldstadt Elsterwerda Regional services RE 7 Dessau Bad Belzig Michendorf Berlin Berlin Brandenburg Airport Wunsdorf Waldstadt Local services RB 10 Nauen Falkensee Berlin Berlin Sudkreuz Local services RB 14 Nauen Falkensee Berlin Berlin Brandenburg Airport Local services RB 21 Berlin Potsdam Golm Wustermark Local services RB 22 Berlin Potsdam Golm Saarmund Berlin Brandenburg Airport Konigs Wusterhausen Berlin S Bahn services Spandau Westkreuz Hauptbahnhof Alexanderplatz Ostbahnhof Karlshorst Kopenick Erkner Berlin S Bahn services Westkreuz Hauptbahnhof Alexanderplatz Ostbahnhof Lichtenberg Strausberg Nord Berlin S Bahn services Potsdam Wannsee Westkreuz Hauptbahnhof Alexanderplatz Ostbahnhof Lichtenberg Ahrensfelde Berlin S Bahn services Spandau Westkreuz Hauptbahnhof Alexanderplatz Ostbahnhof Schoneweide Flughafen BrandenburgSee also EditList of central stations Railway stations in Berlin Berlin Palermo railway axisReferences Edit Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland German railway atlas 2017 ed Schweers Wall 2017 ISBN 978 3 89494 146 8 Stationspreisliste 2023 Station price list 2023 PDF in German DB Station amp Service 28 November 2022 Retrieved 14 December 2022 Alle Zielorte PDF Verkehrsverbund Berlin Brandenburg 1 January 2021 p 61 Retrieved 5 May 2021 300 000 Reisende und Besucher werden taglich erwartet in German Deutsche Bahn Archived from the original on 12 March 2010 Retrieved 13 May 2011 On track for tomorrow Public Works Planning and Projects in Transport in Germany DB s publication for the International Transportation Workshop May 2012 Berlin Central Station is their station project example Accessed 14 August 2013 Business Travel News from Deutsche Bahn Spring 2013 Archived 25 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 14 August 2013 Your perfect connections from the airport directly to your destination at www bahn com Accessed 14 August 2013 Berlin Central Station at Structurae international database and gallery of structures Accessed 14 August 2013 Edwards Brian 2011 Sustainability and the Design of Transport Interchanges Routledge Oxford amp New York p 149 etc ISBN 978 0 415 46449 9 Patterson Michael Robert 2008 Structural Glass Facades A Unique Building Technology Pro Quest Ann Arbor UMI 1454120 ISBN missing Second world war bomb defused near Berlin s main railway station The Guardian 3 April 2013 Bahnhofskategorieliste 2015 PDF DB Station amp Service AG Archived from the original PDF on 24 February 2015 Retrieved 25 September 2015 Naimark Norman M 1995 The Russians in Germany A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation 1945 1949 Cambridge Belknap Press p 89 16th Berlin Superior Court of Justice AZ 16 O 240 05 Gabriel M Ahlfeldt The Train has Left the Station Do Markets Value Intra City Access to Inter City Rail Connections March 2009 Merkel opens Berlin Hauptbahnhof Railway Gazette International 1 July 2006 Mutmasslicher Amoklaufer bittet Opfer um Verzeihung RP Online Archived from the original on 26 May 2012 Retrieved 30 May 2006 Erik Kirschbaum and Claudia Kade Man stabs 28 after opening of Berlin train station Reuters Retrieved 3 June 2006 dead link HIV fears after teen s stabbing spree in Berlin Radio New Zealand 28 May 2006 Archived from the original on 4 February 2012 Retrieved 30 May 2006 Berlins Pannen Bahnhof kunftig ab Windstarke acht geschlossen Spiegel online in German itz AP ddp dpa 19 January 2007 Retrieved 20 August 2010 German wie Regalbretter Berliner Hauptbahnhof erneut gesperrt sueddeutsche de in German AP dpa 21 January 2007 Retrieved 20 August 2010 Der Berliner Hauptbahnhof jetzt bald sturmsicher sueddeutsche de in German AFP dpa AP 22 January 2007 Retrieved 20 August 2010 kt 23 January 2007 Hauptbahnhof ist jetzt sturmsicher Der Tagesspiegel in German Retrieved 20 August 2010 Neuer Arger fur Fahrgaste der Bahn Berliner Zeitung in German 18 April 2013 Grieshaber Kirsten 17 March 2022 Berlin train station turns into refugee town for Ukrainians Associated Press Retrieved 26 March 2022 Klaus Kurpjuweit 21 November 2017 Die Bohrarbeiten fur die U5 kommen voran in German Tagesspiegel Urban rail news in brief May 2010 Railway Gazette International Retrieved 14 May 2011 Peter Neumann 12 May 2009 Neue Invalidenstrasse es wird geplant und geklagt Tenants and landlords feared onslaught of cars New Invalidenstrasse it is planned and appealed Berliner Zeitung in German tagesspiegel de Tram to the main station Court approves expansion of InvalidenstrasseIn Der Tagesspiegel 22 December 2010 Central Station gets a new S Bahn and tram connections fast to the train In Berliner Zeitung 7 June 2011 tagesspiegel de In December drives the first tram to the main train station In Der Tagesspiegel 9 November 2014 Timetables for Berlin Hauptbahnhof in German External links Edit Current departure time in Berlin Hbf Deutsche Bahn Retrieved 27 December 2013 Berlin Hauptbahnhof Deutsche Bahn AG Official DB site in English Berlin Central Station am Washingtonplatz Berlin Germany Interactive panorama in front of the station Berlin Central Station at Structurae In pictures Berlin s new station BBC pictures of the station and opening Eroffnung Hauptbahnhof Berlin Pictures amp Videos of the opening in German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Berlin Hauptbahnhof amp oldid 1127230146, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.