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Cottbus Hauptbahnhof

Cottbus Hauptbahnhof (German) or Chóśebuz głowne dwórnišćo (Lower Sorbian) is one of the main railway stations of the German state of Brandenburg. It was called Cottbus station until 9 December 2018. It is located just south of central Cottbus. It is classified by Deutsche Bahn as a category 2 station.[1]

Cottbus Hauptbahnhof
Junction station
Cottbus station forecourt with newly designed façade (June 2020)
General information
LocationVetschauer Str. 70, Cottbus, Brandenburg
Germany
Coordinates51°45′3″N 14°19′35″E / 51.75083°N 14.32639°E / 51.75083; 14.32639
Line(s)
Platforms10 (formerly 12)
Other information
Station code1077[1]
DS100 codeBCS[2][page needed]
IBNR8010073
Category2[1]
Fare zone: Cottbus A/7270[3]
Websitewww.bahnhof.de
History
Opened13 September 1866; 157 years ago (1866-09-13)
Passengers
< 50,000/day[4]
Services
Preceding station DB Fernverkehr Following station
Lübbenau IC 56 Terminus
Preceding station DB Regio Nordost Following station
Calau (Niederlausitz)
towards Leipzig Hbf
RE 10 Cottbus-Sandow
Drebkau
towards Elsterwerda
RE 13 Terminus
Drebkau
towards Dresden Hbf
RE 18
Kolkwitz Süd RB 43 Cottbus-Sandow
Leuthen (b Cottbus) RB 49 Terminus
Preceding station Ostdeutsche Eisenbahn Following station
Guben RE 1
Terminus
Kolkwitz
towards Nauen
RE 2
Terminus RB 46 Cottbus-Sandow
RB 65 Neuhausen (bei Cottbus)
towards Zittau
Preceding station KD Following station
Forst (Lausitz) D99 Berlin-Lichtenberg
Terminus
Location
Cottbus Hauptbahnhof
Location within Brandenburg
Cottbus Hauptbahnhof
Location within Germany
Cottbus Hauptbahnhof
Location within Europe

History edit

 
Old entrance building on historical postcard. View from the platforms

Cottbus station entered into operation on 13 September 1866 with the opening of the railway line from Berlin. In 1867, this line was extended to Görlitz. In 1870, the station building was inaugurated, located between the tracks as an "island station" (German: Inselbahnhof). In the following years, other railway lines were built in the region. The Großenhainer Bahnhof (the station serving trains to Großenhain) was opened on the Großenhain–Cottbus railway in 1873, north of the Berliner Bahnhof (the station serving trains to Berlin). In 1880, this station was closed and the trains were diverted to the Berlin station. The building of the Großenhainer Bahnhof still exists and serves the railway administration.

In 1886, the station's new owners, the Prussian state railways, built a tunnel to connect the platforms. To the north of the station there were originally freight facilities.

 
Station building of the
Spreewald Railway
(Postcard beginning of the 1920s)

In 1899, the Spreewald Railway was opened with its terminus on the edge of the track field north of the state station.[5]

By 1927 there were plans to build a new building on the southern side of the tracks because of the lack of space in the station building, which was confined on its island. However, these were not realised because of the Great Depression.

In February 1945, the station building and other parts of the station were destroyed in an air raid. After the war, a barracks-like building was built for passengers to replace the destroyed building. This provisional building remained for a long time and proved to be more and more inadequate. In the late 1960s, there were plans to build a new station building on the south side of the line. In 1970, the first preparations were made for its construction. As Cottbus was an important railway junction, especially for freight, because of the extensive lignite mining in the region, extensive preparations had to be made before the main construction could begin. These included the duplication of several lines in the Cottbus area, in order to relieve the junction. An additional platform was built. In 1974, work began on the new platform tunnel. Finally, after four years of construction, on 5 October 1978, the new station building went into operation.

 
Cottbus station, departing freight train (1989)

On 30 September 1989, the Lübbenau–Cottbus line was electrified, including the tracks at Cottbus station. On 16 December 1989, electrification was extended to Finsterwalde on the Halle–Cottbus line. In 1990, it was extended to Senftenberg (on the Großenhain–Cottbus line) and Guben (Cottbus–Guben line).

In 1995, the National Garden Show (Bundesgartenschau) was held in Cottbus. On this occasion, the entrance building was extensively renovated and expanded.

At the end of November 2010, a new electronic interlocking system was put into operation at a cost of €50 million. Since then, all signals, switches and crossings in the area of Cottbus station have been controlled from the control centre at Berlin-Pankow.[6]

Infrastructure edit

The station is located south of central Cottbus on an east–west orientation. The original structure of the station as an island station can still be easily recognised by the large open area between the tracks. On this island some of the outbuildings of the temporary station built after the war have been preserved. Originally, the station was reached from Bahnhofstraße, which runs east of the station on a bridge over the tracks; there is now no connection from the bridge.

On the central island there are two platform edges on through tracks and some bay platforms on terminating tracks. The station building, built in the style of the 1970s, is on the southern side of the tracks. During the reconstruction a new "home platform" was created next to the new entrance building. Between the entrance building and the central island, there are two island platforms and another north of it.[7]

During the reconstruction, a tunnel was built from the new station building to the middle island. The original station tunnel is located about 100 metres (328 ft) to its west. It starts on the platform that faces the current tracks 2 and 3 and links the platforms with each other and with the northern exit on the city side. It could not, however, be extended to the new station building. To get from the station building to the northernmost platform or the northern entrance, it is necessary to change tunnels. At the northern entrance there are no ticket facilities or waiting rooms. In front of its exit is the Spreewaldbahnhof, the starting point of the disused narrow gauge Spreewald Railway. Between the northern entrance and the platforms there are facilities for freight. These are for the most part no longer in operation, including the freight loading and unloading facilities and the container terminal.

The entrance building contains a ticket office, various dining facilities, a bookstore, and a shop selling local products. There are facilities for waiting in the heated concourse building.

Directly in front of the entrance building is the stop for tram lines 1 and 5 and some bus lines. Tram lines 2, 3 and 4 stop east of the station at the intersection of Bahnhofstraße and Stadtring.

Name edit

 
Bilingual sign on platform – German: Cottbus Hauptbahnhof (Hbf), Lower Sorbian: Chóśebuz głowne dwórnišćo (gł.dw.)

Until 2000 the station was the only passenger station in the city, so its name did not need to be distinguish it from other stations. Since then, a new stations has been built at Cottbus Sandow and the stations now known as Cottbus-Merzdorf and Cottbus-Willmersdorf Nord have had Cottbus added to their names. During the renovation of the station for the National Garden Show the name on the outside facade of the station was changed from Bahnhof Cottbus ("Cottbus station") to Cottbus Hauptbahnhof ("Cottbus central station"). Both the Verkehrsverbund Berlin-Brandenburg (Berlin-Brandenburg Transport Association) and the public transit system of Cottbus–Cottbusverkehr–call the station in their timetables Cottbus Hauptbahnhof. Officially the railway station, despite its importance, however, was still not known as Cottbus Hauptbahnhof. On 9 December 2018, its name was officially changed to Cottbus Hauptbahnhof.

Cottbus is the capital of the Sorbian people in Lower Lusatia, and platform signage is bilingual in German and Lower Sorbian, reading "Cottbus/Chóśebuz" until 2018, and "Cottbus Hbf"/"Chóśebuz gł.dw." since 2018.

Rail services edit

The station has lost its former role as a long-distance transport junction. It is served only by one pair of long-distance trains.

The station is served by the following services:[8][better source needed]

Line Operator Route Interval
IC 56 DB Fernverkehr CottbusBerlinPotsdamMagdeburgHanoverBremenOldenburg (Oldb)Norddeich Mole | ← Emden Außenhafen 1 train
RE 1 Ostdeutsche Eisenbahn Cottbus – Guben – Eisenhüttenstadt – Frankfurt (Oder)Berlin – Potsdam – Brandenburg – Magdeburg Some trains
RE 2 Ostdeutsche Eisenbahn CottbusLübbenau (Spreewald)Lübben (Spreew)Königs Wusterhausen – Berlin – Berlin-SpandauNauen 60 min
RE 10 DB Regio Nordost Frankfurt – Eisenhüttenstadt – Guben – CottbusCalau (Nl)Doberlug-KirchhainFalkenberg (Elster)EilenburgLeipzig 120 min
RE 13 DB Regio Nordost CottbusSenftenberg (– RuhlandElsterwerda-BiehlaElsterwerda)
(Mon-Fri only)
60 min
RE 18 DB Regio Nordost Cottbus – Senftenberg – Ruhland – Dresden 120 min
RB 43 DB Regio Nordost Cottbus – Calau (Nl) – Doberlug-Kirchhain – Falkenberg (Elster) 120 min
RB 46 Ostdeutsche Eisenbahn CottbusForst (Lausitz) 60 min
RB 49 DB Regio Nordost Cottbus – Senftenberg – Ruhland – Elsterwerda-Biehla – Falkenberg (Elster) 120 min
RB 65 Ostdeutsche Eisenbahn CottbusGörlitzZittau 60 min

Until mid-December 2014 the station was also served by EuroCity "Wawel", which used to run once daily between Hamburg-Altona and Wrocław Główny. This train was reinvented in December 2020 between Berlin Hauptbahnhof and Krakow Główny, but as the train is running on the electrified and faster route via Frankfurt (Oder), it does not stop in Cottbus Hbf anymore.

Future edit

The station built during the renovation in the 1970s remained in many ways an inadequate station, partly because of its lack of continuous tunnels. Deutsche Bahn is planning the renovation of the station.[9] All tracks and platforms of the passenger station are to be rebuilt and the signalling system is to be modernised. The modernisation is expected to cost almost €100 million.

At the end of 2008, DB Netz was requested by the Federal Railway Authority to demolish large parts of the infrastructure of the former container terminal on the north side of the station.[10] The city of Cottbus plans an extension of Wilhelm-Külz-Straße on the site.

 
Cottbus station track field (October 2009)

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Stationspreisliste 2024" [Station price list 2024] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 24 April 2023. Retrieved 29 November 2023.
  2. ^ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland [German railway atlas] (2009/2010 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  3. ^ (PDF). Verkehrsverbund Berlin-Brandenburg. 1 January 2021. p. 62. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 August 2021. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
  4. ^ (PDF) (in German). November 2006. p. 25. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 7, 2012. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  5. ^ "die Dokumentation einer stillgelegten Bahn" [the documentation of a disused railway]. The Spreewaldbahn (in German).
  6. ^ (in German). Lausitzer Rundschau. 19 November 2010. Archived from the original on 22 November 2010. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  7. ^ "Station track plan" (PDF) (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Retrieved 7 November 2011.[dead link]
  8. ^ "Timetables for Cottbus station" (in German).
  9. ^ (in German). Lausitzer Rundschau. 8 December 2008. Archived from the original on 16 October 2008. Retrieved 7 November 2011.
  10. ^ Announcement of the Federal Railway Authority of 19 December 2008.[full citation needed]
  • Liesk, Günter; Puschmann, Horst; Wiene, Dieter (2002). "Der Bahnhof Cottbus". Schienenverkehr in der DDR, volume III (in German). Transpress. pp. 185–194. ISBN 3-613-71186-9.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Bahnhof Cottbus at Wikimedia Commons

cottbus, hauptbahnhof, german, chóśebuz, głowne, dwórnišćo, lower, sorbian, main, railway, stations, german, state, brandenburg, called, cottbus, station, until, december, 2018, located, just, south, central, cottbus, classified, deutsche, bahn, category, stat. Cottbus Hauptbahnhof German or Chosebuz glowne dwornisco Lower Sorbian is one of the main railway stations of the German state of Brandenburg It was called Cottbus station until 9 December 2018 It is located just south of central Cottbus It is classified by Deutsche Bahn as a category 2 station 1 Cottbus HauptbahnhofJunction stationCottbus station forecourt with newly designed facade June 2020 General informationLocationVetschauer Str 70 Cottbus BrandenburgGermanyCoordinates51 45 3 N 14 19 35 E 51 75083 N 14 32639 E 51 75083 14 32639Line s Berlin Gorlitz km 114 7 KBS 202 220 Halle Cottbus km 173 9 KBS 209 43 215 Cottbus Guben km 173 9 KBS 201 211 Cottbus Forst Zary km 0 6 KBS 209 46 Grossenhain Cottbus km 79 7 KBS 208 Cottbus Grunow Frankfurt Oder km 79 7 closed Platforms10 formerly 12 Other informationStation code1077 1 DS100 codeBCS 2 page needed IBNR8010073Category2 1 Fare zone Cottbus A 7270 3 Websitewww bahnhof deHistoryOpened13 September 1866 157 years ago 1866 09 13 Passengers lt 50 000 day 4 ServicesPreceding station DB Fernverkehr Following station Lubbenautowards Norddeich Mole or Emden Aussenhafen IC 56 Terminus Preceding station DB Regio Nordost Following station Calau Niederlausitz towards Leipzig Hbf RE 10 Cottbus Sandowtowards Frankfurt Oder Drebkautowards Elsterwerda RE 13 Terminus Drebkautowards Dresden Hbf RE 18 Kolkwitz Sudtowards Herzberg Elster RB 43 Cottbus Sandowtowards Frankfurt Oder Leuthen b Cottbus towards Falkenberg Elster RB 49 Terminus Preceding station Ostdeutsche Eisenbahn Following station Gubentowards Magdeburg Hbf RE 1 Terminus Kolkwitztowards Nauen RE 2 Terminus RB 46 Cottbus Sandowtowards Forst Lausitz RB 65 Neuhausen bei Cottbus towards Zittau Preceding station KD Following station Forst Lausitz towards Wroclaw Glowny D99 Berlin LichtenbergTerminusLocationCottbus HauptbahnhofLocation within BrandenburgShow map of BrandenburgCottbus HauptbahnhofLocation within GermanyShow map of GermanyCottbus HauptbahnhofLocation within EuropeShow map of Europe Contents 1 History 2 Infrastructure 3 Name 4 Rail services 5 Future 6 References 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp Old entrance building on historical postcard View from the platforms Cottbus station entered into operation on 13 September 1866 with the opening of the railway line from Berlin In 1867 this line was extended to Gorlitz In 1870 the station building was inaugurated located between the tracks as an island station German Inselbahnhof In the following years other railway lines were built in the region The Grossenhainer Bahnhof the station serving trains to Grossenhain was opened on the Grossenhain Cottbus railway in 1873 north of the Berliner Bahnhof the station serving trains to Berlin In 1880 this station was closed and the trains were diverted to the Berlin station The building of the Grossenhainer Bahnhof still exists and serves the railway administration In 1886 the station s new owners the Prussian state railways built a tunnel to connect the platforms To the north of the station there were originally freight facilities nbsp Station building of theSpreewald Railway Postcard beginning of the 1920s In 1899 the Spreewald Railway was opened with its terminus on the edge of the track field north of the state station 5 By 1927 there were plans to build a new building on the southern side of the tracks because of the lack of space in the station building which was confined on its island However these were not realised because of the Great Depression In February 1945 the station building and other parts of the station were destroyed in an air raid After the war a barracks like building was built for passengers to replace the destroyed building This provisional building remained for a long time and proved to be more and more inadequate In the late 1960s there were plans to build a new station building on the south side of the line In 1970 the first preparations were made for its construction As Cottbus was an important railway junction especially for freight because of the extensive lignite mining in the region extensive preparations had to be made before the main construction could begin These included the duplication of several lines in the Cottbus area in order to relieve the junction An additional platform was built In 1974 work began on the new platform tunnel Finally after four years of construction on 5 October 1978 the new station building went into operation nbsp Cottbus station departing freight train 1989 On 30 September 1989 the Lubbenau Cottbus line was electrified including the tracks at Cottbus station On 16 December 1989 electrification was extended to Finsterwalde on the Halle Cottbus line In 1990 it was extended to Senftenberg on the Grossenhain Cottbus line and Guben Cottbus Guben line In 1995 the National Garden Show Bundesgartenschau was held in Cottbus On this occasion the entrance building was extensively renovated and expanded At the end of November 2010 a new electronic interlocking system was put into operation at a cost of 50 million Since then all signals switches and crossings in the area of Cottbus station have been controlled from the control centre at Berlin Pankow 6 Infrastructure editThe station is located south of central Cottbus on an east west orientation The original structure of the station as an island station can still be easily recognised by the large open area between the tracks On this island some of the outbuildings of the temporary station built after the war have been preserved Originally the station was reached from Bahnhofstrasse which runs east of the station on a bridge over the tracks there is now no connection from the bridge On the central island there are two platform edges on through tracks and some bay platforms on terminating tracks The station building built in the style of the 1970s is on the southern side of the tracks During the reconstruction a new home platform was created next to the new entrance building Between the entrance building and the central island there are two island platforms and another north of it 7 During the reconstruction a tunnel was built from the new station building to the middle island The original station tunnel is located about 100 metres 328 ft to its west It starts on the platform that faces the current tracks 2 and 3 and links the platforms with each other and with the northern exit on the city side It could not however be extended to the new station building To get from the station building to the northernmost platform or the northern entrance it is necessary to change tunnels At the northern entrance there are no ticket facilities or waiting rooms In front of its exit is the Spreewaldbahnhof the starting point of the disused narrow gauge Spreewald Railway Between the northern entrance and the platforms there are facilities for freight These are for the most part no longer in operation including the freight loading and unloading facilities and the container terminal The entrance building contains a ticket office various dining facilities a bookstore and a shop selling local products There are facilities for waiting in the heated concourse building Directly in front of the entrance building is the stop for tram lines 1 and 5 and some bus lines Tram lines 2 3 and 4 stop east of the station at the intersection of Bahnhofstrasse and Stadtring nbsp Cottbus station entrance building from the east 1990 nbsp Track field left of the entrance building 2009 nbsp Entrance building 2009 Name edit nbsp Bilingual sign on platform German Cottbus Hauptbahnhof Hbf Lower Sorbian Chosebuz glowne dwornisco gl dw Until 2000 the station was the only passenger station in the city so its name did not need to be distinguish it from other stations Since then a new stations has been built at Cottbus Sandow and the stations now known as Cottbus Merzdorf and Cottbus Willmersdorf Nord have had Cottbus added to their names During the renovation of the station for the National Garden Show the name on the outside facade of the station was changed from Bahnhof Cottbus Cottbus station to Cottbus Hauptbahnhof Cottbus central station Both the Verkehrsverbund Berlin Brandenburg Berlin Brandenburg Transport Association and the public transit system of Cottbus Cottbusverkehr call the station in their timetables Cottbus Hauptbahnhof Officially the railway station despite its importance however was still not known as Cottbus Hauptbahnhof On 9 December 2018 its name was officially changed to Cottbus Hauptbahnhof Cottbus is the capital of the Sorbian people in Lower Lusatia and platform signage is bilingual in German and Lower Sorbian reading Cottbus Chosebuz until 2018 and Cottbus Hbf Chosebuz gl dw since 2018 Rail services editThe station has lost its former role as a long distance transport junction It is served only by one pair of long distance trains The station is served by the following services 8 better source needed Line Operator Route Interval IC 56 DB Fernverkehr Cottbus Berlin Potsdam Magdeburg Hanover Bremen Oldenburg Oldb Norddeich Mole Emden Aussenhafen 1 train RE 1 Ostdeutsche Eisenbahn Cottbus Guben Eisenhuttenstadt Frankfurt Oder Berlin Potsdam Brandenburg Magdeburg Some trains RE 2 Ostdeutsche Eisenbahn Cottbus Lubbenau Spreewald Lubben Spreew Konigs Wusterhausen Berlin Berlin Spandau Nauen 60 min RE 10 DB Regio Nordost Frankfurt Eisenhuttenstadt Guben Cottbus Calau Nl Doberlug Kirchhain Falkenberg Elster Eilenburg Leipzig 120 min RE 13 DB Regio Nordost Cottbus Senftenberg Ruhland Elsterwerda Biehla Elsterwerda Mon Fri only 60 min RE 18 DB Regio Nordost Cottbus Senftenberg Ruhland Dresden 120 min RB 43 DB Regio Nordost Cottbus Calau Nl Doberlug Kirchhain Falkenberg Elster 120 min RB 46 Ostdeutsche Eisenbahn Cottbus Forst Lausitz 60 min RB 49 DB Regio Nordost Cottbus Senftenberg Ruhland Elsterwerda Biehla Falkenberg Elster 120 min RB 65 Ostdeutsche Eisenbahn Cottbus Gorlitz Zittau 60 min Until mid December 2014 the station was also served by EuroCity Wawel which used to run once daily between Hamburg Altona and Wroclaw Glowny This train was reinvented in December 2020 between Berlin Hauptbahnhof and Krakow Glowny but as the train is running on the electrified and faster route via Frankfurt Oder it does not stop in Cottbus Hbf anymore Future editThe station built during the renovation in the 1970s remained in many ways an inadequate station partly because of its lack of continuous tunnels Deutsche Bahn is planning the renovation of the station 9 All tracks and platforms of the passenger station are to be rebuilt and the signalling system is to be modernised The modernisation is expected to cost almost 100 million At the end of 2008 DB Netz was requested by the Federal Railway Authority to demolish large parts of the infrastructure of the former container terminal on the north side of the station 10 The city of Cottbus plans an extension of Wilhelm Kulz Strasse on the site nbsp Cottbus station track field October 2009 References edit a b c Stationspreisliste 2024 Station price list 2024 PDF in German DB Station amp Service 24 April 2023 Retrieved 29 November 2023 Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland German railway atlas 2009 2010 ed Schweers Wall 2009 ISBN 978 3 89494 139 0 Alle Zielorte PDF Verkehrsverbund Berlin Brandenburg 1 January 2021 p 62 Archived from the original PDF on 22 August 2021 Retrieved 5 May 2021 Bahnhofsentwicklungsprogramm Brandenburg Aktueller Stand und Konzeption 2006 PDF in German November 2006 p 25 Archived from the original PDF on April 7 2012 Retrieved 7 November 2011 die Dokumentation einer stillgelegten Bahn the documentation of a disused railway The Spreewaldbahn in German Zugverkehr auf Cottbuser Bahnhof ist eingestellt in German Lausitzer Rundschau 19 November 2010 Archived from the original on 22 November 2010 Retrieved 7 November 2011 Station track plan PDF in German Deutsche Bahn Retrieved 7 November 2011 dead link Timetables for Cottbus station in German 100 Millionen Euro Bahn will Bahnhof in Cottbus sanieren in German Lausitzer Rundschau 8 December 2008 Archived from the original on 16 October 2008 Retrieved 7 November 2011 Announcement of the Federal Railway Authority of 19 December 2008 full citation needed Liesk Gunter Puschmann Horst Wiene Dieter 2002 Der Bahnhof Cottbus Schienenverkehr in der DDR volume III in German Transpress pp 185 194 ISBN 3 613 71186 9 External links edit nbsp Media related to Bahnhof Cottbus at Wikimedia Commons Portals nbsp Transport nbsp Germany Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cottbus Hauptbahnhof amp oldid 1187080251, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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