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Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof

Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof, also called Frankfurt Central Station and Frankfurt Main Station, is the busiest railway station in the German state of Hesse.[2] Because of its location near the middle of Germany and usage as a transport hub for long and short distance travelling, Deutsche Bahn refers to it as the most important station in Germany.

Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof
Terminal station
General information
LocationFrankfurt, Hesse
Germany
Coordinates50°6′25″N 8°39′45″E / 50.10694°N 8.66250°E / 50.10694; 8.66250
Owned byDeutsche Bahn
Operated by
Line(s)
Platforms
  • 24 mainline (26 tracks on one level)
  • 4 S-Bahn (Tiefbahnhof)
  • 4 U-Bahn (3 for passengers)
  • 3 × 2 Tram
ConnectionsFrankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof underground
Construction
ArchitectHermann Eggert and Johann Wilhelm Schwedler
Architectural style
Other information
Station code1866
DS100 codeFF
Category1
Fare zone: 5001[1]
Websitewww.bahnhof.de
History
Opened18 August 1888; 134 years ago (1888-08-18)
Passengers
493,000 daily
Services
Preceding station DB Fernverkehr Following station
Mannheim Hbf ICE 11
reverses out
Fulda
Mannheim Hbf ICE 12
reverses out
Hanau Hbf
Terminus ICE 15 Fulda
towards Berlin Hbf
Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe ICE 20
reverses out
Frankfurt Airport
Mannheim Hbf
towards Chur
Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe ICE 22
reverses out
Frankfurt Airport
Darmstadt Hbf ICE 26
reverses out
Frankfurt West
towards Hamburg Hbf
Frankfurt Airport ICE 31
reverses out
Würzburg Hbf
towards Passau Hbf
Mannheim Hbf
towards Passau Hbf
Frankfurt Airport ICE 41
reverses out
Aschaffenburg Hbf
Terminus ICE 49 Frankfurt Airport
towards Köln Hbf
Fulda
towards Dresden Hbf
ICE 50
reverses out
Frankfurt Airport
Terminus ICE 78 Frankfurt Airport
ICE 79 Frankfurt Airport
ICE/TGV 82 Mannheim Hbf
towards Paris Est
ICE/TGV 84 Mannheim Hbf
towards Marseille
Frankfurt Airport
towards Dortmund Hbf
ICE 91
reverses out
Würzburg Hbf
towards Wien Hbf
Darmstadt Hbf IC 26
reverses out
Friedberg
towards Hamburg Hbf
Frankfurt Airport
towards Hamburg Hbf
IC 31
reverses out
Hanau Hbf
Terminus IC 34 Frankfurt West
towards Siegen
IC 62 Darmstadt Hbf
Preceding station ÖBB Following station
Terminus Railjet Express Darmstadt Hbf
towards Bregenz
Preceding station DB Regio Bayern Following station
Terminus RE 54 Frankfurt Süd
towards Bamberg
RE 55 Frankfurt Süd
Preceding station DB Regio Mitte Following station
Terminus RE 2
Südwest-Express
Frankfurt-Niederrad
towards Koblenz Hbf
RE 4 Frankfurt-Höchst
RE 14
Südwest-Express
Frankfurt-Höchst
towards Mannheim Hbf
RE 20 Frankfurt-Höchst
RE 30 Friedberg (Hess)
towards Kassel Hbf
RE 50 Frankfurt Süd
towards Bebra
RE 60 Langen (Hess)
towards Mannheim Hbf
RE 70 Frankfurt-Niederrad
towards Mannheim Hbf
RB 22 Frankfurt-Höchst
RB 34 Frankfurt (Main) West
RB 41 Frankfurt (Main) West
towards Treysa
RB 51 Frankfurt Süd
RB 61 Neu-Isenburg
towards Dieburg
RB 67 Langen (Hess)
RB 68 Langen (Hess)
Preceding station Hessische Landesbahn Following station
Terminus RB 12 Frankfurt-Höchst
RB 58 Frankfurt Süd
towards Laufach
Preceding station VIAS Following station
Terminus RE 85 Frankfurt (Main) Süd
RB 10 Frankfurt-Höchst
towards Neuwied
RB 82 Darmstadt Nord
towards Eberbach
Preceding station Vlexx Following station
Terminus RE 3 Frankfurt-Niederrad
Preceding station Rhine-Main S-Bahn Following station
Terminus Frankfurt-Niederrad
Location
Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof
Location within Frankfurt
Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof
Location within Hesse
Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof
Location within Germany
Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof
Location within Europe

Name

The affix "Main" comes from the city's full name, Frankfurt am Main ("Frankfurt on the River Main") and is needed to distinguish it from Frankfurt (Oder) station on the River Oder in Brandenburg. In German, the name is often abbreviated as Frankfurt (Main) Hbf.

History

Initial situation

 
Station-Shield - Frankfurt - International Trade Fair City

Before the current Hauptbahnhof was built on the Galgenfeld (gallows field), the three western stations, the termini of the Taunus Railway (Taunusbahn), the Main–Weser Railway (Main-Weser-Bahn) and the Main-Neckar Railway (Main-Neckar-Bahn) were located on the outskirts of the city, the Gallusanlage, the area of today's Bahnhofsviertel ("station district").

Plans

Due to the increased volume of travellers at the end of the 19th century, the capacity of the three western railway stations became increasingly inadequate, but changes were made more difficult by the territorial affiliations of the states surrounding the Free City of Frankfurt. After the annexation of Frankfurt, Nassau and Hesse-Kassel by Prussia in 1866, the obstacles in this regard were largely removed, so that planning for a central station was taken seriously. The inadequacy of the existing situation became apparent primarily during the Franco-Prussian War of 1870/71. Apparently, when troop movements were noticeably hampered by the scattered stations. Like the three western stations before it, the new station was to be built as a terminal station. First, a large station with 34 platform tracks was planned. Because of the huge dimensions, however, a variant with "only" 18 platform tracks was used. Mail and goods handling was to take place under the station hall, local traffic was to be handled outside, which was realised by the main freight yard built later. The town council, which only got a say in 1875, also wanted the railway facilities relocated from the Anlagenring (the ring of roads and parklands on the demolished walls surrounding the inner city) to the former gallows field. A new district with Kaiserstraße as the main axis was to be created on the area of the track fields of the Western stations that was thus freed from railway operations. This option also had the great advantage that operations could be carried out largely undisturbed during the construction phase, since the new station hardly affected the old lines.

From 1880, the Bauakademie (Prussian Building Academy) held a competition involving all the major architects to design a "monument that challenged the highest artistic standards". In 1881, the winner of this architectural competition was that of the agricultural inspector and university master builder Hermann Eggert from Strasbourg in Alsace, from among the 55 designs submitted. He was commissioned with the planning and construction of the entrance building. The Berlin architect Johann Wilhelm Schwedler, who specialised in steel construction, scored second place. He became the designer of the three new station halls made of iron with a 28 metre-high barrel vault, each of which had three platforms with six tracks.[3]

Realisation

 
A postcard image of the Hauptbahnhof, c. 1915

On 18 August 1888, after only five years of construction, the Centralbahnhof Frankfurt (Frankfurt Central Station) was inaugurated. In the next few years, the station district developed to the east of the entrance building and was fully developed by around 1900. Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof was the largest station in Europe until Leipzig Hauptbahnhof was built in 1915.

Railway operations

The station was designed for regular services. The entry and exit tracks of each line lay next to each other.[4]

On the evening of the opening day, a train was unable to stop in time and ran over the buffer stop. The locomotive and the pavement of the transverse platform were damaged. This was the beginning of a whole series of such incidents, which caused some ridicule in the press.[5] The "highlight" was the "sweeping" crossing of the locomotive of the Ostend-Wien-Express on 6 December 1901. The locomotive and tender only came to a standstill for first and second class waiting room.

Many engine drivers therefore drove very carefully into the station and came to a stop some distance from the buffer stops. This in turn meant that the last carriages of the trains came to a stop away from the platforms, which the management did not like either. The engine drivers were warned to "drive as close as possible to the buffer stops".[6]

Extensions and conversions

 
View through the platform hall of the station
 
Railway station platform 18
 
The 1957 signal box

In 1924 the building was extended with two outer halls in Neoclassical style. The number of tracks increased to 25 (tracks 1 to 24 and 1a). Reliefs with motifs of the Wandervogel movement were installed at the southern entrance.

During the Second World War, the station was the target of Allied air raids, for instance on 11 December 1944, when almost 1000 tons of multi-purpose bombs were dropped on the station.[7] However, it had already been damaged by air raids on Frankfurt am Main. Above all, the glazing of the platform halls was destroyed.[8] In order to protect the passengers from rain, the former glass surfaces were partly closed with wood, a temporary solution that remained in place for almost 60 years. Offices that did not necessarily have to be on site for operational purposes were outsourced, the lost and found office for example to the Frankfurt-Höchst station.[9]

The station was fully electrified in 1956.

A 22 meter high signal box tower was built between 1955 and 1957.[10] In 1957, what was then the largest and most modern track signal box in Europe (with a train number signalling system) was put into operation. 16 operators controlled the 15,000 relay system. The building erected near tracks 9 and 10 is now a listed building.[11]

Also in 1957, nine steam shunting locomotives were replaced by seven diesel shunting locomotives. In the early 1960s, Germany's largest express freight handling facility was set up under the station. 15 million pieces of luggage and express goods alone were handled annually in these years. The facilities also included a supply centre for the station and the dining cars, with its own confectionery, large bakery and butcher's shop. Two railway post offices were also part of the extensive facilities, as were 70 freight lifts.

As a result of growing inner-city traffic congestion, the idea of an inner-city connecting railway was taken up again in the 1960s, despite the fact that it was not economically justifiable.[12]

The construction of the underground railway systems began in 1971 with the B-Tunnel of the Frankfurt U-Bahn in the central city. A large shopping arcade (B level) was created as a distribution level, from which two four-track stations each—an underground station (C level) and an S-Bahn station (D level)—and a three-storey underground car park (part of which can also be used as a fallout shelter), is accessed through numerous corridors and stairs. These were the first public escalators in the city at the time. The tram stop on the square in front of the station, Am Hauptbahnhof, could formerly only be reached from the escalator opened in 1978[13] on the B level. There is now a pedestrian crossing at street level.

The underground stations were built using "cut and cover" construction: for the construction of the S-Bahn station below the long-distance train hall, the north wing of the entrance building was removed from 12 January 1972[14] and later rebuilt using the original facade cladding. The underground stations began operating in 1978.

At the same time, a two-storey air raid shelter was built to offer railway employees protection in an emergency. All telephone operations could be handled from this bunker. It was also possible to operate the loudspeaker system. Even though stocks such as canned food are no longer stored today, the technical systems (air filter systems, power generators) are still fully operational.

In the early 1970s, the platform ticket requirement was abolished and the platform barriers were dismantled.

The two platforms on tracks 6 to 9 were widened, raised and lengthened for the introduction of ICE operations in June 1991. The space for the widening was gained by demolishing the baggage platforms, which were no longer used.

From 2002 to 2006, the listed[11] roofs of the five platform halls were completely renewed during operation, taking into account heritage preservation issues.[15][16] A total of around 60,000 square metres of roof and wall cladding, including around 30,000 square metres of glass, were renewed and 5,000 tons of steel replaced. A special routine was developed as an assembly concept for this basic repair. At a height of ten meters, an assembly and transport platform was drawn in over the length of the roof for the duration of the construction work. Tower cranes were installed in the central area of this platform. Some loads of up to 150 tons per support were lowered to the basement and foundations were built there. All work steps were integrated in the routine in such a way that the platforms were moved by one field (9.3 metres) per hall every two weeks. Since then, screw connections instead of rivets have served as the means of fastening, although a specially developed rivet head screw was approved in individual cases by the Federal Railway Authority. The refurbishment of the station roof has allowed significantly more daylight to enter. The trusses that support the roof were painted light gray as in the original condition and therefore appear lighter. The decorative rosettes in the gussets are now painted dark blue and are more easily seen. The entire construction process took place almost unnoticed ten metres above the heads of the travellers.

An incident occurred shortly after work began. During welding work, part of the roof of the northern part of the station building caught fire. The "North Ventilation Centre" was almost completely destroyed and had to be replaced. Since air continued to be sucked in during the fire, dirt and damage also occurred inside the building, especially on level B.

A total of €117m was invested in the roof renovation.[17] 80 percent of the costs were borne by the federal government.[18] The facade was renovated in 2013.[16]

Other parts of the interior design of the station and entrance halls as well as the underground station were also modernised. In the meantime, liquid-crystal displays have replaced the old split-flap displays on the platforms. As in Wiesbaden Hauptbahnhof, seven cubic glass and steel pavilions have replaced the previous buildings on the transverse platform. In mid-2006, cubic and transparent lifts were also installed to connect the S-Bahn platforms to the U-Bahn and to the side platform of the train shed.

Due to the frequent theft of luggage trolleys, which caused annual damage of up to €30,000, a security system was installed in the station to prevent the luggage trolleys from being removed from the railway premises. When crossing a red mark, the front wheel locked. This system was originally developed for shopping carts and adapted accordingly. The rental of luggage trolleys was later discontinued, and in view of the increased number of passengers, there was no longer any room for safe operation.

Planning began in 1998, and implementation at the end of 2001, of a computer-based interlocking of the SIMIS C type, the four-stage commissioning of which was completed on 27 November 2005.[19][20] It replaces the track control signal box from 1957, which handled a total of around 20 million trains and 100 million shunting trips.[20] The "Fpf" signal box located between tracks 9 and 10 was considered the largest and most modern signal box in Europe at the time it was commissioned. Since 27 March 1986, circuit changes at the signal box had been prohibited due to age-related signs of wear, the stress on the system and the insulation of the interior wiring.[19] The new signal box is divided into two sub-centres (north and south) and was the largest two-storey signal box building in Germany when it was commissioned.[19]

The entry and exit speeds were increased from 30 km/h[20] to 40 to 60 km/h and new running options were created with additional points. A platform changeover was introduced on all access routes, and 13 platform tracks of the main station were also divided into two sections (with train detection signals). The system comprises a total of 845 control units, including 340 switches and track closures as well as 67 main signals. The interlocking is now remotely operated from the operations centre in Frankfurt by six dispatchers and a node dispatcher.[11] €132m[20] was spent on the signal box.

The new interlocking laid the foundation for numerous extensions and conversions of the tracks of the station and the lines leading to it, in order to better utilise the station platform tracks in the future and to increase their capacity.[11]

The wayfinding system was renewed in November 2005 in preparation for the 2006 World Cup. Replacing of the partly outdated signage made a quick and easy orientation within the station possible.

Finishing in 2007, the floors and the cladding of the stairs, which had not been renewed for decades, were uniformly covered with black granite from China. Following this, a redesign of the station forecourt, the B level and the S-Bahn station is planned.

From July to September 2010, platform 12/13 was removed and rebuilt. The platform cover was separated from the substructure with concrete saws, demolished in sections and rebuilt in prefabricated concrete sections. The new platform was given the same granite flooring as the transverse platform and the main platforms. The part outside the hall will be provided with a new, 130 metre-long platform roof. Overall, the platform renovation cost €8.5m.

In October 2020, the conversion of the B level and the entrance hall began, which will be completely redesigned within eight years. The federal government, DB, the city and the Frankfurt public transport company (Verkehrsgesellschaft Frankfurt) are investing a total of €375m.[13] By the end of 2024, the entrance hall is to be renovated first, followed by the forecourt.[21]

Other upgrades

The capacity of some access routes is considered to be exhausted. Several lines (e.g. ICE 13 and RB 58) can no longer be routed via the station. For reasons of acceleration, only four platform tracks (tracks 6 to 9) are normally used for long-distance trains on the north-south axis.[4]

In order to mitigate a number of traffic disadvantages of terminal stations in general and the Frankfurt railway junction in particular, ideas and suggestions have been discussed again and again since the Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof was commissioned to mitigate the disadvantages or to relocate the station as a whole. These proposals were discarded due to technical problems and lack of economic viability.[12]

Various options for underground through stations were discussed in the 1980s and 1990s. The Frankfurt 21 concept that emerged from this provided for the conversion of the station into a twelve-track through station. The project presented in 1996 was shelved in 2001 due to a lack of funding. The RheinMain plus project was then pursued.

Deutsche Bahn is planning to separate long-distance and regional traffic from the direction of Mannheim, Mainz and the Cologne–Frankfurt high-speed rail line. Almost all long-distance traffic is to be concentrated on the south side of the station, on platforms 1 to 8, and conflicts between routes are to be reduced. Part of the regional traffic is to be relocated to the north side. Among other things, the construction of a connecting curve known as the Kraftwerkskurve ("power station curve") from Frankfurt South to platform tracks 1 to 3 and the installation of additional sets of points in the apron of the station are planned by 2030.[4] From June 2017 to November 2021, the Homburger embankment was upgraded in two ways. According to an estimate in 2017, the 800-metre-long upgrade would cost €131m, but the costs ultimately amounted to around €180m.[22][23][24] The costs were funded by the federal government.[25] Operationally, the line is to be referred to as "Ffm Hbf–Mainzer Landstraße".[26]

By 2019, access from level B and the station forecourt are to be remodelled at a cost of €175m.[27] Between the beginning of 2016 and the beginning of 2019, more than 1,000 square metres of new retail space are to be built for €134.5m. The city is contributing €27.5m. Previously unused basements are to be used for this purpose.[28] On 21 December 2015, Deutsche Bahn and the city of Frankfurt signed a contract to modernise the underground distribution level and to create additional access points. Work was scheduled to begin in the fourth quarter of 2016 and be completed in mid-2020. The city of Frankfurt is contributing €27.5m to the construction costs of €135m.[16]

The planned Frankfurt am Main long-distance railway tunnel is to run from the Offenbach city limits or from the Frankfurt East station to the Niederräd Main bridge. It is intended to relieve the Hauptbahnhof and turn it into an underground through station for many long-distance lines. The project is included as an "urgent need" of the Federal Transport Infrastructure Plan 2030.[29] The results of the feasibility study were presented to the public on 28 June 2021.[30] The construction period is estimated at 10 years after the completion of planning. Construction is expected to start in the 2030s and operations would start in the 2040s. The construction costs are estimated at €3.6b.[31] The upgrade of the node is one of 13 infrastructure projects of the proposed German clock-face timetable (Deutschlandtakt) that, according to the coalition agreement of the red-green-yellow federal government presented in November 2021, are to be "accelerated" and implemented "with high political priority".[32]

Architecture

Above ground part

 
Façade
Inside and outside Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof in 2014
 
Architectural detail on the front of Frankfurt Am Main Hauptbahnhof

The above-ground part of Frankfurt Haupptbahnhof is divided into the entrance building and the train shed. The entrance building faces on to the street side to the east and thus opens up the terminal station towards the Bahnhofsviertel (station district). The façade of the older building, in front of the three central train sheds, was designed in a Renaissance Revival style, the extensions of the entrance building from 1924, in front of the two outer halls, is in the neoclassical style. The building is 270 metres wide. The centre of the entrance building is the main reception hall, the street-side entrance of which consists of three doorways divided by two large pillars. Above the centre there is a decorated clock with allegories of day and night and the Deutsche Bahn logo with the word "Hauptbahnhof". The division into three bays is also continued in the roof area, where large glass surfaces let in daylight. The division of the train shed into three parts corresponded to the original use by three railway companies: the Taunus-Eisenbahn, the Prussian state railways and the Hessian Ludwigsbahn. There is a tower on each side of the facade. In the middle of the roof there is a 6.3 metre-high bronze group of figures by the Braunschweig sculptor Gustav Herold: Atlas, who carries the globe on his shoulders, accompanied by symbolic figures for steam and electricity. There are also figures representing trade and agriculture and the iron industry and shipping.

West of the entrance building is the train shed. It consists of five steel and glass halls that cover the platforms over a length of 186 metres. The three larger halls are 56 metres wide and 28 metres high, the two outer small halls are 31 metres wide and 20 metres high.[18] The transverse platform, which allows access to the 24 above-ground mainline tracks in the train shed, extends across the entire width of the halls, only the outer track 1a can only be reached indirectly via the platform on track 1. The platforms, which are at right angles to the transverse platform, are also connected by an underpass (transverse tunnel) connected to the west. Outside the platform halls, the platforms continue with canopies from different eras.

Operational usage

The station's terminal layout has posed some unique problems ever since the late 20th century, since all trains have to change directions and reverse out of the station to continue on to their destination. This causes long turn-around times and places the passengers in the opposite direction of where they had been sitting. There have been several attempts to change this. The last project, called Frankfurt 21, was to put the whole station underground, connect it with tunnels also to the east, and so avoid the disadvantages of the terminal layout. This would be financed by selling the air rights over the area now used for tracks as building ground for skyscraper, but this soon proved unrealistic, and the project was abandoned.

Frankfurt is the third-busiest railway station outside Japan and the second-busiest in Germany after Hamburg Hauptbahnhof.[citation needed]

Long distance services

As for long-distance traffic, the station profits greatly from its location in the heart of Europe; 13 of the 24 ICE lines call at the station, as well as 2 of the 3 ICE Sprinter lines. To ease the strain on the Hauptbahnhof, some ICE lines now call at Frankfurt Airport station and at Frankfurt (Main) Süd instead of Hauptbahnhof.

Line Route Interval
ICE 4
ICE-Sprinter
Hamburg-Altona – Hamburg Dammtor Hamburg – Hannover – Frankfurt – Darmstadt One train pair
ICE 11 Hamburg-Altona – Berlin – Leipzig – Erfurt – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Augsburg – Munich Every two hours
ICE 12 Berlin Ost Wolfsburg – Braunschweig – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Freiburg – Basel (– Interlaken Ost) Every two hours
ICE 13 Berlin Ost – Braunschweig – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Frankfurt Individual services
ICE 15
ICE-Sprinter
Berlin – Halle – Erfurt – Frankfurt Every two hours
ICE 20 (Kiel –) Hamburg – Hannover – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Freiburg – Basel – Zürich (– Chur) Every two hours
ICE 22 (Kiel –) Hamburg – Hannover – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Frankfurt – Frankfurt Airport Mannheim – Stuttgart Every two hours
ICE 22 (Munich East – Nuremberg – Würzburg – Hanau –) Frankfurt – Fulda – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Göttingen – Hannover – Bremen – Oldenburg (Oldb) One train Sun – Fri
ICE 26 (Stralsund –) Hamburg – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Gießen – Frankfurt – Heidelberg – Karlsruhe Every two hours together with IC line 26
ICE 31 Hamburg-Altona – Hamburg – Bremen – Osnabrück – Münster – Dortmund – Hagen – Wuppertal – Solingen – Cologne – Bonn – Koblenz – Mainz – Frankfurt Airport – FrankfurtHanau – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Ingolstadt – Munich Individual services
ICE 41 (Dortmund –) Essen – Duisburg – Düsseldorf – Köln Messe/Deutz – Frankfurt Airport – Frankfurt – Aschaffenburg – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Munich Hourly
ICE 49 (Dortmund – Hagen – Wuppertal – Solingen –) Cologne – Siegburg/Bonn – Montabaur – Limburg Süd Frankfurt Airport – Frankfurt Individual services
ICE 50 Dresden – Leipzig – Erfurt – Eisenach – Fulda – Frankfurt – Frankfurt Airport – Wiesbaden Every two hours
ICE 78 Amsterdam – Arnhem – Duisburg – Cologne – Frankfurt Airport – Frankfurt Every two hours
ICE 79 Bruxelles-Midi/Brussel-Zuid – Liège-Guillemins – Aachen – Köln – Frankfurt Airport – Frankfurt Every two hours
ICE/TGV 82 Frankfurt – Mannheim – Kaiserslautern – Saarbrücken/– Karlsruhe – Strasbourg – Paris Est Every two hours
ICE/TGV 84 Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Baden-Baden – Strasbourg – Mulhouse-Ville – Belfort-Montbéliard – Besançon Franche-Comté – Chalon-sur-Saône – Lyon-Part-Dieu – Avignon – Aix-en-Provence – Marseille-Saint-Charles One train pair
ECE 85 Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Baden-Baden – Freiburg (Breisgau) Hbf – Basel Bad Bf – Basel SBB – Olten – Lucerne – Arth-Goldau – Bellinzona – Lugano – Chiasso – Como – Monza – Milan One train pair
ICE 91 (Dortmund – Essen – Duisburg – Düsseldorf – Köln – Bonn – Koblenz – Mainz – Frankfurt Airport –) Frankfurt – Würzburg – Nürnberg – Regensburg – Passau – Linz – Vienna Every two hours
IC 26 Westerland – Hamburg – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Gießen – Frankfurt – Heidelberg – Karlsruhe One train pair
IC 31 (Kiel –) Hamburg – Osnabrück – Bremen – Münster – Dortmund – Wuppertal – Cologne – Koblenz – Mainz – Frankfurt (– Würzburg – Nuremberg – Regensburg – Passau) Every two hours together with ICE line 31
IC 34 FrankfurtWetzlarSiegen HbfDortmund/UnnaHammMünster – (EmdenNorddeich Mole) Every two hours
IC 62 Frankfurt – Darmstadt – Heidelberg – Stuttgart – Augsburg – München – Salzburg – Linz or – Graz or – Villach – Klagenfurt Four train pairs
RJ 63 Frankfurt – Munich – Salzburg – Linz – Vienna – Budapest Sat and Sun
RJ 66 Budapest – Vienna – Linz – Salzburg – Munich – Frankfurt Fri and Sat

Local services

With regard to regional traffic, Frankfurt Hbf is the main hub in the RMV network, offering connections to Koblenz, Limburg, Kassel, Nidda, Stockheim, Siegen, Fulda, Gießen, Aschaffenburg, Würzburg, Mannheim, Heidelberg, Dieburg, Eberbach, Worms and Saarbrücken with fifteen regional lines calling at the main station.

Line Route Interval
RE 2 Frankfurt – Frankfurt AirportRüsselsheimMainz – Bingen (Rhein) – Koblenz 120 min (extra trains to the peak)
RE 3 Frankfurt – Frankfurt Airport – Rüsselsheim – Mainz – Bingen – Koblenz/Bad KreuznachSaarbrücken
RE 4 Frankfurt – Frankfurt-Höchst – Mainz – Worms – Ludwigshafen – Germersheim – Karlsruhe 120 min
RE 5 Frankfurt – Frankfurt (Main) Süd – Hanau – Fulda – Bebra Some trains
RE 9 Frankfurt – Frankfurt-Höchst – Mainz-Kastel – Wiesbaden-Biebrich – Wiesbaden-Schierstein – Niederwalluf – Eltville 60 min (only in peak)
RE 13 Frankfurt – Frankfurt Airport – Rüsselsheim – Mainz – Alzey Some trains in peak
RE 14 Frankfurt – Frankfurt-Höchst – Mainz – Worms – Ludwigshafen Mitte – Mannheim 120 min
RE 20 Frankfurt – Frankfurt-Höchst – Niedernhausen (Taunus)Limburg (Lahn) 60 min (only in peak)
RE 30 FrankfurtFriedberg (Hess)GießenMarburg (Lahn)Treysa – Wabern (Bz Kassel) – Kassel 120 min
RE 50 FrankfurtFrankfurt SouthOffenbachHanauFulda 60 min (only in peak)
RE 54 Frankfurt – Maintal – Hanau – Aschaffenburg – WürzburgBamberg 120 min (with gaps to the peak)
RE 55 Frankfurt – Offenbach – Hanau – Aschaffenburg – Würzburg/– Bamberg 120 min (Frankfurt–Würzburg; additional trains in the peak); individual trains in the peak (Würzburg–Bamberg)
RE 60 FrankfurtDarmstadtBensheimWeinheim (Bergstr)Mannheim 60/120 min
RE 70 FrankfurtGroß Gerau-Dornberg – Riedstadt-GoddelauGernsheimBiblis – Mannheim 60 min
RE 85 Frankfurt – Offenbach – Hanau – BabenhausenGroß-Umstadt Wiebelsbach (– Erbach (Odenw)) 60 min (Frankfurt–Babenhausen); 120 min (Babenhausen–Erbach)
RE 98 Frankfurt – Friedberg – Gießen – Marburg – Treysa – Wabern – Kassel Some trains between Frankfurt and Gießen in the peak
RE 99 Frankfurt – Friedberg – Gießen – Wetzlar – Dillenburg – Haiger – Siegen
RB 10 Frankfurt – Frankfurt-Höchst – Wiesbaden – Rüdesheim (Rhein) – Koblenz – Neuwied 60 min
RB 12 Frankfurt – Frankfurt-Höchst – KelkheimKönigstein (Taunus) 30 min
RB 15 FrankfurtBad HomburgFriedrichsdorfWehrheimNeu-AnspachUsingenGrävenwiesbachBrandoberndorf 60 min (only in peak)
RB 22 Frankfurt – Frankfurt-Höchst – Niedernhausen (Taunus) – Limburg (Lahn) 30/60 min
RB 34 FrankfurtBad Vilbel – Niederdorfelden – NidderauAltenstadt (Hess)Glauburg-Stockheim 30/60 min
RB 40 Frankfurt – Friedberg (Hess) – Butzbach – Gießen – Wetzlar – Herborn (Dillkr) – Dillenburg 40/80 min
RB 41 Frankfurt – Friedberg (Hess) – Butzbach – Gießen – Marburg (Lahn) – CölbeKirchhain (Bz Kassel)StadtallendorfNeustadt – Treysa 60 min
RB 48 Frankfurt– Friedberg (Hess) – BeienheimReichelsheim (Wetterau)Nidda some trains in peak
RB 51 Frankfurt – Offenbach (Main) Hbf – Hanau – LangenselboldGelnhausenWächtersbach (– Bad Soden-Salmünster) 60 min
RB 58 Rüsselsheim OpelwerkFrankfurt AirportFrankfurt – Frankfurt South – Frankfurt EastMaintal Ost – Hanau – Aschaffenburg – Laufach 60 min in peak
RB 61 FrankfurtDreieich-Buchschlag – Rödermark-Ober Roden – Dieburg 60 min
RB 67 Frankfurt – Darmstadt – Bensheim – Heppenheim (Bergstr) – Weinheim (Bergstr) – Mannheim
RB 68 Frankfurt – Darmstadt – Bensheim – Heppenheim – Weinheim (Bergstr) – Heidelberg
RB 82 FrankfurtDarmstadt NordReinheim (Odenw) – Groß-Umstadt Wiebelsbach – Erbach (– Eberbach)

The subterranean S-Bahn station is the most important station in the S-Bahn Rhein-Main network, used by all Frankfurt S-Bahn lines, except line S 7, which terminates at the surface station.

Line Route
  Frankfurt (Main) Hbf – Walldorf (Hess) – Mörfelden – Groß Gerau-Dornberg – Riedstadt-Goddelau
In brief
Total number of tracks: 120
Number of passenger tracks
above ground:
25 main tracks, 2 branch)
3 tram stops (2 tracks each)
Below ground: 4 S-Bahn tracks,
4 U-Bahn tracks (3 in use)
Daily trains:
(excluding Stadtbahn & tramway)
342 long-distance
290 regional
Passengers (daily): 460,000

Other services

Tram connections are offered by TraffiQ, with tram lines 11 and 12 (station Hauptbahnhof/Münchener Straße), 14, 16, 17, 20, 21 and the Ebbelwei-Expreß. The lines U4 and U5 call at the subterranean Stadtbahn stop.

Preceding station   Frankfurt U-Bahn Following station
Festhalle/Messe
towards Bockenheimer Warte
U4 Willy-Brandt-Platz
towards Enkheim
Terminus U5 Willy-Brandt-Platz
towards Preungesheim

Future expansion

Construction of a railway tunnel with four platforms below the existing station was proposed in 2018 under the project name Fernbahntunnel Frankfurt am Main (Long-distance railway tunnel Frankfurt am Main).[33] As being listed as "urgent need" in the Federal Infrastructure Plan 2030, government funding for the scheme is secured. A study to determine feasibility of construction is expected to be completed by early 2021.[34]

Crime

In 2019, the Federal Police recorded 4,787 crimes at Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof, more than at any other German train station.[35] They include the murder of an eight-year-old boy on 29 July.[36][37]

References

  1. ^ "Tarifinformationen 2021" (PDF). Rhein-Main-Verkehrsverbund. 1 January 2021. p. 137. Retrieved 8 April 2021.
  2. ^ "Getting here & travelling around: Rail". Frankfurt.de. City of Frankfurt am Main. Frankfurt central station is the most important rail transport hub in Germany.
  3. ^ Hager, Bernd (2013). "Atlas, die Erdkugel tragend …". Eisenbahngeschichte (in German). DGEG Medien. 58: 34–43.
  4. ^ a b c Mytzka, Johannes-Jakob (2014). "Betriebliche Untersuchung von Infrastrukturmaßnahmen im Umfeld von Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof". Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau (in German) (11): 15–18. ISSN 0013-2845.
  5. ^ Schomann 1983, p. 161.
  6. ^ "Notice no. 345". Amtsblatt der Königlich Preußischen und Großherzoglich Hessischen Eisenbahndirektion in Mainz (in German). Eisenbahndirektion Mainz (26): 172. 27 May 1916.
  7. ^ Stahl, Hans-Günter (2015). Der Luftkrieg über dem Raum Hanau 1939–1945. Hanauer Geschichtsblätter (in German). Vol. 48. Hanau. p. 227.
  8. ^ Lasky, Melvin (2014). And everything was still (German diary 1945). Berlin. p. 347. ISBN 978-3-87134-708-5.
  9. ^ "notice no. 337". Amtsblatt der Reichsbahndirektion Mainz (in German). Deutsche Reichsbahn (21): 145. 13 May 1944.
  10. ^ "Neue Betriebszentrale für Frankfurt/M". Eisenbahn-Revue International (in German) (1/2): 2. January 1999. ISSN 1421-2811.
  11. ^ a b c d (PDF) (Das Projekt. Der Eisenbahnknoten. Die Schieneninfrastruktur.) (in German). Deutsche Bahn AG. June 2009. pp. 6f, 10f, 12, 28. Archived from the original (PDF; 1,63 MB) on 23 January 2013. Retrieved 9 May 2023. (32-page brochure)
  12. ^ a b Speck, Georg (October 1984). … und dann immer geradeaus. Ein Vorschlag für die Eisenbahn in Frankfurt am Main (in German). Fachgebiet Eisenbahnwesen, einschließlich spurgebundener Nahverkehr der Technischen Hochschule Darmstadt. pp. 2, 3, 15.
  13. ^ a b Harting, Mechthild (12 October 2020). "„Hier beginnt etwas Großes"". Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  14. ^ Thomas, Peter (19 December 2021). "Aufbruch in die Unterwelt". Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung (in German). No. 50. p. 46.
  15. ^ Tempel, Norbert (2010). "Eine Wiedergeburt: Grundinstandsetzung der Gleishallen im Frankfurter Hauptbahnhof". Industrie-Kultur (in German) (50): 10f. (based on a manuscript by Volker Rödel)
  16. ^ a b c "B-Ebene des Frankfurter Hauptbahnhofs wird schöner". Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (in German). No. 297. 22 December 2015. p. 29. ISSN 0174-4909.
  17. ^ "Vorbereitungen für die Erneuerung des Bahnsteiges 12/13 im Hauptbahnhof Frankfurt beginnen" (Press release) (in German). Deutsche Bahn AG. 26 February 2010.
  18. ^ a b "Sanierung des Frankfurter Hauptbahnhofs". Eisenbahn-Revue International (in German) (10): 429. October 2001. ISSN 1421-2811.
  19. ^ a b c Magiera, Dieter; Vorlitzky, Jürgen; Beinlich, Andreas; Bezzenberger, Wolfram; Briesen, Dieter (2006). "Elektronisches Stellwerk für den Hauptbahnhof Frankfurt am Main". Signal + Draht (in German). 98 (10): 6–9. ISSN 0037-4997.
  20. ^ a b c d "ESTW Frankfurt Hbf in Betrieb". Eisenbahn-Revue International (in German) (1): 4. January 2006. ISSN 1421-2811.
  21. ^ Leclerc, Florian (2 October 2020). "Hauptbahnhof Frankfurt wird umgebaut: So sehen die Pläne aus". Frankfurter Rundschau (in German). Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  22. ^ Rippegather, Jutta (19 March 2017). "Hauptbahnhof wird entflochten". Frankfurter Rundschau (in German). Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  23. ^ Wrede, Stephan; Gericke, Jens-Peter (July 2018). "Building Information Modeling ist die digitale Zukunft des Bauens". Der Eisenbahningenieur (in German). 68 (7): 16–18. ISSN 0013-2810.
  24. ^ (Press release) (in German). Deutsche Bahn. 30 November 2021. Archived from the original on 30 November 2021. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  25. ^ (Press release) (in German). Deutsche Bahn. 14 June 2017. Archived from the original on 10 July 2017. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  26. ^ "Aus Geschäftlichen Mitteilungen". Lok-Report (in German) (11): 24–26. November 2019. ISSN 0344-7146.
  27. ^ "Not known". Frankfurter Rundschau (in German). 14 November 2013. p. D2.
  28. ^ Jaeger, Milan; Leclerc, Florian (8 October 2014). "Einkaufszentrum im Hauptbahnhof". Frankfurter Rundschau (in German). Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  29. ^ "Bundesverkehrsminister kündigt Fernbahntunnel für Frankfurt an". Offenbach-Post (in German). 14 November 2018. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  30. ^ "Planung für Fernbahntunnel startet: Täglich 250 Züge mehr zum Hauptbahnhof Frankfurt". deutschebahn.com (Press release) (in German). 28 June 2021. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  31. ^ "Die nächsten Schritte   Fernbahntunnel Frankfurt". fernbahntunnel-frankfurt.de (in German). 28 June 2021. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  32. ^ "Mehr Fortschritt wagen: Bündnis für Freiheit, Gerechtigkeit, und Nachhaltigkeit" (PDF) (Koalitionsvertrag 2021–2025 zwischen der Sozialdemokratischen Partei Deutschlands (SPD), BÜNDNIS 90 / DIE GRÜNEN und den Freien Demokraten (FDP)) (in German). SPD, Bündnis 90/Die Grünen, FDP. November 2021. p. 13. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  33. ^ "Das Ende des Kopfbahnhofs, so wie wir ihn kennen". fnp.de. 8 November 2018. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  34. ^ "Knoten Frankfurt; Fernbahntunnel inkl. Station unterhalb des Hbf Frankfurt/Main, Machbarkeitsstudie". ted.europa.eu. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  35. ^ "Frankfurter Hauptbahnhof mit den meisten Straftaten". Frankfurter Allgemeine (in German). 7 March 2020. ISSN 0174-4909. Retrieved 4 February 2023.
  36. ^ "Germany train incident: Eritrean on trial for boy's Frankfurt death". BBC News. 19 August 2020. Retrieved 4 February 2023.
  37. ^ "Frankfurt rail attack: Boy's killer given life in psychiatric ward". BBC News. 28 August 2020. Retrieved 4 February 2023.

Sources

  • Bundesbahndirektion Frankfurt am Main (1988). Abfahrt 1888, Ankunft 1988: 100 Jahre Hauptbahnhof Frankfurt am Main. Darmstadt: HESTRA-Verlag. ISBN 3-7771-0215-6.
  • Groß, Lothar (2012). Made in Germany: Deutschlands Wirtschaftsgeschichte von der Industralisierung bis heute. Vol. 1: 1800 - 1945. Books on demand. ISBN 978-3-8482-1042-8.
  • Rödel, Volker (2006). Der Hauptbahnhof zu Frankfurt am Main. Aufstieg, Fall und Wiedergeburt eines Großstadtbahnhofs [The main station to Frankfurt am Main. Rise, Fall and Rebirth of a City Train Station]. Arbeitshefte des Landesamtes für Denkmalpflege Hessen 8. Stuttgart.
  • Schomann, Heinz (1983). Der Frankfurter Hauptbahnhof. Ein Beitrag zur Architektur- und Eisenbahngeschichte der Gründerzeit [The Frankfurt central station. A contribution to the architectural and railway history of the Wilhelminian era]. ISBN 3-421-02801-X.
  • Setzepfandt, Wolf-Christian (August 2002). Architekturführer Frankfurt am Main [Architecture Guide Frankfurt am Main]. Berlin: Dietrich Reimer Verlag. p. 33. ISBN 3-496-01236-6.

External links

  • Current departure time in Frankfurt (Main) Hbf | Deutsche Bahn
  • Panorama at the Central Station Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof

50°06′25″N 8°39′45″E / 50.10694°N 8.66250°E / 50.10694; 8.66250

frankfurt, main, hauptbahnhof, station, frankfurt, oder, frankfurt, oder, station, also, called, frankfurt, central, station, frankfurt, main, station, busiest, railway, station, german, state, hesse, because, location, near, middle, germany, usage, transport,. For the station in Frankfurt Oder see Frankfurt Oder station Frankfurt Main Hauptbahnhof also called Frankfurt Central Station and Frankfurt Main Station is the busiest railway station in the German state of Hesse 2 Because of its location near the middle of Germany and usage as a transport hub for long and short distance travelling Deutsche Bahn refers to it as the most important station in Germany Frankfurt Main HauptbahnhofTerminal stationGeneral informationLocationFrankfurt HesseGermanyCoordinates50 6 25 N 8 39 45 E 50 10694 N 8 66250 E 50 10694 8 66250Owned byDeutsche BahnOperated byDB Netz DB Station amp ServiceLine s Cologne Frankfurt high speed Main Weser Railway Frankfurt Gottingen railway Frankfurt Hanau Taunus Railway Main Railway Main Neckar Railway Underground Main Lahn Railway Homburg RailwayPlatforms24 mainline 26 tracks on one level 4 S Bahn Tiefbahnhof 4 U Bahn 3 for passengers 3 2 TramConnectionsFrankfurt Main Hauptbahnhof undergroundConstructionArchitectHermann Eggert and Johann Wilhelm SchwedlerArchitectural styleRenaissance revival facade Neoclassicism extensions Other informationStation code1866DS100 codeFFCategory1Fare zone 5001 1 Websitewww bahnhof deHistoryOpened18 August 1888 134 years ago 1888 08 18 Passengers493 000 dailyServicesPreceding station DB Fernverkehr Following stationMannheim Hbftowards Innsbruck Hbf ICE 11reverses out Fuldatowards Berlin GesundbrunnenMannheim Hbftowards Interlaken Ost ICE 12reverses out Hanau Hbftowards Berlin OstbahnhofTerminus ICE 15 Fuldatowards Berlin HbfKassel Wilhelmshohetowards Hamburg Altona ICE 20reverses out Frankfurt Airporttowards Wiesbaden HbfMannheim Hbftowards ChurKassel Wilhelmshohetowards Kiel Hbf Neumunster Hamburg Altona or Oldenburg Hbf ICE 22reverses out Frankfurt Airporttowards Stuttgart HbfDarmstadt Hbftowards Karlsruhe Hbf ICE 26reverses out Frankfurt Westtowards Hamburg HbfFrankfurt Airporttowards Hamburg Altona ICE 31reverses out Wurzburg Hbftowards Passau HbfMannheim Hbftowards Passau HbfFrankfurt Airporttowards Dortmund Hbf or Essen Hbf ICE 41reverses out Aschaffenburg Hbftowards Munchen Hbf or Garmisch PartenkirchenTerminus ICE 49 Frankfurt Airporttowards Koln HbfFuldatowards Dresden Hbf ICE 50reverses out Frankfurt Airporttowards Wiesbaden HbfTerminus ICE 78 Frankfurt Airporttowards Amsterdam CentraalICE 79 Frankfurt Airporttowards Brussels SouthICE TGV 82 Mannheim Hbftowards Paris EstICE TGV 84 Mannheim Hbftowards MarseilleFrankfurt Airporttowards Dortmund Hbf ICE 91reverses out Wurzburg Hbftowards Wien HbfDarmstadt Hbftowards Karlsruhe Hbf IC 26reverses out Friedbergtowards Hamburg HbfFrankfurt Airporttowards Hamburg Hbf IC 31reverses out Hanau Hbftowards Passau Hbf or Munchen HbfTerminus IC 34 Frankfurt Westtowards SiegenIC 62 Darmstadt Hbftowards Klagenfurt Hbf or Graz HbfPreceding station OBB Following stationTerminus Railjet Express Darmstadt Hbftowards BregenzPreceding station DB Regio Bayern Following stationTerminus RE 54 Frankfurt Sudtowards BambergRE 55 Frankfurt Sudtowards Wurzburg HbfPreceding station DB Regio Mitte Following stationTerminus RE 2Sudwest Express Frankfurt Niederradtowards Koblenz HbfRE 4 Frankfurt Hochsttowards Karlsruhe HbfRE 14Sudwest Express Frankfurt Hochsttowards Mannheim HbfRE 20 Frankfurt Hochsttowards Limburg Lahn RE 30 Friedberg Hess towards Kassel HbfRE 50 Frankfurt Sudtowards BebraRE 60 Langen Hess towards Mannheim HbfRE 70 Frankfurt Niederradtowards Mannheim HbfRB 22 Frankfurt Hochsttowards Limburg Lahn RB 34 Frankfurt Main Westtowards Glauburg StockheimRB 41 Frankfurt Main Westtowards TreysaRB 51 Frankfurt Sudtowards WachtersbachRB 61 Neu Isenburgtowards DieburgRB 67 Langen Hess towards Mannheim Hbf or HockenheimRB 68 Langen Hess towards Wiesloch WalldorfPreceding station Hessische Landesbahn Following stationTerminus RB 12 Frankfurt Hochsttowards Konigstein Taunus RB 58 Frankfurt Sudtowards LaufachPreceding station VIAS Following stationTerminus RE 85 Frankfurt Main Sudtowards Gross Umstadt WiebelsbachRB 10 Frankfurt Hochsttowards NeuwiedRB 82 Darmstadt Nordtowards EberbachPreceding station Vlexx Following stationTerminus RE 3 Frankfurt Niederradtowards Saarbrucken HbfPreceding station Rhine Main S Bahn Following stationTerminus Frankfurt Niederradtowards Riedstadt GoddelauLocationFrankfurt Main HauptbahnhofLocation within FrankfurtShow map of Frankfurt am MainFrankfurt Main HauptbahnhofLocation within HesseShow map of HesseFrankfurt Main HauptbahnhofLocation within GermanyShow map of GermanyFrankfurt Main HauptbahnhofLocation within EuropeShow map of Europe Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Initial situation 2 2 Plans 2 3 Realisation 2 4 Railway operations 2 5 Extensions and conversions 2 6 Other upgrades 3 Architecture 3 1 Above ground part 4 Operational usage 4 1 Long distance services 4 2 Local services 4 3 Other services 5 Future expansion 6 Crime 7 References 7 1 Sources 8 External linksName EditThe affix Main comes from the city s full name Frankfurt am Main Frankfurt on the River Main and is needed to distinguish it from Frankfurt Oder station on the River Oder in Brandenburg In German the name is often abbreviated as Frankfurt Main Hbf History EditInitial situation Edit Station Shield Frankfurt International Trade Fair CityBefore the current Hauptbahnhof was built on the Galgenfeld gallows field the three western stations the termini of the Taunus Railway Taunusbahn the Main Weser Railway Main Weser Bahn and the Main Neckar Railway Main Neckar Bahn were located on the outskirts of the city the Gallusanlage the area of today s Bahnhofsviertel station district Plans Edit Due to the increased volume of travellers at the end of the 19th century the capacity of the three western railway stations became increasingly inadequate but changes were made more difficult by the territorial affiliations of the states surrounding the Free City of Frankfurt After the annexation of Frankfurt Nassau and Hesse Kassel by Prussia in 1866 the obstacles in this regard were largely removed so that planning for a central station was taken seriously The inadequacy of the existing situation became apparent primarily during the Franco Prussian War of 1870 71 Apparently when troop movements were noticeably hampered by the scattered stations Like the three western stations before it the new station was to be built as a terminal station First a large station with 34 platform tracks was planned Because of the huge dimensions however a variant with only 18 platform tracks was used Mail and goods handling was to take place under the station hall local traffic was to be handled outside which was realised by the main freight yard built later The town council which only got a say in 1875 also wanted the railway facilities relocated from the Anlagenring the ring of roads and parklands on the demolished walls surrounding the inner city to the former gallows field A new district with Kaiserstrasse as the main axis was to be created on the area of the track fields of the Western stations that was thus freed from railway operations This option also had the great advantage that operations could be carried out largely undisturbed during the construction phase since the new station hardly affected the old lines From 1880 the Bauakademie Prussian Building Academy held a competition involving all the major architects to design a monument that challenged the highest artistic standards In 1881 the winner of this architectural competition was that of the agricultural inspector and university master builder Hermann Eggert from Strasbourg in Alsace from among the 55 designs submitted He was commissioned with the planning and construction of the entrance building The Berlin architect Johann Wilhelm Schwedler who specialised in steel construction scored second place He became the designer of the three new station halls made of iron with a 28 metre high barrel vault each of which had three platforms with six tracks 3 Realisation Edit A postcard image of the Hauptbahnhof c 1915On 18 August 1888 after only five years of construction the Centralbahnhof Frankfurt Frankfurt Central Station was inaugurated In the next few years the station district developed to the east of the entrance building and was fully developed by around 1900 Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof was the largest station in Europe until Leipzig Hauptbahnhof was built in 1915 Railway operations Edit The station was designed for regular services The entry and exit tracks of each line lay next to each other 4 On the evening of the opening day a train was unable to stop in time and ran over the buffer stop The locomotive and the pavement of the transverse platform were damaged This was the beginning of a whole series of such incidents which caused some ridicule in the press 5 The highlight was the sweeping crossing of the locomotive of the Ostend Wien Express on 6 December 1901 The locomotive and tender only came to a standstill for first and second class waiting room Many engine drivers therefore drove very carefully into the station and came to a stop some distance from the buffer stops This in turn meant that the last carriages of the trains came to a stop away from the platforms which the management did not like either The engine drivers were warned to drive as close as possible to the buffer stops 6 Extensions and conversions Edit View through the platform hall of the station Railway station platform 18 The 1957 signal boxIn 1924 the building was extended with two outer halls in Neoclassical style The number of tracks increased to 25 tracks 1 to 24 and 1a Reliefs with motifs of the Wandervogel movement were installed at the southern entrance During the Second World War the station was the target of Allied air raids for instance on 11 December 1944 when almost 1000 tons of multi purpose bombs were dropped on the station 7 However it had already been damaged by air raids on Frankfurt am Main Above all the glazing of the platform halls was destroyed 8 In order to protect the passengers from rain the former glass surfaces were partly closed with wood a temporary solution that remained in place for almost 60 years Offices that did not necessarily have to be on site for operational purposes were outsourced the lost and found office for example to the Frankfurt Hochst station 9 The station was fully electrified in 1956 A 22 meter high signal box tower was built between 1955 and 1957 10 In 1957 what was then the largest and most modern track signal box in Europe with a train number signalling system was put into operation 16 operators controlled the 15 000 relay system The building erected near tracks 9 and 10 is now a listed building 11 Also in 1957 nine steam shunting locomotives were replaced by seven diesel shunting locomotives In the early 1960s Germany s largest express freight handling facility was set up under the station 15 million pieces of luggage and express goods alone were handled annually in these years The facilities also included a supply centre for the station and the dining cars with its own confectionery large bakery and butcher s shop Two railway post offices were also part of the extensive facilities as were 70 freight lifts As a result of growing inner city traffic congestion the idea of an inner city connecting railway was taken up again in the 1960s despite the fact that it was not economically justifiable 12 The construction of the underground railway systems began in 1971 with the B Tunnel of the Frankfurt U Bahn in the central city A large shopping arcade B level was created as a distribution level from which two four track stations each an underground station C level and an S Bahn station D level and a three storey underground car park part of which can also be used as a fallout shelter is accessed through numerous corridors and stairs These were the first public escalators in the city at the time The tram stop on the square in front of the station Am Hauptbahnhof could formerly only be reached from the escalator opened in 1978 13 on the B level There is now a pedestrian crossing at street level The underground stations were built using cut and cover construction for the construction of the S Bahn station below the long distance train hall the north wing of the entrance building was removed from 12 January 1972 14 and later rebuilt using the original facade cladding The underground stations began operating in 1978 At the same time a two storey air raid shelter was built to offer railway employees protection in an emergency All telephone operations could be handled from this bunker It was also possible to operate the loudspeaker system Even though stocks such as canned food are no longer stored today the technical systems air filter systems power generators are still fully operational In the early 1970s the platform ticket requirement was abolished and the platform barriers were dismantled The two platforms on tracks 6 to 9 were widened raised and lengthened for the introduction of ICE operations in June 1991 The space for the widening was gained by demolishing the baggage platforms which were no longer used From 2002 to 2006 the listed 11 roofs of the five platform halls were completely renewed during operation taking into account heritage preservation issues 15 16 A total of around 60 000 square metres of roof and wall cladding including around 30 000 square metres of glass were renewed and 5 000 tons of steel replaced A special routine was developed as an assembly concept for this basic repair At a height of ten meters an assembly and transport platform was drawn in over the length of the roof for the duration of the construction work Tower cranes were installed in the central area of this platform Some loads of up to 150 tons per support were lowered to the basement and foundations were built there All work steps were integrated in the routine in such a way that the platforms were moved by one field 9 3 metres per hall every two weeks Since then screw connections instead of rivets have served as the means of fastening although a specially developed rivet head screw was approved in individual cases by the Federal Railway Authority The refurbishment of the station roof has allowed significantly more daylight to enter The trusses that support the roof were painted light gray as in the original condition and therefore appear lighter The decorative rosettes in the gussets are now painted dark blue and are more easily seen The entire construction process took place almost unnoticed ten metres above the heads of the travellers An incident occurred shortly after work began During welding work part of the roof of the northern part of the station building caught fire The North Ventilation Centre was almost completely destroyed and had to be replaced Since air continued to be sucked in during the fire dirt and damage also occurred inside the building especially on level B A total of 117m was invested in the roof renovation 17 80 percent of the costs were borne by the federal government 18 The facade was renovated in 2013 16 Other parts of the interior design of the station and entrance halls as well as the underground station were also modernised In the meantime liquid crystal displays have replaced the old split flap displays on the platforms As in Wiesbaden Hauptbahnhof seven cubic glass and steel pavilions have replaced the previous buildings on the transverse platform In mid 2006 cubic and transparent lifts were also installed to connect the S Bahn platforms to the U Bahn and to the side platform of the train shed Due to the frequent theft of luggage trolleys which caused annual damage of up to 30 000 a security system was installed in the station to prevent the luggage trolleys from being removed from the railway premises When crossing a red mark the front wheel locked This system was originally developed for shopping carts and adapted accordingly The rental of luggage trolleys was later discontinued and in view of the increased number of passengers there was no longer any room for safe operation Planning began in 1998 and implementation at the end of 2001 of a computer based interlocking of the SIMIS C type the four stage commissioning of which was completed on 27 November 2005 19 20 It replaces the track control signal box from 1957 which handled a total of around 20 million trains and 100 million shunting trips 20 The Fpf signal box located between tracks 9 and 10 was considered the largest and most modern signal box in Europe at the time it was commissioned Since 27 March 1986 circuit changes at the signal box had been prohibited due to age related signs of wear the stress on the system and the insulation of the interior wiring 19 The new signal box is divided into two sub centres north and south and was the largest two storey signal box building in Germany when it was commissioned 19 The entry and exit speeds were increased from 30 km h 20 to 40 to 60 km h and new running options were created with additional points A platform changeover was introduced on all access routes and 13 platform tracks of the main station were also divided into two sections with train detection signals The system comprises a total of 845 control units including 340 switches and track closures as well as 67 main signals The interlocking is now remotely operated from the operations centre in Frankfurt by six dispatchers and a node dispatcher 11 132m 20 was spent on the signal box The new interlocking laid the foundation for numerous extensions and conversions of the tracks of the station and the lines leading to it in order to better utilise the station platform tracks in the future and to increase their capacity 11 The wayfinding system was renewed in November 2005 in preparation for the 2006 World Cup Replacing of the partly outdated signage made a quick and easy orientation within the station possible Finishing in 2007 the floors and the cladding of the stairs which had not been renewed for decades were uniformly covered with black granite from China Following this a redesign of the station forecourt the B level and the S Bahn station is planned From July to September 2010 platform 12 13 was removed and rebuilt The platform cover was separated from the substructure with concrete saws demolished in sections and rebuilt in prefabricated concrete sections The new platform was given the same granite flooring as the transverse platform and the main platforms The part outside the hall will be provided with a new 130 metre long platform roof Overall the platform renovation cost 8 5m In October 2020 the conversion of the B level and the entrance hall began which will be completely redesigned within eight years The federal government DB the city and the Frankfurt public transport company Verkehrsgesellschaft Frankfurt are investing a total of 375m 13 By the end of 2024 the entrance hall is to be renovated first followed by the forecourt 21 Other upgrades Edit The capacity of some access routes is considered to be exhausted Several lines e g ICE 13 and RB 58 can no longer be routed via the station For reasons of acceleration only four platform tracks tracks 6 to 9 are normally used for long distance trains on the north south axis 4 In order to mitigate a number of traffic disadvantages of terminal stations in general and the Frankfurt railway junction in particular ideas and suggestions have been discussed again and again since the Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof was commissioned to mitigate the disadvantages or to relocate the station as a whole These proposals were discarded due to technical problems and lack of economic viability 12 Various options for underground through stations were discussed in the 1980s and 1990s The Frankfurt 21 concept that emerged from this provided for the conversion of the station into a twelve track through station The project presented in 1996 was shelved in 2001 due to a lack of funding The RheinMain plus project was then pursued Deutsche Bahn is planning to separate long distance and regional traffic from the direction of Mannheim Mainz and the Cologne Frankfurt high speed rail line Almost all long distance traffic is to be concentrated on the south side of the station on platforms 1 to 8 and conflicts between routes are to be reduced Part of the regional traffic is to be relocated to the north side Among other things the construction of a connecting curve known as the Kraftwerkskurve power station curve from Frankfurt South to platform tracks 1 to 3 and the installation of additional sets of points in the apron of the station are planned by 2030 4 From June 2017 to November 2021 the Homburger embankment was upgraded in two ways According to an estimate in 2017 the 800 metre long upgrade would cost 131m but the costs ultimately amounted to around 180m 22 23 24 The costs were funded by the federal government 25 Operationally the line is to be referred to as Ffm Hbf Mainzer Landstrasse 26 By 2019 access from level B and the station forecourt are to be remodelled at a cost of 175m 27 Between the beginning of 2016 and the beginning of 2019 more than 1 000 square metres of new retail space are to be built for 134 5m The city is contributing 27 5m Previously unused basements are to be used for this purpose 28 On 21 December 2015 Deutsche Bahn and the city of Frankfurt signed a contract to modernise the underground distribution level and to create additional access points Work was scheduled to begin in the fourth quarter of 2016 and be completed in mid 2020 The city of Frankfurt is contributing 27 5m to the construction costs of 135m 16 The planned Frankfurt am Main long distance railway tunnel is to run from the Offenbach city limits or from the Frankfurt East station to the Niederrad Main bridge It is intended to relieve the Hauptbahnhof and turn it into an underground through station for many long distance lines The project is included as an urgent need of the Federal Transport Infrastructure Plan 2030 29 The results of the feasibility study were presented to the public on 28 June 2021 30 The construction period is estimated at 10 years after the completion of planning Construction is expected to start in the 2030s and operations would start in the 2040s The construction costs are estimated at 3 6b 31 The upgrade of the node is one of 13 infrastructure projects of the proposed German clock face timetable Deutschlandtakt that according to the coalition agreement of the red green yellow federal government presented in November 2021 are to be accelerated and implemented with high political priority 32 Architecture EditAbove ground part Edit Facade source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Inside and outside Frankfurt Main Hauptbahnhof in 2014 Architectural detail on the front of Frankfurt Am Main HauptbahnhofThe above ground part of Frankfurt Haupptbahnhof is divided into the entrance building and the train shed The entrance building faces on to the street side to the east and thus opens up the terminal station towards the Bahnhofsviertel station district The facade of the older building in front of the three central train sheds was designed in a Renaissance Revival style the extensions of the entrance building from 1924 in front of the two outer halls is in the neoclassical style The building is 270 metres wide The centre of the entrance building is the main reception hall the street side entrance of which consists of three doorways divided by two large pillars Above the centre there is a decorated clock with allegories of day and night and the Deutsche Bahn logo with the word Hauptbahnhof The division into three bays is also continued in the roof area where large glass surfaces let in daylight The division of the train shed into three parts corresponded to the original use by three railway companies the Taunus Eisenbahn the Prussian state railways and the Hessian Ludwigsbahn There is a tower on each side of the facade In the middle of the roof there is a 6 3 metre high bronze group of figures by the Braunschweig sculptor Gustav Herold Atlas who carries the globe on his shoulders accompanied by symbolic figures for steam and electricity There are also figures representing trade and agriculture and the iron industry and shipping West of the entrance building is the train shed It consists of five steel and glass halls that cover the platforms over a length of 186 metres The three larger halls are 56 metres wide and 28 metres high the two outer small halls are 31 metres wide and 20 metres high 18 The transverse platform which allows access to the 24 above ground mainline tracks in the train shed extends across the entire width of the halls only the outer track 1a can only be reached indirectly via the platform on track 1 The platforms which are at right angles to the transverse platform are also connected by an underpass transverse tunnel connected to the west Outside the platform halls the platforms continue with canopies from different eras Operational usage EditThe station s terminal layout has posed some unique problems ever since the late 20th century since all trains have to change directions and reverse out of the station to continue on to their destination This causes long turn around times and places the passengers in the opposite direction of where they had been sitting There have been several attempts to change this The last project called Frankfurt 21 was to put the whole station underground connect it with tunnels also to the east and so avoid the disadvantages of the terminal layout This would be financed by selling the air rights over the area now used for tracks as building ground for skyscraper but this soon proved unrealistic and the project was abandoned Frankfurt is the third busiest railway station outside Japan and the second busiest in Germany after Hamburg Hauptbahnhof citation needed Long distance services Edit As for long distance traffic the station profits greatly from its location in the heart of Europe 13 of the 24 ICE lines call at the station as well as 2 of the 3 ICE Sprinter lines To ease the strain on the Hauptbahnhof some ICE lines now call at Frankfurt Airport station and at Frankfurt Main Sud instead of Hauptbahnhof Line Route IntervalICE 4 ICE Sprinter Hamburg Altona Hamburg Dammtor Hamburg Hannover Frankfurt Darmstadt One train pairICE 11 Hamburg Altona Berlin Leipzig Erfurt Frankfurt Mannheim Stuttgart Augsburg Munich Every two hoursICE 12 Berlin Ost Wolfsburg Braunschweig Kassel Wilhelmshohe Frankfurt Mannheim Karlsruhe Freiburg Basel Interlaken Ost Every two hoursICE 13 Berlin Ost Braunschweig Kassel Wilhelmshohe Frankfurt Individual servicesICE 15 ICE Sprinter Berlin Halle Erfurt Frankfurt Every two hoursICE 20 Kiel Hamburg Hannover Kassel Wilhelmshohe Frankfurt Mannheim Karlsruhe Freiburg Basel Zurich Chur Every two hoursICE 22 Kiel Hamburg Hannover Kassel Wilhelmshohe Frankfurt Frankfurt Airport Mannheim Stuttgart Every two hoursICE 22 Munich East Nuremberg Wurzburg Hanau Frankfurt Fulda Kassel Wilhelmshohe Gottingen Hannover Bremen Oldenburg Oldb One train Sun FriICE 26 Stralsund Hamburg Kassel Wilhelmshohe Giessen Frankfurt Heidelberg Karlsruhe Every two hours together with IC line 26ICE 31 Hamburg Altona Hamburg Bremen Osnabruck Munster Dortmund Hagen Wuppertal Solingen Cologne Bonn Koblenz Mainz Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt Hanau Wurzburg Nuremberg Ingolstadt Munich Individual servicesICE 41 Dortmund Essen Duisburg Dusseldorf Koln Messe Deutz Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt Aschaffenburg Wurzburg Nuremberg Munich HourlyICE 49 Dortmund Hagen Wuppertal Solingen Cologne Siegburg Bonn Montabaur Limburg Sud Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt Individual servicesICE 50 Dresden Leipzig Erfurt Eisenach Fulda Frankfurt Frankfurt Airport Wiesbaden Every two hoursICE 78 Amsterdam Arnhem Duisburg Cologne Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt Every two hoursICE 79 Bruxelles Midi Brussel Zuid Liege Guillemins Aachen Koln Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt Every two hoursICE TGV 82 Frankfurt Mannheim Kaiserslautern Saarbrucken Karlsruhe Strasbourg Paris Est Every two hoursICE TGV 84 Frankfurt Mannheim Karlsruhe Baden Baden Strasbourg Mulhouse Ville Belfort Montbeliard Besancon Franche Comte Chalon sur Saone Lyon Part Dieu Avignon Aix en Provence Marseille Saint Charles One train pairECE 85 Frankfurt Mannheim Karlsruhe Baden Baden Freiburg Breisgau Hbf Basel Bad Bf Basel SBB Olten Lucerne Arth Goldau Bellinzona Lugano Chiasso Como Monza Milan One train pairICE 91 Dortmund Essen Duisburg Dusseldorf Koln Bonn Koblenz Mainz Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt Wurzburg Nurnberg Regensburg Passau Linz Vienna Every two hoursIC 26 Westerland Hamburg Kassel Wilhelmshohe Giessen Frankfurt Heidelberg Karlsruhe One train pairIC 31 Kiel Hamburg Osnabruck Bremen Munster Dortmund Wuppertal Cologne Koblenz Mainz Frankfurt Wurzburg Nuremberg Regensburg Passau Every two hours together with ICE line 31IC 34 Frankfurt Wetzlar Siegen Hbf Dortmund Unna Hamm Munster Emden Norddeich Mole Every two hoursIC 62 Frankfurt Darmstadt Heidelberg Stuttgart Augsburg Munchen Salzburg Linz or Graz or Villach Klagenfurt Four train pairsRJ 63 Frankfurt Munich Salzburg Linz Vienna Budapest Sat and SunRJ 66 Budapest Vienna Linz Salzburg Munich Frankfurt Fri and SatLocal services Edit With regard to regional traffic Frankfurt Hbf is the main hub in the RMV network offering connections to Koblenz Limburg Kassel Nidda Stockheim Siegen Fulda Giessen Aschaffenburg Wurzburg Mannheim Heidelberg Dieburg Eberbach Worms and Saarbrucken with fifteen regional lines calling at the main station Line Route IntervalRE 2 Frankfurt Frankfurt Airport Russelsheim Mainz Bingen Rhein Koblenz 120 min extra trains to the peak RE 3 Frankfurt Frankfurt Airport Russelsheim Mainz Bingen Koblenz Bad Kreuznach SaarbruckenRE 4 Frankfurt Frankfurt Hochst Mainz Worms Ludwigshafen Germersheim Karlsruhe 120 minRE 5 Frankfurt Frankfurt Main Sud Hanau Fulda Bebra Some trainsRE 9 Frankfurt Frankfurt Hochst Mainz Kastel Wiesbaden Biebrich Wiesbaden Schierstein Niederwalluf Eltville 60 min only in peak RE 13 Frankfurt Frankfurt Airport Russelsheim Mainz Alzey Some trains in peakRE 14 Frankfurt Frankfurt Hochst Mainz Worms Ludwigshafen Mitte Mannheim 120 minRE 20 Frankfurt Frankfurt Hochst Niedernhausen Taunus Limburg Lahn 60 min only in peak RE 30 Frankfurt Friedberg Hess Giessen Marburg Lahn Treysa Wabern Bz Kassel Kassel 120 minRE 50 Frankfurt Frankfurt South Offenbach Hanau Fulda 60 min only in peak RE 54 Frankfurt Maintal Hanau Aschaffenburg Wurzburg Bamberg 120 min with gaps to the peak RE 55 Frankfurt Offenbach Hanau Aschaffenburg Wurzburg Bamberg 120 min Frankfurt Wurzburg additional trains in the peak individual trains in the peak Wurzburg Bamberg RE 60 Frankfurt Darmstadt Bensheim Weinheim Bergstr Mannheim 60 120 minRE 70 Frankfurt Gross Gerau Dornberg Riedstadt Goddelau Gernsheim Biblis Mannheim 60 minRE 85 Frankfurt Offenbach Hanau Babenhausen Gross Umstadt Wiebelsbach Erbach Odenw 60 min Frankfurt Babenhausen 120 min Babenhausen Erbach RE 98 Frankfurt Friedberg Giessen Marburg Treysa Wabern Kassel Some trains between Frankfurt and Giessen in the peakRE 99 Frankfurt Friedberg Giessen Wetzlar Dillenburg Haiger SiegenRB 10 Frankfurt Frankfurt Hochst Wiesbaden Rudesheim Rhein Koblenz Neuwied 60 minRB 12 Frankfurt Frankfurt Hochst Kelkheim Konigstein Taunus 30 minRB 15 Frankfurt Bad Homburg Friedrichsdorf Wehrheim Neu Anspach Usingen Gravenwiesbach Brandoberndorf 60 min only in peak RB 22 Frankfurt Frankfurt Hochst Niedernhausen Taunus Limburg Lahn 30 60 minRB 34 Frankfurt Bad Vilbel Niederdorfelden Nidderau Altenstadt Hess Glauburg Stockheim 30 60 minRB 40 Frankfurt Friedberg Hess Butzbach Giessen Wetzlar Herborn Dillkr Dillenburg 40 80 minRB 41 Frankfurt Friedberg Hess Butzbach Giessen Marburg Lahn Colbe Kirchhain Bz Kassel Stadtallendorf Neustadt Treysa 60 minRB 48 Frankfurt Friedberg Hess Beienheim Reichelsheim Wetterau Nidda some trains in peakRB 51 Frankfurt Offenbach Main Hbf Hanau Langenselbold Gelnhausen Wachtersbach Bad Soden Salmunster 60 minRB 58 Russelsheim Opelwerk Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt Frankfurt South Frankfurt East Maintal Ost Hanau Aschaffenburg Laufach 60 min in peakRB 61 Frankfurt Dreieich Buchschlag Rodermark Ober Roden Dieburg 60 minRB 67 Frankfurt Darmstadt Bensheim Heppenheim Bergstr Weinheim Bergstr MannheimRB 68 Frankfurt Darmstadt Bensheim Heppenheim Weinheim Bergstr HeidelbergRB 82 Frankfurt Darmstadt Nord Reinheim Odenw Gross Umstadt Wiebelsbach Erbach Eberbach Main article Frankfurt Main Hauptbahnhof underground The subterranean S Bahn station is the most important station in the S Bahn Rhein Main network used by all Frankfurt S Bahn lines except line S 7 which terminates at the surface station Line Route Frankfurt Main Hbf Walldorf Hess Morfelden Gross Gerau Dornberg Riedstadt GoddelauIn briefTotal number of tracks 120Number of passenger tracksabove ground 25 main tracks 2 branch 3 tram stops 2 tracks each Below ground 4 S Bahn tracks 4 U Bahn tracks 3 in use Daily trains excluding Stadtbahn amp tramway 342 long distance290 regionalPassengers daily 460 000 Other services Edit Tram connections are offered by TraffiQ with tram lines 11 and 12 station Hauptbahnhof Munchener Strasse 14 16 17 20 21 and the Ebbelwei Express The lines U4 and U5 call at the subterranean Stadtbahn stop Preceding station Frankfurt U Bahn Following stationFesthalle Messetowards Bockenheimer Warte U4 Willy Brandt Platztowards EnkheimTerminus U5 Willy Brandt Platztowards PreungesheimFuture expansion EditThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information March 2022 Construction of a railway tunnel with four platforms below the existing station was proposed in 2018 under the project name Fernbahntunnel Frankfurt am Main Long distance railway tunnel Frankfurt am Main 33 As being listed as urgent need in the Federal Infrastructure Plan 2030 government funding for the scheme is secured A study to determine feasibility of construction is expected to be completed by early 2021 34 Crime EditIn 2019 the Federal Police recorded 4 787 crimes at Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof more than at any other German train station 35 They include the murder of an eight year old boy on 29 July 36 37 References Edit Tarifinformationen 2021 PDF Rhein Main Verkehrsverbund 1 January 2021 p 137 Retrieved 8 April 2021 Getting here amp travelling around Rail Frankfurt de City of Frankfurt am Main Frankfurt central station is the most important rail transport hub in Germany Hager Bernd 2013 Atlas die Erdkugel tragend Eisenbahngeschichte in German DGEG Medien 58 34 43 a b c Mytzka Johannes Jakob 2014 Betriebliche Untersuchung von Infrastrukturmassnahmen im Umfeld von Frankfurt Main Hauptbahnhof Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau in German 11 15 18 ISSN 0013 2845 Schomann 1983 p 161 Notice no 345 Amtsblatt der Koniglich Preussischen und Grossherzoglich Hessischen Eisenbahndirektion in Mainz in German Eisenbahndirektion Mainz 26 172 27 May 1916 Stahl Hans Gunter 2015 Der Luftkrieg uber dem Raum Hanau 1939 1945 Hanauer Geschichtsblatter in German Vol 48 Hanau p 227 Lasky Melvin 2014 And everything was still German diary 1945 Berlin p 347 ISBN 978 3 87134 708 5 notice no 337 Amtsblatt der Reichsbahndirektion Mainz in German Deutsche Reichsbahn 21 145 13 May 1944 Neue Betriebszentrale fur Frankfurt M Eisenbahn Revue International in German 1 2 2 January 1999 ISSN 1421 2811 a b c d Frankfurt RheinMainplus PDF Das Projekt Der Eisenbahnknoten Die Schieneninfrastruktur in German Deutsche Bahn AG June 2009 pp 6f 10f 12 28 Archived from the original PDF 1 63 MB on 23 January 2013 Retrieved 9 May 2023 32 page brochure a b Speck Georg October 1984 und dann immer geradeaus Ein Vorschlag fur die Eisenbahn in Frankfurt am Main in German Fachgebiet Eisenbahnwesen einschliesslich spurgebundener Nahverkehr der Technischen Hochschule Darmstadt pp 2 3 15 a b Harting Mechthild 12 October 2020 Hier beginnt etwas Grosses Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in German Retrieved 16 May 2023 Thomas Peter 19 December 2021 Aufbruch in die Unterwelt Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung in German No 50 p 46 Tempel Norbert 2010 Eine Wiedergeburt Grundinstandsetzung der Gleishallen im Frankfurter Hauptbahnhof Industrie Kultur in German 50 10f based on a manuscript by Volker Rodel a b c B Ebene des Frankfurter Hauptbahnhofs wird schoner Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in German No 297 22 December 2015 p 29 ISSN 0174 4909 Vorbereitungen fur die Erneuerung des Bahnsteiges 12 13 im Hauptbahnhof Frankfurt beginnen Press release in German Deutsche Bahn AG 26 February 2010 a b Sanierung des Frankfurter Hauptbahnhofs Eisenbahn Revue International in German 10 429 October 2001 ISSN 1421 2811 a b c Magiera Dieter Vorlitzky Jurgen Beinlich Andreas Bezzenberger Wolfram Briesen Dieter 2006 Elektronisches Stellwerk fur den Hauptbahnhof Frankfurt am Main Signal Draht in German 98 10 6 9 ISSN 0037 4997 a b c d ESTW Frankfurt Hbf in Betrieb Eisenbahn Revue International in German 1 4 January 2006 ISSN 1421 2811 Leclerc Florian 2 October 2020 Hauptbahnhof Frankfurt wird umgebaut So sehen die Plane aus Frankfurter Rundschau in German Retrieved 16 May 2023 Rippegather Jutta 19 March 2017 Hauptbahnhof wird entflochten Frankfurter Rundschau in German Retrieved 16 May 2023 Wrede Stephan Gericke Jens Peter July 2018 Building Information Modeling ist die digitale Zukunft des Bauens Der Eisenbahningenieur in German 68 7 16 18 ISSN 0013 2810 Deutsche Bahn beseitigt Engpass im Frankfurter Schienennetz Zusatzliches Gleis zum Hauptbahnhof fertiggestellt Press release in German Deutsche Bahn 30 November 2021 Archived from the original on 30 November 2021 Retrieved 16 May 2023 Homburger Damm Baubeginn der Massnahmen im Knoten Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof Press release in German Deutsche Bahn 14 June 2017 Archived from the original on 10 July 2017 Retrieved 16 May 2023 Aus Geschaftlichen Mitteilungen Lok Report in German 11 24 26 November 2019 ISSN 0344 7146 Not known Frankfurter Rundschau in German 14 November 2013 p D2 Jaeger Milan Leclerc Florian 8 October 2014 Einkaufszentrum im Hauptbahnhof Frankfurter Rundschau in German Retrieved 16 May 2023 Bundesverkehrsminister kundigt Fernbahntunnel fur Frankfurt an Offenbach Post in German 14 November 2018 Retrieved 16 May 2023 Planung fur Fernbahntunnel startet Taglich 250 Zuge mehr zum Hauptbahnhof Frankfurt deutschebahn com Press release in German 28 June 2021 Retrieved 16 May 2023 Die nachsten Schritte Fernbahntunnel Frankfurt fernbahntunnel frankfurt de in German 28 June 2021 Retrieved 16 May 2023 Mehr Fortschritt wagen Bundnis fur Freiheit Gerechtigkeit und Nachhaltigkeit PDF Koalitionsvertrag 2021 2025 zwischen der Sozialdemokratischen Partei Deutschlands SPD BUNDNIS 90 DIE GRUNEN und den Freien Demokraten FDP in German SPD Bundnis 90 Die Grunen FDP November 2021 p 13 Retrieved 16 May 2023 Das Ende des Kopfbahnhofs so wie wir ihn kennen fnp de 8 November 2018 Retrieved 5 October 2020 Knoten Frankfurt Fernbahntunnel inkl Station unterhalb des Hbf Frankfurt Main Machbarkeitsstudie ted europa eu Retrieved 5 October 2020 Frankfurter Hauptbahnhof mit den meisten Straftaten Frankfurter Allgemeine in German 7 March 2020 ISSN 0174 4909 Retrieved 4 February 2023 Germany train incident Eritrean on trial for boy s Frankfurt death BBC News 19 August 2020 Retrieved 4 February 2023 Frankfurt rail attack Boy s killer given life in psychiatric ward BBC News 28 August 2020 Retrieved 4 February 2023 Sources Edit Bundesbahndirektion Frankfurt am Main 1988 Abfahrt 1888 Ankunft 1988 100 Jahre Hauptbahnhof Frankfurt am Main Darmstadt HESTRA Verlag ISBN 3 7771 0215 6 Gross Lothar 2012 Made in Germany Deutschlands Wirtschaftsgeschichte von der Industralisierung bis heute Vol 1 1800 1945 Books on demand ISBN 978 3 8482 1042 8 Rodel Volker 2006 Der Hauptbahnhof zu Frankfurt am Main Aufstieg Fall und Wiedergeburt eines Grossstadtbahnhofs The main station to Frankfurt am Main Rise Fall and Rebirth of a City Train Station Arbeitshefte des Landesamtes fur Denkmalpflege Hessen 8 Stuttgart Schomann Heinz 1983 Der Frankfurter Hauptbahnhof Ein Beitrag zur Architektur und Eisenbahngeschichte der Grunderzeit The Frankfurt central station A contribution to the architectural and railway history of the Wilhelminian era ISBN 3 421 02801 X Setzepfandt Wolf Christian August 2002 Architekturfuhrer Frankfurt am Main Architecture Guide Frankfurt am Main Berlin Dietrich Reimer Verlag p 33 ISBN 3 496 01236 6 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frankfurt Main Hauptbahnhof category Current departure time in Frankfurt Main Hbf Deutsche Bahn Panorama at the Central Station Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof Official Plan of the Frankfurt HauptbahnhofPortals Transport Germany 50 06 25 N 8 39 45 E 50 10694 N 8 66250 E 50 10694 8 66250 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frankfurt Main Hauptbahnhof amp oldid 1168965576, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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