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Lutherstadt Wittenberg Hauptbahnhof

Lutherstadt Wittenberg Hauptbahnhof (until December 2016: Bahnhof Lutherstadt Wittenberg in German) is a railway station located in Wittenberg, Germany. The station opened on 3 August 1859 is located on the Berlin–Halle railway and Roßlau–Falkenberg/Elster railway. The train services are operated by Deutsche Bahn. With over 5000 passengers per day, it is the most important railway station in the eastern part of the state of Saxony-Anhalt.

Lutherstadt Wittenberg Hauptbahnhof
Railway junction
The station in 2017
General information
LocationWittenberg, Saxony-Anhalt
Germany
Coordinates51°52′03″N 12°39′44″E / 51.867634°N 12.662181°E / 51.867634; 12.662181Coordinates: 51°52′03″N 12°39′44″E / 51.867634°N 12.662181°E / 51.867634; 12.662181
Owned byDeutsche Bahn
Operated by
Line(s)
Platforms7
Construction
ArchitectFranz Schwechten
Architectural styleNeo-Renaissance
Other information
Station code3863
DS100 codeLW[1]
IBNR8010222
Category3[2]
Fare zoneMDV: 283 (rail only)[3]
Websitewww.bahnhof.de
History
Opened3 August 1859; 163 years ago (1859-08-03)
Electrified25 May 1978; 44 years ago (1978-05-25), 15 kV  16 2⁄3 Hz AC system (overhead)
Previous names1859-1945 Bahnhof Wittenberg
1945-2016 Bahnhof Lutherstadt Wittenberg
Passengers
5000
Services
Preceding station   DB Fernverkehr   Following station
towards Hamburg or Berlin
ICE 11
via Stuttgart - Frankfurt - Erfurt - Leipzig - Berlin
towards Munich
ICE 28
via Nürnberg - Erfurt - Leipzig - Berlin
towards Munich
Preceding station DB Regio Nordost Following station
Zörnigall RE 3 Terminus
Preceding station DB Regio Südost Following station
Lutherstadt Wittenberg Altstadt RE 14 Lutherstadt Wittenberg-Labetz
Lutherstadt Wittenberg Altstadt
towards Dessau Hbf
RB 51
Preceding station S-Bahn Mitteldeutschland Following station
Terminus S 2 Pratau
Pratau S 8 Terminus
Location
Lutherstadt Wittenberg
Location in Saxony-Anhalt
Lutherstadt Wittenberg
Location in Germany
Lutherstadt Wittenberg
Location in Europe

Location and name

The station is located in the east of Wittenberg, about one kilometre from the historic city centre. The Berlin–Halle railway, running from the northeast to the southwest, and the Roßlau–Falkenberg/Elster railway, running east-west, cross at the station.

The station was originally called only Wittenberg and later Wittenberg (Prov Sachs), indicating that it was in the Province of Saxony. Since 1938, the city has been nicknamed Lutherstadt (Luther city) and the station has also been called Lutherstadt Wittenberg since the end of the Second World War. It is also sometimes referred to as a Hauptbahnhof (main station) unofficially and by the municipality.[4] The street leading to the station, which was formerly called Am Bahnhof ("at the station") is now called Am Hauptbahnhof.

History

 
The old building
 
The rebuild "green station"

The Anhalt railway built by the Berlin-Anhalt Railway Company (Anhalter Bahn, BAE) from Köthen and Dessau reached Wittenberg on 28 August 1841. On 10 September 1841 the railway was consistently in operation as far as the Anhalt station in Berlin. The first Wittenberg station was also built in 1841 on the former line to the north of the city wall. It still exists today and is considered one of the oldest railway station building in Germany, but it is no longer used as such. It is located on the street of Am Alten Bahnhof (“at the old station”).

The railway facilities were reorganised in 1859 during the construction of the first railway bridge over the Elbe on a direct line from Wittenberg to Bitterfeld, which was opened on 3 August 1859. In the same year a new station building was built in the Swiss chalet style. It was located on the town side of the railway tracks at about the 95.0 km point of the current chainage of the line.[5]

The Wittenberg–Falkenberg (Elster) railway was opened by BAE on 15 October 1875. Wittenberg had developed into a railway junction. The third station of the town was opened at its current location on 13 November 1877. The architect and builder was Franz Schwechten.

From 1888 to 1921, the station was connected to the town centre by a metre gauge horse railway.

The station was destroyed by Allied air raids on 16 and 20 April 1945. Only the outer walls from the entrance building remained standing. Reconstruction took place from 1948 and 1951.[5]

Electric operations commenced on the Berlin–Halle railway in 1978 and on the Roßlau–Falkenberg railway in 1985.

In the spring of 1996, extensive remodelling of the station began as part of the German Unity Transport Projects (Verkehrsprojekts Deutsche Einheit): 8.3 (upgrading of the Berlin–Leipzig/Halle line). Three platforms on the Berlin–Halle railway and a 42 m long pedestrian tunnel were completely rebuilt up to 1998. While previously access to the station had only been possible by a road running between the tracks of the lines to Bitterfeld and Dessau, there has since been a direct western exit to the town. The new bus station is located on the newly created station forecourt. An electronic interlocking replaced several old signal boxes. The new tracks have allowed trains to run through the station at up to 160 km/h since the construction of the new Elbe bridge.[6]

Reconstruction

The station was rebuilt as the second "green station" in Germany, and the station building was replaced by a new building. The construction work was initially to begin in June 2012 and to be completed by the end of 2013. On 7 March 2011, the former Saxony-Anhalt Minister for Construction and Transport, Karl-Heinz Daehre, presented the idea of the first climate-friendly station in Germany. Natural materials were mainly used in the construction, and renewable energies such as sunlight provide some of the energy for the new station building. Wittenberg also transformed the area around the station and nearby parking areas. Half of the proposed project cost of €3.3 million covered the acquisition of land.[7] The new station opened in December 2016.[8][9] The new station building was built west of the tracks, and the old station building was demolished.[4]

Infrastructure

The entrance building designed by Franz Schwechten and opened in 1877 was built on an island between the tracks. The tracks are not connected south of the station and the line to Dessau passes under the line to Bitterfeld. In the north there is a common field of tracks between the lines and there are also facilities for freight.

The station building is designed like a basilica so that the entrance building benefits from daylight. Schwechten’s design was in the style of the Italian Renaissance.[10] After the destruction of the Second World War only the outer walls were intact and the design of the entire interior comes from the post-war period.

West of the station building is the line from Berlin to Halle with platform tracks 1–4, with track 4 lying next to the station building and tracks 2 and 3 lying next to an island platform. The platforms are covered and connected by a tunnel. East of the station building is the Roßlau–Falkenberg (Elster) line with platform tracks 5-7, of which only track 6 is currently (2013) used regularly by passenger trains. This platforms is not covered and can only be reached by crossing the tracks from platform 5 next to the station building.

Some two kilometres of the station to the northeast is the former Lutherstadt Wittenberg rail workshop (Bahnbetriebswerk Lutherstadt Wittenberg).

Train services

Wittenberg station offers connections to the north to Berlin as well as to the south towards Halle and Leipzig. To the west there are regional rail links towards Dessau and from there to Magdeburg and to the east there are connections to Falkenberg (Elster) and from there to Cottbus and Hoyerswerda. Intercity-Express and Intercity trains also stop in Wittenberg. The historic town centre is about one kilometre away from the station.

The following services currently call at the station:[11]

Line Route Interval (min) Operator
ICE 11 HamburgBerlinLutherstadt WittenbergLeipzigErfurtFrankfurtStuttgartMunich 120 DB Fernverkehr
ICE 28 Hamburg – Berlin – Lutherstadt Wittenberg – Leipzig – Erfurt – BambergNuremberg – Munich 120 DB Fernverkehr
RE 3 Lutherstadt WittenbergJüterbog – Berlin – EberswaldeGreifswaldStralsund 120 DB Regio Nordost
RE 14 DessauRoßlau – Coswig – Lutherstadt Wittenberg – Annaburg – Falkenberg Individual services DB Regio Südost
RB 51 Dessau – Roßlau – Coswig – Lutherstadt Wittenberg – Annaburg – Falkenberg 060 (Dessau–Wittenberg)
120 (Wittenberg–Falkenberg)
DB Regio Südost
RB 55 Lutherstadt Wittenberg – Pretzsch – Bad Schmiedeberg – Bad Düben – Eilenburg
(Sat–Sun in the summer season)
Individual services DB Regio Südost
S 2 (Jüterbog –) Lutherstadt Wittenberg – Gräfenhainichen – BitterfeldDelitzsch – Leipzig – Leipzig-Stötteritz 120 DB Regio Südost
S 8 (Jüterbog –) Lutherstadt Wittenberg – Gräfenhainichen – Bitterfeld – Landsberg – Halle 120 DB Regio Südost

Notes

  1. ^ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2009/2010 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  2. ^ "Stationspreisliste 2023" [Station price list 2023] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 28 November 2022. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  3. ^ "Tarifzonenplan" (PDF). Mitteldeutscher Verkehrsverbund. 1 August 2021. Retrieved 22 August 2021.
  4. ^ a b "Hauptbahnhof" (in German). Municipality of Wittenberg. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  5. ^ a b Hilmar Spanel (1991). Zur Geschichte der Eisenbahn in und um Wittenberg 1841–1991. Schriftenreihe des Stadtgeschichtlichen Zentrums Wittenberg (in German). Vol. 14. Wittenberg. pp. 34 and 93.
  6. ^ (PDF) (in German). Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure. Archived from the original (PDF, 608 kB) on 31 December 2013. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  7. ^ "Bahnhof der Lutherstadt Wittenberg bekommt neues klimafreundliches Empfangsgebäude" (in German). energieportal24.de. 7 March 2011. Retrieved 31 October 2014.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ "Grüner Bahnhof – ein neuer Standard für die Empfangsgebäude der Zukunft" (PDF). Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau (in German) (3): 34. 2013. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  9. ^ "Wittenberg bekommt zweiten "Grünen Bahnhof" bundesweit". Mitteldeutsche Zeitung (in German). 28 February 2013. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  10. ^ Manfred Berger (1980). Historische Bahnhofsbauten (in German). Vol. 1, Sachsen, Preußen, Mecklenburg und Thüringen. Transpress-Verlag. p. 160.
  11. ^ Timetables for Lutherstadt Wittenberg station (in German)

References

  • Peter Bley (1990). 150 Jahre Berlin-Anhaltische Eisenbahn (in German). Düsseldorf: alba. ISBN 3-87094-340-8.

lutherstadt, wittenberg, hauptbahnhof, until, december, 2016, bahnhof, lutherstadt, wittenberg, german, railway, station, located, wittenberg, germany, station, opened, august, 1859, located, berlin, halle, railway, roßlau, falkenberg, elster, railway, train, . Lutherstadt Wittenberg Hauptbahnhof until December 2016 Bahnhof Lutherstadt Wittenberg in German is a railway station located in Wittenberg Germany The station opened on 3 August 1859 is located on the Berlin Halle railway and Rosslau Falkenberg Elster railway The train services are operated by Deutsche Bahn With over 5000 passengers per day it is the most important railway station in the eastern part of the state of Saxony Anhalt Lutherstadt Wittenberg HauptbahnhofRailway junctionThe station in 2017General informationLocationWittenberg Saxony AnhaltGermanyCoordinates51 52 03 N 12 39 44 E 51 867634 N 12 662181 E 51 867634 12 662181 Coordinates 51 52 03 N 12 39 44 E 51 867634 N 12 662181 E 51 867634 12 662181Owned byDeutsche BahnOperated byDB Netz DB Station amp ServiceLine s Berlin Halle railway Rosslau Falkenberg Elster railwayPlatforms7ConstructionArchitectFranz SchwechtenArchitectural styleNeo RenaissanceOther informationStation code3863DS100 codeLW 1 IBNR8010222Category3 2 Fare zoneMDV 283 rail only 3 Websitewww bahnhof deHistoryOpened3 August 1859 163 years ago 1859 08 03 Electrified25 May 1978 44 years ago 1978 05 25 15 kV 16 2 3 Hz AC system overhead Previous names1859 1945 Bahnhof Wittenberg1945 2016 Bahnhof Lutherstadt WittenbergPassengers5000ServicesPreceding station DB Fernverkehr Following stationBerlin Sudkreuztowards Hamburg or BerlinICE 11via Stuttgart Frankfurt Erfurt Leipzig BerlinLeipzigtowards MunichBerlin Sudkreuztowards Hamburg Altona or StralsundICE 28via Nurnberg Erfurt Leipzig BerlinLeipzigtowards MunichPreceding station DB Regio Nordost Following stationZornigalltowards Stralsund Hbf or Schwedt RE 3 TerminusPreceding station DB Regio Sudost Following stationLutherstadt Wittenberg Altstadttowards Magdeburg Hbf RE 14 Lutherstadt Wittenberg Labetztowards Falkenberg Elster Lutherstadt Wittenberg Altstadttowards Dessau Hbf RB 51Preceding station S Bahn Mitteldeutschland Following stationTerminus S 2 Pratautowards Leipzig StotteritzPratautowards Halle Saale Hbf S 8 TerminusLocationLutherstadt WittenbergLocation in Saxony AnhaltShow map of Saxony AnhaltLutherstadt WittenbergLocation in GermanyShow map of GermanyLutherstadt WittenbergLocation in EuropeShow map of Europe Contents 1 Location and name 2 History 2 1 Reconstruction 3 Infrastructure 4 Train services 5 Notes 6 ReferencesLocation and name EditThe station is located in the east of Wittenberg about one kilometre from the historic city centre The Berlin Halle railway running from the northeast to the southwest and the Rosslau Falkenberg Elster railway running east west cross at the station The station was originally called only Wittenberg and later Wittenberg Prov Sachs indicating that it was in the Province of Saxony Since 1938 the city has been nicknamed Lutherstadt Luther city and the station has also been called Lutherstadt Wittenberg since the end of the Second World War It is also sometimes referred to as a Hauptbahnhof main station unofficially and by the municipality 4 The street leading to the station which was formerly called Am Bahnhof at the station is now called Am Hauptbahnhof History Edit The old building The rebuild green station The Anhalt railway built by the Berlin Anhalt Railway Company Anhalter Bahn BAE from Kothen and Dessau reached Wittenberg on 28 August 1841 On 10 September 1841 the railway was consistently in operation as far as the Anhalt station in Berlin The first Wittenberg station was also built in 1841 on the former line to the north of the city wall It still exists today and is considered one of the oldest railway station building in Germany but it is no longer used as such It is located on the street of Am Alten Bahnhof at the old station The railway facilities were reorganised in 1859 during the construction of the first railway bridge over the Elbe on a direct line from Wittenberg to Bitterfeld which was opened on 3 August 1859 In the same year a new station building was built in the Swiss chalet style It was located on the town side of the railway tracks at about the 95 0 km point of the current chainage of the line 5 The Wittenberg Falkenberg Elster railway was opened by BAE on 15 October 1875 Wittenberg had developed into a railway junction The third station of the town was opened at its current location on 13 November 1877 The architect and builder was Franz Schwechten From 1888 to 1921 the station was connected to the town centre by a metre gauge horse railway The station was destroyed by Allied air raids on 16 and 20 April 1945 Only the outer walls from the entrance building remained standing Reconstruction took place from 1948 and 1951 5 Electric operations commenced on the Berlin Halle railway in 1978 and on the Rosslau Falkenberg railway in 1985 In the spring of 1996 extensive remodelling of the station began as part of the German Unity Transport Projects Verkehrsprojekts Deutsche Einheit 8 3 upgrading of the Berlin Leipzig Halle line Three platforms on the Berlin Halle railway and a 42 m long pedestrian tunnel were completely rebuilt up to 1998 While previously access to the station had only been possible by a road running between the tracks of the lines to Bitterfeld and Dessau there has since been a direct western exit to the town The new bus station is located on the newly created station forecourt An electronic interlocking replaced several old signal boxes The new tracks have allowed trains to run through the station at up to 160 km h since the construction of the new Elbe bridge 6 Reconstruction Edit The station was rebuilt as the second green station in Germany and the station building was replaced by a new building The construction work was initially to begin in June 2012 and to be completed by the end of 2013 On 7 March 2011 the former Saxony Anhalt Minister for Construction and Transport Karl Heinz Daehre presented the idea of the first climate friendly station in Germany Natural materials were mainly used in the construction and renewable energies such as sunlight provide some of the energy for the new station building Wittenberg also transformed the area around the station and nearby parking areas Half of the proposed project cost of 3 3 million covered the acquisition of land 7 The new station opened in December 2016 8 9 The new station building was built west of the tracks and the old station building was demolished 4 Infrastructure EditThe entrance building designed by Franz Schwechten and opened in 1877 was built on an island between the tracks The tracks are not connected south of the station and the line to Dessau passes under the line to Bitterfeld In the north there is a common field of tracks between the lines and there are also facilities for freight The station building is designed like a basilica so that the entrance building benefits from daylight Schwechten s design was in the style of the Italian Renaissance 10 After the destruction of the Second World War only the outer walls were intact and the design of the entire interior comes from the post war period West of the station building is the line from Berlin to Halle with platform tracks 1 4 with track 4 lying next to the station building and tracks 2 and 3 lying next to an island platform The platforms are covered and connected by a tunnel East of the station building is the Rosslau Falkenberg Elster line with platform tracks 5 7 of which only track 6 is currently 2013 used regularly by passenger trains This platforms is not covered and can only be reached by crossing the tracks from platform 5 next to the station building Some two kilometres of the station to the northeast is the former Lutherstadt Wittenberg rail workshop Bahnbetriebswerk Lutherstadt Wittenberg Train services EditWittenberg station offers connections to the north to Berlin as well as to the south towards Halle and Leipzig To the west there are regional rail links towards Dessau and from there to Magdeburg and to the east there are connections to Falkenberg Elster and from there to Cottbus and Hoyerswerda Intercity Express and Intercity trains also stop in Wittenberg The historic town centre is about one kilometre away from the station The following services currently call at the station 11 Line Route Interval min OperatorICE 11 Hamburg Berlin Lutherstadt Wittenberg Leipzig Erfurt Frankfurt Stuttgart Munich 120 DB FernverkehrICE 28 Hamburg Berlin Lutherstadt Wittenberg Leipzig Erfurt Bamberg Nuremberg Munich 120 DB FernverkehrRE 3 Lutherstadt Wittenberg Juterbog Berlin Eberswalde Greifswald Stralsund 120 DB Regio NordostRE 14 Dessau Rosslau Coswig Lutherstadt Wittenberg Annaburg Falkenberg Individual services DB Regio SudostRB 51 Dessau Rosslau Coswig Lutherstadt Wittenberg Annaburg Falkenberg 0 60 Dessau Wittenberg 120 Wittenberg Falkenberg DB Regio SudostRB 55 Lutherstadt Wittenberg Pretzsch Bad Schmiedeberg Bad Duben Eilenburg Sat Sun in the summer season Individual services DB Regio SudostS 2 Juterbog Lutherstadt Wittenberg Grafenhainichen Bitterfeld Delitzsch Leipzig Leipzig Stotteritz 120 DB Regio SudostS 8 Juterbog Lutherstadt Wittenberg Grafenhainichen Bitterfeld Landsberg Halle 120 DB Regio SudostNotes Edit Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland German railway atlas 2009 2010 ed Schweers Wall 2009 ISBN 978 3 89494 139 0 Stationspreisliste 2023 Station price list 2023 PDF in German DB Station amp Service 28 November 2022 Retrieved 14 December 2022 Tarifzonenplan PDF Mitteldeutscher Verkehrsverbund 1 August 2021 Retrieved 22 August 2021 a b Hauptbahnhof in German Municipality of Wittenberg Retrieved 31 October 2014 a b Hilmar Spanel 1991 Zur Geschichte der Eisenbahn in und um Wittenberg 1841 1991 Schriftenreihe des Stadtgeschichtlichen Zentrums Wittenberg in German Vol 14 Wittenberg pp 34 and 93 Sachstandsbericht Verkehrsprojekte Deutsche Einheit PDF in German Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure Archived from the original PDF 608 kB on 31 December 2013 Retrieved 31 October 2014 Bahnhof der Lutherstadt Wittenberg bekommt neues klimafreundliches Empfangsgebaude in German energieportal24 de 7 March 2011 Retrieved 31 October 2014 permanent dead link Gruner Bahnhof ein neuer Standard fur die Empfangsgebaude der Zukunft PDF Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau in German 3 34 2013 Retrieved 31 October 2014 Wittenberg bekommt zweiten Grunen Bahnhof bundesweit Mitteldeutsche Zeitung in German 28 February 2013 Retrieved 31 October 2014 Manfred Berger 1980 Historische Bahnhofsbauten in German Vol 1 Sachsen Preussen Mecklenburg und Thuringen Transpress Verlag p 160 Timetables for Lutherstadt Wittenberg station in German References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lutherstadt Wittenberg Hauptbahnhof Peter Bley 1990 150 Jahre Berlin Anhaltische Eisenbahn in German Dusseldorf alba ISBN 3 87094 340 8 Portals Transport Germany Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lutherstadt Wittenberg Hauptbahnhof amp oldid 1115993092, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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