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Würzburg Hauptbahnhof

Würzburg Hauptbahnhof is a railway station for the city of Würzburg in the German state of Bavaria. It was opened in 1864[5] to the north of the inner city as a replacement for the former Ludwigsbahnhof (Ludwig's station) in the city centre, the capacity of which had been exhausted by the dramatic increase of rail traffic. Even today, Würzburg station is one of the major stations in Bavaria, since it lies at the intersection of several heavily used rail corridors. In particular, the routes in the north–south direction from Hamburg and Bremen to Munich as well as in west–east direction from the Rhine-Ruhr and Rhine-Main to Nuremberg and Vienna. Apart from Aschaffenburg Hauptbahnhof, Würzburg is the only station in Lower Franconia to be served by Intercity-Express services. With its combination of rail, tram and bus services, the station is the main hub for public transport in the city and the district of Würzburg.

Würzburg Hauptbahnhof
Through station
General information
LocationBahnhofplatz 4, Würzburg, Bavaria
Germany
Coordinates49°48′05″N 9°56′08″E / 49.80139°N 9.93556°E / 49.80139; 9.93556
Elevation181 m (594 ft)
Owned byDeutsche Bahn
Operated byDB Station&Service
Line(s)
Platforms11
Other information
Station code6945
DS100 codeNWH[1]
IBNR8000260
Category2[2]
Fare zone
  • VVM: A/100[3]
  • VRN: 640 (VVM transitional tariff)[4]
Website
  • www.bahnhof.de
  • stationsdatenbank.de
History
Opened1 June 1854
Services
Preceding station DB Fernverkehr Following station
Fulda ICE 25 Nürnberg Hbf
towards München Hbf
Frankfurt (Main) Hbf ICE 31 Nürnberg Hbf
towards Passau Hbf
Aschaffenburg Hbf ICE 41 Nürnberg Hbf
towards München Hbf
Hanau Hbf
towards Dortmund Hbf
ICE 91 Nürnberg Hbf
towards Wien Hbf
Hanau Hbf
towards Hamburg Hbf
IC 31 Nürnberg Hbf
Terminus
Preceding station DB Regio Bayern Following station
Terminus RE 10 Rottendorf
RE 20 Schweinfurt Hbf
Gemünden RE 54 Schweinfurt Hbf
towards Bamberg
Aschaffenburg Hbf RE 55 Terminus
Würzburg-Zell
towards Schlüchtern
RB 53 Rottendorf
towards Bamberg
Terminus RB 80 Würzburg Süd
RB 85 Würzburg Süd
towards Osterburken
Preceding station DB Regio Südost Following station
Terminus RE 7 Schweinfurt Hbf
towards Erfurt Hbf
RE 57 Schweinfurt Hbf
Preceding station Following station
Terminus RE 8 Lauda
Preceding station Following station
Terminus RE 80 Würzburg Süd
towards München Hbf
Location
Würzburg
Location in Bavaria
Würzburg
Location in Germany
Würzburg
Location in Europe

History Edit

 
The first Bavarian state railways, with the Ludwig Western Railway in the north connecting Würzburg to the rail network

The city of Würzburg was the capital of the Grand Duchy of Würzburg under Ferdinand III until 1814. It was then part of the territories in Franconia that were granted to the Kingdom of Bavaria by the Congress of Vienna in compensation for the loss of the Tyrol and that part of Palatinate that was east of the Rhine to Baden. Because of its remoteness within Bavaria, Würzburg was not connected by the Ludwig South-North Railway, which crossed the entire kingdom. At the urging of the Bavarian parliament, the city was connected to the railway network by the second state railway, the Ludwig Western Railway only a few years later. Construction work began in 1852 and the 43-kilometre (27 mi)-long third stage from Schweinfurt to Würzburg (now part of the Bamberg–Rottendorf railway) of the 206 km (128 mi)-long line was opened on 1 June 1854. In the fourth and final stage, the line was opened to the Bavarian border in Kahl am Main via Gemünden am Main and Aschaffenburg on 1 October 1854 (now part of the Main–Spessart railway).

The first station of 1852: the Ludwig station Edit

The first Würzburg station was named the Ludwigsbahnhof (Ludwig station) after King Ludwig I. At the request of the Ministry of War, the station was built inside the city walls, despite the higher land acquisition costs, at the exact location of the Mainfranken Theater today. This however meant, due to the already dense development, that it was possible to build only a terminal station. The area available for the station was about 400 metres (1,312 ft) long and between 50 and 100 metres (164 and 328 ft) wide and next to the station building and the train shed there was also a roundhouse and a carriage shed. It also included a workshop for the maintenance of rail vehicles and a freight warehouse. A second building was added, which was connected by tracks that had to be built on embankments that were up to five metres high due to the unevenness of the ground and as a result the building was higher than the surrounding streets.

It was designed in the Renaissance Revival style by the royal architect Gottfried von Neureuther, who designed many station buildings of the Royal Bavarian State Railways and described the Würzburg station as one of the most difficult buildings on the Ludwig Western Railway. The station building was a two-storey building, the front of which faced west to Theaterstraße, where a forecourt was designed as a formal entrance to the city. The slightly elevated ground floor, as a result of the high position of the tracks, was clad with limestone and sandstone and included, among other things, waiting rooms and a restaurant. A 100-metre (328 ft)-long and 24-metre (79 ft)-wide platform area adjoined the station building to the east. Under the 13-metre (43 ft)-high roof there were a track for passenger and freight trains and two bypass tracks. Large problems were experienced with the introduction of the tracks to the station area, as only two tracks ran through the city walls; these branched immediately after crossing the moat towards Schweinfurt and Gemünden. Sets of points had to be inserted on the bridge over the moat so that trains could be separated so that freight trains could run to the northern part of the station and passenger trains run to the southern part of the station. This limited the increase in capacity significantly, particularly for freight traffic.

Relocation of the station Edit

 
A regional train on the eastern approaches

In subsequent years the railways grew steadily. Although a lack of resources prevented rapid economic growth, as a result of the construction of new tracks, Würzburg became a railway junction. First, in 1861 construction started on a nearly 90-kilometre (56 mi)-long link between Würzburg and Ansbach station, where it connected with a line that had been built in 1859 by the town of Ansbach to connect with the Ludwig South-North Railway in Gunzenhausen. This line (which is now part of the Treuchtlingen–Würzburg railway) was completed in 1864, giving Würzburg a shorter connection to the major cities of Augsburg and Munich. Just a year later, a direct link was opened between Rottendorf and Fürth (now part of the Nuremberg–Würzburg railway), creating a much shorter than the line via Bamberg and relegating the Ludwig Western Railway to a minor role. At the same time the common section with the old route to Bamberg between Würzburg and Rottendorf was duplicated. In 1866, the Baden Odenwald Railway (Odenwaldbahn) was completed. It was last railway opened to Würzburg until the late 20th century. It was built mainly at the request of Bavaria, to connect the then Bavarian Rhenish Palatinate to its own railway network and ran from Würzburg via Osterburken and Mosbach to Heidelberg.

The new station outside the inner city Edit

The terminus could no longer absorb the traffic of the additional lines. An extension of the facilities that were tight from the start was not possible due to the density of buildings in the inner city. To provide greater capacity for passenger services, it was planned initially to shift freight and shunting to a separate location. Against the backdrop of the ever-growing rail traffic and given the operational benefits of a through station, the decision was taken in 1862 to build a new station to the north of the city beneath the Schalksberg (hill) and near the famous Würzburger Stein vineyard. At this time the area was only sparsely populated and there was enough space available for a large station yard and a through station. The construction of the station was accompanied by an extensive reorganisation of the road network. The mainly narrow and winding streets of the town centre were greatly improved by the widening of existing streets and the building of the central Schönbornstraße. The newly created Kaiserstraße connected the outlying station complex and the town. A new district was then established in the immediate vicinity of the station and in place of the former city wall a ring of parks in the English style was created. Julius-Maximilian's University and imposing Gründerzeit villas were built between the station and the banks of the Main river. In addition, a separate district for railway employees was built to the northeast of the station.

The architect Friedrich Bürklein was commissioned for the construction of the station building. He had been responsible for the construction of München Hauptbahnhof and the stations in Augsburg, Bamberg, Nördlingen, Nuremberg and Bad Kissingen. Construction started in 1863 and it was completed in 1869.

The station building was an imposing building, which consisted of a two-story central hall, which was bounded by two raised side wings. On the ground floor the entire front of the central hall was composed of arcade-like archways, which gave access to the inside of the station. There were, in addition to a salon for the king, the usual facilities of a station at the time, such as waiting rooms for four classes, two restaurants, ticketing and baggage counter and several administrative offices. The rooms on the upper floor were used as apartments for the staff. The platforms were one level above the street level as they were built on an embankment. Therefore, in the middle of the entrance building, there was a staircase to the concourse supported by 14 marble columns.

The railway tracks were built over a very large area. Sidings, locomotive and carriage maintenance shops and warehouses were built to the north of the platform area. To the east there were the facilities of the Grand Duchy of Baden State Railway, which operated the Odenwald Railway towards Heidelberg, as it ran through Bavaria for only about 20 kilometres (12 mi).

Destruction during World War II and reconstruction Edit

Until shortly before the end of the Second World War people still living in Würzburg had the illusion that the city would be spared an air raid because no significant industry was located in the city and it had three hospitals. However, Würzburg had great importance for rail transport, the logistical backbone of German armaments. On 23 February 1945, during an air strike of the United States Army Air Force, which was actually directed at Bayreuth, a large part of the station area was destroyed or severely degraded by about 200 bombs. Although the only threat from Würzburg for the Allies had been eliminated and another attack seemed unlikely, starting on the evening of 16 March 1945 in England, about 230 four-engined Avro Lancaster bombers of the Royal Air Force flew to Würzburg. In this destruction, considered one of the most devastating in the war, about 5,000 people lost their lives. In addition, 90 percent of the buildings in the inner city were damaged, which made Würzburg one of the most devastated cities of World War II. The city, which had often been called the "pearl of the baroque", was reduced to a pile of rubble within 19 minutes. Following the destruction on 23 February of the station built by Friedrich Bürklein, the station building of the Ludwig station was now also destroyed; since the closing of railway operations it had been used as a school.

The ruins of the Ludwig station were completely removed up to the early 1960s and today's Mainfranken Theater Würzburg was built in its place. Shortly after the war work began on the reconstruction of the railway facilities. Since the station had been almost completely destroyed, the then Deutsche Bundesbahn and the responsible architect, Bundesbahn inspector Hans Kern decided against a reconstruction of the building and to build a new building. It was built in the unadorned style of 1950s modernism. The wide front was completely glazed and concrete pillars supported the slightly overhanging roof. Construction of the entrance hall began in 1952 and it was opened on 2 October 1954 at the conclusion of the electrification of the Fürth–Würzburg line. After further stages of construction, the building was completed in 1961. Inside there was a large entrance hall, which among other things housed a ticket office and various shops. The northern side of the hall was adorned by an attached stone mosaic of the Eichstätt artist Alois Wünsche-Mitterecker that had a cross-sectional image of a class 44 steam locomotive at its original size. As repeated vibrations caused by departing trains broke part of the wall panelling, the mosaic was removed in 1958 and installed in the Nuremberg Transport Museum.

The division of Germany and recent development since the 1980s Edit

 
Just five kilometers from Würzburg Hauptbahnhof, on the Main Viaduct, Veitshöchheim, an ICE 3 train reaches 200 km/h

Würzburg Hauptbahnhof has a central location in Germany and was always a major hub for rail transport, but after the division of Germany its importance increased again. While rail traffic between the north and the southeast of the country had previously been distributed over several routes, now the lines through the Thuringian Forest, the Franconian Forest and the Vogtland were truncated. All the trains that had to be operated along the Inner German border, including the routes to Munich via Würzburg and Nuremberg caused a considerable increase in the workload for Würzburg.

In the timetable of 1979/80, 300 passenger, 250 freight trains and 100 other trains operated through Würzburg station on weekdays. About 60 passenger and 50 freight trains were shunted at the station.[6]

The high utilisation of the access routes led to the construction of two new lines for high-speed traffic (Mannheim–Stuttgart and Hanover–Würzburg) in order to clear the old lines of express trains. During the 1991 timetable, the first Intercity-Express sets served Würzburg, still under the "Intercity" name. In May 1992, Würzburg became an ICE stop with the establishment of the Hamburg–Würzburg–Munich ICE service.[7]

The station today Edit

Infrastructure Edit

Entrance building Edit

Since the construction of the new station building, it has been changed only slightly since its completion so that the basic structure of the original design is still preserved almost completely. In place of the wall paintings that have been removed there are now billboards. The former ticket office was converted into a travel center that was modified in the 1990s to fit the new corporate design of Deutsche Bahn. In addition, the entrance building now housed a baggage room, a "ServicePoint", a food shop, a book shop and a small kiosk for tobacco products and magazines. In the summer of 2006, two new sales pavilions were established for this purpose and an older bakery was removed and the ServicePoint had to be moved to the side of the hall. At the eastern end there was an office of the Bahnhofsmission charity, which provides assistance to travellers and the homeless; until the beginning of 2008, this has since been housed in the west wing of the building. Before the start of the platform underpass there is a toilet facility, which has been leased to a private operator since 2006. There have been repeated complaints in recent years regarding its cleanliness and hygiene to Deutsche Bahn, which notes, however, that a comprehensive renovation of the facility will be undertaken during the modernisation of the whole building.[8] The restaurant Bürgerstuben was housed in the western part of the building until June 2007. Its operation was terminated in October 2006 by the operator, SSP Deutschland, the successor to Deutsche Bahn's own catering operation Mitropa, in preparation for the planned station modernisation as part of the "arcades project" (Arcaden-Projekt, see below). Since Deutsche Bahn reversed the termination of the operation of the restaurant after the collapse of the arcades project, the reconstructed restaurant has been staffed by a new operator.[9] On the top floor in the western part of the building there is a conference centre and in the eastern part there are business premises. In mid-2007, work started on the establishment of a DB Lounge for first-class travellers and bahn.comfort (BahnCard) customers, which was forecast for completion in 2011.[10]

As part of the economic stimulus package, Deutsche Bahn is renovating the station building with energy-related measures.

Platforms and railway tracks Edit

 
The whole station premises looking to the southeast
 
Platform underpass

The station still has extensive trackage used by both passenger and freight trains. The southern two tracks (201 and 202) are only for freight. The platform next to the station building is used for parking inter-city and has no rail services. On the remaining five island platforms the following passenger services are carried out:

  • platform B: tracks 2 and 3 (local traffic), length: 435 m
  • platform C: tracks 4 and 5 (long-distance and local traffic), length: 473/444 m
  • platform D: tracks 6 and 7 (long-distance and local traffic), length: 417/365 m
  • platform E: tracks 8 and 9 (local traffic), length: 300 m
  • platform F: tracks 10 and 11 (local traffic), length: 323/329 m

All platforms are 76 cm (30 in) high,[11] which is one of the two standard heights used in Germany. Step-free entry is still not possible to any one of trains running, as Deutsche Bahn has no long-distance trains with entrance heights of 76 cm (30 in) and the regional trains used here are mostly of older construction and can only be entered by taking several steps at the entrances. The DB subsidiary Westfrankenbahn on its service to Bad Mergentheim partly uses new class 642 diesel multiple units, which are also not barrier-free despite their low floors, as their entrances are 55 cm (22 in) high, so that passengers have to step down. The length of three of the five platforms (B, C and D) make them suitable for long-distance services and they are divided into five platform sections. Platforms C and D are over 410 metres (1,350 ft) long and almost their whole length is required for full-length Intercity-Express (ICE) trains. At the end of 2006, the previously common split-flap platform displays were replaced on the platforms and in the underpass with modern screens using LCD technology.

The platforms can be reached through a tunnel located at street level. Like the platforms, it is not designed for the current passenger traffic. The platforms are not accessible for the disabled, although the long-distance platforms and platform F have baggage conveyor belts. But at present there are no escalators, lifts or ramps. With the start of ICE services in the early 1990s, an additional platform (F) was built because the "home" platform was converted into parking for ICE sets at the same time.

In 1959, a DrS interlocking was put into operation. The system, which cost 4.7 million Deutschmarks (DM), replaced five old signal boxes and saved 28 positions. In 1969, the system was supplemented by a shunting interlocking system (SPDRs 600 technology). This DM 1.2 million system saved eight positions.[6]

In the 1970s, Würzburg station was upgraded for the introduction of the Hanover–Würzburg new line. The tracks were redesigned so that trains on the new line could reach all platform tracks. To increase the number of simultaneous incoming and outgoing trains, the new line was placed between the two tracks of the Würzburg–Aschaffenburg line. At the same time it would be possible, with fully occupied platform tracks, for 750 m (2,460 ft) long freight trains take to pass through the rebuilt station. For these and other requirements, a step-by-step schedule was established for the upgrade of the station.[12]

 
Extensive track work at the west end of the station (June 1987)

To meet the increasing performance requirements for the construction of the new line and the third track to Rottendorf, the west end of the station was completely rebuilt and the east end was partially rebuilt.[6] In 1984, a new signal box was into operation.[13] From 1989[14] until 1999, the station entrances were extensively remodelled. The performance of the node was improved by the installation of slimmer sets of points and improvements to the signalling systems. The track upgrade supported an increase in speeds from 40 to 60 km/h (25 to 37 mph) at the east end and from 60 to 80 km/h (37 to 50 mph) at the west end. The exit for the high speed line can be operated at 100 km/h (62 mph). Moreover, the traffic flows were designed so that trains would run at the entrance and exit largely without crossing paths and freight operations are concentrated on the south side of the station. These measures have substantially increased the capacity of the tracks and operations can now be handled with less noise. The travel time savings for long-distance operations is about two minutes and in conjunction with improvements to the Nuremberg–Würzburg line about seven minutes. The cost of the upgrade amounted to about DM 115 million (about €60 million).[15] As early as 1988 to 1991, the upgrade on the eastern end had raised speeds from 40 to 60 km/h (25 to 37 mph).[16]

Station forecourt Edit

 
The station forecourt with a dummy of the St Kilian fountain, which was erected at the beginning of the rehabilitation. The station building is in the background.

The station forecourt extends from the entrance building to the Röntgenring and Haugerring on the inside of the ring of parks on the site of the former walls. It is bounded to the east and west by two lines of pavilions harbouring various shops.

The St Kilian fountain stands on a pedestal in the middle of the forecourt, which was inaugurated in July 1895 by Prince Regent Luitpold and is the only existing remnant of the former station. The St Kilian fountain was a gift from the Prince Regent to Würzburg; after this the Franconia fountains were built in front of the Residence in honour of Luitpold.[17]

A bronze statue of St. Kilian stood over the basin of the fountain from 1895 to 1943. This was removed in 1943 to melt down for the production of armaments. The statue was bought back from a Hamburg scrap yard and restored on 8 July 1949.[18] The fountain made out of Carrara marble was last sandblasted in the 1970s. Since then, the substance has deteriorated and become porous. Since it was unsafe, it had to be propped up for several years.

A renovation could not be carried out until April 2007. The fountain was dismantled over a few days and removed in pieces to the nearby Frankenhalle. It was restored and then rebuilt on the station forecourt. Where possible, the old parts were reused but new parts were also used based on the original model. The cost of the renovation of the 100-year-old structure is estimated at €1 million, which was borne by the city and the state of Bavaria. It was re-inaugurated on 24 July 2009.[19] The Franconian apostle St Kilian crowns the fountain and faces the city. Fishing and wine growing are shown in the relief.[20]

The terminal loop of the tram track runs around the St Kilian fountain, which has two tram stops.

Services Edit

 
Western track field in front of Würzburg station, in the centre is the ramp of the high-speed line

Lines Edit

Several major rail corridors cross at Würzburg Hauptbahnhof. All lines are electrified and duplicated and the highly trafficked Würzburg–Rottendorf section has three tracks. The high-speed line from Fulda is scheduled for 250 km/h (155 mph) operations for the most part. Its continuation to Nuremberg can partially be operated at speeds of up to 200 km/h (124 mph). The other routes, which mainly handle regional traffic, operate at speeds of 120 to 160 km/h (75 to 99 mph). The following is a summary of timetable routes (KBS) that begin or end here:

Long-distance lines Edit

Würzburg Hauptbahnhof is connected by the following services to the rail network (as of the 2018 timetable):

Line Route Frequency Stock
ICE 25 Lübeck HamburgHamburg-Harburg HannoverGöttingenKassel-WilhelmshöheFuldaWürzburg HBFNurembergIngolstadtMunich Individual services ICE 2, ICE 1
Hamburg-AltonaHamburg-Dammtor Hourly
Bremen Every 2 hours
ICE 31 DortmundHagenWuppertalSolingenCologneBonnKoblenzMainzFrankfurt AirportFrankfurt (Main)HanauWürzburg HBF – Nuremberg – Ingolstadt HBF – Munich 1 train pair ICE T
ICE 41 Dortmund – Bochum EssenDuisburgDüsseldorfKöln Messe/Deutz – Frankfurt Airport – Frankfurt (Main) – Aschaffenburg Würzburg HBF – Nuremberg – Ingolstadt – Munich Hourly ICE 3
Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof – MainzWiesbaden – Köln Messe/Deutz – Düsseldorf – Duisburg – Essen – Bochum – Dortmund – Hamm (Westf)SoestLippstadtPaderbornAltenbekenWarburg (Westf) – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Fulda – 1 train pair
ICE 91 Dortmund – Hagen – Wuppertal – Solingen – Cologne – Bonn – Koblenz – Mainz – Frankfurt Airport – Frankfurt (Main) – Hanau – Würzburg HBF – Nuremberg – Regensburg – Plattling – PassauLinzSt. PöltenVienna Every 2 hours ICE T
Bochum – Essen – Duisburg – Düsseldorf –
Hamburg-Altona – Hamburg-Dammtor – Hamburg – Hamburg-HarburgHannoverGöttingen – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Fulda – 1 train pair
IC 26 Hamburg-Altona – Hamburg-Dammtor – Hamburg – Hamburg-Harburg – LüneburgUelzen – Celle – Hannover – Göttingen – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Fulda – Würzburg HBF – Steinach (b. Rothenburg) – AnsbachTreuchtlingenDonauwörthAugsburg München-PasingMünchen OstRosenheimBad EndorfPrien a. ChiemseeÜberseeTraunsteinFreilassing – Piding – Bad Reichenhall – Berchtesgaden 1 train pair IC
Buchloe – Kaufbeuren – Kempten – Immenstadt – Sonthofen – Oberstdorf
IC 31 KielNeumünster Hamburg – Hamburg-Harburg – BremenOsnabrückMünster (Westf) – Dortmun – Hagen – Wuppertal – Solingen – Cologne – Bonn – Koblenz – Mainz – Frankfurt Airport – Frankfurt (Main) – Hanau – Würzburg HBF – Nuremberg (– Regensburg – Straubing – Plattling – Passau) 1 train pair IC
Hamburg Altona – 2 train pairs
EN Hamburg-Altona – Hamburg-Dammtor – Hamburg – Göttingen – Würzburg HBF – Nuremberg – Augsburg – Munich – Rosenheim – KufsteinWörglJenbachInnsbruck 1 train pair ÖBB-Nightjet
EN Cologne – Bonn – Koblenz – Mainz – Frankfurt Airport – Frankfurt (Main) SüdWürzburg HBF – Nuremberg – Regensburg – Passau – WelsLinz – Amstetten – St. Pölten – Vienna – Vienna (car loading) 1 train pair ÖBB-Nightjet

Due to its convenient location, long-distance trains have run from all over Germany and neighbouring countries to Würzburg station since the early days of rail travel. Therefore, it was also served on several routes of the Trans Europ Express (TEE) network, which was established in 1957. With a single domestic route and two routes to Vienna and Klagenfurt, the only non-German cities to be served directly were in nearby Austria.

  • TEA 21/22: Rheinpfeil, Dortmund–Frankfurt–Würzburg–(Nuremberg)–Munich (1965–1971)
  • TEA 90/91: Blauer Enzian, Hamburg–Würzburg–Munich–Klagenfurt (1965–1979)
  • TEA 26/27: Prinz Eugen, Bremen–Nuremberg–Würzburg–Vienna (1971–1978)

After Deutsche Bundesbahn gradually introduced its increasingly popular Intercity network with two-class trains from 1968, the first class only TEE services were phased out.

 
ICE meeting in the eastern track field
 
An ICE 3 passes over the ramp to the west of the station at the start of the Hanover–Würzburg high-speed line

On 27 May 1988, the Fulda–Würzburg section was the first major section of the Hanover–Würzburg high-speed line to be put into operation. The official ceremonial opening of operations by the InterCityExperimental was held at Würzburg station at 12:58. The opening of the section was celebrated with a festival at the station on 28 and 29 May, with many shuttles services running to Fulda. The first scheduled passenger service on the new line, IC 686 (Herrenchiemsee) left Würzburg station on 29 May at 9:17. The first scheduled service arriving regularly on the high-speed line was IC 581 (Veit Stoß) at 10:42.[21]

With the start of the summer 1991 timetable, Intercity–Express trains were put into operation as Deutsche Bundesbahn's highest train class, running on the Hamburg–Munich line via Hanover, Frankfurt (Main), Mannheim and Stuttgart, although not through Würzburg. After delivery of further ICE sets from 31 March 1992, a second connection was established between Hamburg and Munich, which ran south of Fulda on a more easterly route through the northern Bavarian cities of Würzburg and Nuremberg. With the delivery of the ICE 2, which allowed trains to be coupled and uncoupled, half a train ran every two hours to Bremen from 1997. By 1992 traffic on the north–south line through Würzburg was almost completely converted to ICE connections, while the east–west line was for a long time still operated by Intercity services. After the opening of the Cologne–Frankfurt high-speed line in 2002, the existing Intercity services from the Ruhr to Nuremberg or Munich were mostly replaced by two hourly ICE services. Since their delivery, ICE 3 sets capable of 300 km/h (186 mph) operations are used. After the integration of the Nuremberg–Ingolstadt high-speed railway in the nationwide long-distance network in December 2006, this route was received an hourly service and more coupled trains operated to various locations. At the timetable change in December 2007, the Intercity/EuroCity service from Dortmund to Vienna was converted to ICE T tilting trains, so now Würzburg is served by four of the five Deutsche Bahn ICE train classes.

 
Two ICE trains of line 25 come together in Würzburg Hauptbahnhof

Since December 2006, services to Würzburg Hauptbahnhof have been generally scheduled to run through the station at 30 minutes past the hour, to maximise connectivity between long-distance and regional services. Since the beginning of the 2007 timetable ICE line 41 has served Würzburg station hourly.

Regional transport routes Edit

 
A Modus set and a diesel multiple unit of class 612 in Würzburg Hauptbahnhof

Würzburg Hauptbahnhof is connected by the following services to the rail network:

Train type Route Frequency Stock
RE 7 / RE 57 Würzburg HBFSchweinfurt – Ebenhausen (Unterfr) Bad Kissingen Every 2 hours class 612
Münnerstadt – Bad Neustadt (Saale) – Mellrichstadt – Grimmenthal – Suhl – Zella-Mehlis – Plaue (Thür) – Arnstadt – Neudietendorf – Erfurt
RE 8 Würzburg HbfLaudaOsterburken – Möckmühl – Bad FriedrichshallNeckarsulmHeilbronnBietigheim-BissingenLudwigsburg Stuttgart Hourly Stadler Flirt 3
RE 10 Würzburg HbfRottendorf – Dettelbach – Buchbrunn-Mainstockheim – Kitzingen – Iphofen – Markt Bibart – Neustadt (Aisch) – Emskirchen – Siegelsdorf – Fürth (Bay)Nuremberg Hourly class 440
RE 10 Würzburg HbfRottendorf – Dettelbach – Buchbrunn-Mainstockheim – Kitzingen Hourly (peak) class 440

class 425

RE 20 Franken-Thüringen-Express:
Würzburg HbfSchweinfurtHaßfurtBamberg (– ForchheimErlangenFürth (Bay) – Nuremberg)
Every 2 hours class 442
RE 54 Main-Spessart-Express (MSX):
Bamberg – Haßfurt – Schweinfurt – Würzburg – Gemünden – Aschaffenburg – Hanau – Maintal – Frankfurt
Every 2 hours class 445
(Twindexx Vario)
RE 55 (Bamberg –) Würzburg Hbf – Karlstadt – Gemünden – Lohr – Aschaffenburg – Hanau – Offenbach (Main)Frankfurt (Main) Süd – Frankfurt (Main) Every 2 hours, some trains continuing to Bamberg
RB 53 (Schlüchtern – Sterbfritz –) Jossa – Obersinn – Mittelsinn – Burgsinn – Rieneck – Gemünden – Wernfeld – Karlstadt – Himmelstadt – Retzbach-Zellingen – Thüngersheim – Veitshöchheim – Würzburg-Zell – Würzburg Hbf – Rottendorf – Seligenstadt – Bergtheim – Essleben – Waigolshausen – Schweinfurt – Schweinfurt MitteSchweinfurt Stadt – Schonungen – Haßfurt – Zeil (Main) – Ebelsbach-Eltmann – Oberhaid – Bamberg Hourly class 440
RB 53 Karlstadt – Himmelstadt – Retzbach-Zellingen – Thüngersheim – Veitshöchheim – Würzburg-Zell – Würzburg Hbf Hourly (peak), continuing as RE10 to Nuremberg class 440
RB 53 Würzburg Hbf – Rottendorf – Seligenstadt – Bergtheim – Essleben – Waigolshausen – Schweinfurt – Schweinfurt Mitte – Schweinfurt Stadt Hourly (peak) class 425
class 440
RB 79 Aschaffenburg – Gemünden – Würzburg Hbf – Rottendorf – Seligenstadt – Schweinfurt – Bamberg Some trains class 425

class 440

RE 80 Würzburg Hbf – Ansbach – Treuchtlingen (– Donauwörth – Augsburg Hbf – München-Pasing – Munich) Hourly (to Treuchtlingen),
every 2 hours (to Munich)
class 462

class 463

RB 80 Würzburg Hbf – Würzburg Süd – Winterhausen – Goßmannsdorf – Ochsenfurt – Marktbreit Hourly (peak) class 425

class 440

RB 85 Würzburg Hbf – Würzburg Süd – Reichenberg – Geroldshausen – Kirchheim (Unterfr) – Gaubüttelbrunn – Wittighausen – Zimmern – Grünsfeld – Gerlachsheim – Lauda – Osterburken Hourly class 440

class 425

As of 11 December 2022

All Regional-Express services (except the Mainfranken-Thüringen-Express) and the Regionalbahn services to Treuchtlingen reach Würzburg station just before the half-hour and leave it a few minutes after the half-hour. Thus there are connections between them and with two regular long-distance services.

Connections with trams and buses Edit

Würzburg station is also a central transfer station for trams and buses. In the station forecourt are the Würzburg tram stops of Hauptbahnhof West and Hauptbahnhof Ost (east). This division of departure platforms for trams to the inner city (west) and Grombühl (east) was established in 1996 as a "temporary" measure during the construction of a new station, which has not yet commenced. Immediately west of the station forecourt is the bus station where the majority of urban and regional bus routes start.

Future development Edit

In 2004, the city of Würzburg published plans for the post office area to the west of the station building by the Essen company Management für Immobilien AG (mfi), which would involve building a shopping centre with an area of 20,000 square metres, including a wedding hall. The so-called Würzburg Arcaden (Wurzburg arcades) would extend to the current bus station, where the Quellenbach parking station would be built. The ambitious schedule provided for a completion of the project by the end of 2006. A citizens' initiative warned against drastic changes to the ring of parks on the former wall, which would have been affected, and demanded a referendum. Before that was carried out, however, the project was abandoned in October 2004 because of differences with the managers of the venue.

 
The post office tower, to the left is the development area for the Arcades
 
Winning design of the architectural competition to redesign the station environment

After the project had failed at the first attempt, mfi brought a revised version to the table in July 2005. This did not include the originally planned development of the bus station, instead, the arcades would be built on the west wing of the main station and a connection to the station building would be created. The profits from the sale of the west wing were intended to be invest in the modernisation of the station building by Deutsche Bahn. Mfi pledged to finance the redevelopment of the station forecourt, the relocation of the bus station on the eastern side of the station and the greening of its current location. Far-reaching changes were also planned in the layout of roads and tram tracks, so that sections of the Haugerring and Röntgenring (the streets on the south side of the ring of parks) would have been widened to five lanes and the tramline to Grombühl would have been relocated from the Haugerring to Haugerglacisstraße (on the north side of the ring of parks next to the station).

On 14 December 2005, the council agreed by a narrow margin to the construction of Würzburg Arcaden and so paved the way for the €250 million project. Finally, in mid-2006, an architectural competition for the redevelopment of the station environment was started, which selected the Stuttgart office of Auer+Weber+Assoziierte and the Hamburg landscape architects, WES & Partner.

The citizens' initiative Ringpark-in-Gefahr ("Ring Park in danger") succeeded in having a referendum called, which took place on 3 December 2006. The proponents of the initiative warned of, despite the planned restoration of the bus station area to the ring park, impending gridlock and the desolation of the inner city after the opening of the proposed shopping centre. With a turnout of over 40 percent, the Wurzburg citizens decided by about 51 to 49 percent, to support the joint project of mfi, Deutsche Bahn and the city—a majority of 985 in favour. Many people complained after the vote that the voting slip was confusing and difficult to understand and more than 12 percent of all votes cast were invalid.

2007: further development after the breakdown of Würzburg Arcaden Edit

 
The short term car park on the eastern side of the station building is to be used for the bus station and the new tram line towards Grombühl

After the referendum was put the federal parliamentarian, Walter Kolbow, who, like the state parliamentarian Rainer Boutter (both SPD), had criticized the coupling of the station redevelopment and the arcade project before the vote, called for the redevelopment to be carried out in several stages. At his initiative, a four-hour summit meeting was held on 12 March 2007 between the then Mayor of Würzburg, Pia Beckmann and the CEO of DB Station&Service, Wolf-Dieter Siebert. Federal and state grants of up to 80 percent of the cost of the renovation of the platforms and their access had already been largely secured, and it was suggested at the meeting that €8 million for the renovation of the entrance building in 2011/2012 was on the way. Deutsche Bahn would provide €3 million and the city of Würzburg would be able to put together €5 million. To keep the city's contribution to a minimum, Mayor Pia Beckmann had brought a "stripped down" version to the discussion, which did not require the development of the second floor. Despite their initial opposition, Deutsche Bahn finally accepted this proposal and also waived the requirement that the City fund €5 million of the cost.[22]

Furthermore, the city is planning extensive changes in the station environment. This will mean that the station forecourt will have a uniform design and more attractive pavilion shops will be built. In addition, the conversion of the current location of the bus station into parkland and the installation of the bus station on the eastern side of the station is planned. Land there that is currently still owned by subsidiaries of Deutsche Bahn is required in return for the city's participation in the rebuilding of station. In particular, as the Würzburg tramway is crowded even after the reorganisation of the tram service, the construction of a central tram stop in front of the entrance building is required. These projects are to be taken forward after the completion of the renovation of the station.

Remediation for the 2018 state garden show Edit

According to Deutsche Bahn, the station is to be rehabilitated for the State Garden Show 2018 from March 2010. The redevelopment of the eastern part of the station building is currently (as of February 2013) expected to be completed in the spring of 2013. The first floor offices are also to be renewed. In addition, the station underpass will be built, including the installation of lifts to the platforms. Likewise, a completely new toilet facility will be built. The barrier-free upgrade of the station will cost €32 million.

See also Edit

References Edit

  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. ^ "Wabenplan des VVM" (PDF). Verkehrsverbund Mainfranken. 1 August 2020. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
  4. ^ "Wabenplan" (PDF). Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Neckar. February 2021. Retrieved 21 February 2021.
  5. ^ "Hauptbahnhof – WürzburgWiki".
  6. ^ a b c Hans Dieter Baumgärtel (1980). "Das neue SpDrS-600-Zentralstellwerk Würzburg". Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau (in German). 29 (10): 719–722.
  7. ^ Marcus Grahnert. "ICE-Einsätze ab 1991" (in German). Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  8. ^ Manuela Göbel (15 May 2007). "Bahnhofsklo: Teuer und dreckig". Main-Post (in German).
  9. ^ Manuela Göbel (20 June 2007). "Bahnhof ohne Restaurant". Main-Post (in German).
  10. ^ Kirsten Denecke, DB Fernverkehr (13 June 2007). Talk täglich (Television production) (in German). Bahn TV.
  11. ^ "Platform information for Würzburg Hbf" (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  12. ^ Helmut Maak (1977). "Der Entwurf der Neubaustrecke Hannover – Würzburg, Streckenabschnitt hessisch/bayerische Landesgrenze – Würzburg". Die Bundesbahn (in German). 53 (12): 883–893. ISSN 0007-5876.
  13. ^ Bundesbahndirektion Nürnberg, Projektgruppe Hannover–Würzburg Süd der Bahnbauzentrale, ed. (April 1986). Neubaustrecke Hannover–Würzburg. Der Südabschnitt Fulda–Würzburg (in German). Deutsche Bundesbahn. p. 33. (Brochure, 40 pp)
  14. ^ Rüdiger Block (1991). "ICE-Rennbahn: Die Neubaustrecken". Eisenbahn-Kurier (in German) (21: Special: Hochgeschwindigkeitsverkehr): 36–45. ISSN 0170-5288.
  15. ^ Carsten Lorenzen, Bernhard Lindenberger (1999). "Ausbaustrecke Würzburg–Iphofen–Nürnberg". Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau (in German). 48: 821 ff.
  16. ^ "Bald acht Minuten schneller durch Franken". Die Bahn Informiert (in German) (3): 16–17. 1992.
  17. ^ Stadt Würzburg, ed. (c. 2008). Kiliansbrunnen. "Ein Brunnen als Geschenk" (in German). Prospekt.
  18. ^ Robert Meier (2005). "Der Heilige Kilian". Feurich-Keks und Zucker-Bär (in German). pp. 68–69.
  19. ^ "Unser Kiliansbrunnen ist wieder da" (in German). Freundeskreises Geschichtswerkstatt Würzburg. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  20. ^ Erika Kerestely (2008). Würzburg. Stadtführer mit farbigem Stadtplan (in German). Würzburg: Stürtz Stadtführer. Verlagshaus Würzburg GmbH & Co KG. p. 75. ISBN 978-3-8003-1929-9.
  21. ^ "Neubauabschnitt Fulda - Würzburg fertiggestellt". Eisenbahn-Journal (in German) (6): 4–10. 1988. ISSN 0720-051X.
  22. ^ Manuela Göbel (12 July 2007). "Die Bahn bewegt sich doch". Main-Post (in German).

Sources Edit

  • Erich Preuß (ed.). "Würzburg Hbf". Das große Archiv der deutschen Bahnhöfe (in German). GeraMond.
  • Suse Schmuck (2004). Der Bahnhof und sein Platz (in German). Würzburg: Schöningh. ISBN 3-87717-811-1.
  • Ulrich Wagner (1994). Würzburg. Ein verlorenes Stadtbild (in German). Gudensberg-Gleichen: Wartberg. ISBN 3-86134-225-1.
  • Hans-Peter Schäfer (1979). "Planung und Bau der Hauptstrecken bis 1879". Die Entstehung des mainfränkischen Eisenbahn-Netzes (in German). Würzburg: Institut für Geographie (1). ISSN 0510-9833.

External links Edit

  • "Track plan of Würzburg Hauptbahnhof" (PDF; 258.97 KB) (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Retrieved 21 April 2013.

würzburg, hauptbahnhof, railway, station, city, würzburg, german, state, bavaria, opened, 1864, north, inner, city, replacement, former, ludwigsbahnhof, ludwig, station, city, centre, capacity, which, been, exhausted, dramatic, increase, rail, traffic, even, t. Wurzburg Hauptbahnhof is a railway station for the city of Wurzburg in the German state of Bavaria It was opened in 1864 5 to the north of the inner city as a replacement for the former Ludwigsbahnhof Ludwig s station in the city centre the capacity of which had been exhausted by the dramatic increase of rail traffic Even today Wurzburg station is one of the major stations in Bavaria since it lies at the intersection of several heavily used rail corridors In particular the routes in the north south direction from Hamburg and Bremen to Munich as well as in west east direction from the Rhine Ruhr and Rhine Main to Nuremberg and Vienna Apart from Aschaffenburg Hauptbahnhof Wurzburg is the only station in Lower Franconia to be served by Intercity Express services With its combination of rail tram and bus services the station is the main hub for public transport in the city and the district of Wurzburg Wurzburg HauptbahnhofThrough stationGeneral informationLocationBahnhofplatz 4 Wurzburg BavariaGermanyCoordinates49 48 05 N 9 56 08 E 49 80139 N 9 93556 E 49 80139 9 93556Elevation181 m 594 ft Owned byDeutsche BahnOperated byDB Station amp ServiceLine s Wurzburg Hannover KBS 351 Wurzburg Stuttgart KBS 780 Wurzburg Aschaffenburg KBS 800 Wurzburg Nuremberg KBS 805 Wurzburg Treuchtlingen KBS 920 Platforms11Other informationStation code6945DS100 codeNWH 1 IBNR8000260Category2 2 Fare zoneVVM A 100 3 VRN 640 VVM transitional tariff 4 Websitewww bahnhof de stationsdatenbank deHistoryOpened1 June 1854ServicesPreceding station DB Fernverkehr Following stationFuldatowards Hamburg Altona ICE 25 Nurnberg Hbftowards Munchen HbfFrankfurt Main Hbftowards Hamburg Altona ICE 31 Nurnberg Hbftowards Passau HbfAschaffenburg Hbftowards Dortmund Hbf or Essen Hbf ICE 41 Nurnberg Hbftowards Munchen HbfHanau Hbftowards Dortmund Hbf ICE 91 Nurnberg Hbftowards Wien HbfHanau Hbftowards Hamburg Hbf IC 31 Nurnberg HbfTerminusPreceding station DB Regio Bayern Following stationTerminus RE 10 Rottendorftowards Nurnberg HbfRE 20 Schweinfurt Hbftowards Nurnberg HbfGemundentowards Frankfurt Main Hbf RE 54 Schweinfurt Hbftowards BambergAschaffenburg Hbftowards Frankfurt Main Hbf RE 55 TerminusWurzburg Zelltowards Schluchtern RB 53 Rottendorftowards BambergTerminus RB 80 Wurzburg Sudtowards TreuchtlingenRB 85 Wurzburg Sudtowards OsterburkenPreceding station DB Regio Sudost Following stationTerminus RE 7 Schweinfurt Hbftowards Erfurt HbfRE 57 Schweinfurt Hbftowards Bad KissingenPreceding station Following stationTerminus RE 8 Laudatowards Stuttgart HbfPreceding station Following stationTerminus RE 80 Wurzburg Sudtowards Munchen HbfLocationWurzburgLocation in BavariaShow map of BavariaWurzburgLocation in GermanyShow map of GermanyWurzburgLocation in EuropeShow map of Europe Contents 1 History 1 1 The first station of 1852 the Ludwig station 1 2 Relocation of the station 1 2 1 The new station outside the inner city 1 2 2 Destruction during World War II and reconstruction 1 2 3 The division of Germany and recent development since the 1980s 2 The station today 2 1 Infrastructure 2 1 1 Entrance building 2 1 2 Platforms and railway tracks 2 1 3 Station forecourt 2 2 Services 2 2 1 Lines 2 2 2 Long distance lines 2 2 3 Regional transport routes 2 2 4 Connections with trams and buses 3 Future development 3 1 2007 further development after the breakdown of Wurzburg Arcaden 3 1 1 Remediation for the 2018 state garden show 4 See also 5 References 6 Sources 7 External linksHistory Edit nbsp The first Bavarian state railways with the Ludwig Western Railway in the north connecting Wurzburg to the rail networkThe city of Wurzburg was the capital of the Grand Duchy of Wurzburg under Ferdinand III until 1814 It was then part of the territories in Franconia that were granted to the Kingdom of Bavaria by the Congress of Vienna in compensation for the loss of the Tyrol and that part of Palatinate that was east of the Rhine to Baden Because of its remoteness within Bavaria Wurzburg was not connected by the Ludwig South North Railway which crossed the entire kingdom At the urging of the Bavarian parliament the city was connected to the railway network by the second state railway the Ludwig Western Railway only a few years later Construction work began in 1852 and the 43 kilometre 27 mi long third stage from Schweinfurt to Wurzburg now part of the Bamberg Rottendorf railway of the 206 km 128 mi long line was opened on 1 June 1854 In the fourth and final stage the line was opened to the Bavarian border in Kahl am Main via Gemunden am Main and Aschaffenburg on 1 October 1854 now part of the Main Spessart railway The first station of 1852 the Ludwig station Edit The first Wurzburg station was named the Ludwigsbahnhof Ludwig station after King Ludwig I At the request of the Ministry of War the station was built inside the city walls despite the higher land acquisition costs at the exact location of the Mainfranken Theater today This however meant due to the already dense development that it was possible to build only a terminal station The area available for the station was about 400 metres 1 312 ft long and between 50 and 100 metres 164 and 328 ft wide and next to the station building and the train shed there was also a roundhouse and a carriage shed It also included a workshop for the maintenance of rail vehicles and a freight warehouse A second building was added which was connected by tracks that had to be built on embankments that were up to five metres high due to the unevenness of the ground and as a result the building was higher than the surrounding streets It was designed in the Renaissance Revival style by the royal architect Gottfried von Neureuther who designed many station buildings of the Royal Bavarian State Railways and described the Wurzburg station as one of the most difficult buildings on the Ludwig Western Railway The station building was a two storey building the front of which faced west to Theaterstrasse where a forecourt was designed as a formal entrance to the city The slightly elevated ground floor as a result of the high position of the tracks was clad with limestone and sandstone and included among other things waiting rooms and a restaurant A 100 metre 328 ft long and 24 metre 79 ft wide platform area adjoined the station building to the east Under the 13 metre 43 ft high roof there were a track for passenger and freight trains and two bypass tracks Large problems were experienced with the introduction of the tracks to the station area as only two tracks ran through the city walls these branched immediately after crossing the moat towards Schweinfurt and Gemunden Sets of points had to be inserted on the bridge over the moat so that trains could be separated so that freight trains could run to the northern part of the station and passenger trains run to the southern part of the station This limited the increase in capacity significantly particularly for freight traffic Relocation of the station Edit nbsp A regional train on the eastern approachesIn subsequent years the railways grew steadily Although a lack of resources prevented rapid economic growth as a result of the construction of new tracks Wurzburg became a railway junction First in 1861 construction started on a nearly 90 kilometre 56 mi long link between Wurzburg and Ansbach station where it connected with a line that had been built in 1859 by the town of Ansbach to connect with the Ludwig South North Railway in Gunzenhausen This line which is now part of the Treuchtlingen Wurzburg railway was completed in 1864 giving Wurzburg a shorter connection to the major cities of Augsburg and Munich Just a year later a direct link was opened between Rottendorf and Furth now part of the Nuremberg Wurzburg railway creating a much shorter than the line via Bamberg and relegating the Ludwig Western Railway to a minor role At the same time the common section with the old route to Bamberg between Wurzburg and Rottendorf was duplicated In 1866 the Baden Odenwald Railway Odenwaldbahn was completed It was last railway opened to Wurzburg until the late 20th century It was built mainly at the request of Bavaria to connect the then Bavarian Rhenish Palatinate to its own railway network and ran from Wurzburg via Osterburken and Mosbach to Heidelberg The new station outside the inner city Edit The terminus could no longer absorb the traffic of the additional lines An extension of the facilities that were tight from the start was not possible due to the density of buildings in the inner city To provide greater capacity for passenger services it was planned initially to shift freight and shunting to a separate location Against the backdrop of the ever growing rail traffic and given the operational benefits of a through station the decision was taken in 1862 to build a new station to the north of the city beneath the Schalksberg hill and near the famous Wurzburger Stein vineyard At this time the area was only sparsely populated and there was enough space available for a large station yard and a through station The construction of the station was accompanied by an extensive reorganisation of the road network The mainly narrow and winding streets of the town centre were greatly improved by the widening of existing streets and the building of the central Schonbornstrasse The newly created Kaiserstrasse connected the outlying station complex and the town A new district was then established in the immediate vicinity of the station and in place of the former city wall a ring of parks in the English style was created Julius Maximilian s University and imposing Grunderzeit villas were built between the station and the banks of the Main river In addition a separate district for railway employees was built to the northeast of the station The architect Friedrich Burklein was commissioned for the construction of the station building He had been responsible for the construction of Munchen Hauptbahnhof and the stations in Augsburg Bamberg Nordlingen Nuremberg and Bad Kissingen Construction started in 1863 and it was completed in 1869 The station building was an imposing building which consisted of a two story central hall which was bounded by two raised side wings On the ground floor the entire front of the central hall was composed of arcade like archways which gave access to the inside of the station There were in addition to a salon for the king the usual facilities of a station at the time such as waiting rooms for four classes two restaurants ticketing and baggage counter and several administrative offices The rooms on the upper floor were used as apartments for the staff The platforms were one level above the street level as they were built on an embankment Therefore in the middle of the entrance building there was a staircase to the concourse supported by 14 marble columns The railway tracks were built over a very large area Sidings locomotive and carriage maintenance shops and warehouses were built to the north of the platform area To the east there were the facilities of the Grand Duchy of Baden State Railway which operated the Odenwald Railway towards Heidelberg as it ran through Bavaria for only about 20 kilometres 12 mi Destruction during World War II and reconstruction Edit Further information Bombing of Wurzburg in World War II Until shortly before the end of the Second World War people still living in Wurzburg had the illusion that the city would be spared an air raid because no significant industry was located in the city and it had three hospitals However Wurzburg had great importance for rail transport the logistical backbone of German armaments On 23 February 1945 during an air strike of the United States Army Air Force which was actually directed at Bayreuth a large part of the station area was destroyed or severely degraded by about 200 bombs Although the only threat from Wurzburg for the Allies had been eliminated and another attack seemed unlikely starting on the evening of 16 March 1945 in England about 230 four engined Avro Lancaster bombers of the Royal Air Force flew to Wurzburg In this destruction considered one of the most devastating in the war about 5 000 people lost their lives In addition 90 percent of the buildings in the inner city were damaged which made Wurzburg one of the most devastated cities of World War II The city which had often been called the pearl of the baroque was reduced to a pile of rubble within 19 minutes Following the destruction on 23 February of the station built by Friedrich Burklein the station building of the Ludwig station was now also destroyed since the closing of railway operations it had been used as a school The ruins of the Ludwig station were completely removed up to the early 1960s and today s Mainfranken Theater Wurzburg was built in its place Shortly after the war work began on the reconstruction of the railway facilities Since the station had been almost completely destroyed the then Deutsche Bundesbahn and the responsible architect Bundesbahn inspector Hans Kern decided against a reconstruction of the building and to build a new building It was built in the unadorned style of 1950s modernism The wide front was completely glazed and concrete pillars supported the slightly overhanging roof Construction of the entrance hall began in 1952 and it was opened on 2 October 1954 at the conclusion of the electrification of the Furth Wurzburg line After further stages of construction the building was completed in 1961 Inside there was a large entrance hall which among other things housed a ticket office and various shops The northern side of the hall was adorned by an attached stone mosaic of the Eichstatt artist Alois Wunsche Mitterecker that had a cross sectional image of a class 44 steam locomotive at its original size As repeated vibrations caused by departing trains broke part of the wall panelling the mosaic was removed in 1958 and installed in the Nuremberg Transport Museum The division of Germany and recent development since the 1980s Edit nbsp Just five kilometers from Wurzburg Hauptbahnhof on the Main Viaduct Veitshochheim an ICE 3 train reaches 200 km hWurzburg Hauptbahnhof has a central location in Germany and was always a major hub for rail transport but after the division of Germany its importance increased again While rail traffic between the north and the southeast of the country had previously been distributed over several routes now the lines through the Thuringian Forest the Franconian Forest and the Vogtland were truncated All the trains that had to be operated along the Inner German border including the routes to Munich via Wurzburg and Nuremberg caused a considerable increase in the workload for Wurzburg In the timetable of 1979 80 300 passenger 250 freight trains and 100 other trains operated through Wurzburg station on weekdays About 60 passenger and 50 freight trains were shunted at the station 6 The high utilisation of the access routes led to the construction of two new lines for high speed traffic Mannheim Stuttgart and Hanover Wurzburg in order to clear the old lines of express trains During the 1991 timetable the first Intercity Express sets served Wurzburg still under the Intercity name In May 1992 Wurzburg became an ICE stop with the establishment of the Hamburg Wurzburg Munich ICE service 7 The station today EditInfrastructure Edit Entrance building Edit Since the construction of the new station building it has been changed only slightly since its completion so that the basic structure of the original design is still preserved almost completely In place of the wall paintings that have been removed there are now billboards The former ticket office was converted into a travel center that was modified in the 1990s to fit the new corporate design of Deutsche Bahn In addition the entrance building now housed a baggage room a ServicePoint a food shop a book shop and a small kiosk for tobacco products and magazines In the summer of 2006 two new sales pavilions were established for this purpose and an older bakery was removed and the ServicePoint had to be moved to the side of the hall At the eastern end there was an office of the Bahnhofsmission charity which provides assistance to travellers and the homeless until the beginning of 2008 this has since been housed in the west wing of the building Before the start of the platform underpass there is a toilet facility which has been leased to a private operator since 2006 There have been repeated complaints in recent years regarding its cleanliness and hygiene to Deutsche Bahn which notes however that a comprehensive renovation of the facility will be undertaken during the modernisation of the whole building 8 The restaurant Burgerstuben was housed in the western part of the building until June 2007 Its operation was terminated in October 2006 by the operator SSP Deutschland the successor to Deutsche Bahn s own catering operation Mitropa in preparation for the planned station modernisation as part of the arcades project Arcaden Projekt see below Since Deutsche Bahn reversed the termination of the operation of the restaurant after the collapse of the arcades project the reconstructed restaurant has been staffed by a new operator 9 On the top floor in the western part of the building there is a conference centre and in the eastern part there are business premises In mid 2007 work started on the establishment of a DB Lounge for first class travellers and bahn comfort BahnCard customers which was forecast for completion in 2011 10 As part of the economic stimulus package Deutsche Bahn is renovating the station building with energy related measures Platforms and railway tracks Edit nbsp The whole station premises looking to the southeast nbsp Platform underpassThe station still has extensive trackage used by both passenger and freight trains The southern two tracks 201 and 202 are only for freight The platform next to the station building is used for parking inter city and has no rail services On the remaining five island platforms the following passenger services are carried out platform B tracks 2 and 3 local traffic length 435 m platform C tracks 4 and 5 long distance and local traffic length 473 444 m platform D tracks 6 and 7 long distance and local traffic length 417 365 m platform E tracks 8 and 9 local traffic length 300 m platform F tracks 10 and 11 local traffic length 323 329 mAll platforms are 76 cm 30 in high 11 which is one of the two standard heights used in Germany Step free entry is still not possible to any one of trains running as Deutsche Bahn has no long distance trains with entrance heights of 76 cm 30 in and the regional trains used here are mostly of older construction and can only be entered by taking several steps at the entrances The DB subsidiary Westfrankenbahn on its service to Bad Mergentheim partly uses new class 642 diesel multiple units which are also not barrier free despite their low floors as their entrances are 55 cm 22 in high so that passengers have to step down The length of three of the five platforms B C and D make them suitable for long distance services and they are divided into five platform sections Platforms C and D are over 410 metres 1 350 ft long and almost their whole length is required for full length Intercity Express ICE trains At the end of 2006 the previously common split flap platform displays were replaced on the platforms and in the underpass with modern screens using LCD technology The platforms can be reached through a tunnel located at street level Like the platforms it is not designed for the current passenger traffic The platforms are not accessible for the disabled although the long distance platforms and platform F have baggage conveyor belts But at present there are no escalators lifts or ramps With the start of ICE services in the early 1990s an additional platform F was built because the home platform was converted into parking for ICE sets at the same time In 1959 a DrS interlocking was put into operation The system which cost 4 7 million Deutschmarks DM replaced five old signal boxes and saved 28 positions In 1969 the system was supplemented by a shunting interlocking system SPDRs 600 technology This DM 1 2 million system saved eight positions 6 In the 1970s Wurzburg station was upgraded for the introduction of the Hanover Wurzburg new line The tracks were redesigned so that trains on the new line could reach all platform tracks To increase the number of simultaneous incoming and outgoing trains the new line was placed between the two tracks of the Wurzburg Aschaffenburg line At the same time it would be possible with fully occupied platform tracks for 750 m 2 460 ft long freight trains take to pass through the rebuilt station For these and other requirements a step by step schedule was established for the upgrade of the station 12 nbsp Extensive track work at the west end of the station June 1987 To meet the increasing performance requirements for the construction of the new line and the third track to Rottendorf the west end of the station was completely rebuilt and the east end was partially rebuilt 6 In 1984 a new signal box was into operation 13 From 1989 14 until 1999 the station entrances were extensively remodelled The performance of the node was improved by the installation of slimmer sets of points and improvements to the signalling systems The track upgrade supported an increase in speeds from 40 to 60 km h 25 to 37 mph at the east end and from 60 to 80 km h 37 to 50 mph at the west end The exit for the high speed line can be operated at 100 km h 62 mph Moreover the traffic flows were designed so that trains would run at the entrance and exit largely without crossing paths and freight operations are concentrated on the south side of the station These measures have substantially increased the capacity of the tracks and operations can now be handled with less noise The travel time savings for long distance operations is about two minutes and in conjunction with improvements to the Nuremberg Wurzburg line about seven minutes The cost of the upgrade amounted to about DM 115 million about 60 million 15 As early as 1988 to 1991 the upgrade on the eastern end had raised speeds from 40 to 60 km h 25 to 37 mph 16 Station forecourt Edit nbsp The station forecourt with a dummy of the St Kilian fountain which was erected at the beginning of the rehabilitation The station building is in the background The station forecourt extends from the entrance building to the Rontgenring and Haugerring on the inside of the ring of parks on the site of the former walls It is bounded to the east and west by two lines of pavilions harbouring various shops The St Kilian fountain stands on a pedestal in the middle of the forecourt which was inaugurated in July 1895 by Prince Regent Luitpold and is the only existing remnant of the former station The St Kilian fountain was a gift from the Prince Regent to Wurzburg after this the Franconia fountains were built in front of the Residence in honour of Luitpold 17 A bronze statue of St Kilian stood over the basin of the fountain from 1895 to 1943 This was removed in 1943 to melt down for the production of armaments The statue was bought back from a Hamburg scrap yard and restored on 8 July 1949 18 The fountain made out of Carrara marble was last sandblasted in the 1970s Since then the substance has deteriorated and become porous Since it was unsafe it had to be propped up for several years A renovation could not be carried out until April 2007 The fountain was dismantled over a few days and removed in pieces to the nearby Frankenhalle It was restored and then rebuilt on the station forecourt Where possible the old parts were reused but new parts were also used based on the original model The cost of the renovation of the 100 year old structure is estimated at 1 million which was borne by the city and the state of Bavaria It was re inaugurated on 24 July 2009 19 The Franconian apostle St Kilian crowns the fountain and faces the city Fishing and wine growing are shown in the relief 20 The terminal loop of the tram track runs around the St Kilian fountain which has two tram stops Services Edit nbsp Western track field in front of Wurzburg station in the centre is the ramp of the high speed lineLines Edit Several major rail corridors cross at Wurzburg Hauptbahnhof All lines are electrified and duplicated and the highly trafficked Wurzburg Rottendorf section has three tracks The high speed line from Fulda is scheduled for 250 km h 155 mph operations for the most part Its continuation to Nuremberg can partially be operated at speeds of up to 200 km h 124 mph The other routes which mainly handle regional traffic operate at speeds of 120 to 160 km h 75 to 99 mph The following is a summary of timetable routes KBS that begin or end here KBS 351 to Fulda Kassel Hanover Hanover Wurzburg high speed railway KBS 780 to Heilbronn Stuttgart Franconia Railway KBS 800 to Aschaffenburg Main Spessart railway KBS 805 to Nuremberg Nuremberg Wurzburg railway KBS 810 to Schweinfurt Bamberg via Nuremberg Wurzburg railway and Bamberg Rottendorf railway KBS 900 to Nuremberg Ansbach Ingolstadt Augsburg Munich KBS 920 to Ansbach Treuchtlingen Treuchtlingen Wurzburg railway Long distance lines Edit Wurzburg Hauptbahnhof is connected by the following services to the rail network as of the 2018 timetable Line Route Frequency StockICE 25 Lubeck Hamburg Hamburg Harburg Hannover Gottingen Kassel Wilhelmshohe Fulda Wurzburg HBF Nuremberg Ingolstadt Munich Individual services ICE 2 ICE 1Hamburg Altona Hamburg Dammtor HourlyBremen Every 2 hoursICE 31 Dortmund Hagen Wuppertal Solingen Cologne Bonn Koblenz Mainz Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt Main Hanau Wurzburg HBF Nuremberg Ingolstadt HBF Munich 1 train pair ICE TICE 41 Dortmund Bochum Essen Duisburg Dusseldorf Koln Messe Deutz Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt Main Aschaffenburg Wurzburg HBF Nuremberg Ingolstadt Munich Hourly ICE 3Frankfurt Main Hauptbahnhof Mainz Wiesbaden Koln Messe Deutz Dusseldorf Duisburg Essen Bochum Dortmund Hamm Westf Soest Lippstadt Paderborn Altenbeken Warburg Westf Kassel Wilhelmshohe Fulda 1 train pairICE 91 Dortmund Hagen Wuppertal Solingen Cologne Bonn Koblenz Mainz Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt Main Hanau Wurzburg HBF Nuremberg Regensburg Plattling Passau Linz St Polten Vienna Every 2 hours ICE TBochum Essen Duisburg Dusseldorf Hamburg Altona Hamburg Dammtor Hamburg Hamburg Harburg Hannover Gottingen Kassel Wilhelmshohe Fulda 1 train pairIC 26 Hamburg Altona Hamburg Dammtor Hamburg Hamburg Harburg Luneburg Uelzen Celle Hannover Gottingen Kassel Wilhelmshohe Fulda Wurzburg HBF Steinach b Rothenburg Ansbach Treuchtlingen Donauworth Augsburg Munchen Pasing Munchen Ost Rosenheim Bad Endorf Prien a Chiemsee Ubersee Traunstein Freilassing Piding Bad Reichenhall Berchtesgaden 1 train pair ICBuchloe Kaufbeuren Kempten Immenstadt Sonthofen OberstdorfIC 31 Kiel Neumunster Hamburg Hamburg Harburg Bremen Osnabruck Munster Westf Dortmun Hagen Wuppertal Solingen Cologne Bonn Koblenz Mainz Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt Main Hanau Wurzburg HBF Nuremberg Regensburg Straubing Plattling Passau 1 train pair ICHamburg Altona 2 train pairsEN Hamburg Altona Hamburg Dammtor Hamburg Gottingen Wurzburg HBF Nuremberg Augsburg Munich Rosenheim Kufstein Worgl Jenbach Innsbruck 1 train pair OBB NightjetEN Cologne Bonn Koblenz Mainz Frankfurt Airport Frankfurt Main Sud Wurzburg HBF Nuremberg Regensburg Passau Wels Linz Amstetten St Polten Vienna Vienna car loading 1 train pair OBB NightjetDue to its convenient location long distance trains have run from all over Germany and neighbouring countries to Wurzburg station since the early days of rail travel Therefore it was also served on several routes of the Trans Europ Express TEE network which was established in 1957 With a single domestic route and two routes to Vienna and Klagenfurt the only non German cities to be served directly were in nearby Austria TEA 21 22 Rheinpfeil Dortmund Frankfurt Wurzburg Nuremberg Munich 1965 1971 TEA 90 91 Blauer Enzian Hamburg Wurzburg Munich Klagenfurt 1965 1979 TEA 26 27 Prinz Eugen Bremen Nuremberg Wurzburg Vienna 1971 1978 After Deutsche Bundesbahn gradually introduced its increasingly popular Intercity network with two class trains from 1968 the first class only TEE services were phased out nbsp ICE meeting in the eastern track field nbsp An ICE 3 passes over the ramp to the west of the station at the start of the Hanover Wurzburg high speed lineOn 27 May 1988 the Fulda Wurzburg section was the first major section of the Hanover Wurzburg high speed line to be put into operation The official ceremonial opening of operations by the InterCityExperimental was held at Wurzburg station at 12 58 The opening of the section was celebrated with a festival at the station on 28 and 29 May with many shuttles services running to Fulda The first scheduled passenger service on the new line IC 686 Herrenchiemsee left Wurzburg station on 29 May at 9 17 The first scheduled service arriving regularly on the high speed line was IC 581 Veit Stoss at 10 42 21 With the start of the summer 1991 timetable Intercity Express trains were put into operation as Deutsche Bundesbahn s highest train class running on the Hamburg Munich line via Hanover Frankfurt Main Mannheim and Stuttgart although not through Wurzburg After delivery of further ICE sets from 31 March 1992 a second connection was established between Hamburg and Munich which ran south of Fulda on a more easterly route through the northern Bavarian cities of Wurzburg and Nuremberg With the delivery of the ICE 2 which allowed trains to be coupled and uncoupled half a train ran every two hours to Bremen from 1997 By 1992 traffic on the north south line through Wurzburg was almost completely converted to ICE connections while the east west line was for a long time still operated by Intercity services After the opening of the Cologne Frankfurt high speed line in 2002 the existing Intercity services from the Ruhr to Nuremberg or Munich were mostly replaced by two hourly ICE services Since their delivery ICE 3 sets capable of 300 km h 186 mph operations are used After the integration of the Nuremberg Ingolstadt high speed railway in the nationwide long distance network in December 2006 this route was received an hourly service and more coupled trains operated to various locations At the timetable change in December 2007 the Intercity EuroCity service from Dortmund to Vienna was converted to ICE T tilting trains so now Wurzburg is served by four of the five Deutsche Bahn ICE train classes nbsp Two ICE trains of line 25 come together in Wurzburg HauptbahnhofSince December 2006 services to Wurzburg Hauptbahnhof have been generally scheduled to run through the station at 30 minutes past the hour to maximise connectivity between long distance and regional services Since the beginning of the 2007 timetable ICE line 41 has served Wurzburg station hourly Regional transport routes Edit nbsp A Modus set and a diesel multiple unit of class 612 in Wurzburg HauptbahnhofWurzburg Hauptbahnhof is connected by the following services to the rail network Train type Route Frequency StockRE 7 RE 57 Wurzburg HBF Schweinfurt Ebenhausen Unterfr Bad Kissingen Every 2 hours class 612Munnerstadt Bad Neustadt Saale Mellrichstadt Grimmenthal Suhl Zella Mehlis Plaue Thur Arnstadt Neudietendorf ErfurtRE 8 Wurzburg Hbf Lauda Osterburken Mockmuhl Bad Friedrichshall Neckarsulm Heilbronn Bietigheim Bissingen Ludwigsburg Stuttgart Hourly Stadler Flirt 3RE 10 Wurzburg Hbf Rottendorf Dettelbach Buchbrunn Mainstockheim Kitzingen Iphofen Markt Bibart Neustadt Aisch Emskirchen Siegelsdorf Furth Bay Nuremberg Hourly class 440RE 10 Wurzburg Hbf Rottendorf Dettelbach Buchbrunn Mainstockheim Kitzingen Hourly peak class 440 class 425RE 20 Franken Thuringen Express Wurzburg Hbf Schweinfurt Hassfurt Bamberg Forchheim Erlangen Furth Bay Nuremberg Every 2 hours class 442RE 54 Main Spessart Express MSX Bamberg Hassfurt Schweinfurt Wurzburg Gemunden Aschaffenburg Hanau Maintal Frankfurt Every 2 hours class 445 Twindexx Vario RE 55 Bamberg Wurzburg Hbf Karlstadt Gemunden Lohr Aschaffenburg Hanau Offenbach Main Frankfurt Main Sud Frankfurt Main Every 2 hours some trains continuing to BambergRB 53 Schluchtern Sterbfritz Jossa Obersinn Mittelsinn Burgsinn Rieneck Gemunden Wernfeld Karlstadt Himmelstadt Retzbach Zellingen Thungersheim Veitshochheim Wurzburg Zell Wurzburg Hbf Rottendorf Seligenstadt Bergtheim Essleben Waigolshausen Schweinfurt Schweinfurt Mitte Schweinfurt Stadt Schonungen Hassfurt Zeil Main Ebelsbach Eltmann Oberhaid Bamberg Hourly class 440RB 53 Karlstadt Himmelstadt Retzbach Zellingen Thungersheim Veitshochheim Wurzburg Zell Wurzburg Hbf Hourly peak continuing as RE10 to Nuremberg class 440RB 53 Wurzburg Hbf Rottendorf Seligenstadt Bergtheim Essleben Waigolshausen Schweinfurt Schweinfurt Mitte Schweinfurt Stadt Hourly peak class 425class 440RB 79 Aschaffenburg Gemunden Wurzburg Hbf Rottendorf Seligenstadt Schweinfurt Bamberg Some trains class 425 class 440RE 80 Wurzburg Hbf Ansbach Treuchtlingen Donauworth Augsburg Hbf Munchen Pasing Munich Hourly to Treuchtlingen every 2 hours to Munich class 462 class 463RB 80 Wurzburg Hbf Wurzburg Sud Winterhausen Gossmannsdorf Ochsenfurt Marktbreit Hourly peak class 425 class 440RB 85 Wurzburg Hbf Wurzburg Sud Reichenberg Geroldshausen Kirchheim Unterfr Gaubuttelbrunn Wittighausen Zimmern Grunsfeld Gerlachsheim Lauda Osterburken Hourly class 440 class 425As of 11 December 2022All Regional Express services except the Mainfranken Thuringen Express and the Regionalbahn services to Treuchtlingen reach Wurzburg station just before the half hour and leave it a few minutes after the half hour Thus there are connections between them and with two regular long distance services Connections with trams and buses Edit Wurzburg station is also a central transfer station for trams and buses In the station forecourt are the Wurzburg tram stops of Hauptbahnhof West and Hauptbahnhof Ost east This division of departure platforms for trams to the inner city west and Grombuhl east was established in 1996 as a temporary measure during the construction of a new station which has not yet commenced Immediately west of the station forecourt is the bus station where the majority of urban and regional bus routes start Future development EditIn 2004 the city of Wurzburg published plans for the post office area to the west of the station building by the Essen company Management fur Immobilien AG mfi which would involve building a shopping centre with an area of 20 000 square metres including a wedding hall The so called Wurzburg Arcaden Wurzburg arcades would extend to the current bus station where the Quellenbach parking station would be built The ambitious schedule provided for a completion of the project by the end of 2006 A citizens initiative warned against drastic changes to the ring of parks on the former wall which would have been affected and demanded a referendum Before that was carried out however the project was abandoned in October 2004 because of differences with the managers of the venue nbsp The post office tower to the left is the development area for the Arcades nbsp Winning design of the architectural competition to redesign the station environmentAfter the project had failed at the first attempt mfi brought a revised version to the table in July 2005 This did not include the originally planned development of the bus station instead the arcades would be built on the west wing of the main station and a connection to the station building would be created The profits from the sale of the west wing were intended to be invest in the modernisation of the station building by Deutsche Bahn Mfi pledged to finance the redevelopment of the station forecourt the relocation of the bus station on the eastern side of the station and the greening of its current location Far reaching changes were also planned in the layout of roads and tram tracks so that sections of the Haugerring and Rontgenring the streets on the south side of the ring of parks would have been widened to five lanes and the tramline to Grombuhl would have been relocated from the Haugerring to Haugerglacisstrasse on the north side of the ring of parks next to the station On 14 December 2005 the council agreed by a narrow margin to the construction of Wurzburg Arcaden and so paved the way for the 250 million project Finally in mid 2006 an architectural competition for the redevelopment of the station environment was started which selected the Stuttgart office of Auer Weber Assoziierte and the Hamburg landscape architects WES amp Partner The citizens initiative Ringpark in Gefahr Ring Park in danger succeeded in having a referendum called which took place on 3 December 2006 The proponents of the initiative warned of despite the planned restoration of the bus station area to the ring park impending gridlock and the desolation of the inner city after the opening of the proposed shopping centre With a turnout of over 40 percent the Wurzburg citizens decided by about 51 to 49 percent to support the joint project of mfi Deutsche Bahn and the city a majority of 985 in favour Many people complained after the vote that the voting slip was confusing and difficult to understand and more than 12 percent of all votes cast were invalid 2007 further development after the breakdown of Wurzburg Arcaden Edit nbsp The short term car park on the eastern side of the station building is to be used for the bus station and the new tram line towards GrombuhlAfter the referendum was put the federal parliamentarian Walter Kolbow who like the state parliamentarian Rainer Boutter both SPD had criticized the coupling of the station redevelopment and the arcade project before the vote called for the redevelopment to be carried out in several stages At his initiative a four hour summit meeting was held on 12 March 2007 between the then Mayor of Wurzburg Pia Beckmann and the CEO of DB Station amp Service Wolf Dieter Siebert Federal and state grants of up to 80 percent of the cost of the renovation of the platforms and their access had already been largely secured and it was suggested at the meeting that 8 million for the renovation of the entrance building in 2011 2012 was on the way Deutsche Bahn would provide 3 million and the city of Wurzburg would be able to put together 5 million To keep the city s contribution to a minimum Mayor Pia Beckmann had brought a stripped down version to the discussion which did not require the development of the second floor Despite their initial opposition Deutsche Bahn finally accepted this proposal and also waived the requirement that the City fund 5 million of the cost 22 Furthermore the city is planning extensive changes in the station environment This will mean that the station forecourt will have a uniform design and more attractive pavilion shops will be built In addition the conversion of the current location of the bus station into parkland and the installation of the bus station on the eastern side of the station is planned Land there that is currently still owned by subsidiaries of Deutsche Bahn is required in return for the city s participation in the rebuilding of station In particular as the Wurzburg tramway is crowded even after the reorganisation of the tram service the construction of a central tram stop in front of the entrance building is required These projects are to be taken forward after the completion of the renovation of the station Remediation for the 2018 state garden show Edit According to Deutsche Bahn the station is to be rehabilitated for the State Garden Show 2018 from March 2010 The redevelopment of the eastern part of the station building is currently as of February 2013 expected to be completed in the spring of 2013 The first floor offices are also to be renewed In addition the station underpass will be built including the installation of lifts to the platforms Likewise a completely new toilet facility will be built The barrier free upgrade of the station will cost 32 million See also Edit2016 Wurzburg train attackReferences 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 Wabenplan des VVM PDF Verkehrsverbund Mainfranken 1 August 2020 Retrieved 16 March 2021 Wabenplan PDF Verkehrsverbund Rhein Neckar February 2021 Retrieved 21 February 2021 Hauptbahnhof WurzburgWiki a b c Hans Dieter Baumgartel 1980 Das neue SpDrS 600 Zentralstellwerk Wurzburg Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau in German 29 10 719 722 Marcus Grahnert ICE Einsatze ab 1991 in German Retrieved 21 April 2013 Manuela Gobel 15 May 2007 Bahnhofsklo Teuer und dreckig Main Post in German Manuela Gobel 20 June 2007 Bahnhof ohne Restaurant Main Post in German Kirsten Denecke DB Fernverkehr 13 June 2007 Talk taglich Television production in German Bahn TV Platform information for Wurzburg Hbf in German Deutsche Bahn Retrieved 21 April 2013 Helmut Maak 1977 Der Entwurf der Neubaustrecke Hannover Wurzburg Streckenabschnitt hessisch bayerische Landesgrenze Wurzburg Die Bundesbahn in German 53 12 883 893 ISSN 0007 5876 Bundesbahndirektion Nurnberg Projektgruppe Hannover Wurzburg Sud der Bahnbauzentrale ed April 1986 Neubaustrecke Hannover Wurzburg Der Sudabschnitt Fulda Wurzburg in German Deutsche Bundesbahn p 33 Brochure 40 pp Rudiger Block 1991 ICE Rennbahn Die Neubaustrecken Eisenbahn Kurier in German 21 Special Hochgeschwindigkeitsverkehr 36 45 ISSN 0170 5288 Carsten Lorenzen Bernhard Lindenberger 1999 Ausbaustrecke Wurzburg Iphofen Nurnberg Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau in German 48 821 ff Bald acht Minuten schneller durch Franken Die Bahn Informiert in German 3 16 17 1992 Stadt Wurzburg ed c 2008 Kiliansbrunnen Ein Brunnen als Geschenk in German Prospekt Robert Meier 2005 Der Heilige Kilian Feurich Keks und Zucker Bar in German pp 68 69 Unser Kiliansbrunnen ist wieder da in German Freundeskreises Geschichtswerkstatt Wurzburg Retrieved 21 April 2013 Erika Kerestely 2008 Wurzburg Stadtfuhrer mit farbigem Stadtplan in German Wurzburg Sturtz Stadtfuhrer Verlagshaus Wurzburg GmbH amp Co KG p 75 ISBN 978 3 8003 1929 9 Neubauabschnitt Fulda Wurzburg fertiggestellt Eisenbahn Journal in German 6 4 10 1988 ISSN 0720 051X Manuela Gobel 12 July 2007 Die Bahn bewegt sich doch Main Post in German Sources EditErich Preuss ed Wurzburg Hbf Das grosse Archiv der deutschen Bahnhofe in German GeraMond Suse Schmuck 2004 Der Bahnhof und sein Platz in German Wurzburg Schoningh ISBN 3 87717 811 1 Ulrich Wagner 1994 Wurzburg Ein verlorenes Stadtbild in German Gudensberg Gleichen Wartberg ISBN 3 86134 225 1 Hans Peter Schafer 1979 Planung und Bau der Hauptstrecken bis 1879 Die Entstehung des mainfrankischen Eisenbahn Netzes in German Wurzburg Institut fur Geographie 1 ISSN 0510 9833 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wurzburg Hauptbahnhof Track plan of Wurzburg Hauptbahnhof PDF 258 97 KB in German Deutsche Bahn Retrieved 21 April 2013 Portals nbsp Transport nbsp Germany Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wurzburg Hauptbahnhof amp oldid 1168376752, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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