Oberhausen Central Station

Oberhausen Hauptbahnhof
Station entrance
Operations
Category 2
Type Crossing station
Platforms in use 10
DS100 code EOB
Station code 4648
Construction and location
Opened 1847
Style of architecture Modernism
Architect Schwingel and Herrmann
Location Oberhausen
State North Rhine-Westphalia
Country Germany
Home page bahnhof.de
Route information
List of railway stations in North Rhine-Westphalia

Oberhausen Central Station (German: Oberhausen Hauptbahnhof) is a railway station in Oberhausen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. The station was opened in 1847 and is located on the Duisburg–Dortmund railway, Arnhem-Oberhausen railway, Oberhausen–Duisburg-Ruhrort railway and Oberhausen-Mülheim-Styrum railway and is served by ICE, IC, RE and RB services operated by DB, NordWestBahn and Eurobahn.

Contents

History

The station was opened in 1847 as part of the trunk line of the former Cologne-Minden Railway Company.[1] The first station building at its present location—a simple half-timbered building and loading facility—was named after the nearby Schloss Oberhausen (palace) and opened on 15 May 1847. It was the first station on the territory of the former Bürgermeisterei of Borbeck; the city of Oberhausen did not exist at this time. The station initially serviced the developing heavy industry, centred on the Gutehoffnungshütte steel works. The entrepreneur Franz Haniel had influence with the Prussian government and the railway company and gainied a rail connection to the Lipper heath, now central Oberhausen. After the opening of the station as the company relocated the Altenberg zinc smelter near to the station.

In 1850, the administration of the Zeche Concordia colliery was established in the station building. In 1854, a more elaborate station building was erected. In 1866, the entrance building of the Bergisch-Märkische Railway Company station was built only a few metres away. Other railway companies and new lines were built subsequently.

Until 1880, Oberhausen has become one of the most important railway junctions in the Ruhr area (including Oberhausen West yard, Osterfeld yard was at that time still independent). In the wake of the nationalisation of the Prussian railways in the early 1880s, lines were connected and central stations were established where possible. The Bergisch-Märkische and Cologne-Minden stations were merged in 1888 into a prestigious new station with tunnels connecting the platforms.

Between 1930 and 1934, the current station building was built in the modernist style. Oberhausen architect Schwingel and supervisor of the Deutsche Reichsbahn railway division (Reichsbahndirektion) of Essen, Karl Herrmann, designed the current building in simple cubic forms.

In the Second World War, the station was repeatedly hit by bombs and shells and heavily damaged. The entrance hall building was only restored to operation in 1954 in a heavily modified form, with the Bali-Kino cinema above a false ceiling and a small shopping arcade.

As part of a project called Internationale Bauausstellung Emscher Park ("international building exhibition Emscher Park"), Oberhausen station and its environs were completely renovated and redecorated in 1993. The entrance hall was extensively restored to its original form and the cinema and the shopping arcade were removed. The platform tracks were reduced from 14 to 10. The disused railway mail terminal was demolished and that area along with the former platform of tracks 4 and 5 were converted into the platform of the LVR Industrial Museum Oberhausen. The Die drei Lebensalter (three ages) relief by Ernst Müller Blensdorf was restored returned to the station. The pedestrian tunnel under the railway tracks was modernised and extended to an entrance on the western side. The headquarters of the Landschaftsverband Rheinland (Rhineland Industrial Museum, LRV), opened in 1997, and the western district thus receive direct access from the station. The reconstruction also included the redesign of the station forecourt with a central bus terminal and the construction of a park and ride car park on the western side.

Train services

The following services currently call at Oberhausen Hauptbahnhof:

Series Operator Route Material Frequency Notes
ICE 43 DB Amsterdam Centraal - Utrecht Centraal - Arnhem - Oberhausen Hbf - Duisburg Hbf - Düsseldorf Hbf - Köln Hbf - Siegburg/Bonn - Frankfurt/Main Flughafen Fernbahnhof - Mannheim Hbf - Karlsruhe Hbf - Offenburg - Freiburg Hbf - Basel Bad Bf - Basel SBB ICE 3M 1x per day
ICE 78 DB Amsterdam Centraal - Utrecht Centraal - Arnhem - Oberhausen Hbf - Duisburg Hbf - Düsseldorf Hbf - Köln Hbf - Siegburg/Bonn - Frankfurt/Main Flughafen Fernbahnhof - Frankfurt (Main) Hbf ICE 3M Every 2 Hours
IC35 DB Norddeich Mole - Norddeich - Norden - Emden Hbf - Leer - Papenburg - Meppen - Lingen (Ems) - Rheine - Münster Hbf - Recklinghausen Hbf - Wanne-Eickel Hbf - Gelsenkirchen Hbf - Oberhausen Hbf - Duisburg Hbf - Düsseldorf Hbf - Köln Hbf - Bonn Hbf - Remagen - Andernach - Koblenz Hbf - Cochem - Bullay - Wittlich Hbf - Trier Hbf - Wasserbillig - Luxembourg DB Class 120 or DB Class 101 and IC stock Every 2 Hours
RB33 Rhein-Niers-Bahn DB Regio Wesel - Friedrichsfeld - Voerde - Dinslaken - Oberhausen-Holten - Oberhausen-Sterkrade - Oberhausen Hbf - Duisburg Hbf - Duisburg-Hochfeld Süd - Rheinhausen Ost - Rheinhausen - Hohenbudberg Bayerwerk - Krefeld-Uerdingen - Krefeld-Linn - Krefeld-Oppum - Krefeld Hbf - Forsthaus - Anrath - Viersen - Mönchengladbach Hbf DB Class 425 1x per hour
RB35 Der Weseler DB Regio (Emmerich - Praest - Millingen - Empel-Rees - Haldern - Mehrhoog - Wesel-Feldmark -) Wesel - Friedrichsfeld - Voerde - Dinslaken - Oberhausen-Holten - Oberhausen-Sterkrade - Oberhausen Hbf - Duisburg Hbf (- Düsseldorf Flughafen - Düsseldorf Hbf) DB Class 425, DB Class 110 + Coaching Stock 1x per hour To Emmerich and Düsseldorf at Peak Times (Monday - Friday), one train per day follows the route from Düsseldorf along to Cologne with stops in Leverkusen, K-Mülheim and Cologne-Deutz
RB36 Ruhrort-Bahn NordWestBahn Duisburg-Ruhrort - Duisburg-Meiderich Süd - Duisburg-Meiderich Ost - Duisburg-Obermeiderich - Oberhausen Hbf NWB LINT 41 2x per hour
RB44 Der Dorstener NordWestBahn Oberhausen Hbf - Oberhausen-Osterfeld Süd - Bottrop-Vonderort - Bottrop Hbf - Bottrop-Boy - Gladbeck West - Gladbeck-Zweckel - Feldhausen - Dorsten NWB LINT 41 1x per hour
Preceding station   DB AG   Following station
ICE 43
toward Basel SBB
ICE 78
toward Emden Außenhafen or Norddeich Mole
IC/EC 35
toward Emmerich
RE 5
Rhein-Express
toward Wesel
RB 33
Rhein-Niers-Bahn
toward Aachen Hbf
toward Emmerich
RB 35
Der Weseler
RB 36
Ruhrort-Bahn
Terminus
Terminus RB 44
Der Dorstener
toward Dorsten
Preceding station   eurobahn   Following station
toward Hamm
RE 3
Rhein-Emscher-Express
Preceding station   Rhine-Ruhr S-Bahn   Following station
S2
Terminus
Terminus S3

Bus Services (since 12th June 2011)

Night Service (only from evening to early morning):

Regular Bus Service:

960: On Sundays or evening Monday to Saturday the line is split from Marktstraße changing the destination to Dümpten or Anne-Frank-Realschule

Tram Services

Gallery

Notes

  1. ^ "Oberhausen Hbf (EOB) operations" (in German). NRW rail archive. André Joost. http://nrwbahnarchiv.bplaced.net/esn/EOB.htm. Retrieved 20 September 2011. 

References

External links