Hanau Hauptbahnhof
Hanau Hauptbahnhof | |
---|---|
Junction station | |
Station forecourt | |
Location |
Hanau, Hesse Germany |
Coordinates | 50°07′17″N 08°55′47″E / 50.12139°N 8.92972°ECoordinates: 50°07′17″N 08°55′47″E / 50.12139°N 8.92972°E |
Line(s) |
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Platforms | 11 |
Other information | |
Station code | 2537 |
DS100 code | FH |
Category | 2 [1] |
Website | www.bahnhof.de |
History | |
Opened | 1 May 1867 |
Traffic | |
Passengers (2010) | About 20,000 [2] |
Hanau Hauptbahnhof is a railway station at Hanau in the German state of Hesse, and is a major railway junction east of Frankfurt am Main. It was opened in 1867, but the current building was built in the late 1960s. It is located about 1.5 kilometres south-east of central Hanau. It is classified by Deutsche Bahn (DB) as a category 2 station[1] and has many train services, including Intercity Express, regional and S-Bahn services.
Links
Hanau Hbf station is a central hub of the railway network that is served by six routes. It is served by:
- Frankfurt-Hanau Railway (Hanau–Maintal–Frankfurt)
- Main-Spessart Railway (Hanau–Kahl–Aschaffenburg)
- Frankfurt-Bebra Railway
- towards the east: Kinzig Valley Railway, Hanau–Fulda–Göttingen
- towards the west: Offenbach am Main–Frankfurt am Main, as the South Main S-Bahn
- Friedberg–Hanau railway to Friedberg
- Odenwald Railway (Hanau–Groß-Umstadt Wiebelsbach–Eberbach)
History
Today’s Hanau Hauptbahnhof was opened on 1 May 1867 on the route of the Frankfurt–Bebra railway as a temporary terminus called Hanau Ost (east). The first station in Hanau was opened in 1848 as the terminus of the Frankfurt-Hanau Railway Company (Frankfurt-Hanauer Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft), which is west of central Hanau at the site of the current Hanau West station.
The Hanau east station was built at the junction between the extension of the Frankfurt-Hanau railway (which runs on the north bank of the Main) connecting with the Main–Spessart railway to Aschaffenburg and the Kinzig Valley Railway to Bebra. Its position was chosen to allow the building of a bridge over the Main to Steinheim as part of the south bank route to Frankfurt. At the same time Hanau depot (Bahnbetriebswerk Hanau) was built at Heideäcker. An entrance building was built at Hanau Ost on the island between the line towards Fulda (northern tracks) and the line to Aschaffenburg (southern tracks).
The constraints imposed by the position of the crossing of the Main explain why the station was built so far from the centre of the city, which is still a significant problem for public transport in Hanau: two centres must be served: the Hauptbahnhof and the downtown bus junction in Freiheitsplatz. Until the end of the Second World War, the station served a tram line of the Hanau Tramway (Hanauer Straßenbahn).
On 15 May 1927, the station was renamed from Hanau Ost station to Hanau Hauptbahnhof.[3]
The original station building was demolished in 1966 and replaced by a building north of the tracks with a spacious station forecourt. The original location as an island station can still be recognised from the track numbering and road connections between the tracks to the nearby park and ride facility. The floor level of the main level of the new station was determined by the location of the existing pedestrian underpass, which was retained. Since the station was built partly in a former river bed of the Main, there will always be problems with water penetration, especially after storms. The passenger accessible part of the entrance building was transformed fundamentally in the early 1990s with the reorganisation of baggage and express freight operations.
Operations
Long-distance services
Hanau station is classified by Deutsche Bahn (DB) as a category 2 station.[1] It is connected by Intercity-Express and Intercity services to cities in a large part of Germany and some cities outside Germany.
Line | Route | Frequency |
---|---|---|
ICE 11 | Berlin – Hildesheim – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Hanau – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Munich | Every 2 hours |
ICE 12 | Berlin – Hildesheim – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Hanau – Frankfurt – Mannheim – Karlsruhe – Freiburg – Basel Bad Bf – Basel SBB | Every 2 hours |
ICE 31 IC 31 | (Kiel –) Hamburg – Osnabrück – Dortmund – Duisburg – Cologne – Koblenz – Frankfurt – Hanau – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Passau (– Linz – Vienna) | Individual services |
ICE 91 | Frankfurt – Hanau – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Passau - Linz - Vienna | Every 2 hours |
Preceding station | Deutsche Bahn | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
towards Munich Hbf | ICE 11 | towards Berlin Ost |
||
towards Interlaken Ost | ICE 12 | towards Berlin Ost |
||
towards Kiel Hbf | ICE 31 | |||
towards Dortmund Hbf | ICE 91 | towards Wien Hbf |
Regional services
Hanau station is served by several Regional-Express and Regionalbahn lines. Since 1995 it has also been served by lines S 8 and S 9 of the Rhine-Main S-Bahn. There is also a central bus station in the station forecourt.
Preceding station | Deutsche Bahn | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Hanau Nord toward Friedberg | RB 33 Friedberg–Hanau railway | Terminus | ||
toward Frankfurt (Main) Hbf | RE 50 Kinzig Valley Railway | toward Fulda |
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SE 50 Kinzig Valley Railway | Wolfgang (Kr Hanau) toward Wächtersbach |
|||
toward Frankfurt (Main) Hbf | RE 55 Main-Spessart Railway | Kahl (Main) toward Würzburg Hbf |
||
toward Frankfurt (Main) Hbf | RB 55 Main-Spessart Railway | Großauheim toward Aschaffenburg Hbf |
||
Preceding station | Hessische Landesbahn | Following station | ||
Terminus | RB 56 Kahlgrund Railway | Großauheim toward Schöllkrippen |
||
Preceding station | VIAS | Following station | ||
toward Frankfurt (Main) Hbf | RE 64 Odenwald Railway | Hainburg Hainstadt toward Groß-Umstadt Wiebelsbach or Erbach |
||
Terminus | RB 64 Odenwald Railway | Hanau Klein-Auheim toward Groß-Umstadt Wiebelsbach |
||
Preceding station | Rhine-Main S-Bahn | Following station | ||
toward Wiesbaden Hbf | Terminus | |||
Notes
- 1 2 3 "Stationspreisliste 2016" [Station price list 2016] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 1 December 2015. Retrieved 24 January 2016.
- ↑ "Aus der Langeweile in die Ferne". Frankfurter Rundschau (in German). 3 April 2010. Retrieved 2 July 2012.
- ↑ Thomas Noßke (2007). "Deutsche Reichsbahn-Gesellschaft, Änderung von Bahnhofsnamen" (in German). Retrieved 2 July 2012.
References
- Martin Schack (2004). Neue Bahnhöfe – Die Empfangsgebäude der Deutschen Bundesbahn 1948 bis 1973 (in German). Verlag Bernd Neddermeyer. ISBN 3-933254-49-3.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hanau Hauptbahnhof. |
- "Track plan of Hanau Hauptbahnhof" (PDF) (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Retrieved 2 July 2012.
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