Wien Hauptbahnhof
Wien Hauptbahnhof | |
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Austrian Federal Railways | |
The northern entrance to the station concourse | |
Location |
Favoritenstraße 51, Vienna Austria |
Coordinates | 48°11′12″N 16°22′48″E / 48.186667°N 16.380000°ECoordinates: 48°11′12″N 16°22′48″E / 48.186667°N 16.380000°E |
Owned by | ÖBB |
Platforms | 12 |
Tracks |
16 Total 12 for ÖBB 2 for underground tram 2 for U-Bahn |
Construction | |
Structure type | at-grade |
Parking | yes |
Other information | |
Website | Hauptbahnhof Wien |
History | |
Opened | December 2012[1]/2015[2] |
Electrified | yes |
Traffic | |
Passengers | 40,000/day[3] |
Wien Hauptbahnhof[4][1][5] (German for "Vienna Main station";[6][7] also referred to in English as "Vienna Hauptbahnhof"[8][9]) is the main railway station in Vienna, Austria, located in the Favoriten district.[10]
Wien Hauptbahnhof has replaced the Wien Südbahnhof terminus[11] with a through station linking four major railway lines converging on Vienna from the North, East, West and South. The new station offers significantly improved, principally international, connectivity.[2] By moving the main access to Südtiroler Platz, the new station is better connected to the Vienna U-Bahn system, and is also accessible by Vienna S-Bahn, tram and bus lines.[12] The Südtiroler Platz S-Bahn station was renamed Wien Hbf (platforms 1 and 2) in December 2012.[8]
Timeframe
The city council agreed to build the station 15 December 2006. Construction began in June 2007, starting with preliminary works such as the remodelling of the S-Bahn station Südtiroler Platz. In 2008, the S-Bahn and the U-Bahn stations at Südtiroler Platz were connected with each other and Südbahnhof was demolished.
In 2009, ÖBB Infrastruktur awarded a €220m construction contract to a consortium led by Strabag.[13]
The bulk of Südbahnhof's services (platforms 11-19) were closed with the timetable change of 13 December 2009, with Wien Meidling railway station temporarily taking over many of Südbahnhof's services.[14] Construction started in April 2010.[15]
Trains began passing through the new Hauptbahhof without stopping, 6 August 2012.[6] The station became partly operational in December 2012,[1] with regional and S-Bahn services using platforms 9-12 and long-distance trains not stopping.[8] It was expected that the Hauptbahnhof would fully open in December 2014, however delays in completing a footbridge mean it will not be fully operational until December 2015.[4][8]
The rebuilt station has around 100 shops and restaurants as well as 600 car parking spaces.[13] Office and residential developments are currently being built.
Opening
The Hauptbahnhof was officially opened by President Heinz Fischer 10 October 2014,[5] with many long-distance services due to use the new station beginning 14 December 2014 when the night trains to Berlin, Bucharest, Düsseldorf, Florence, Hamburg, Hanover, Köln, Kraków, Milan, München, Rome, Venice, Verona and Zürich will depart from the station. A new daily high-speed train service between Graz and Prague (via Wien Hbf) will depart every two hours.[9]
Train services
The station is served by the following services:
- Intercity Express services (ICE 91) Hamburg - Hanover - Kassel - Nürnberg - Passau - Linz - St Pölten - Vienna - Vienna Airport
- Intercity Express services (ICE 91) Dortmund - Essen - Düsseldorf - Cologne - Koblenz - Frankfurt - Nürnberg - Passau - Linz - St Pölten - Vienna - Vienna Airport
- RailJet services Zürich - Innsbruck - Salzburg - Linz - St Pölten - Vienna - Győr - Budapest
- RailJet services Munich - Salzburg - Linz - St Pölten - Vienna - Győr - Budapest
- RailJet services Frankfurt - Stuttgart - Munich - Salzburg - Linz - St Pölten - Vienna - Győr - Budapest
- RailJet services Graz - Vienna - Breclav - Brno - Pardubice - Prague
- RailJet services Villach - Klagenfurt - Vienna
- EuroCity services Vienna - Győr - Budapest - Kiskunmajsa - Novi Sad - Belgrade
- EuroCity services Vienna - Győr - Budapest - Debrecen
- EuroCity services Vienna - Breclav - Ostrava - Katowice - Warsaw
- EuroCity services Vienna - Graz - Maribor - Zagreb
- Night train (Russian Railways) Nice - Milan - Innsbruck - Vienna - Warsaw - Minsk - Moscow
- EuroNight services Vienna - Klagenfurt - Villach - Venice - Verona - Bologna - Florence - Rome
- EuroNight servicesVienna - Klagenfurt - Villach - Venice - Verona - Milan [16]
- D Train Vienna - Breclav - Ostrava - Bohumin
S1 | Mödling – Wien Meidling | – Wien Hauptbahnhof (platform 1–2) | – Wien Floridsdorf – Gänserndorf |
S2 | Wiener Neustadt Hauptbahnhof – Baden – Wien Meidling | – Wien Hauptbahnhof (platform 1–2) | – Wien Floridsdorf – Wolkersdorf – Mistelbach – Laa an der Thaya |
S3 | Wien Meidling | – Wien Hauptbahnhof (platform 1–2) | – Wien Floridsdorf – Stockerau – Absdorf–Hippersdorf or Hollabrunn |
S60 | Rekawinkel – Wien Hütteldorf – Wien Meidling | – Wien Hauptbahnhof (platform 9–12) | – Bruck an der Leitha |
S80 | Wien Hirschstetten – Wien Stadlau – Wien Simmering | – Wien Hauptbahnhof (platform 9–12) | – Wien Meidling – Ebenfurth – Wiener Neustadt Hauptbahnhof |
R | to Deutschkreutz, Bratislava, Marchegg, Pamhagen, Wulkaprodersdorf, Győr, Payerbach-Reichenau, Břeclav, Znojmo and Wiener Neustadt Hauptbahnhof |
Preceding station | Deutsche Bahn | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
ICE 91 | Terminus |
|||
Preceding station | ÖBB | Following station | ||
Railjet | toward Budapest Keleti |
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toward Graz | Railjet | toward Praha hlavní nádraží |
||
toward Villach or Lienz in Osttirol | Railjet | Terminus | ||
toward Wien Westbahnhof | EuroCity | toward Beograd |
||
toward Wien Westbahnhof | EuroCity | toward Debrecen |
||
toward Wien Westbahnhof | EuroCity | toward Belgrade |
||
toward Zagreb Glavni kolodvor | EuroCity | Terminus | ||
toward Nice-Ville | EuroNight | toward Moscow Belorussky |
||
toward Roma Termini | EuroNight | Terminus | ||
toward Milano Centrale | EuroNight | Terminus |
Preceding | Vienna S-Bahn | Following |
---|---|---|
Toward Wiener Neustadt |
Toward Gänserndorf | |
Toward Wiener Neustadt |
Toward Laa an der Thaya | |
Terminus |
Toward Hollabrunn | |
Toward Absdorf | ||
Toward Rekawinkel |
Toward Bruck an der Leitha | |
Toward Wiener Neustadt |
Toward Wien Hirschstetten |
Public transport
The station is served by the following municipal public transport services:
Construction
-
Started in 2011
-
In January 2012
-
In August 2012
-
In October 2012
References
Notes
- 1 2 3 "Openings increase speeds and capacity". Railway Gazette International. 27 December 2012.
- 1 2 "Bahnkonzept Hauptbahnhof Wien" [Track Design at Vienna Central Station] (in German). Österreichische Bundesbahnen. Retrieved 2014-12-08.
- ↑ "Fertigstellung des Rautendaches am Wiener Hauptbahnhof bis Jahresende" [Completion of the diamond roof at Vienna's main train station by year end]. Wiener Zeitung (in German). 12 March 2013. Retrieved 2014-12-08.
- 1 2 Beier, Roland (May 2013). "Wien Hauptbahnhof delayed". Today's Railways.
- 1 2 "Wien Hauptbahnhof officially inaugurated". Railway Gazette International. 10 October 2014.
- 1 2 "Milestones of Vienna's Main Railway Station". City of Vienna.
- ↑ "Wien Hauptbahnhof/Vienna Main Station" (PDF). Österreichische Bundesbahnen.
- 1 2 3 4 Fender, Keith (June 2013). "Vienna Hauptbahnhof delayed". Modern Railways.
- 1 2 "Vienna Hauptbahnhof celebrates opening". The Local. 6 October 2014.
- ↑ "Wien Hauptbahnhof and Wieden". The Rough Guide to Vienna. Rough Guides. p. 136. (subscription required (help)).
- ↑ Averbuck, Alexis; Bedford, Neal (2009). Western Europe. Lonely Planet. p. 66.
- ↑ "Facts & Figures project Vienna main station" (PDF). Hauptbahnhof Wien.
- 1 2 "Wien Hauptbahnhof construction contract awarded". Railway Gazette International. 22 November 2009.
- ↑ "Passenger Info: Timetable changes with closure of Vienna Südbahnhof from December 13th, 2009" (PDF). Österreichische Bundesbahnen. Retrieved 2010-02-13.
- ↑ "Hauptbahnhof Wien" (in German). Hauptbahnhof Wien. Retrieved 2010-10-15.
- ↑ EuroNight timetable
Bibliography
- Kaiser, Wolfgang (2011). Die Wiener Bahnhöfe. Geschichte, Gegenwart und Zukunft [The Vienna Railway Stations: History, Present and Future]. München: GeraMond. ISBN 9783862451104. (German)
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wien Hauptbahnhof. |
- Hauptbahnhof Wien English-language official website of the project
- Building proposals (German)
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