Balduinstein station

Balduinstein
Deutsche Bahn
Through station

Former entrance building
Location Bahnhofstr. 19, Balduinstein, Rhineland-Palatinate
Germany
Coordinates 50°20′49″N 7°58′05″E / 50.346917°N 7.967936°E / 50.346917; 7.967936Coordinates: 50°20′49″N 7°58′05″E / 50.346917°N 7.967936°E / 50.346917; 7.967936
Line(s) Lahn Valley Railway (km 61.4) (625)
Platforms 2
Construction
Architect Heinrich Velde
Architectural style Neo-classical
Other information
Station code 383[1]
DS100 codeFBAD[2]
IBNR8000786
Category6[1]
Website www.bahnhof.de
History
Opened 5 July 1862
Services
Preceding station   Deutsche Bahn   Following station
Laurenburg (Lahn)
toward Mayen Ost
RB 23
Lahn-Eifel-Bahn
Fachingen (Lahn)

Balduinstein is a station in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate on the Lahn Valley Railway. It lies to the north of the municipality of Balduinstein on the bank of the Lahn.

History

A railbus set of the Oberhessische Eisenbahnfreunde consisting of vehicles 798 829 and 996 677 on 28 February 2015 in Balduinstein station
Koblenz–Gießen Regionalbahn service entering the station in 1997

The Bonn construction company Spuhn, which won the contract for the construction of the Lahn Valley Railway between Balduinstein and Runkel, started work in Balduinstein in the autumn of 1857. Since August of the same year, the Georg Mayer company from Alzey had been working on the Cramberg tunnel, the east portal of which lies south of Balduinstein. The resulting material was used as fill for the railway line, which required the demolition of many houses by the summer of 1860. The inhabitants' access to the Lahn was ensured by a number of underpasses and overpasses.[3]

The neoclassical station building was designed by the Diez architects Heinrich Velde, who also designed numerous other buildings along the railway line. The two-storey building was built with three-storey corner buildings and a very large covered porch. Archduke Stephen, Palatine of Hungary, who had moved back to his County of Holzappel in 1850, sought a stately entrance building for his guests staying at the newly redesigned Schaumburg Castle,[4] although this matter was at discretion of the ruler, Adolphe, Duke of Nassau.[5]

The Fürstenzimmer ("princes’ room"), which had a separate entrance from the station forecourt as well as platform access and had 15 square metres of floor space, proved to be too small at the latest by the summer of 1863. Archduke Stephen requested permission to use the corner room of the first floor as a waiting room for his guests. The Fürstenzimmer was used until recently for normal platform access for all passengers.[6]

On 9 September 1991, the station building was added to Rhineland-Palatinate’s list of cultural monuments. The district administration of the Rhein-Lahn-Kreis said that Balduinstein station was "a testimony of artistic creativity and technical activity [...] in the Lahn valley" ("ein Zeugnis des künstlerischen Schaffens und des technischen Wirkens […] im Lahntal"). Moreover, the building was a "characteristic feature" ("kennzeichnendes Merkmal") of the place and the preservation and care of the town's buildings were in the public interest for both urban and artistic reasons.[7]

Change of ownership

Deutsche Bahn AG sold the building in February 2004 to First Real Estate Grundbesitz GmbH (FRE), which became insolvent in the autumn of 2007. In due course, Property First GmbH of Dortmund, Main Asset Management GmbH and the Luxembourg company Patron Elke S.a.r.L took possession. On 20 June 2015, the building was sold at an auction held by the auctioneer Karhausen AG for the "exceptionally high" price of €120,000 to a bidder who was resident in Limburg. With the upgrade of the Lahn Valley Railway, Deutsche Bahn stopped using it in mid-August 2015.[8]

Operations

Balduinstein station was opened on 5 July 1862 with the opening of the NassauLimburg section of the line.[9] In the beginning, there were four passenger trains per day. The running time to Limburg was 25 minutes (2012: 11 minutes) with a stop in Fachingen; without a stop it took only 20 minutes.[10]

Services

The following service stops in Bad Ems station:[11]

Line Route Frequency
RB 23 Lahn-Eifel-Bahn Mayen Ost – MendigKoblenz StadtmitteKoblenz HbfBad Ems – Nassau (Lahn) – Balduinstein – Diez – Limburg (Lahn) Hourly (+ extra trains in peak hour)

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Balduinstein station.
  1. 1 2 "Stationspreisliste 2017" [Station price list 2017] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 18 November 2016. Retrieved 14 December 2016.
  2. Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2009/2010 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  3. Willi Bode (2011). Bau der Lahntalbahn (in German). Weilburg. pp. 71, 75–76.
  4. Arno Baumann; Bernd Geil; Hans-Jürgen Sarholz; Barbara Schröder (2008). Die Lahntalbahn (in German). Erfürt. p. 104.
  5. Willi Bode (2011). Bau der Lahntalbahn (in German). Weilburg. pp. 76–77.
  6. Willi Bode (2011). Balduinstein (in German). Weilburg. pp. 77–79.
  7. Willi Bode (2011). Bau der Lahntalbahn (in German). Weilburg. p. 78.
  8. hpg (24 June 2015). "Bahnhof versteigert". Nassauische Presse (in German). Retrieved 27 February 2017.
  9. Willi Bode (2011). Balduinstein (in German). Weilburg. pp. 81, 98.
  10. Timetable of 5 July 1862. Herzoglich Nassauische Staats-Eisenbahn. cited in: Willi Bode (2011). Balduinstein (in German). Weilburg. p. 99.
  11. "Time table line number 625" (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Retrieved 25 February 2017.
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