Bad Salzungen station
Junction station | |||||||||||
Location | Bahnhofstr. 6, Bad Salzungen, Thuringia Germany | ||||||||||
Coordinates | 50°48′54″N 10°13′46″E / 50.814924°N 10.229537°ECoordinates: 50°48′54″N 10°13′46″E / 50.814924°N 10.229537°E | ||||||||||
Line(s) | |||||||||||
Platforms | 2 (formerly 5) | ||||||||||
Other information | |||||||||||
Station code | 333[1] | ||||||||||
DS100 code | USZ[2] | ||||||||||
IBNR | 8010021 | ||||||||||
Category | 6[1] | ||||||||||
Website | www.bahnhof.de | ||||||||||
History | |||||||||||
Opened | 1858 | ||||||||||
Services | |||||||||||
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Location | |||||||||||
Bad Salzungen Location within Thuringia |
Bad Salzungen station is the railway station of the town of Bad Salzungen in the German state of Thuringia. It is located on the Werra Railway and on the .
History[]
Bad Salzungen station was opened in 1858 by the private Werra Railway Company (Werra-Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft) and soon developed into a hub on the Werra Railway. Its importance continued to grow with the opening in 1879 of the first metre-gauge railway in Germany, the nearby (Feldabahn or Felda Railway), the opening in 1889 of the , which branched off in the neighbouring , and the steadily increasing potash production in the nearby Werra potash district. Therefore the Felda Railway was converted to standard gauge in sections from 1906 until 1934.
Bad Salzungen station was expanded to include an extensive marshalling yard. In addition to a further connecting line for a cold rolling mill, Deutsche Reichsbahn also built a wagon maintenance workshop (Wagenaufarbeitung, WAS) for the carrying out the most urgent work on freight wagons. A freight train was operated for Deutsche Post, started in Bad Salzungen and running on the Bad Salzungen–Zella-Mehlis–Gräfenthal–Gotha route to the postal platform opposite the main post office.
Bad Salzungen was also important for passenger transport, but for a long time the station was only an intermediate station for express trains to Bad Liebenstein. The semi-fast and express trains towards Zwickau only started at Bad Salzungen station after the branch line to Bad Liebenstein had been closed. In the 1980s, a so-called Bauarbeiter-D-Zug (construction workers express) was established, which always took construction workers to Berlin just after midnight on Mondays to work on the East German housing program (Wohnungsbauprogramm). This was the only high-quality passenger service on the middle part of the Werra Railway.
After the fall of the GDR, goods traffic almost collapsed, only the potash traffic remained until 1999. However, when the last Thuringian potash plant in Unterbreizbach received a connection via Heringen, only occasional timber traffic remained. Only scrap or rags were transported on the connecting track from the former potash operation in Merkers.
Since 2001, the Süd-Thüringen-Bahn (STB) has operated passenger services on the line. Trains runs over the whole Werra Railway hourly from Eisenach to Eisfeld and continue every two hours over the via Sonneberg to Neuhaus am Rennweg. There are also some additional peak hour services to Eisenach. The STB continued to run railcars to Vacha for half a year until rail passenger services on the line ended in 2001.
It was announced in 2010 that the town of Bad Salzungen would acquire the station building and the freight yard area. In addition, timber loading would to be shifted to Merkers and a shopping centre of the Kaufland retail chain would be built in the area of the former freight yard. Timber loading has been carried out in Merkers and Dorndorf since 2011. The former freight yard was demolished in early 2015 and the construction of the shopping centre was scheduled for 2015.[3]
In November 2014, Deutsche Bahn began to provide barrier-free access to platforms 3 and 4, the only platforms still used for passenger services. As part of the construction carried out for the renewal of Bad Salzungen station by the end of 2015, Deutsche Bahn has provided funding of €2.3 million to the state of Thuringia. Two lifts were built to provide step-free access to the platform and the new platform was also equipped with a direction signs, platform information, tactile paving as well as platform information monitors.[4]
Platforms[]
Platform | Length in m[5] | Height in cm[5] |
---|---|---|
3 | 132 | 55 |
4 | 132.5 | 55 |
Gallery[]
Street side
Level crossing at the eastern end of the station
Former Bad Salzungen wagon maintenance workshop
Station exit towards Meiningen (1991)
References[]
Notes[]
- ^ a b "Stationspreisliste 2021" [Station price list 2021] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 16 November 2020. Retrieved 3 December 2020.
- ^ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2009/2010 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
- ^ "Kaufland-Baustart für nächstes Frühjahr geplant" (in German). insuedthueringen.de. 19 April 2014.
- ^ "Baubeginn zur Erneuerung der Verkehrsstation Bad Salzungen" (Press release) (in German). Deutsche Bahn AG. 30 October 2014. Archived from the original on 11 December 2014. Retrieved 23 June 2017.
- ^ a b "Platform information for Bad Salzungen station" (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Archived from the original on 18 April 2016. Retrieved 23 June 2017.
Sources[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bad Salzungen station. |
- Dietsch, Steffen; Hans Löhner, Stefan Goldschmidt (2008). Die Werrabahn (in German). Coburg: DVerlag Eisenbahnfreunde Steinachtalbahn-Coburg. ISBN 978-3-9810681-3-9.
- Railway stations in Thuringia
- Railway stations in Germany opened in 1858
- Buildings and structures in Wartburgkreis