Brest-Tsentralny railway station
Brest-Tsentralny | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Belarusian Railway terminal | ||||||
Location | Belarus, Brest | |||||
Owned by | Belarusian Railway | |||||
Platforms | 5 (4 island platforms) | |||||
Construction | ||||||
Parking | yes | |||||
Other information | ||||||
Station code | 130007[1] | |||||
Fare zone | 4 | |||||
History | ||||||
Opened | 1886[2] | |||||
Electrified | yes | |||||
Services | ||||||
|
Brest-Tsentralny is the main railway station of Brest, Belarus.
History[]
The first building of the Brest station was built in 1886, and opened on 28 May in the presence of Emperor Alexander III.
It was built in the form of "medieval castle" with four water towers. The station was equipped with water heating. In the halls for passengers of the 1st and 2nd classes have parquet floors, 3rd class — plank, utility room — asphalt. Soon the station became the first in Russian Railways, have electric lighting — 160 light bulbs of 20 candles appeared in the halls and on platforms and 12 lights on 50 of candles lit up the station square.
In 1915, during the First world war, the station building was destroyed by the retreating Russian troops. The Polish authorities have constructed a new building. Visited Brest in 1949, Marshal Kliment Voroshilov, has contributed to the adoption of the decision on reconstruction of the station, which was held in 1953-1957.[3]
International trains and destinations[]
Because of the break-of-gauge at Brest, where Russian broad gauge railway track meets European standard gauge, all passenger trains travelling to or from Poland have their bogies replaced here to continue their journey and freight is transloaded from cars of one gauge to cars of another.
Train number | Train name | Destination | Operated by |
---|---|---|---|
003Б/004Б | Minsk bel: Мінск, rus: Минск |
Moscow (Belorussky) | Belarusian Railways |
007М/008Б | Moscow (Belorussky) | Belarusian Railways | |
009Щ/010Щ | Polonez rus: Полонез |
Warsaw (Zachodnia) Moscow (Belorussky) |
Russian Railways |
013М/014М | Strizh rus: Стриж |
Berlin (HBF) Moscow (Belorussky) |
Russian Railways |
017Б/018Б | Nice Moscow (Belorussky) |
Russian Railways | |
021Е/022Г | Vltava rus: Влтава |
Prague (Hlavní) Moscow (Belorussky) |
Russian Railways |
023Й/024Й | Paris (Paris-Est) Moscow (Belorussky) |
Russian Railways | |
027Б/028Б | Bug bel, rus: Буг |
Moscow (Belorussky) | Belarusian Railways |
051Б/052Б | Zvezda bel: Зорка, rus: Звезда |
Saint Petersburg (Vitebsky) | Belarusian Railways |
065Б/066Б | Murmansk | Belarusian Railways | |
067Б/068Б | Saratov | Belarusian Railways | |
095Б/096Б | Moscow (Belorussky) | Belarusian Railways | |
103Н/104Б | Novosibirsk | Belarusian Railways | |
119Б/120Б | Terespol | Belarusian Railways | |
121Б/122Б | Terespol | Belarusian Railways | |
123Б/124Б | Terespol | Belarusian Railways | |
IC 125/IC 126 | Mickiewicz | Warsaw (Zachodnia) | Polish State Railways |
IC 127/IC 128 | Skaryna | Warsaw (Zachodnia) | Polish State Railways |
EC 130/EC 131 | Báthory | Budapest (Nyugati) | Hungarian State Railways Polish State Railways |
131Б/132Б | Moscow (Belorussky) | Belarusian Railways | |
133Я/134Ф | Arkhangelsk | Belarusian Railways | |
221Б/222Б | Moscow (Belorussky) | Belarusian Railways | |
317Б/318Б | Karaganda | Belarusian Railways | |
327Б/328Б | Kazan (Main) | Belarusian Railways | |
675Ф/676Ф | Moscow (Belorussky) | Belarusian Railways |
Photos[]
Station building
Tracks
Depot, bogie exchange
The railway station in 1915)
Railroad checkpoint "Bug"
References[]
- ^ Stations on paravoz.com
- ^ Железнодорожные станции СССР. Справочник. — М.: Транспорт, 1981
- ^ Railway stations of USSR. Справочник. — М.: Транспорт, 1981
External links[]
- Railway stations in Belarus
- Railway stations opened in 1886