St._Wendel_station

St. Wendel station

St. Wendel station

Add article description


St. Wendel station is the most important station in the town of St. Wendel in the German state of Saarland. The station is located at line-kilometer 106.3 of the Nahe Valley Railway (Nahetalbahn) and was the beginning of the now dismantled St. Wendel–Tholey railway. It was opened during the extension of the Nahe Valley Railway from Idar-Oberstein via Türkismühle to Neunkirchen (Saar) on 26 May 1860.

Quick Facts General information, Location ...

Location

The station is located in the centre of the town of St. Wendel. A large bus station with 16 bus platforms is located in front of the station building from which city buses and regional buses run to the surrounding towns and municipalities.

History

St. Wendel station was opened with the Idar-Oberstein–Türkismühle–St. Wendel–Neunkirchen (Saar) section of the Nahe Valley Railway from Bingen am Rhein to Saarbrücken on 26 May 1860.

A single-track local railway was opened from St. Wendel station to Tholey on 3 August 1915, but its planned continuation to Lebach was not built. Passenger services were stopped on this route in 1984. The section from Oberthal to Tholey was closed first and the remainder of the line, which was served by freight traffic until 1995, was closed in 1996. Meanwhile, the entire line from St. Wendel to Tholey has been converted to an asphalt long-distance cycling route (Wendelinus–Radweg).

The Reichsbahn district office was moved from Türkismühle to St. Wendel in 1937.

The line from Türkismühle to St. Wendel has been electrified since 1969.

Operations

All trains on the Nahe Valley Railway now (2017) stop at St. Wendel. The station is a stop of an hourly Regional-Express line RE 3 from Frankfurt (Main) Hauptbahnhof or Mainz Hauptbahnhof to Saarbrücken Hauptbahnhof and an hourly Regionalbahn service from Neubrücke via Türkismühle, St. Wendel and Neunkirchen to Saarbrücken (RB 73) and an hourly Regionalbahn service from St. Wendel via Neunkirchen to Saarbrücken (also RB 73).[4][5]

More information Line, Route ...

References

Notes

  1. "Stationspreisliste 2024" [Station price list 2024] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 24 April 2023. Retrieved 29 November 2023.
  2. Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2009/2010 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  3. "Wabenplan 2021" (PDF). Saarländischer Verkehrsverbund. 7 January 2021. Retrieved 4 April 2021.

Sources

  • Brumm, Rudolf (1987). Die Rhein-Nahe-Bahn. Ein ausführlicher Bericht über Planung, Bau und Betrieb der Rhein-Nahe-Bahn Bingerbrück–Bad Kreuznach–Bad Münster a. St.–Sobernheim–Kirn–Idar-Oberstein–St. Wendel–Neunkirchen [The Rhine-Nahe Railway. A detailed report on the planning, construction and operation of the Rhein-Nahe Railway, Bingerbrück-Bad Kreuznach-Bad Münster a. St.-Sobernheim-Kirn-Idar-Oberstein-St. Wendel–Neunkirchen] (in German). Bad Kreuznach: Edition Nahetal. ISBN 3-926421-00-2.
  • Sturm, Heinz (2005). Die pfälzischen Eisenbahnen [The Palatine Railways] (in German). Ludwigshafen am Rhein: pro MESSAGE. ISBN 3-934845-26-6.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article St._Wendel_station, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.