Kaufering station

Kaufering
Deutsche Bahn
Crossing station
Location Kaufering, Bavaria
Germany
Coordinates 48°04′51″N 10°51′17″E / 48.080835°N 10.854595°E / 48.080835; 10.854595Coordinates: 48°04′51″N 10°51′17″E / 48.080835°N 10.854595°E / 48.080835; 10.854595
Line(s)
Platforms 5
Other information
Station code 3142[1]
DS100 codeMKFG[2]
IBNR8000195
Category4[1]
History
Opened 1 November 1872
Traffic
Passengers 7,000

Kaufering station is the station of the market town of Kaufering in the Upper Bavarian district of Landsberg am Lech. The station has five platform tracks and is classified by Deutsche Bahn as a category 4 station.[1] It is used daily by about 140 trains operated by DB Regio and Regentalbahn and is an interchange station between the Allgäu Railway and the Bobingen–Landsberg am Lech railway (Lechfeld Railway).

Location

Kaufering station is located south of Kaufering. The station area is bounded to the north by Bahnhofstrasse and to the south by Viktor-Frankl-Straße. The station building is located north of the tracks and has the address of Bahnhofstrasse 15.

History

Kaufering station was opened on 1 November 1872 with the completion of the Buchloe–Kaufering–Landsberg railway. The line from Munich to Buchloe was opened on 1 May 1873. The Lechfeld Railway via Bobingen to Augsburg was opened on 15 May 1877. Kaufering was now a railway junction. On 5 April 1893, signalling at the station was centralised, which meant that the levers for setting the switches and signals were brought together on a single a lever frame. A command signal box was installed in the station building; this was operated by the dispatcher and two other signalmen. The station was rebuilt in 1906 as part of the duplication of the Munich–Buchloe line and it received a pedestrian subway and platform canopies; a warming-up shed for locomotives and a waterworks were built. In World War II, the volume of traffic increased at the station because there was a munitions factory in the vicinity of the station. An air-raid shelter was built in 1944. The transport of all munitions and the concentration camp prisoners, who were forced to build the shelter, passed through Kaufering station. As a result, the station's network of tracks developed during the war and Kaufering now had 15 tracks. On 27 June 1979, the mechanical interlocking was replaced by a push button interlocking. The old waterworks was demolished in 1981. The extension of the platform tunnels to the south to the new park-and-ride facility was completed in 1997.

Station building

The station building was built in 1872 as a three-story building of unrendered brick. The doors and windows were arranged symmetrically. The building was plastered and painted white after the First World War. Between 1990 and 1991 the building was renovated. There is a ticket office in the entrance building still.[3]

Infrastructure

Station platforms

Kaufering station has five platform tracks on three platforms, including the platform next to the station building, platform 1. The platforms are covered and have digital destination displays. All platforms are connected to platform 1 by a pedestrian tunnel. The station is not accessible by the disabled. There is a park-and-ride lot at the station.

Platforms

Platforms are used as follows:

Platform data

Platform lengths and heights are as follows:[4]

Operations

The station is operated with trains meeting at the station at regular intervals: every half hour there are connections towards Buchloe, Munich and Landsberg and every hour there are connections toward Augsburg as well.

Kaufering station has been served since 9 December 2007 by alex (until 2010: Arriva Länderbahn-Express) services operated by Regentalbahn between Munich and Lindau and Oberstdorf. This gives Kaufering a fast connection to Munich and the Allgäu. In addition, Regional-Express services run on the Munich–Memmingen, Munich–Fussen and Munich–Kempten routes every two hours.

In addition, Kaufering station is served every hour by Regionalbahn services towards Augsburg and Landsberg am Lech. Additional shuttle trains run to Landsberg to provide a 30-minute interval service.

The Regional-Express and alex services together produce a service every half hour between Munich and Buchloe.

Line/
train type
Route Frequency
alex MunichGeltendorfKauferingBuchloe – Kaufbeuren – Kempten (Allgäu) – Immenstadt – Oberstdorf / – HergatzLindau Individual services
RE Munich – Geltendorf – Kaufering – Buchloe – Türkheim (Bay) – Memmingen Every 2 hours
RE Munich – Geltendorf – Kaufering – Buchloe – Kaufbeuren – Biessenhofen – Kempten (Allgäu) Every 2 hours
RE Munich – Geltendorf – Kaufering – Buchloe – Kaufbeuren – Biessenhofen – Füssen Every 2 hours
RB Kneipp-Lechfeld-Bahn:
Landsberg (Lech) – Kaufering (– Augsburg)
Every 30 minutes

Four pairs of EuroCity trains on line 88 (Munich–Zurich) run through Kaufering without stopping.

Future

It is planned to upgrade the Munich–Buchloe-Memmingen-Lindau line and to electrify the Geltendorf-Buchloe-Memmingen-Lindau section. This work was formerly expected to last from 2014 to 2016 and be commissioned in 2017, but this work is likely to be delayed due to a recently identified cost increase.[5] There are also plans to upgrade the station to make it accessible for the disabled.[6]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 "Stationspreisliste 2016" [Station price list 2016] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 1 December 2015. Retrieved 24 January 2016.
  2. Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2009/2010 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  3. "Geschichte des Bahnhofes Kaufering" (in German). City of Kaufering. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
  4. "Platform information for Kaufering station" (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Retrieved 21 January 2013.
  5. Aimée Jajes (19 October 2012). "Elektrifizierung der Strecke München-Lindau wieder verschoben". Augsburger Allgemeine (in German). Retrieved 17 January 2013.
  6. "Verkehrsanbindung Bahnhof Kaufering" (in German). City of Kaufering. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, August 08, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.