Ludwigsburg station

Ludwigsburg station
Through station
Location Ludwigsburg, Baden-Württemberg
Germany
Coordinates 48°53′32″N 9°11′7″E / 48.89222°N 9.18528°E / 48.89222; 9.18528Coordinates: 48°53′32″N 9°11′7″E / 48.89222°N 9.18528°E / 48.89222; 9.18528
Line(s)
Platforms 5
Other information
Station code 3833
DS100 codeTLU
Category3 [1]
Website www.bahnhof.de
History
Opened 15 October 1846

Ludwigsburg station is in Ludwigsburg in the German state of Baden-Württemberg on the Franconia Railway and the Backnang–Bietigheim line. It is served by regional trains and the Stuttgart S-Bahn. Until 2005 the Ludwigsburg–Markgröningen line also connected to the station. In addition, it has a direct link with Stuttgart's main marshalling yard at Kornwestheim.

History

From the beginning of the planning for the Central Railway (German: Centralbahn), a station was planned for the Residenzstadt (city with a royal palace) of Ludwigsburg. Construction began in 1844 and affected several parts of the Ludwigsburg district. A portion of the Lerchenholz hill had to be removed. The site of the former Schafhofseen (lake) had to be filled in. Ludwigsburg station had a two-storey entrance building and a locomotive depot.

Ludwigsburg station in 1860

On 5 October 1846 the first train ran to Ludwigsburg. The stops between Stuttgart and Ludwigsburg were not served by the Royal Württemberg State Railways until ten days later. The inauguration ceremony for the new line was held in Stuttgart. The Ludwigsburg city council took no part in it.

Unfortunately for the locals the station was in a very unfavourable position. Due to the swampy area around the Feuersee (lake) there was only a narrow track that was very difficult to use in rain or snow. Carts could only approach the station via Solitudestraße and Leonbergerstraße. A direct road link had to be created as soon as possible. But the Government did not have the finances to achieve this.

The construction continued on the Northern Railway. A year later, on 11 October 1847, the next section was completed and trains ran to Bietigheim. In 1852 the State Railways opened a second track on the line from Stuttgart to Bietigheim. In the 1860s another floor was added to the station building along with two wings. The southern wing was a building for mail handling, the north one was a waiting room. A loading dock existed for freight and military traffic. At the time there were five tracks running through the station. A sixth track was added as siding in 1868 to serve the factory of Heinrich Franck & Sons, which produced a coffee substitute from chickory.

After ten years of construction, the road between Wilhelmsplatz (now Schillerplatz) and the station was completed in 1869. Eisenbahnstraße (railway street) was a short time later renamed Myliusstraße after General Ferdinand von Mylius who was considered the founder of the costly street. Stately buildings were built along the street and Bahnhofsvorplatz (station forecourt) such as the railway hotel (1870s), the general post office (1886) and the music hall (1890).

On 15 October 1881 the State Railway opened the railway line between Ludwigsburg and Beihingen (now part of Freiberg am Neckar), connecting to the Backnang–Bietigheim line.Three terminating tracks were built on the north side of the entrance building to cater for the resulting traffic.

From 1910 to 1926 the station forecourt was the starting point of the Ludwigsburg Overhead Line Railway (Ludwigsburger Oberleitungs-Bahn), an early trolleybus operation. A branch line to Markgröningen was opened on 4 December 1916. The building of two additional tracks between Stuttgart and Ludwigsburg was completed in 1929. On 15 May 1933, electrification of two tracks to Stuttgart was completed and suburban services began to operate on the line.

South end of Ludwigsburg station with the Wüstenrot Tower in the background

On 28 September 1975 Deutsche Bundesbahn closed passenger operations on the line to Markgröningen due to lack of passengers. From the mid-1970s tracks in the station area were modified as part of the introduction of Stuttgart S-Bahn operations. The junction between the Northern Railway and the line to Backnang is now grade separated. The terminating tracks north of the station were built over.

Despite an extensive renovation of the station and the waiting room in the 1950s, the station was outdated and still unpopular with some of the population. Its demolition in favour of a new building began in October 1987. It was one of a small number of stations that had survived World War II to be demolished and replaced in Württemberg. After several planning delays the groundbreaking ceremony for a new building took place in June 1991. The new building combines the station with a shopping centre. It was opened on 19 November 1992.[2]

Operations

The station has five platform tracks. Regional trains stop at track 1 running towards Bietigheim. Track 2 is used by S-Bahn services to Bietigheim or Marbach. S-Bahn services towards Zuffenhausen run on track 3. Track 4 is used by regional trains to Stuttgart. Track 5 is not used by scheduled services.

Long distance services do not normally stop at Ludwigsburg, except for a night stop on an InterCity train from Frankfurt to Stuttgart and an Intercity-Express from Stuttgart to Essen. The station is classified by Deutsche Bahn as a category 3 station.

Regional services

Line Frequency
RE R4 Stuttgart – LudwigsburgBietigheimHeilbronnBad Friedrichshall-JagstfeldOsterburkenLaudaWürzburg 120 minutes
RE R5 Stuttgart – Ludwigsburg – Bietigheim – Vaihingen (Enz)MühlackerPforzheimKarlsruhe-DurlachKarlsruhe 120 minutes
RE R5 Stuttgart – Ludwigsburg – Bietigheim – Vaihingen (Enz) – Mühlacker – BrettenBruchsalHeidelberg 120 minutes
RB R1 Stuttgart – Ludwigsburg – Bietigheim – Heilbronn – Bad Friedrichshall-Jagstfeld – Mosbach-Neckarelz 60 minutes (between Stuttgart and Heilbronn: 30 minutes)

S-Bahn

Line Route
S 4 BacknangMarbachLudwigsburgZuffenhausenHauptbahnhofSchwabstraße
S 5 Bietigheim – Ludwigsburg – Zuffenhausen – Hauptbahnhof – Schwabstraße

Notes

  1. "Stationspreisliste 2016" [Station price list 2016] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 1 December 2015. Retrieved 24 January 2016.
  2. Feitenhansl, Roland (2003). Der Bahnhof Heilbronn – seine Empfangsgebäude von 1848, 1874 und 1958 (in German). Hövelhof: DGEG Medien. pp. 23, 54. ISBN 3-937189-01-7.

References

External links

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