Oberlahnstein station

Oberlahnstein station
Through station
Location Lahnstein, Rhineland-Palatinate
Germany
Coordinates 50°17′59″N 7°36′14″E / 50.2998184°N 7.6038912°E / 50.2998184; 7.6038912Coordinates: 50°17′59″N 7°36′14″E / 50.2998184°N 7.6038912°E / 50.2998184; 7.6038912
Line(s)
Platforms 3
Other information
Station code 4659
DS100 codeKOL[1]
IBNR8004550
Category5[2]
History
Opened July 1, 1858 (1858-07-01)
Services
Preceding station   VIAS   Following station
toward Neuwied
SE 10
RheingauLinie
Braubach

Oberlahnstein station is, along with Niederlahnstein and Friedrichssegen, one of three stations in the town of Lahnstein in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate. It is a through station with 3 platform tracks on the East Rhine Railway (German: Rechte Rheinstrecke) and is located in the Oberlahnstein district. The adjacent freight depot now forms only a brownfield site.

History

The first section of the Lahn Valley Railway was opened from Oberlahnstein to Bad Ems on 1 July 1858, but shortly afterwards it was buried by a landslide. The Nassau Rhine Railway Company (Nassauische Rhein Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft), opened in 1856, the first section of the Nassau Rhine Railway (Nassauische Rheinbahn) from Wiesbaden to Rudesheim, which was authorised in 1853. Due to financial and technical difficulties, the line was not opened to Oberlahnstein until 1862. It was extended to Niederlahnstein on 3 June 1864. The Stolzenfels–Oberlahnstein train ferry connected the right and the left Rhine lines for two years from the second half of 1862 in order to connect the two lines.

A direct connection was opened from Niederlahnstein to Hohenrhein junction on the Lahn Valley Railway in 1879. This meant that Oberlahnstein station lost some of its importance.

Around 1960, the entire East Rhine Railway from Cologne to Wiesbaden was electrified. The station building, which had been heavily damaged in World War II, was replaced by a new building in 1968.

On 30 May 1983, the Oberlahnstein–Friedrichssegen section of the Lahn Valley Railway was closed and dismantled. Thus Oberlahnstein station lost its function as a railway junction in the Rhine-Mosel-Lahn area, which has now largely been transferred to the Niederlahnstein station and Koblenz Central Station (Hauptbahnhof). However, no passenger trains had run on this section since the 1910s, except for a brief period after the Second World War.

In December 2007, an electronic interlocking was commissioned on the Right Rhine line. In the summer of 2008, the second phase of the project was completed and the Oberlahnstein–Niederlahnstein section was connected to the electronic interlocking system.[3]

Oberlahnstein depot

As early as 1862 a small locomotive depot (Lokstation) was established in Oberlahnstein, which later developed into the Oberlahnstein depot (Bahnbetriebswerk). The depot was disbanded as a separate unit in 1962, when the roundhouse was also demolished.

Platforms

Oberlahnstein station once had an extensive system of tracks, which were mainly located in the now closed and dismantled freight yard. Passenger services use a “home” and a side platform.

The numbering begins on the southwest side of the station building.

The tracks of the former Oberlahnstein freight yard are slightly offset to the tracks of the passenger station and today form only a brownfield site.

Rail services

Oberlahnstein station is only served by local trains. The southern section of the East Rhine Railway (Koblenz–Wiesbaden–Frankfurt) was served until the beginning of the 2010/2011 timetable in December 2010 by the Loreley-Bahn (RB 10) and the Loreley-Express (RE 10), which were operated by the Deutsche Bahn (DB). As the result of a Europe-wide tender, services since 12 December 2010, have been operates as a single Stadt-Express services every hour, sometimes even half an hour, by VIAS GmbH, using new Stadler FLIRT sets.

Line Service Route Frequency
SE 10 RheingauLinie NeuwiedKoblenzOberlahnsteinWiesbadenFrankfurt Hourly

Notes

  1. Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2009/2010 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  2. "Stationspreisliste 2016" [Station price list 2016] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 1 December 2015. Retrieved 24 January 2016.
  3. "ESTW Rheintal: Weiterer Streckenabschnitt geht in Betrieb" (in German). Bahn-Nachrichtenarchiv. 2 December 2011. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
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