Stadtmitte (Berlin U-Bahn)

Ruhleben-bound train at U2 platform, Stadtmitte U-Bahn station
Platform of the U2
Platform of the U6

Stadtmitte (City Centre) is a Berlin U-Bahn station located on the U2 and the U6 in the Mitte district.

Overview

The U2 platform opened on 1 October 1908 with the new U-Bahn section from Potsdamer Platz to Spittelmarkt. The station beneath the crossing of Friedrichstraße and Mohrenstraße was designed by Alfred Grenander and initially called Friedrichstraße.[1] The second platform of the present-day U6 line was finished on 30 January 1923, but was built about 160 m (520 ft) southwards at the corner of Friedrichstraße and Leipziger Straße, the main east-west thoroughfare of the Friedrichstadt quarter. The platforms are connected by a pedestrian underpass colloquially called the Mäusetunnel ("mice tunnel"). The station received its current name in 1936.

The U6 station was closed from 13 August 1961 due to the construction of the Berlin Wall. This station is also again, once the border station, and it is well connected to the U2 station respectively. The only difference to Schwartzkopffstraße, consists only in the presence of the compound where the tracks have become store rooms. The rolls of barbed wire were also installed so as to prevent escapees from crawling, and the entrances and transfer linkways were all locked with a baby-lock gate. Armed guards were patrolled at the southern side of the entrance. All were eliminated by 29 June 1990 and reopened on 1 July 1990.

References

  1. J. Meyer-Kronthaler, Berlins U-Bahnhöfe, Berlin: be.bra, 1996
Preceding station   Berlin U-Bahn   Following station
towards Ruhleben
U2
towards Pankow
towards Alt-Tegel
U6

Coordinates: 52°30′44″N 13°23′22″E / 52.51222°N 13.38944°E / 52.51222; 13.38944

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