Hannover Messe/Laatzen station

Hannover Messe/Laatzen station is a Category 4 station in the German town of Laatzen near the Hanover fairground (German: Messegelände Hannover). It is normally served only by the Hanover S-Bahn. During major events such as CeBIT and Hanover Messe all passing regional and long distance stop at the station. The station opened in 2000, replacing the old Messe station, which was located on a spur line in the fairgrounds.

Hannover Messe/Laatzen
Through station
Station
LocationMünchner Str. 2, Laatzen, Lower Saxony
Germany
Coordinates52°19′02″N 9°47′33″E
Line(s)
Platforms6
Connections
Other information
Station code3488[1]
DS100 codeHHML[2]
IBNR8003487
Category4[1]
Fare zoneGVH
Websitewww.bahnhof.de
History
Opened2000 (2000)
Services
Preceding station   S-Bahn Hannover   Following station
toward Bennemühlen
S 4
Rheten
toward Hannover Flughafen
S 8Terminus
Location
Hannover Messe/Laatzen
Location within Lower Saxony
Hannover Messe/Laatzen
Location within Germany
Hannover Messe/Laatzen
Location within Europe

History

The station was built for Expo 2000. It replaced Messe station at Laatzen, which was built in 1977 during the construction of the Hanover–Würzburg high-speed line, which had in turn replaced the former suburban railway station of Hannover-Wülfel on the Hanoverian Southern Railway.

The Hannover-Messe station was a terminal station on the fairground site that it served until 1998, having been expanded again in 1988.[3]

The new station was designed following a competition for planning ideas advertised throughout Europe.[4] It was officially open on 22 March 2000. The first of two stages went into operation in the spring of 1998, following the start of construction in 1996. A total of €200 million was invested in the project, which included the installation of 30 new sets of points and 61 additional signals. As part of Expo 2000 133,000 passengers per day were expected to travel to and from the site in 300 long distance and regional trains and 250 S-Bahn trains.[5]

A 60 m long and 36 m wide concrete bridge spans across the tracks, which is covered by a roof supported by curved steel trusses. This gives access to the platforms via covered fingers, which serve as roofs to the platform and have several exits to it.

Station hall during Expo 2000

The Messe station has two 420 m long and 9 metre wide long-distance platforms serving four running lines and a 210 m long terminal platform with two tracks for the S-Bahn line, which ends there. Two other non-stop tracks for the Hanover–Würzburg high-speed line run between the tracks serving the long-distance platforms.

During Expo 2000 there was a temporary Terminal B located northeast of the station on the existing tracks; this was used as a terminus for services to and from the north and east. These platforms were dismantled after Expo 2000 finished.

Normal Operations

S-Bahn service of class 423 at the terminating platform

Hannover-Messe/Laatzen station has been served since December 2008 by the S-Bahn, with services running every hour on line 4. Previously it had been served by an hourly Regionalbahn services on the HanoverHildesheim route and a two hourly metronom service on the Uelzen–Hanover–Göttingen route. Since 10 December 2017, LOC 1818 and LOC 1819 of the private operator Locomore has also stopped at this station. Locomore connects the Hanover region with Berlin, Frankfurt and Stuttgart.

LineRouteInterval
S 4HildesheimSarstedt – Hannover Messe/Laatzen – HanoverLangenhagenBennemühlen 60 min

Operations during major trade fairs

When major trade fairs like CeBIT and Hannover Messe are open, the station also serves as a long-distance station, giving a direct connection to the fairgrounds (CeBIT 2010 was served daily for up to 72 Intercity-Express and 15 Intercity trains and additional regional trains). S-Bahn line 4 towards Bennemühlen is reinforced so that it runs at 30-minute intervals. Furthermore, S-Bahn line 8 operates as a direct connection via Hannover Hauptbahnhof to Hannover airport.

LineRouteInterval
ICE 20(Kiel) – Hamburg – Hanover – Hannover Messe/Laatzen – Göttingen – Frankfurt – MannheimKarlsruhe – Freiburg – Basel SBB (– ZürichInterlaken Ost)0120 min
ICE 22(Kiel) – Hamburg – Hannover – Hannover Messe/Laatzen – Göttingen – Frankfurt – Frankfurt Flughafen – Mannheim (– Heidelberg) – Stuttgart0120 min
ICE 25(Lübeck) – Hamburg – Hannover – Hannover Messe/Laatzen – Göttingen – FuldaWürzburg – Nuremberg – IngolstadtMunich (– Garmisch-Partenkirchen)060 min
IC 26(Binz) – StralsundRostock – Hamburg – Hannover – Hannover Messe/Laatzen – Göttingen – Frankfurt – Heidelberg – Karlsruhe0120 min
RE 2 Uelzen – Celle – Hanover Hannover Messe/Laatzen Sarstedt Nordstemmen – Elze Kreiensen – Göttingen 060 min
RE 10Hannover Hannover Messe/Laatzen Hildesheim – Derneburg Salzgitter-Ringelheim – Goslar Bad Harzburg 060 min
S 8Hannover Flughafen – Langenhagen – Hannover – Hannover Messe/Laatzen030 min

Connections

Skywalk to the exhibition ground

The 340-metre-long skywalk bridge connects the station and the fair ground. This is an elevated double tube in which two parallel walkways allow a rapid, two-way and all-weather pedestrian link.

There is a link to a stop on the Hanover Stadtbahn lines 1 and 2, which is located about 200 metres away on Hildesheimer Straße. Next to the station is a stop on bus routes 340 and 341, which only run hourly.

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gollark: And, through quite a lot of complex logic, `(1/"d") * "abcdefgh"` is equivalent to `"abcdefgh" / "d"`.
gollark: You can also do stuff like `"abcde" - "c"`.
gollark: You can, for example, do `(nil).bees = "Hello, world!"` and then access that on any `nil` on any potatOS computer.
gollark: No, we use a partial Hell Superset implementation which is incompatible with this, as well as a bunch of hooks for superglobals.

References

  1. "Stationspreisliste 2020" [Station price list 2020] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 4 November 2019. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
  2. Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (10 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2017. ISBN 978-3-89494-146-8.
  3. "Neuer Messebahnhof eingeweiht". Die Bundesbahn (in German) (9): 475. 1988.
  4. "Expo 2000- und Messe-Bahnhof Hannover-Laatzen". Renaissance der Bahnhöfe. Die Stadt im 21. Jahrhundert (in German). Vieweg Verlag. 1996. pp. 100–107. ISBN 3-528-08139-2.
  5. "Eröffnung des neuen Messebahnhofs in Hannover". Eisenbahn-Revue International (in German) (5/2000): 233 f. ISSN 1421-2811.
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