Landau (Pfalz) Hauptbahnhof

Landau (Pfalz) Hauptbahnhof (Landau (Pfalz) main station) is the centre of public transport in the city of Landau in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate.

Landau (Pfalz) Hauptbahnhof
Junction station
Track field and platforms with a Regionalbahn service to Pirmasens
LocationLandau in der Pfalz, Rhineland-Palatinate
Germany
Coordinates49°11′53″N 8°7′34″E
Line(s)
Platforms5
Other information
Station code3505
DS100 codeRLA[1]
IBNR8000216
Category4[2]
History
Opened1855
Services
Preceding station   DB Regio Mitte   Following station
RE 6
Knöringen-Essingen
RB 51
Pfälzische Maximiliansbahn
Insheim
Knöringen-Essingen
RB 53
Pfälzische Maximiliansbahn
toward Wissembourg
TerminusRB 55
Queichtalbahn
Landau (Pfalz) Süd
Location
Landau (Pfalz) Hauptbahnhof
Location in Rhineland-Palatinate
Landau (Pfalz) Hauptbahnhof
Location in Germany
Landau (Pfalz) Hauptbahnhof
Location in Europe

History

The history of the station begins in 1855, when the Palatine Maximilian Railway was opened on the Neustadt–Landau–WindenWissembourg route. In 1872, a new station building was built in the Romanesque revival style, replacing the original timber building. In the same year, the Lower Queich Valley Railway (Untere Queichtalbahn) was opened from Germersheim to Landau. The Queich Valley Railway (Queichtalbahn), connecting Landau, Annweiler, Biebermühle and Zweibrücken, was opened in 1874/5.

Long distance trains ran in all directions, on the Amsterdam–Bingerbrück–Bad Kreuznach–Neustadt–Landau–StrasbourgBasel route and on the Munich–UlmStuttgartBruchsal–Germersheim–Landau–Biebermühle–Zweibrücken–Saarbrücken route.

In 1898 the branch line to Herxheim was opened. The Palatine Overland Railway (Pfälzer Oberlandbahn), an overland tramway (interurban) running from Neustadt to Landau, was completed in 1913 to the station, but it was closed to Landau in 1953.

The station building was completely destroyed in World War II. A temporary structure existed for several years until the current station building was built. In the early 1980s, the Lower Queich Valley Railway and the branch line to Herxheim were closed. In the 1990s, the operations depot and the smaller marshalling yard were closed.

In 2010, the station was renovated, the platforms was modernised and lifts were installed.

Operations

The main station consists of five platform tracks: tracks 1, 2 and 5 are served by trains on the Queich Valley Railway, although tracks 1 and 5 are rarely used. Track 3 and 4 are used by trains on the Maximilian Railway. Services run in each direction on the Maximilian Railway three times an hour, a Regional-Express service runs on the Karlsruhe–Neustadt route, a Regionalbahn service runs on the Neustadt–Wissembourg route and a Regionalbahn service runs on the Karlsruhe–Neustadt route. Once an hour a train runs on the Queich Valley Railway.

On Sundays and public holidays three pairs of regional long distance services operate: the Elsass-Express from Mainz to Wissembourg, the Weinstraßenexpress from Wissembourg to Koblenz and the Rheintalexpress from Karlsruhe to Koblenz.

Buses operate to the suburbs from a central bus station located in the station forecourt.

In the station building there is a restaurant and a kiosk. On 2 September 2010 a new travel centre opened.

gollark: Yes, I can hear *you* okay.
gollark: I'm going to try reloading the page or something, stupid unreliable browser Discord.
gollark: I found a spare USB microphone in my random electronics box, so I might try with that tomorrow. Also, my phone has a microphone, I realized.
gollark: I checked the pulseaudio control panel thing, and it lists both an internal and headset microphone, both muted by default. When I *un*muted them and tried the mic test thing I just got noise, so who knows what's going on with that.
gollark: Well, I've got a server, but that... doesn't have a microphone either.

References

  1. Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2009/2010 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  2. "Stationspreisliste 2020" [Station price list 2020] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 4 November 2019. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
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