Stephansplatz (Vienna U-Bahn)

Stephansplatz is an important destination and interchange station in the Vienna U-Bahn system. It is located under the Stephansplatz and is served by lines U1 and U3. It is located in the Innere Stadt district.

Stephansplatz
U1 platform
LocationStephansplatz, Vienna
Austria
Owned byWiener Linien
Line(s) and
Platforms1 island platform and 2 single platforms.
Tracks4
Construction
Disabled accessYes
History
Opened1978
Services
Preceding station   Vienna U-Bahn   Following station
towards Oberlaa
Line U1
towards Leopoldau
towards Ottakring
Line U3
towards Simmering

Stephansplatz station opened on 18 November 1978. Designated officially as the central node of the U-Bahn by City in on-train announcements and on network maps by a pictogram of its namesake, the Stephansdom, the station serves the heart of the Altstadt and connects two of the busiest lines, making it one of the busiest stations in the city. The U1 between it and Karlsplatz has the highest ridership in the system: approximately 167,000 riders per day in 2004.[1]

Station layout

The U-Bahn platforms lie up to five storeys below the Stephansplatz. Station entrances are located in the square, in the Graben, in Kärntner Straße and in Goldschmiedegasse. To preserve the streetscape, they are not covered. The Goldschmiedegasse entrance is via a lift on the outside of the Haas-Haus and is wheelchair-accessible.[2] The remaining entrances have escalators and stairs. There are a total of 23 escalators of varying lengths, and 3 additional lifts within the station.

The U1 runs deeper underground and has an island platform; the two U3 platforms are single platforms stacked above each other. An information kiosk and a Wiener Linien ticket purchase outlet are located on the upper level of the station. In addition, two Viennese bakery brands have stores within the station complex. Until its relocation in 2005, there was also a police station.[3]

History

Night view of excavations for the station in front of St. Stephen's Cathedral, June 1975

Adequate public transport service to the Innere Stadt within the Ringstraße had been a long-term need in Vienna. As early as the 19th century, plans had been proposed for a central station immediately next to St. Stephen's Cathedral. The Palais Equitable, built in 188791 for The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States on the adjacent Stock-im-Eisen Platz, actually has a covered stairway that was intended to be adaptable as an U-Bahn access.[4][5]

Construction of the Stephansplatz station began as part of the creation of the basic network (Grundnetz) in May 1973. Deep excavation at the site was completed in August 1977 and construction of the station then proceeded largely in an open pit.[6] The U3 connection was planned from the beginning and prepared for as part of the work in the 1970s, but that part of the station only opened in 1991.

In the course of digging in front of the cathedral in 1973, the Vergilius Chapel, closed off in the 18th century and completely forgotten, was rediscovered. It was excavated by archaeologists and integrated into the station.

Smell

The U1 station has an unpleasant smell which has given rise to urban legends.[7] However, the true cause is that to prevent the sandy ground under the cathedral from sinking and undermining it, an organic binding agent was used to stabilise the ground. On warm days, a chemical reaction caused by the binding agent produces butyric acid, which mingles with seeping groundwater and causes the unpleasant odour and also leaves deposits in the station.[8][9]


U3 platform
Station entrance in front of Haas-Haus with St. Stephen's in the background


gollark: Oh, and land value tax is a neat idea.
gollark: I think market systems are waaay better than some weird communist one at resource allocation (with intervention), so I'd prefer markets + limited central governance.
gollark: If there's some leather available, and two different production processes needing leather, how do you decide which factory gets which?
gollark: And a quota for "10 tons of nails", so they made a single 10-ton nail.
gollark: There were things with Soviet truck depots driving trucks in circles pointlessly because they had a quota of "40000 miles driven".

References

  1. Horst Prillinger, Zahlen, Daten, Fakten, Die Wiener U-Bahn, 2 September 2006, retrieved 15 June 2010 (German).
  2. U1 - Stephansplatz, Barrierfreie Informationen, Wiener Linien (German).
  3. "Polizeiinspektion Brandstätte 4 eröffnet", Vienna Town Hall press release, 14 October 2005, retrieved 15 June 2010 (German).
  4. Caroline Jäger, Österreichische Architektur des 19. und 20. Jahrhunderts, Vienna: Neuer Wissenschaftlicher Verlag, 2005, ISBN 3-7083-0263-X, p. 142: "[das] von Andreas Streit für eine New Yorker Lebensversicherung . . . errichtete Palais Equitable, das . . . einen mit Glas überdeckten Innenhof mit einer interessanter räumlichen Lösung der Hauptstiege aufweist, die angeblich schon für einen künftigen U-Bahn Aufgang vorgesehen war" - "[the] Palais Equitable, built by Andreas Streit for a New York insurance company, which manifests a glass-covered interior courtyard with an interesting spatial solution for the main stairway which was reputedly already intended for a future U-Bahn entrance".
  5. Rob Humphreys, The Rough Guide to Vienna, London: Rough Guides, 2001, p. 47.
  6. "Arge U-Bahn Stephansplatz", Arbeiter-Zeitung 20 August 1977, p. 19 (German).
  7. "Bauopfer für die Wiener U-Bahn", Moderne Sagen, Sagen.at, retrieved 15 June 2010 (German): Legends include a rat burial ground, a homeless person who died next to a heating installation, and accidentally walled up workers; also a reference to the past practice of sacrificing small animals for the weal of a new building.
  8. Horst Prillinger, "Warum stinkt es in der U1-Station Stephansplatz so?" ("Why does it reek like that in the Stephansplatz U1 station?"), FAQ, Die Wiener U-Bahn, 2 September 2006 (German), retrieved 15 June 2010.
  9. Horst Prillinger, "What's that foul smell on the U1 platform at Stephansplatz?", FAQ, The Vienna Metro, 1 May 2007, retrieved 20 June 2010.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.