Alzey | |
Native Name Lang: | de |
Symbol: | rail |
Symbol Location: | de |
Type: | Through station |
Address: | Bahnhofstr. 30, Alzey, Rhineland-Palatinate |
Country: | Germany |
Coordinates: | 49.7501°N 8.1099°W |
Platforms: | 3 |
Zone: | |
Passengers: | 3500[4] |
Website: | www.bahnhof.de |
Map Type: | Rhineland-Palatinate |
Alzey station is, along with the stations Alzey Süd and Alzey West, one of three stations in the urban area of the Rhenish Hesse (German: Rheinhessen) town of Alzey in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate. It is classified by Deutsche Bahn as a category 3 station.
The station was built in 1871 during the construction of the Alzey–Mainz railway and the Rheinhessen Railway by the Hessian Ludwig Railway (Hessische Ludwigsbahn, HLB). Three years later, the Donnersberg Railway was opened to Kirchheimbolanden. Most recently, the was officially opened on 28 September 1896, but it was closed after almost 100 years.
The station building and the nearby freight yard were built from Flonheim sandstone. The station, as restored in the 1920s, had a waiting room for first and second class passengers and another for the third and fourth class.[5] At noon on 19 October 1944, the station building was destroyed by an air raid. Until the late 1950s, a shed was used as a substitute before the new building was opened in 1960.[6] Until then, passengers were allowed through the ticket gate only with a valid ticket or visitors with a platform ticket.
Because of Alzey station’s location in the middle of Rhenish Hesse, it is connected to three operating lines:
The following is an overview of services at Alzey station:
Line | Route | Frequency | |
---|---|---|---|
Individual services (seasonal) | |||
(Frankfurt Hbf – Frankfurt Airport – –) Mainz –Alzey – Kirchheimbolanden | Hourly | ||
(Frankfurt Hbf –Frankfurt Airport – Rüsselsheim –) Mainz –Alzey – Kirchheimbolanden | Hourly | ||
Hourly |
The entrance building is to the east of platforms 1 to 5. Located in the entrance building are the DB travel centre, a car rental and transportation service and a restaurant, which also operates a kiosk facing platform 1.
Alzey station has three platforms with a total of five platform tracks. Track 1 is the “home” platform.[7]
Tracks 1 and 2 are used here for services to Mainz, Worms and Bingen. Services on the Donnersberg Railway to Kirchheimbolanden usually run from track 3. Tracks 4 and 5 are largely overgrown and are disused. The island platforms (tracks 2–5) can only be reached through a pedestrian underpass. The three platforms in use have a length of 171 metres.[8]
Platform tracks 1 to 3 have barrier-free access for the disabled. There is no lift for tracks 4 and 5.
Alzey freight yard is south of Alzey station, but it was shut down decades ago. The buildings are now sold or rented and the open spaces of the freight yard are used for the bus station and a supermarket.
Also to the south was a locomotive depot (Bw Alzey), which was built in 1904, with a 4-stall engine shed, a roundhouse with a turntable and other smaller industrial buildings. The depot lost its independence in 1952 and became a branch of the Worms depot. In subsequent years, the depot was closed down gradually. The turntable has long-since been removed and the engine shed is rented to a bus company. Although the roundhouse is a listed building, it is unused and in danger of collapse.
South of the entrance building of Alzey station is a bus station where numerous buses of two Deutsche Bahn-owned bus companies, Omnibusverkehr Rhein-Nahe (ORN) and Busverkehr Rhein-Neckar (BRN), call: ORN routes 424, 425, 426, 428, 441, 442, 444, 446 and 660 and BRN routes 427 and 435 run from Alzey to the Rhenish Hesse region. In addition, ORN operates routes 421 and 422 as the so-called “city bus lines”, which run through Alzey town.
Near the entrance building there are plenty of parking spaces. There is also a taxi stand nearby.