Bramming railway station explained

Bramming
Type:railway station
Address:Jernbanegade 9
6740 Bramming
Borough:Esbjerg Municipality
Country:Denmark
Coordinates:55.4646°N 8.7071°W
Platform:2
Tracks:3
Architect:Niels Peder Christian Holsøe
Code:Bm[1]
Opened:3 October 1874
Owned:Banedanmark
Operator:DSB and GoCollective
Map Type:Denmark Region of Southern Denmark#Denmark
Map Dot Label:Bramming station
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Zoom:14

Bramming railway station (previously:) is a railway station serving the railway town of Bramming east of the city of Esbjerg in West Jutland, Denmark.

Bramming railway station is located on the Lunderskov–Esbjerg railway line from to, and is also the northern terminal station of the Bramming–Tønder railway line. The station opened in 1874. It offers InterCity services to and Copenhagen and regional rail services to, and Aarhus operated by the national railway company DSB, as well as regional rail services to,,, and in Germany, operated by the private public transport company GoCollective.

History

Bramming railway station opened on 3 October 1874 as on one of the original intermediate stations on the Lunderskov–Esbjerg railway line.

Already the following year, the station became a railway junction as the railway line from Bramming to Ribe was opened on 1 May 1875.

The station was the site of the 1913 Bramminge train accident, when train 1029 (known as the Emigrant) servicing the route from Copenhagen to Esbjerg derailed soon after passing the station at Bramminge.

In 1916, Bramming station also became the southwestern terminus of the railway line from Bramming to Grindsted which opened on 1 December 1916 and in 1920 became a part of the new Langå-Bramming railway line. The Langå-Bramming Line was closed in 1971. Freight traffic on the section to continued until May 2012.

Architecture

The still existing station building from 1874 was built to designs by the Danish architect Niels Peder Christian Holsøe, known for the numerous railway stations he designed across Denmark in his capacity of head architect of the Danish State Railways.[2]

Services

The station offers direct InterCity services to and Copenhagen and regional rail services to, and Aarhus, both operated by the national railway company DSB, as well as regional rail services to,,, and in Germany, operated by the private public transport company GoCollective.

See also

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Stationsforkortelser . . April 12, 2024 . da .
  2. Web site: N.P. Holsøe. Kunstindeks Danmark & Weilbach Kunstnerleksikon. Vigand Rasmussen. 19 October 2022. da.