Eckernförde station explained

Eckernförde
Native Name Lang:de
Symbol:rail
Symbol Location:de
Type:Through station
Address:Reeperbahn 54-58, Eckernförde, Schleswig-Holstein
Country:Germany
Coordinates:54.4678°N 9.8353°W
Platforms:3
Opened:1 July 1881
Website:www.bahnhof.de
Map Type:Schleswig-Holstein#Germany#Europe
Map Dot Label:Eckernförde
Embedded:
Stroke-Colour:
  1. C60C30
Stroke-Width:3
Marker:rail-underground
Marker-Colour:
  1. 009D58
Zoom:15

Eckernförde station is the station of the town of Eckernförde in the German state of Schleswig-Holstein. It is a through station and the most important en-route station on the Kiel–Flensburg railway. It is classified by Deutsche Bahn as a category 5 station. To the north of the entrance building there was also a terminal station of the Eckernförde District Railway (German: Eckernförder Kreisbahnen) until 1958.

Rail services

Eckernförde station has three platform tracks and other tracks that do not have platforms. Currently, tracks 1 and 2 are used for passenger services–until 2007 these were tracks 1 and 3:

The length of the platforms is (in rounded figures) 225 metres for track 1, 370 m for track 2 and 426 m for track 3. The latter has since been downgraded to a railway siding. The Kiel–Flensburg railway is operated (with variations in peak hours) usually every hour by Regionalbahn Schleswig-Holstein; hourly trains between Kiel and Eckernförde are operated by the Nord-Ostsee-Bahn, offset by half an hour. On most days Eckernförde is served between about 4:30 a.m. and 1:20 a.m.

LineRouteTimetable route
Kiel – Gettorf – Eckernförde – Süderbrarup – Flensburg146
Kiel – Gettorf – Eckernförde146

Since 2009, a regional electronic interlocking in Eckernförde station has controlled the electronic signals on the entire section between Eckernförde and Flensburg and the Lindaunis Bridge, a bascule bridge across the Schlei in Lindaunis.[1]

History

The Kiel-Flensburg-Eckernförde Railway Company (Kiel-Eckernförde-Flensburger Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft, KEFE)) opened the Kiel–Eckernförde section of the Kiel–Flensburg line on 1 July 1881 and the Eckernförde–Flensburg section on 21 December 1881. Traffic was satisfactory and it was taken over by the Prussian state railways on 1 July 1903. It became part of Deutsche Reichsbahn on 1 April 1920. The Eckernförde–Kappeln Narrow Gauge Railway Company (Eckernförde-Kappelner Schmalspurbahn-Gesellschaft) opened a railway to Kappeln with its own terminus at the northern end of Eckernförde station on 26 January 1889, which was closed in 1958. On 1 April 1903, the Eckernförde district assumed this line and opened a second line to Owschlag on 30 October 1904, which operated until 1954. To distinguish it from the Eckernförde District Railway station (Kreisbahnhof Eckernförde) and two other stations in the Eckernförde urban area of the Eckernförde District Railway (Carlshöhe, Schnaap—which was part of Borby until Borby's incorporation in Eckernförde in 1934—and, from 1947, Hasenheide[2]), the station was initially designated as the Eckernförde Staatsbahnhof (Eckernförde state station), but it was also, at times, called Reichsbahnhof Eckernförde (Eckernförde Reichsbahn station) and after the Second World War, for a time it was called Eckernförde Hauptbahnhof (Eckernförde main station).

Because after the Second World War, the British military governors of Schleswig-Holstein ("Regional Commissioners", originally Hugh Champion de Crespigny) lived in the Altenhof manor house, but had their seat at “Somerset House” in Kiel, the line was repaired relatively quickly after the war and services resumed between Kiel and Eckernförde with a morning and an evening services and a single stop at Altenhof station. The trains had a single passenger car for the local population and a lounge car for the British military governor.[3] Eckernförde station was also the destination of trains carrying refugees after the war.[4]

Locomotives were stationed in Eckernförde from the 1960s to the early 1990s, but only a single diesel locomotive still operated to service the port railway. The former engine shed was replaced by for a parking lot after the closure of the port railway. There were around 50 staff at the station at one time.[5] From 1972 to 1999, Eckernförde station was serviced by individual Durchgangszug (a type of express) and Intercity (IC) trains on the weekends. The IC trains operated, inter alia, on the Eckernförde–Koblenz (initially from Flensburg), Cologne–Eckernförde and DüsseldorfHanover–Eckernförde routes. These mainly carried German soldiers. In the first years after the opening of the resort of Damp 2000 in 1972, special IC trains ran from Cologne to Eckernförde and back for weekend getaways.

In the early 1980s, there were plans to close the Kiel–Flensburg line north of Eckernförde.

The original entrance building of Eckernförder station—built in 1880/81 and expanded several times since to about three times its original size—was demolished in 1973 after, a few months earlier, serving as a film set for part of the television adaptation of Hans Fallada's novel, (published in English as A Small Circus). Only the signalling infrastructure remained until the completion of the new station building in 1974. Shortly before, the freight yard had been moved to the south of the entrance building; this area is now used by the bus station. The ground plan of the current station building consists of four hexagons and an extension to the north consisting of two sections at an angle.

Outlook

It is planned to replace the entrance building built in 1973/74 by a new building. This would also provide space for a cinema and retail shops alongside the railway service areas and the office of the Bahnhofsmission (a charity helping travellers and the needy at stations).[6] These plans are uncertain.

In the proposed StadtRegionalBahn Kiel (Kiel regional Stadtbahn), one of the lines runs to Eckernförde and would be served twice an hour. The planned services would run in Kiel on a route between Kiel-Suchsdorf and Kiel Hauptbahnhof and also on another route through the University. According to these plans, the route would be electrified and a second station would be built in the south of Eckernförde. Eckernförde station would be renamed Eckernförde Hauptbahnhof. After a decision of the district council of Rendsburg-Eckernförde in December 2014 to reject these plans, these plans are not being pursued any further.[7]

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. . unknown. 2 . 2008 . 42 . German.
  2. Web site: Hasenheide. Railway History Database. 24 June 2014. German. dead. https://archive.today/20130415171749/http://www.railwayhistory.org/en/d/point.de.Hasenheide/. 15 April 2013.
  3. Book: Ilse Rathjen-Couscherung . Eckernförde unter britischer Besatzung . Heimatgemeinschaft Eckernförde . 2008 . 978-3-00-025744-5 . 176 . German.
  4. Web site: Flight and Expulsion Stories and Pictures . Roots Web . 24 June 2014 . German . https://web.archive.org/web/20121001001039/http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~pommerninterestgroup/Menu/Expulsion.html . 1 October 2012 . dead .
  5. Book: Kurt Schulz . Gruß aus Eckernförde . Schleswiger Druck- und Verlagshaus . Schleswig . 1977 . 3-88242-020-0 . 11 . German. (there are 41 railway staff in a photograph taken in 1920 or 1921)
  6. News: . 4 September 2013. unknown . German.
  7. News: Kiel: "Die Stadtregionalbahn ist mausetot". https://web.archive.org/web/20160304055321/http://www.shz.de/lokales/landeszeitung/kiel-die-stadtregionalbahn-ist-mausetot-id8471021.html. 4 March 2016. live. Schleswig-Holsteinische Landeszeitung. 16 December 2014. 17 February 2018. de . SHZ.de.