Erftstadt station explained

Erftstadt
Native Name Lang:de
Symbol:rail
Symbol Location:de
Type:Through station
Former:Liblar
Address:Bahnhofstr. 136-146, Erftstadt, North Rhine-Westphalia
Country:Germany
Coordinates:50.8071°N 6.8331°W
Owned:Deutsche Bahn
Platforms:2
Zone:VRS

2860[1]

Opened:
  • 1 October 1875[2]
  • reopening: November 1984
Website:www.bahnhof.de
Map Type:North Rhine-Westphalia#Germany#Europe
Map Dot Label:Erftstadt
Embedded:
Stroke-Colour:
  1. C60C30
Stroke-Width:3
Marker:rail-underground
Marker-Colour:
  1. 009D58
Zoom:15

Erftstadt station is the only passenger station of the town of Erftstadt in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia and is thus the major transport hub of the town. The station building is located in the district of Liblar. The station is served by Regional-Express services, RE 22 (Eifel Railway) and RE 12 (Eifel-Mosel-Express) and Regionalbahn service RB 24 (Eifelbahn) of the Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Sieg (Rhine-Sieg transport association, VRS), which run from Trier via Kalle to Cologne Hauptbahnhof and together provide services at 30-minute intervals. These services operate on the Eifel Railway (Eifelstrecke).

Location

The station area is located on the south-eastern edge of the town between the Ville chain of lakes in the east and the town centre of Erftstadt in the west. The station itself is located in the southern part of the Liblar district.

History

In 1874, the Rhenish Railway Company (Rheinische Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft, RhE) began the construction of an elaborate station in a historicist style, which was opened in October 1875 with the name of Liblar. The first Rhenish briquettes were made on 1 March 1877. As a result, Liblar station also developed into a substantial freight yard in subsequent years. The station building was enlarged in 1913. In 1938, Liblar station was expanded to 16 tracks due to the ever growing demand for brown coal. By 1960, the last open-pit mines had been closed and dismantled and the export of brown coal from Liblar had ended. In the following years, Liblar station lost its importance. In 1969, as part of a municipal reform and the reorganisation of the district of Euskirchen, several municipalities (including Liblar) were combined and the city of Erftstadt was founded. In 1981, the old station building was demolished by Deutsche Bundesbahn. The modern station was built in the same location as the original station during the upgrade of the Cologne–Trier railway. The station was renamed Erftstadt on 27 May 1990.

Infrastructure

The station has two platform tracks. In addition, the station has parking, bicycle parking, direct access to the bus stop, a taxi stand and a small kiosk. It is served by three regional rail services together providing two services an hour during working days. Rail services are operated by DB Regio Südwest with diesel railcars of classes 620 and 622 with up to three sets coupled. Currently, however, only a maximum of three two-part or two three-part sets are coupled together.[3] [4] [5]

Line Service Route Interval
60 minutes
60 minutes

The station is also served by four bus routes: 920 (Lechenich – Gymnich – Türnich – Kerpen – Sindorf – Horrem, operated by Regionalverkehr Köln at 30- to 60-minute intervals), 975 (Türnich – Horrem – Bergheim – Bedburg – Kaster, operated by Rhein-Erft-Verkehrsgesellschaftat (REVG) at 60-minute intervals), 977 (Liblar – Türnich – Frechen, operated by REVG at 30- to 60-minute intervals), 990 (Lechenich + Brühl – Wesseling, operated by REVG at 30- to 60-minute intervals).[3]

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: VRS-Gemeinschaftstarif . . 9 May 2020 . 200 . German . 20 April 2020 . 11 June 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200611234728/https://www.vrs.de/fileadmin/Dateien/Downloadcenter/Tarif/VRS_Gemeinschaftstarif_20042020.pdf . dead .
  2. Web site: Erftstadt station operations . NRW Rail Archive . André . Joost . 14 June 2020 . de.
  3. Web site: Erftstadt station . NRW Rail Archive . André . Joost . 14 June 2020 . de.
  4. Web site: RE22: Eifel-Express . NRW Rail Archive . André . Joost . 14 June 2020 . de.
  5. Web site: RB24: Eifel-Bahn . NRW Rail Archive . André . Joost . 14 June 2020 . de.