Feldkirch railway station explained

Style:ÖBB
Feldkirch
Address:Bahnhofstraße
6800 Feldkirch
Country:Austria
Coordinates:47.2411°N 9.6042°W
Distance:46.912NaN
from St. Margrethen
Line:Feldkirch–Buchs railway
Vorarlberg railway
Owned:Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB)
Operator:ÖBB
Map Type:Austria
Map Size:300
Mapframe:yes

Feldkirch railway station (German: Bahnhof Feldkirch) serves the city of Feldkirch, in the Feldkirch district of the Austrian federal state of Vorarlberg. Opened in 1872, it forms the junction between the Vorarlberg railway and the Feldkirch–Buchs railway.

The station is owned and operated by the Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB).

Location

Feldkirch railway station is situated in Bahnhofplatz, in the northern Feldkirch district of Levis, between the Ardetzenberg and the Känzele.

History

The station was opened on 1 July 1872, together with the rest of the Vorarlberg railway.[1] The original station building was repeatedly extended from 1884, as the Arlberg railway transformed Feldkirch into an international transport hub.

In the 1960s, the original station building was torn down. In early 1969, the new building was put into operation.

Between 1999 and 2001, the station was renovated and rebuilt again, as part of the ÖBB-Bahnhofsinitiative. The renovation work included replacement of the platforms, the pedestrian underpass and the station building.

In 2010, in a survey conducted by the Verkehrsclub Österreich (VCÖ), the station was nominated by the interviewed passengers as the sixth most beautiful railway station in Austria.[2]

Services

Feldkirch is one of Vorarlberg's major railway stations. It also serves as a loading station for the motorail train from Feldkirch to Vienna, Graz and Villach. Additionally, it is served by Railjet and other long-distance trains as well as regional train services of Vorarlberg S-Bahn, with some services also operating for Bodensee S-Bahn.

Feldkirch is the border station of the line to (Switzerland) and it is the only Austrian border station adjacent to the Principality of Liechtenstein. It is also situated on the Vorarlberg line, which continues northwards to in Germany.

the following regional train services exist (the S1 and R5 are both also part of Bodensee S-Bahn):

Customs

Feldkirch station is, for customs purposes, a border station for passengers arriving from Liechtenstein and Switzerland. As such, checks may be performed in the station by Austrian customs officials. Systematic passport controls were reduced when Switzerland joined the Schengen Area in 2008 and later scrapped when Liechtenstein joined in 2011.[7] [8] [9]

Notable visitors

James Joyce

Irish writer James Joyce paid a visit to Feldkirch in 1932 to see his friend Eugene Jolas. During the visit, he said to Jolas, "Over there, on those tracks, the fate of Ulysses was decided in 1915." Since Bloomsday 1994, the quote has been displayed in German translation in the station concourse.Joyce had travelled through Feldkirch by train in 1915. Due to World War I, he had been considered an "enemy alien" in his then home town of Trieste, which, at that time, was part of Austria-Hungary. Thanks to influential friends, he had obtained permission to leave Austria-Hungary, with his partner Nora Barnacle and their two shared children, and travel to Zürich. Meanwhile, his brother Stanislaus Joyce was arrested in Trieste and detained until the end of the war.[10]

During border control checks at Feldkirch, the train on which Joyce and Barnacle were travelling was boarded, and passengers inspected by officials; Joyce escaped arrest by a whisker. If Joyce had been arrested then, he would have been unable to write Ulysses in its present form, hence his comment to Jolas.[11]

At the end of 2001, the ÖBB replaced a plaque mounted by the Feldkirch culture circle above the ticket counters on Bloomsday 1994 with a more conspicuous presentation of the Joycean literary quotation.

Stefan Zweig

In his memoirs The World of Yesterday (German: Die Welt von Gestern), the Austrian writer Stefan Zweig explained that on 24 March 1919 he had been an eyewitness at Feldkirch railway station, as Charles I of Austria was deported from the Republic of German Austria into exile in Switzerland:[12]

See also

Notes

  1. Web site: Vision Rheintal: Eine Raumbezogene Kulturgeschichte . Ritsch . Wolfgang . Stadelmann . Carmel . April 2005 . Vision-Rheintal website . 13 August 2011. de.
  2. Web site: Dornbirn hat schönsten Bahnhof Vorarlbergs . https://archive.today/20120722123700/http://vorarlberg.orf.at/stories/465140/ . dead . 22 July 2012 . Dornbirn has the most beautiful station in Vorarlberg . 25 August 2010 . Vorarlberg ORF website . . 13 August 2011 . de .
  3. Web site: Fahrplan REX 1 . oebb.at . 2023-12-10 . 2024-05-31.
  4. Web site: Fahrplan S1 . vmobil.at . 2023-12-10 . 2024-05-31.
  5. Web site: Fahrplan S2 . vmobil.at . 2023-12-10 . 2024-05-30.
  6. Web site: Fahrplan R5 (S5) . vmobil.at . 2023-12-10 . 2024-05-30.
  7. Web site: Switzerland's Schengen entry finally complete.
  8. News: Land borders open as Switzerland enters Schengen zone. France 24. 12 December 2008.
  9. Web site: No more controls on Swiss-Liechtenstein border .
  10. Weigel . Andreas . Feldkirch und das Schicksal. Zum 125. Geburtstag von James Joyce (1882–1941). . St. Galler Tagblatt . 2 February 2007 . de.
  11. Weigel . Andreas . 2000 . Das Schicksal des "Ulysses". James Joyce und Feldkirch, Vorarlberg. . Montfort. Vierteljahreszeitschrift für Geschichte und Gegenwart Vorarlbergs . 52 . 3 . 289–301 . de.
  12. Web site: Am Grenzbahnhof Feldkirch 1919: Visum für Stefan Zweig, 4. Jänner 1919 . Ulrich Nachbaur . March 2009 . Geschichte - Landesgeschichte . Land Vorarlberg . 11 August 2011 . de . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110928141210/http://www.vorarlberg.at/vorarlberg/geschichte_statistik/geschichte/landesgeschichte/ausstellungendesvorarlber/archivaledesmonats-2009/maerz_amgrenzbahnhoffeldk.htm . 28 September 2011 .

Further reading

External links