Grevenbroich station explained

Grevenbroich
Native Name Lang:de
Symbol:rail
Symbol Location:de
Type:Through station
Address:Bahnhofsvorplatz 17, Grevenbroich, North Rhine-Westphalia
Country:Germany
Coordinates:51.0931°N 6.5806°W
Platforms:4
Zone:
Opened:1 September 1869[3]
Website:www.bahnhof.de
Map Type:North Rhine-Westphalia

Grevenbroich station is a junction station in the city of Grevenbroich in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia. It is located at the junction of the Cologne–Mönchengladbach railway and the Düren–Neuss railway. It is classified by Deutsche Bahn as a category 4 station.

With stops by Busverkehr Rheinland (BVR, a bus operator owned by Deutsche Bahn) in the five bays of the bus station in the station forecourt, Grevenbroich station is the transport hub of Grevenbroich.

History

The first entrance building of Grevenbroich station was demolished after the Second World War, probably as a result of war damage. It was replaced by the existing station building.

The area of the former goods yard, which lay to the west of the platforms, has been reduced dramatically in recent years, so that today it is no longer used. Only a large brownfield area indicates its former size.

With the commissioning of electronic interlocking at Grevenbroich on the Rheydt-Ehrenfeld route in 2007, the Gnf and Gs signal boxes were closed, but they still exist.

The station was partially restored in the period from July to September 2012. A new floor covering with a tactile guidance system for the visually impaired and blind was installed and the entrance area was renovated. The middle entrance door was replaced by an automatically opening door, it allows wheelchair users and people with restricted mobility to enter the station. Deutsche Bahn invested about €300,000 for this project.

Operations

Grevenbroich station is served by the following three services:[4]

LineLine nameRouteFrequency
Rhein-Erft-ExpressMönchengladbach – Grevenbroich – Rommerskirchen – Cologne – Porz (Rhein) – Troisdorf – Bonn-Beuel – Linz (Rhein) – Neuwied – Koblenz Stadtmitte – KoblenzHourly
Rhein-Erft-BahnMönchengladbach – Grevenbroich – Rommerskirchen – Cologne – Cologne/Bonn Airport – Troisdorf – Bonn-Beuel – Linz (Rhein) – Neuwied – Engers – Koblenz-Ehrenbreitstein – KoblenzHourly
Düssel-Erft-BahnDüsseldorf – Neuss – Grevenbroich – Bedburg (Erft)Every 30 mins (Düsseldorf–Grevenbroich); every 60 mins (Grevenbroich–Bedburg (Erft))

Planning

There were plans to replace the former RB 38 service (which ran from Cologne to Düsseldorf via Horrem, Bedburg and Grevenbroich) by a new Rhine-Ruhr S-Bahn line S 18, which would have involved electrifying the Düren–Neuss railway through Grevenbroich station, although this plan is not currently being pursued for the section north of Bedburg. The section from Bedburg to Düsseldorf has been separated and now operates as the Düssel-Erft-Bahn, which has been renumbered as the RB 39.

Platform usage

In general, rail services use the platforms as follows:

PlatformLineUse
1to Mönchengladbach
2to Düsseldorf, Bedburg (Horrem and Cologne until December 2017)
3to Düsseldorf, Bedburg (Horrem and Cologne until December 2017)
4to Koblenz

Bus routes

The station is served by the following bus routes operated by Busverkehr Rheinland:[4]

Line Route Frequency
Neuss Stadthalle – Holzheim – Grevenbroich Kapellen – Wevelinghoven – Grevenbroich BfEvery 60 or 120 minutes
Grevenbroich Bf – Rommerskirchen Vanikum – Rom. Postamt/Bf – Dormagen Delhoven – Dormagen Bf – Marktplatz/CologneEvery 60 or 120 minutes
Neuss Landestheater – NE-Süd Bf – Holzheim – Grevenbroich Kapellen – Wevelinghoven (– Grevenbroich Bf)Every 60 or 120 minutes
Neuss Stüttgen – Elvekum – Norf – Hoisten – Grevenbroich Neukirchen – Wevelinghoven (– Grevenbroich Bf) (small bus)
Rommerskirchen − Grevenbroich Bf − Kapellen-Wevelinghoven BfEvery 30 or 60 minutes
Gindorf – Gustorf – Grevenbroich Bf – Allrath – Rommerskirchen Oekoven – EvinghovenEvery 30 or 60 minutes
Kapellen-Wevelinghoven Bf – Wevelinghoven – Grevenbroich BfEvery 60 minutes

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Fahrplan 2020: Neuss/Kaarst . . Stadtwerke Neuss . 12 May 2020 . 7 January 2020.
  2. Web site: VRS-Gemeinschaftstarif . . 9 May 2020 . 201 . 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 .
  3. Web site: Grevenbroich operations . NRW Rail Archive . André Joost . 15 June 2013 . German.
  4. Web site: Grevenbroich station . NRW Rail Archive . André Joost . 15 June 2013 . German.