Hadera West railway station explained

Hadera West railway station
תחנת הרכבת חדרה מערב
Coordinates:32.4382°N 34.8991°W
Platform:3
Tracks:3
Parking:330 spaces
Passengers:2,430,825[1]
Pass Year:2019
Pass Rank:18 out of 68

Hadera Ma'arav (West) railway station (Hebrew: תחנת הרכבת חדרה מערב, Tahanat HaRakevet Hadera Ma'arav) is an Israel Railways passenger station[2] and freight terminal located in the city of Hadera. It serves the city, including its large industrial zones, as well as other small communities in the area.

Location

The station is part of the North-South coastal line. It is located at the western edge of the city of Hadera, at the southern end of Dereh HaRakevet (Hebrew: דרך הרכבת, The Train Road).

History

Until 1953, Hadera had only one railway station, the Hadera East railway station, located at the eastern edge of the town, which was constructed in the 1920s by the British during their Mandate for Palestine, and which was connected north to Haifa and south to Lod and Tel Aviv (through Petah Tikva) via the now mostly-defunct Eastern Railway.

The new and improved "Coastal Railway Line" was constructed during the early 1950s, and shortened the rail journey between Haifa and Tel Aviv by 20 minutes (from 1 hour and 20 minutes to just over 1 hour). The new railway line connects to the old one at the Remez railway junction which is about 2.5 km north of the Hadera East railway station, which meant that Hadera East could not be served by the new coastal Haifa–Tel Aviv passenger service.

In order to include Hadera in the improved Haifa–Tel Aviv passenger service, the new Hadera West railway station was built 5 km south of the intersection of the Eastern and Coastal Railway Lines at Remez junction and 5 km west of the old railway station. The new station opened to the public on May 14, 1953. The location of the station, then far from the city center, meant that passenger numbers were fairly low until the 2000s.

The station underwent reconstruction and preservation during the early 1990s.

With the inauguration of the new Tel Aviv suburban service (Binyamina/Netanya–Tel Aviv–Rehovot/Ashkelon Suburban Service) in the late 1990s Hadera Ma'arav ceased to be a station on both the Jerusalem–Tel Aviv–Haifa InterCity Service and the Beer Sheva–Tel Aviv–Haifa–Nahariya InterCity Service and became a suburban station on the Tel Aviv–Binyamina suburban service.

In 2001, the station was updated to the present passenger station format of Israel Railways.

Future plans

In the future, a combined public transport hub, to include a new central bus station, is expected to be built at the site and will replace Hadera's current central bus station, located closer to the historic city center. As part of this project, the road infrastructure around the station will be significantly upgraded and Hadera West will serve as the only intermediate stop on a new high-speed train between Haifa and Tel Aviv which will travel at speeds of up to 250 km/h. As such, Hadera West will replace Binyamina as the key northern transfer station between intercity and suburban trains (currently most intercity trains do not stop at Hadera).

Design

The station consists of a side platform and an island platform, numbered 1 to 3 from east to west. Between the side platform and the island platform, there are two parallel tracks, and an additional track to the west of platform 3. Further to the west there are several tracks in the station's freight terminal as well as stacked container and cargo storage area.

The station hall is located to the east of the rail tracks. The two platforms are interconnected by a pedestrian tunnel and bridge. A lift operates on both platforms.

Platform 1 is used for southbound suburban trains, platform 2 for northbound suburban trains. Platform 3 is used for suburban trains when it is necessary to allow an InterCity train to get ahead of the suburban train in Hadera (instead of the usual Binyamina) in order to reduce delays.

Train service

Hadera Ma'arav (West) is a station on the Tel Aviv suburban line (Binyamina/Netanya–Tel Aviv–Rehovot/Ashkelon Suburban Service). Almost all Inter-City trains pass through this station without stopping, except on Saturdays and holidays, a few morning trains, a few evening and some late night trains. The station is situated between Caesarea-Pardes Hanna railway station to the north and Netanya railway station to the south.

Timetable highlights:

Station layout

Platform numbers increase in an East-to-West direction

Side platform
Platform 1 Advancing<---Southbound trains are called רכבת פורשת in Israel Railways Terminology---> trains toward Modi'in Central do not stop here →
Advancing trains toward Be'er Sheva Central do not stop here →
Advancing toward Be'er Sheva Central
Advancing toward Be'er Sheva Central
Advancing toward Jerusalem–Yitzhak Navon during night hours only, except on Wed.-Thu. nights
Advancing toward Ben Gurion Airport during night hours on Wed.-Thu. nights only
Platform 2← Nahariya–Modi'in and Nahariya–Beersheba Returning<---Northbound trains are called רכבת חוזרת in Israel Railways Terminology---> trains toward Nahariya do not stop here
← Returning toward Karmiel
← Returning toward Binyamina
← Returning toward Binyamina during night hours only
Island platform
Platform 3← Bypass track – not in ordinary use →

Ridership

Passengers boarding and disembarking by year
Year Passengers Rank Source
20211,424,860 2021 Freedom of Information Law Annual Report
2020879,112 2020 Freedom of Information Law Annual Report
20192,430,8252019 Freedom of Information Law Annual Report

Public transport connections

Hadera Ma'arav (West) station is accessible mainly by private cars since it is situated in a fairly remote location approximately 2 km from the city's center. It is located off the main road which connects central Hadera with the Coastal Highway and the Giv'at Olga neighborhood to the west.

The only public transport link is line 15, 17 and 22 operated by Egged, which is synchronized with train arrival/departure times, but is a one-way route, going to the railway station in the mornings and returning from the railway station in the evenings. Additional buses stop on the road leading from Hadera to the Coastal Highway, at a point approximately a 700m walk northeast of the station entrance.

Facilities

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2019 Freedom of Information Law Annual Report . Israel Railways.
  2. Web site: Hadera-West. Israel Railways. December 8, 2020.