Hjortshøj railway station explained

Hjortshøj
Type:railway station
Address:Hjortshøj Stationsvej
8530 Hjortshøj
Borough:Aarhus Municipality
Country:Denmark
Coordinates:56.2447°N 10.2689°W
Line:Grenaa Line
Platform:1
Tracks:1
Architect:Niels Peder Christian Holsøe
Opened:1 December 1877
Owned:Banedanmark
Operator:Aarhus Letbane
Map Type:Denmark
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Zoom:14

Hjortshøj station is a railway station serving the railway town and suburb of Hjortshøj north of Aarhus on the peninsula of Djursland in Jutland, Denmark.

The station is located on the Grenaa railway line between Aarhus and Grenaa. It opened in 1877 with the opening of the Aarhus-Ryomgård section of the railway line. The station was closed in 1969, but reopened in 1979. Since 2019, the station has been served by the Aarhus light rail system, a tram-train network combining tram lines in the city of Aarhus with operation on railway lines in the surrounding countryside.

History

The station opened on 1 December 1877 as the railway company Østjyske Jernbane (ØJJ) opened a branch line from Aarhus to Ryomgård on the Randers-Ryomgaard-Grenaa Line from Randers to Grenaa. Just a few years later the trains starting running directly between Grenaa and Aarhus, with the Ryomgård-Randers section being reduced to a branch line used mostly for rail freight transport until it was closed altogether on 2 May 1971. The station was closed in 1969, but reopened in 1979.

From 2016 to 2019, the station was temporarily closed along with the Grenaa railway line while it was being reconstructed and electrified to form part of the Aarhus light rail system, a tram-train network combining tram lines in the city of Aarhus with operation on railway lines in the surrounding countryside. Since 2019, the station has been served by Line L1 of the Aarhus light rail network, operated by the multinational transportation company Keolis.

Architecture

The station building from 1877 was designed by the Danish architect Niels Peder Christian Holsøe (1826 - 1895), known for the numerous railway stations he designed across Denmark in his capacity of head architect of the Danish State Railways.[1] It was torn down in 1979.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: N.P. Holsøe. Kunstindeks Danmark & Weilbach Kunstnerleksikon. Vigand Rasmussen. 24 October 2022. da.