Jena Saale station explained

Jena Saale
Native Name:Jena Saalbahnhof
Native Name Lang:de
Symbol:rail
Symbol Location:de
Type:Through station
Address:Spitzweidenweg 28, Jena, Thuringia
Country:Germany
Coordinates:50.9368°N 11.5936°W
Owned:Deutsche Bahn
Line:Großheringen–Saalfeld (KBS 560)
Platform:3
Opened:30 April 1874
Zone:VMT
Website:www.bahnhof.de
Map Type:Thuringia#Germany#Europe
Map Dot Label:Jena Saalbahnhof
Embedded:
Stroke-Colour:
  1. C60C30
Stroke-Width:3
Marker:rail-underground
Marker-Colour:
  1. 009D58
Zoom:15

Jena Saale station (Saalbahnhof) is a station in the Jena suburb of Jena-Nord in the German state of Thuringia. It lies at line-kilometre 25.50 of the Großheringen–Saalfeld railway.

History

The station, which is 144.32 metres above sea level, was opened on 30 April 1874 with the opening of the Saale Railway (Saalbahn) between Großheringen and Saalfeld. The station on the Saale Railway, known as the Saalbahnhof, was soon called Jena Hauptbahnhof (main station) and, from 1909 until the commissioning of the provisional Jena Paradies station on 26 September 1999,[1] was the city's main station for long-distance traffic that ran north–south. All the services on the Berlin–Munich route stopped here during that period.

The station, which was classified by Deutsche Reichsbahn as class II, is now designated as category 6. Between May 2006 and March 2007, Saal station was adapted to modern requirements and all facilities, which were no longer considered absolutely necessary, were demolished, including the canopy on platform 2/3, which was replaced by a sheltered waiting area. Saal station is now served by Regionalbahn services to and from Großheringen/Naumburg, Saalfeld and Pößneck.

Following changes in the use and ownership of the building, the Kulturbahnhof Jena (Culture station Jena) was created out of the entrance building and its annexes. This building is a heritage-listed monument.[2]

Infrastructure

Platforms

PlatformLength in m[3] Height in cm
112055
212055
312055

Signal boxes

The station has been controlled by an electronic interlocking at Jena-Göschwitz and built by Siemens since 27 November 2011. One day before, the dispatchers signal box, "Jm", was taken out of operation. The guard signal box, "Js", was also closed. Until September 2006, there was another signal box, "Jn". All were mechanical signal boxes of the Jüdel type.[4]

Transport services

Regional services

In the 2022 timetable the following services stopped in Jena Saal station:

Line Route Interval (min) Operator
120 Abellio
HalleWeißenfels – Naumburg (Saale) – Camburg (Saale) – Jena Saalbf – Orlamünde – Saalfeld (Saale) 60 Abellio
Jena SaalbfJena Paradies – Orlamünde – Pößneck 120 Erfurter Bahn

Public transport services

(as of December 2019)
The Spittelplatz tram stop is served by tram lines 1 and 4. This stop is located west of the station on the B 88. It is accessible via Spitzweidenweg and only a few minutes' walk from the station.

The Saalbahnhof bus stop of bus route 15 is next to the railway station on Spitzweidenweg. Bus route 15 runs between Rautal – Stadtzentrum and Jena West station (Westbahnhof).

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Werner Drescher . Die Saalbahn – Die Geschichte der Eisenbahn zwischen Großheringen, Jena und Saalfeld . EK-Verlag . Freiburg . 3-88255-586-6 . 2004. de . 141.
  2. Web site: Denkmalkarte Jena . https://web.archive.org/web/20170116150128/https://www.jena.de/fm/1727/denkmalkarte.pdf. 16 January 2017. City of Jena, FB Stadtumbau, Team Geoinformationen. Dr. Zippel . 14 July 2011 . 9 July 2017. de.
  3. Web site: Platform information for Saalbahnhof Jena . https://web.archive.org/web/20160406172752/http://www.deutschebahn.com/de/geschaefte/infrastruktur/bahnhof/bahnsteige_uebersicht/2235752/bahnsteige_details.html?start=0&rid=3044&c2235748=Jena&itemsPerPage=20&x=1 . 6 April 2016. Deutsche Bahn . 9 July 2017. de.
  4. Web site: List of German signal boxes . stellwerke.de . 9 July 2017. de.