Lehrte station explained

Lehrte
Symbol:rail
Symbol Location:de
Symbol2:s-bahn
Symbol Location2:hannover
Address:Lehrte, Lower Saxony
Country:Germany
Coordinates:52.3767°N 9.9744°W
Opened:15 August 1843
Zone:GVH

C[1]

Type:Railway junction
Platforms:7
Line:

Lehrte (German: Bahnhof Lehrte) is a railway station located in Lehrte, Germany. The station opened on 15 August 1843 and is located on the Berlin-Lehrte Railway and Hanover–Brunswick railway. The train services are operated by Deutsche Bahn, WestfalenBahn and Metronom.

History

Lehrte had developed by the mid-19th century into a major railway junction of the Royal Hanoverian State Railways (Königlich Hannöverschen Staatseisenbahnen) and it had become known as a typical railway town. The railway line between Hanover and Lehrte via Peine was built in 1843 and extended in the following years to Brunswick (Braunschweig). Branch lines were subsequently built from Lehrte to Celle (1845) and to Hildesheim (1846). In 1844, an entrance building was built in the neoclassical style to a design by Eduard Ferdinand Schwarz.

The Berlin-Lehrte railway was built by the Magdeburg-Halberstadt Railway Company (Magdeburg-Halberstädter Eisenbahngesellschaft, MHE) and was opened throughout in 1871. It competed with the existing line via Magdeburg and Brunswick. The end of the line was at the Lehrter Bahnhof in Berlin, which was demolished in 1958. This was on the site of the new Berlin Hauptbahnhof.

The line to Hildesheim, which had previously run to the south through the centre of the town was relocated in 1990 and reconnected to the Berlin-Lehrte line to the east of Lehrte. As a result, it eased congestion in the centre of the town, which had long been desired. The old railway embankment was converted into an urban green space. As a result, the level crossings that had been common in Lehrte were removed in the centre of the town. In 1998, a high-speed railway was opened from Hanover to Berlin next to the old Berlin-Lehrte railway via Lehrte, Meinersen, Gifhorn, Wolfsburg, Oebisfelde, Stendal and Spandau. Lehrte station is now used only for regional transport services, as the Intercity-Express and Intercity (IC) services towards Berlin and the IC services towards Leipzig run through without stopping.

By the summer of 2008, the junction in Lehrte was rebuilt again to provide a grade-separated connection for freight trains from the Hanover freight bypass to the east and to give a grade-separated route from Celle to Hildesheim and Brunswick; this involved the raising of the tracks of the high-speed rail line. The long-distance trains from Wolfsburg and Brunswick can now run through Lehrte at 120 km/h.

Train services

Lehrte is a major hub for public transport in the Großraum-Verkehr Hannover (GVH; Greater Hanover Transport Association) with connections to the Hanover S-Bahn. Trains of various train classes to/from Bielefeld, Brunswick, Celle, Hanover, Hildesheim, Rheine and Wolfsburg stop at Lehrte.

The station is served by the following service(s):[2]

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Regionalzug und S-Bahn . . 31 January 2021 . December 2020.
  2. http://kursbuch.bahn.de/hafas/kbview.exe/dn?st_name=Lehrte&st_filter=&cat_name=&searchmode=station&mainframe=result&orig=sS&dosearch=1&oblig_st=1&submitButton=Suche+starten Timetables for Lehrte station