Marl-Sinsen station explained

Marl-Sinsen
Native Name Lang:de
Symbol:rail
Symbol Location:de
Type:Through station
Address:Bahnhofstr. 158, Sinsen-Lenkerbeck, Marl, North Rhine-Westphalia
Country:Germany
Coordinates:51.6676°N 7.1734°W
Line:Wanne-Eickel Hbf – Hamburg Hbf (km 17.1)
Platforms:2
Website:www.bahnhof.de
Zone:VRR

152[1]

Opened:1880/86[2]

Marl-Sinsen is the one of three stations in the city of Marl in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia. The station is classified as station category 5 and is under the station administration of Münster.

Location

The station is located on Bahnhofstraße (which is an extension of the Bergstraße/Victoriastraße alignment) at its intersection with Gräwenkolkstraße in the Marl district of Sinsen-Lenkerbeck.

The station is near line kilometre 17.056 on the Wanne-Eickel–Hamburg railway (Wanne-Eickel HauptbahnhofHamburg Hauptbahnhof).

History

It was established between 1880 and 1886 on the Wanne-Eickel–Hamburg railway as a stop for farming settlement (Bauerschaft) of Sinsen. Around 25 years after its incorporation into Marl in 1926, the station was renamed Marl-Sinsen at the beginning of the 1950s.[2]

Between 1914 and 1977, it was possible to change at the station to and from the tramways of the Vestische Kleinbahnen and the Vestische Straßenbahnen.[3] [4]

Operations

Passenger services

The station is served only by regional services of the so-called Haard-Achse network: the RE 2 Rhein-Haard-Express (Münster (Westf) Hbf – Düsseldorf Hbf) and the RE 42 Niers-Haard-Express (Münster (Westf) Hbf – Mönchengladbach Hbf). Both lines are operated by DB Regio AG, Region NRW as part of the Rhein-Haard network.[5]

- class="hintergrundfarbe6" ! Line Route ! Interval
Rhein-Haard-Express


OsnabrückMünster HbfHaltern am See
Marl-SinsenRecklinghausenWanne-EickelGelsenkirchenEssenMülheimDuisburgDüsseldorf
Status: December 2023 timetable

Some trains at night
Vest-Ruhr-Express:
Bochum – Recklinghausen – Marl-Sinsen
Status: December 2023 timetable
60 min
Niers-Haard-Express


Münster – Dülmen – Haltern am See –
Marl-Sinsen – Recklinghausen – Wanne-Eickel – Gelsenkirchen – Essen – Mülheim – Duisburg – KrefeldMönchengladbach
Status: December 2023 timetable

60 min

There is no station building and access to the only existing platform is via a staircase or a lift from the road underpass. The station was recently upgraded to a 76 centimetre-high platform to give accessibility for the disabled to railway vehicles running there. The Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Ruhr announced in 2017 that it was planned to raise the platform to a height of 76 centimetres and to modernise the station facilities by 2023 at the latest as part of the Modernisierungsoffensive 3 (modernisation campaign, MOF 3), which is co-financed by the federal and state governments.[6]

Freight operations

In freight transport, the station is of greater importance as the connecting line to the Auguste Victoria colliery begins from it; this also connects to the neighbouring Marl-Chemiepark Power Station. Until the closure of the mine in 2015, Marl-Sinsen was the transfer station for coal trains that were hauled by the locomotives of the colliery to the Sinsen station and from there over the tracks of the DB. For this purpose, there are extensive railway tracks west of the platform, both to the north (the colliery's transfer station) and to the south (the DB freight yard).

The operation of the traffic of the Quarzwerke Group at Sythen is also handled by Deutsche Bahn at Marl-Sinsen.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: StadtLinie 220 . Vestische Straßenbahnen GmbH . 19 May 2020 . 13 July 2019.
  2. Web site: Marl-Sinsen station operations . André Joost . NRWbahnarchiv-Bahnhofsinfo . André Joost . 14 February 2017. de.
  3. Book: Ralph Bernatz . Der Weg zur Vestischen . Die Vestische. Legendäre Straßenbahn zwischen Lippe und Emscher 1901–1982. Straßenbahn Magazin Special Nr. 25 . GeraMond . Munich . 2013 . 978-3-86245-255-2 . 16–27. de.
  4. Book: Klaus Oehlert-Schellberg . Die Vestischen Straßenbahnen . Verlag Kenning . Nordhorn . 1995 . 3-927587-49-4 . 56–62. de.
  5. Web site: Marl-Sinsen station . André Joost . NRWbahnarchiv-Bahnhofsinfo . André Joost . 14 February 2017. de.
  6. Web site: MOF 3: 21 Bahnhöfe im Verbundraum werden saniert . Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Ruhr . 18 February 2016 . 14 February 2017. de.