Nørre Nebel railway station explained

Nørre Nebel
Type:Terminal railway station
Address:Bredgade 45
6830 Nørre Nebel
Borough:Varde Municipality
Country:Denmark
Coordinates:55.7772°N 8.2906°W
Map Type:Denmark
Platform:2
Tracks:2
Architect:Heinrich Wenck
Opened:15 March 1903
Owned:Vestbanen A/S
Operator:GoCollective
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Zoom:14

Nørre Nebel railway station is a railway station serving the small railway town of Nørre Nebel in West Jutland, Denmark.

The station is the northern terminus of the Varde–Nørre Nebel railway line from Varde to Nørre Nebel via Oksbøl. The station opened in 1903. The train services are currently operated by the railway company GoCollective which run frequent local train services from Nørre Nebel to and with onward connections from there to the rest of Denmark.

History

The station opened on 15 March 1903 to serve as the northern terminus of the new railway line from Varde to Nørre Nebel. In 1913, the railway line was extended from Nørre Nebel to on the Esbjerg–Struer railway line, but this section was closed again in 1940.

Architecture

The original and still existing station building from 1903 was built to designs by the Danish architect Heinrich Wenck (1851–1936), known for the numerous railway stations he designed across Denmark in his capacity of head architect of the Danish State Railways.

Operations

Train services

The train services are currently operated by the railway company GoCollective which run frequent local train services from Nørre Nebel station to and with onward connections from there to the rest of Denmark.

See also

References

Bibliography

External links