Villähde railway station explained

Villähde
Type:VR station
Style:VR Group
Address:Lastaustie 7, 15540
Borough:Villähde, Nastola
Country:Finland
Owned:Finnish Transport Infrastructure Agency
Operator:VR Group
Line:Lahti–Kouvola
Platforms:2 side platforms
Tracks:2
Parking:Yes
Bicycle:Yes
Code:Vlh
Classification:Operating point[1]
Years1:1888
Events1:Opened
Years2:1970
Events2:Closed to passenger traffic
Years3:17 September 2009
Events3:Re-opened
Passengers:5,000[2]
Pass Year:2016
Map State:collapsed
Mapframe:y
Mapframe-Zoom:13

The Villähde railway station (Finnish: Villähteen rautatieasema, Swedish: Villähde järnvägsstation) is located in the city of Lahti (formerly the municipality of Nastola), Finland, in the district of Villähde. It is located along the LahtiKouvola line, and its neighboring stations are Lahti in the west and Nastola in the east.[3]

History

1st station

In 1870, the owner of the, Werner Wessner, expressed his interest in founding a station in Villähde to assist the nearby large estates in getting their goods on the market. The proposal was not accepted at this time; the matter was brought back up by Wessner as well as the locals of the western parts of the parish of Nastola, this time meeting success. The site of the station was not seen as optimal to serve the Ersta Manor, but it was also located in a convenient location at a crossing between the local roads to Heinola and Orimattila. Wessner donated the lands surrounding the future station to the state, and the station of Villähde was opened in the year 1888. The Class V station building was completed in the same year, and it was accompanied by a warehouse and two residential buildings. The station was originally founded under the name Villähti; the name was changed to Villähde in 1938.[3] [4]

After the second World War, a car chassis factory as well as a furniture workshop were founded in Villähde. However, upon the foundation of the Lankila and Haravakylä halts (in 1940 and 1945, respectively), the number of passengers at Villähde began to dwindle due to the locations of the halts better serving the population centers in the region. Despite the urban area of Villähde reaching a total population of 1,300 residents by 1970, the station was closed from passengers in the same year and was made unmanned in 1971. Its railyard was disassembled in 1995, and therefore the first operating point of Villähde was closed.[3]

2nd station

Villähde was reopened in 2009 as a crossover point. After the passenger services of the Nastola area were transferred from Uusikylä to the new Nastola halt in the centre of the municipality in 2005, the municipal council and its residents started once again an initiative to build a station in Villähde.[3] Both stations were subsequently rebuilt and reopened in 2010, which made Nastola home to a total of three active railway stations.[5]

Services

Villähde is served by all commuter trains on the route LahtiKouvola, and some of these services are operated from or continue towards Kotka as well. The intermediate stations between Lahti and Kouvola are also served by all but one rush hour service on the route Helsinki–Lahti–Kouvola.[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Railway Network Statement 2021 . Finnish Transport Infrastructure Agency . 11 December 2020 . 978-952-317-744-4 . 15 February 2021 . 1 October 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20201001183729/https://julkaisut.vayla.fi/pdf12/vj_2019-46eng_vs2021_web.pdf . live .
  2. Kamppila . Pirjo . 11 December 2017 . Edellinen avaus Villähteellä, seuraavana jonossa Hennala . fi . Etelä-Suomen Sanomat . A5.
  3. Book: Iltanen, Jussi . Radan varrella: Suomen rautatieliikennepaikat . fi . 978-951-593-214-3 . Karttakeskus . 2010.
  4. Book: Ruotsalainen, Roosa. Lahti–Kouvola-rataosuuden kulttuurihistoriallisten kohteiden inventointi. Finnish Transport Infrastructure Agency. 2021. 978-952-317-838-0. Helsinki. 47. fi.
  5. Web site: Nastolassa junapysäkkejä melkein kuin Vantaalla . Veirto . Tuija . November 15, 2011 . Yle . 14 September 2020 . fi .
  6. Web site: VR long-distance traffic timetable for the period 11 January−27 March 2021. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20210219185030/https://assets.ctfassets.net/gshi3wijcp49/473lXRkWafx63vLq5m9JJr/4d5bdd43d2cd2146c12481ed1e6d3065/VR_Aikataulutaulukot_11-01-2021_27-03-2021_v201218.pdf. 19 February 2021. 15 February 2021. VR Group. fi.