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Hohenstein-Ernstthal station is the railway station of
Hohenstein-Ernstthal Hohenstein-Ernstthal () is a town in the Zwickau rural district, Saxony, Germany. The towns of Hohenstein and Ernstthal were united in 1898, and the town is either known by its hyphenated form, or simply called Hohenstein. The town grew in the 15 ...
in the south west of the German State of Saxony. The station is classified as a category 5 station by
DB Station&Service DB Station&Service AG is a subsidiary of Deutsche Bahn, responsible for managing over 5,400 train station A train station, railway station, railroad station or depot is a railway facility where trains stop to load or unload passengers, ...
and has two platform tracks. It is served daily by about 85 trains and is located on the
Dresden–Werdau railway The Dresden–Werdau railway is an electrified, double-track main line in the German state of Saxony. It runs from Dresden via Freiberg, Chemnitz and Zwickau to Werdau wye, where it joins the Leipzig-Hof railway. The line was opened in severa ...
. The train station is served only by regional and local trains.


History

The station, which is located at line-kilometre 98.23 of the Dresden–Werdau railway, was opened on 15 November 1858. At first, the station was in neither Hohenstein nor Ernstthal, but in Oberlungwitz in the district of Abtei. The station site was later purchased by Hohenstein. From 1860 to 1887, the Hohenstein post office was located in the station building. In 1913, the station included 13 tracks. From 17 March 1913 to 26 March 1960, the station forecourt was the starting point of the Hohenstein-Ernstthal–Oelsnitz Tramway. The freight traffic of the tramway was handled next to the freight yard and two loading tracks, a transhipment track, a wooden transhipment hall with a loading crane and a siding to the freight shed were built. Until the summer timetable change on 30 May 1976, the so-called ''Stadt- und Vorortbahnverkehr'' ("urban and suburban railway service", an
S-Bahn The S-Bahn is the name of hybrid urban- suburban rail systems serving a metropolitan region in German-speaking countries. Some of the larger S-Bahn systems provide service similar to rapid transit systems, while smaller ones often resemble co ...
-like system) operated between Hohenstein-Ernstthal and
Flöha Flöha () is a town in the district of Mittelsachsen, in Saxony, Germany. Flöha is situated on the confluence of the rivers Zschopau and Flöha, east of Chemnitz. Flöha station connects the town to Dresden, Chemnitz, Freiberg, Annaberg-Buc ...
. The freight yard was closed on 31 December 2000. The two signal boxes were demolished in September 2006 and extensive reconstruction has taken place since 2007. The Tudor-style entrance building was demolished in 2007 and replaced by a low-rise building and the railway station was redeveloped to remove barriers to access. The then redesigned station forecourt was opened on 9 July 2009; a ''Turmwagen'' ("tower car", a vehicle designed for the maintenance of the tramway’s overhead wire) was erected on the forecourt as a monument to the former tramway. In 2010, work started on the replacement of the platform, leading to the construction of a platform on the former loading road. The platform next to the station building and the original island platform were completely demolished and replaced by a new barrier-free island platform. The new station was officially opened on 2 August 2011.


Description


Former entrance building

At its opening on 15 November 1858, the entrance building consisted only of the structure that later became its middle section. From 1860 to 1887, the post and telegraph office was in the entrance building. In 1899 to 1902, the building was expanded, with two annexes erected to the right and left of the existing building. The building now included a ticket office, a baggage handling office, a restaurant, a snackbar, an information desk and toilets. In addition, twelve railway apartments were spread over two floors. In 1985 the entrance building was painted for the last time in wine red and gold. As the building had increasingly decayed, it was first blocked off because of a risk of collapse and then it was demolished in 2007.


The modern station

Hohenstein-Ernstthal station now has three main through tracks. The third track still provides access for
road–rail vehicle A road–rail vehicle or a rail–road vehicle is a dual-mode vehicle which can operate both on rail tracks and roads. They are also known as two-way vehicles (german: Zweiwegefahrzeug), hi-rail (from ''highway'' and ''railway'', or variation ...
s. The island platform is fully accessible, with lifts as well as with markings and
tactile paving Tactile paving (also called tenji blocks, truncated domes, detectable warnings, tactile tiles, tactile ground surface indicators, tactile walking surface indicators, or detectable warning surfaces) is a system of textured ground surface indicat ...
for the blind and visually impaired. The two platforms are 170 m long and 55 cm high. There are also a
Mitteldeutsche Regiobahn Transdev Germany is the largest private operator of passenger buses and trains in Germany. It is a subsidiary of Transdev. History In 1997, Aktiengesellschaft für Industrie und Verkehrswesen was purchased by a CGEA Group (60%) EnBW (40%) cons ...
partner agency (ticket office), a waiting room, a toilet, a store for travel necessities, parking lots and bicycle parking spaces in the station forecourt.


Regional services


References


External links

{{Commons category, Bahnhof Hohenstein-Ernstthal, Hohenstein-Ernstthal station
www.verkehrsmittelvergleich.de

www.antares08.an.ohost.de
Railway stations in Saxony Railway stations in Germany opened in 1858 Buildings and structures in Zwickau (district) station