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Wien Hetzendorf railway station

Coordinates: 48°08′05″N 16°17′02″E / 48.13472°N 16.28389°E / 48.13472; 16.28389
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Wien Hetzendorf
S-Bahn station
General information
LocationEckartsaugasse 2[1]
Austria
Coordinates48°08′05″N 16°17′02″E / 48.13472°N 16.28389°E / 48.13472; 16.28389
Owned byÖBB
Operated byÖBB
Platforms2 side platforms
Tracks2
Construction
Bicycle facilitiesYes
AccessibleNo
Other information
Fare zoneCore Zone (100)
History
Opened1849 (1849)
Electrified15 kV 16,7 Hz
Services
Preceding station Vienna S-Bahn Following station
Wien Atzgersdorf
towards Mödling
S2 Wien Meidling
Wien Atzgersdorf S3 Wien Meidling
towards Hollabrunn
S4 Wien Meidling
Location
Wien Hetzendorf is located in Austria
Wien Hetzendorf
Wien Hetzendorf
Location within Austria
Railway station Hetzendorf in 1897

Wien Hetzendorf is a Vienna S-Bahn station, served by S1 and S2. The station is 1.63 km (1.01 mi) west of Wien Meidling. The station is situated between Altmannsdorfer Straße and Hetzendorfer Straße. Connections are available to Lines 16A, 62A, 64A of Wiener Linien Bus service and Line 62 of Wiener Linien Tram service.

History

The railway station was opened in June 1841 as a part of the railroad from Vienna to Gloggnitz in Lower Austria. The first steam locomotive using the new railroad was built by the Norris Locomotive Works in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1837 and brought to Vienna. The locomotive was named Philadelphia and a bridge across the railroad between the railway stations Wien Meidling and Wien Hetzendorf is called Philadelphiabrücke up to now in commemoration of the early days of that railroad. It was completed as the Southern Railway in Austria until 1857 to reach the harbour of Trieste, then part of the Austrian Empire.

The railway station gained importance when the later Emperor Charles I of Austria lived close to the station in Schloss Hetzendorf. The station was also the best connection from Schönbrunn Palace to the south.

References

  1. ^ "ÖBB - Umleitung zur neuen Website".

Media related to Wien Hetzendorf railway station at Wikimedia Commons