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Winterthur Grüze railway station

Coordinates: 47°29′55.511″N 8°45′3.668″E / 47.49875306°N 8.75101889°E / 47.49875306; 8.75101889
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Winterthur Grüze
Two-story building with gabled roof
The station building in 2009
General information
LocationSankt Gallerstrasse 143
Winterthur
Switzerland
Coordinates47°29′55.511″N 8°45′3.668″E / 47.49875306°N 8.75101889°E / 47.49875306; 8.75101889
Elevation452 m above the sea
Owned bySwiss Federal Railways
Line(s)
Train operators
History
Opened14 October 1855 (1855-10-14)
Services
Preceding station Zurich S-Bahn Following station
Winterthur
towards Brugg AG
S12 Winterthur Hegi
towards Wil
Winterthur
Terminus
S35
Winterthur
towards Aarau
S11 Winterthur Seen
towards Wila
Winterthur
Terminus
S26 Winterthur Seen
towards Rüti ZH
Location
Winterthur Grüze is located in Switzerland
Winterthur Grüze
Winterthur Grüze
Location within Switzerland

Winterthur Grüze railway station (German: Bahnhof Winterthur Grüze) is a railway station that serves Grüze, an industrial zone in district number 2, Winterthur, a city in the canton of Zürich, Switzerland.[1][2]

Opened in 1855, the station was built as a junction station and is the largest freight hub in Winterthur. It forms part of both the Tösstal line and the St. Gallen–Winterthur line.[2] At the moment, it has no direct connection to the city bus service.

The roofs of the station platforms are listed buildings and are unique in Switzerland.

Location

The station is situated roughly on the border between central Winterthur (to its west) and the Grüze industrial area (to its east).

History

The station was built in 1855, and used for the first time on 14 October of that year for Sankt Gallisch-Appenzellische Eisenbahn scheduled service on the WinterthurWil railway. In 1875, the Tösstalbahn (TTB) was opened. Initially, due to its operator's lack of permission to enter Winterthur Hauptbahnhof, that line's termini were Grüze and Bauma.

It was not until 1882 that the operators of the Tösstalbahn could run trains to Winterthur Hauptbahnhof. For that purpose, a second track was created between Winterthur HB and Winterthur Grüze. The line from Winterthur HB to Räterschen (the next station towards Wil – St. Gallen), as well as the route to Tösstal (Winterthur HB – Winterthur Grüze – Winterthur Seen etc.) remained separated, without any connection between them.

With the commissioning of the new electrical signalling in 1953, the two tracks to Winterthur were connected with each other by a set of points (switches). Between Winterthur HB and Winterthur Grüze, double track operation was introduced. Räterschen railway station also received new signalling (integrated circuits) at that time.

Simultaneously, the main line (Winterthur – Winterthur Grüze – Räterschen – (Wil – St. Gallen)) was renovated, and the section between Winterthur Grüze and Räterschen converted to double track (the St. Gallen – Wil – Räterschen section had been built as a double track section right from the beginning).

Since the introduction of the Zürich S-Bahn in 1990, S12 trains travelling in both directions (towards Seen and Winterthur–Zürich, respectively) have stopped hourly at Grüze. Since November 2002, Grüze has been a self-service station and the signal box has been automatically remote controlled.

Architecture

The station yard with its unique platform shelters, 2008.

The station has been a junction station ever since the construction of the Tösstalbahn. It is the point where the line from Winterthur HB separates into the lines to Wil and into the Tösstal, respectively. For that reason, tracks 4-7 are provided with platforms, each serving two tracks, one in each direction.

The other tracks, apart from one siding, are on the Tösstalbahn side of the line, and are used for goods traffic. As the station is located within the Grüze industrial area, it was formerly the scene of a lot of cargo handling. Even today, the station is one of the main SBB-CFF-FFS cargo hubs in the canton of Zürich.

The station's platform shelters, built in 1955, are listed buildings, and are unique in Switzerland. They were developed between 1952 and 1955 by the railway architect Hans Hilfiker, also the designer of the famous Swiss railway clock, as a prototype for new platform shelters. A special feature of these shelters is the central support tube with platform numbers at its ends, from which the cantilever roofs protrude on both sides. The new shelters, however, were never put into series production, and so Grüze remains the only station of its kind in Switzerland.

The station building is located on the southwestern side of all tracks at the station.

Services

Zürich S-Bahn

The station is served by four lines of the Zürich S-Bahn.

Night trains

One night train operated by THURBO runs through the station heading for Wil. The Tösstal is served by night buses from Winterthur Hauptbahnhof and therefore has no night train.

See also

References

  1. ^ map.geo.admin.ch (Map). Swiss Confederation. Retrieved 2 December 2011.
  2. ^ a b Eisenbahnatlas Schweiz. Verlag Schweers + Wall GmbH. 2012. pp. 12–13. ISBN 978-3-89494-130-7.