České Budějovice railway station
České Budějovice | |
---|---|
General information | |
Location | Nádražní, České Budějovice Czech Republic |
Coordinates | 48°58′28″N 14°29′17″E / 48.974378°N 14.488158°E |
Owned by | SŽDC |
Connections | Trolleybuses, buses |
Construction | |
Architect | Gustav Kulhavý |
History | |
Opened | 1868 |
Rebuilt | 1908 |
Electrified | 1968 |
České Budějovice railway station is a mainline railway station and marshalling yard in České Budějovice in the Czech Republic. It is located at the junction of an international corridor leading from Prague south to Linz in Austria with several domestic lines. The Neo-Renaissance station building, completed in 1908, is located on Nádražní street, a short walk east of the old town. Most passenger services are operated by Czech Railways but some are operated by Arriva.[1]
History
The history of rail transport in České Budějovice began as early as 1828 with the opening of a horse-drawn railway to Linz, but it was not until 1868 when a new line to Plzeň was opened that a station was built for locomotives. At the beginning of the 20th century, as the railways continued to grow, a much larger station was constructed on the same tracks a short distance north of the old one. The station building was designed by Gustav Kulhavý in Neo-Renaissance style and constructed by J. M. Kohler & son. It was opened in 1908, and the first train to call at the station was an express train from Trieste to Prague on 17 December of that year.[2]
Reconstruction
In 2016, the station was acquired by the Railway Infrastructure Administration Company (Cz: Správa železniční dopravní cesty, or SŽDC), who plan to renovate the station at a cost of approximately 150 million Czech koruna, with work beginning in 2018.[3]
Services
The station is served by one express route and three long-distance routes operated by Czech Railways.[4]
Preceding station | České dráhy | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Velešín město toward Linz |
Ex7 | Tábor toward Prague | ||
Český Krumlov Terminus |
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Čičenice toward Plzeň |
R11 | Veselí nad Lužnicí toward Brno | ||
Terminus | R17 | Veselí nad Lužnicí toward Prague via Tábor | ||
Čičenice toward Prague via Písek |
R26 | Terminus | ||
Nové Hodějovice toward České Velenice |
Stopping trains | České Budějovice severní zastávka toward Tábor, Prachatice or Protivín | ||
České Budějovice jižní zastávka toward Černý Kříž or Horní Dvořiště |
||||
Preceding station | Arriva | Following station | ||
Boršov nad Vltavou toward Nová Pec |
Arriva Express | Chotýčany toward Prague |
References
- ^ "České Budějovice". Želpage. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
- ^ Kopáček, Jiří; Vondra, Václav. "Nádraží (železniční)". Encyklopedie Českých Budějovic. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
- ^ Marek, Lukáš. "Budějovice mají nejhorší nádraží, s novým vlastníkem je šance na opravu". iDnes. Retrieved 4 November 2017.
- ^ "Schema linek dálkových vlaků ČR" (PDF). České dráhy. Retrieved 4 November 2017.