Limburg Süd station
General information | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Location | Londoner Str. 5, Limburg, Hesse Germany | ||||||||||||||||||||
Coordinates | 50°22′56″N 8°5′46″E / 50.38222°N 8.09611°E | ||||||||||||||||||||
Line(s) |
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Platforms | 2 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Other information | |||||||||||||||||||||
Station code | 3723 | ||||||||||||||||||||
DS100 code | FLIS[1] | ||||||||||||||||||||
IBNR | 8003680 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Category | 4[2] | ||||||||||||||||||||
Website | www.bahnhof.de | ||||||||||||||||||||
Passengers | |||||||||||||||||||||
ca. 2,625 per day[3] | |||||||||||||||||||||
Services | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Limburg Süd (German for Limburg south) is a station in the town of Limburg an der Lahn, in the German state of Hesse. It is located in the Eschhöfer Feld ("Eschhofen field")[4] in the district of Eschhofen at the 110.5 kilometre point of the Cologne-Frankfurt high-speed railway. Limburg Süd is the only station in Germany that is served only by Intercity-Express (ICE) services.
Infrastructure
The entrance building, which has 300 square metres of usable space, is located on platform 1 (used by trains to Frankfurt) and houses the Deutsche Bahn travel centre, waiting benches and vending machines for beverages and confectioneries. There are no public toilets in the station itself, but there are some in the adjacent parking garage. Alternatively, there is a coin-operated toilet cubicle in the forecourt.
The 180 square m area on the second floor has been largely empty since the opening of the station. However, it is now planned to establish a control room of DB Energie there.[5]
Railway tracks
The station has four tracks. The two middle tracks serve as through tracks and are built as slab tracks. ICE trains can pass through the station without decelerating at up to 300 km/h, while stopping trains running to the two outer platforms can pass over the turnouts at 100 km/h. Platform 4 (serving trains to Cologne) is reached over a bridge spanning the track, which has a staircase and a lift at each end.
The 405 m long[6] and 3.4 m wide platforms have canopies over a length of 300 m. An 11 m high[7] and 36 m wide roof spans all four tracks.[8]
North of the platform a crossover allows a track change from the western to the eastern track. Two km towards Frankfurt (113.0 km point), at the Lindenholzhausen crossover, it is possible to change tracks from the east to the west track. The crossovers are passable at 100 km/h while changing tracks.[9] A sub-centre of the electronic interlocking system and an electric sub-station (which is also linked to the public network[10]) have also been established in the area of the station.
Operations
The majority of trains run past Limburg Süd station without stopping. Trains run towards Frankfurt and Cologne every two hours and there are several additional services. All trains stopping in Limburg Süd also stop in Montabaur and some stop in Siegburg/Bonn.
Limburg Süd station is unique in that it is the only station in the country to only be served by high-speed services: - this is a distinction it shares with Ebbsfleet International, the only station in the United Kingdom that is only served by high-speed services. Allersberg (Rothsee) station and Kinding (Altmühltal) station on the Nuremberg–Munich high-speed railway are not connected to any other lines, but are only served by slower München-Nürnberg-Express and Allersberg-Express services. The power-weight ratio requirement of the Cologne-Frankfurt high-speed line means it is only possible to serve the station with ICE 3 services.
Line | Route | Frequency |
ICE 41 | (Dortmund –) Essen – Duisburg – Köln Messe/Deutz – Montabaur – Limburg Süd – Frankfurt Airport – Frankfurt (Main) Hbf – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Munich | Every 2 hours |
ICE 45 | Cologne – Cologne/Bonn Airport – Montabaur – Limburg Süd – Wiesbaden – Mainz | Individual services |
ICE 49 | (Dortmund – Wuppertal –) Cologne – Siegburg/Bonn – Montabaur – Limburg Süd – Frankfurt Airport – Frankfurt (Main) Hbf | Individual services |
ICE International 79 | Brussels – Aachen – Cologne – Siegburg/Bonn – Limburg Süd – Frankfurt Airport – Frankfurt (Main) Hbf | Individual services |
Public transport
Limburg (Lahn) station in central Limburg city can be reached by bus and possibly by taxi called to the taxi rank. After the opening of the ICE station there were shuttle buses running on a timetable coordinated with the arrivals and departures of ICE services between two stations, but this was later rationalised to save costs. Outside the station, there is also a taxi rank.
9.1 percent of commuters departing from the station in 2004 reached it by the shuttle bus.[11]
Although the station is in the district of Eschhofen, there is no direct road link to Eschhofen.
Parking
Near the station building there is a parking area with 325 spaces. There is a separate parking area for long-term parking. A parking garage with 573 car and 24 bicycle parking spaces for commuters is also nearby. The parking garage opened in September 2011, after 19 months of construction, with six levels, a filling station and toilets. At the opening of the station there were approximately 300 parking spaces.[12] The town of Limburg and Deutsche Bahn have been negotiating to establish additional parking for long-distance travellers.[13]
History
The planning of a Cologne–Gross-Gerau high-speed railway in the 1970s envisaged a station between Limburg and Diez on its right bank (east of the Rhine) route option. The station would have been located south of the Lahn and west of the existing station and above the Lahn Valley Railway. Trains on the existing line from Wetzlar would have connected to services to Cologne and trains from Niederlahnstein would have connected to services towards Frankfurt. The four-track infrastructure would have had, in addition to the two central through tracks, two external platform tracks connected by scissors crossovers (with four sets of points) at each end of the station. The proposed station was assessed as having "predominantly regional importance", which justified "only a limited number of train stops".[14]
After the completion of the route selection process, Federal Cabinet decided on 20 December 1989 that the line would be built on the route of the high-speed line along the A3, as built. It also agreed to the building of a station at Limburg.[15] An option running through the Rhine Valley was now finally off the table. In the same way that the state of Rhineland-Palatinate demanded a station at Montabaur, the state of Hesse demanded a station on its territory. In an agreement of March 1990 the premiers of the two states as well as the federal transport minister noted that there was consensus that "a stop was required in the Limburg area".[16]
Discussion of options
As part of the coordination between the federal government and the two states three options were tested in Limburg:
- The establishment of a station in Limburg, along with a station in Montabaur. The additional station in Montabaur would compensate for the lack of a connection to the Lahn Valley Railway, which would not be possible in this option and was mainly required by the state of Hesse and corporations in the Limburg/Gießen area. Instead, the area of Koblenz would access Montabaur station by car (Dernbach interchange and Montabaur exit). Montabaur station also offered the possibility of a connection to the Lower Westerwald Railway to Siershahn. The cost of this option in 1991 was estimated to be 30 million Deutschmark (DM).[15]
- The establishment of a station in Limburg-Eschhofen was also discussed. Passengers would have to overcome a height difference of about 40 m between the Lahn Valley Railway and the new line to change trains. The town of Limburg saw this option as the best ways to link to the town's road network as well as to promote urban development. The costs were estimated at DM 90 million (1991 prices).[15]
- The establishment of a station between Diez and Limburg, west of the above two options, which pass on the east city of Limburg, was also examined. A link between the Lahn Valley Railway and the new line would have been short. The then Deutsche Bundesbahn saw disadvantages in the necessary construction of a 1.5 km long viaduct over the Lahn and greater landscape fragmentation as a result of separation from the route of Autobahn 3 (A3). The cost of this option was estimated at about DM 65 million.[15] This option was discarded not least due to the resulting fragmentation of the Diersteiner Aue (Dierstein floodplain) and the need to cross large deposits of limestone would have made it difficult to prevent the contamination of potable water.[17]
The board of Deutsche Bundesbahn selected the first option for the high-speed line on 8 March 1991.[15][18] The selection of the current location meant a comparatively small expenditure at the cost of a missing link to the transport network and a secluded position; it also necessitated the construction of the 2.4 km long Limburg tunnel through a water protection zone. The station would be built at a green-field location about 2.5 km southeast of the city centre and close to the A 3. The traffic forecast assumed that 90 percent of rail passengers would use cars to reach or leave the station, connecting with ICEs.[15]
Prior to a decision of the Rhine route in the Federal Cabinet, the then premier of Rhineland-Palatinate, Carl-Ludwig Wagner 1989 called for a so-called option S in an interview in July. This envisaged a right bank route taking a sharp curve from Dernbach through a tunnel and a bridge over the Rhine to Koblenz before taking another a sharp curve back over another Rhine crossing to a purely right bank route to Frankfurt. The estimated additional costs of this option were DM 1.3 to 2.8 billion (about €0.7 to 1.4 billion). The Federal Transport Minister, Friedrich Zimmermann spoke of a "provincial farce" and suggested, as a compromise, the establishment of a high-speed station in Limburg to provide a connection with Koblenz. In addition to the establishment of the station, the compromise proposal provided for a package of other railway infrastructure in Rhineland-Palatinate. The then Deutsche Bundesbahn initially accepted the route via Limburg and Vilich in order to prevent further delays to the project.[19]
Planning
The regional planning approval process of the Giessen region was commenced for the section in January 1991 and completed in July 1994. Thus the position of the station in Limburg was established.[20] The Eschhofen variation, which provided for an eastern curve around the city, was introduced into the planning approval process.[17] The station was part of zoning section 31.3, which stretched from the Limburg tunnel to the town limits.[21] At the end of 1994, the facility was designed with five tracks.[20] The planning approval was issued on 25 June 1997. It was based on a design by the Berlin architects Weinkamm.[21]
As planned in 1995, Limburg Süd and Montabaur would be among five stations on the new Cologne–Rhine/Main line.[22]
Deutsche Bahn, the town of Limburg and the State of Hesse ran a competition for the design of the station and its environment in 1997.[7] In early 1997, the jury chose from 35 proposals received[7] a "flying carpet" design from the Düsseldorf architecture office of Schuster. The name "flying carpet" referred to a 16 m wide bridge that would be built over the tracks, appearing from the distance to float. The jury praised the design as creative and economically convincing.[23] The design was modified in some respects before the start of construction.
On 13 July 1998, Limburg council agreed to fund DM 1.5 million of the planned construction costs of DM 36 million (€18 million). This was linked to two conditions: the future of the station must be guaranteed in the long term and Limburg would become part of the Rhein-Main-Verkehrsverbund (Rhine-Main Transport Association, RMV).[24] The actual design of the station and its associated costs had still not been finalised, but it was expected to cost DM 36 million.[25]
The construction and financing agreement for Limburg Süd station was signed in mid-2000 by representatives of Deutsche Bahn, the state of Hesse and the city of Limburg. It was planned that one train per hour in each direction would stop at the station; at other times trains would stop every two-hours. In addition, it was intended to allow the tickets of the RMV to be used on the trains.[26]
On 31 January 2001, representatives of Deutsche Bahn and the mayor of the town of Limburg, Martin Richard, signed a contract for the development of the area surrounding the station. It regulated the exchange of land and changes to land use planning in this area.[27]
The more elaborate scheme that was initially planned at a cost of DM 42 million was reduced to half that cost.[28] As estimated in 2000[26] and 2001, the scheme should have cost DM 28.5 million (€14.6 million), with DM 12.5 million to be funded by the federal government, DM 8.5 million by the state, 6.0 million DM by Deutsche Bahn and DM 1.5 million by the town of Limburg.[7] In 2002, construction costs were given as €14.6 million.[12]
Construction and commissioning
In mid-1999, the first pre-construction activities were carried out at the station site. The start of construction was expected in the same year.[29]
In the course of preliminary archaeological explorations more than fifty archaeological monuments were discovered in the area of the future station. The discoveries, which were up to 7,000 years old, showed that significant trade had been carried out for centuries in the area of today's station.[30]
The construction of the station began with a groundbreaking ceremony on 24 September 2001.[7] The station building was completed on 12 July 2002. 9000 sq m of earth was excavated for the station building and 2,000 cubic metres of concrete or reinforced concrete were poured.[7]
On 1 August 2002, the station was opened for operations along with the new line.[12] More than 2,000 people, including the premier of Hesse, Roland Koch, watched the arrival of the first ICE 3, which arrived six minutes ahead of schedule in Limburg in the early morning of 1 August 2002.[31]
From the commissioning of the new line, two class 218 locomotives were stationed at the station, ready to tow broken-down trains on the new line. These were removed in 2010/2011.
South Limburg was one of three intermediate stations between Cologne and Frankfurt Airport that was served by every third train.[31] The station building was completed in November 2003.
In service
Limburg Süd and Montabaur stations were subject to criticism from the start due to their high construction costs and the initial lack of commercial sites in the station area. In 2005, about 2,500 people a day used the station. Between 2003 and 2005, the number of passengers increased by 32 percent. The continued existence of the station as an ICE stop was confirmed in 2007. A 2004 survey showed that 96 percent of passengers on the platform between 5 and 9 AM were commuters on their way to work.[32] The record (as of 2012) number of daily passengers at the station according to surveys was 2,758 travellers recorded on a day in 2008. In 2009, 2,694 passengers were counted in surveys. Counts of working days in April 2012 showed an average of 2,625 arriving and departing. The majority of the passengers were traveling to Frankfurt am Main (in both directions there were about 1,000 each day).[3]
A 2010 study by the University of Hamburg and the London School of Economics and Political Science determined that in the period from 2002 to 2006, that there had been additional economic growth of 2.7 percent in the catchment area of the new stations of Limburg and Montabaur. This growth is clearly a result of improved market access due to the stations.[33]
Criticism
The stations of Limburg Süd and Montabaur, which are approximately 20 km apart, have been criticised in the past as being the result of political blackmail.[28] After Limburg Süd station had already been agreed in the late 1980s, Rhineland-Palatinate had demanded a station in Montabaur before it would allow a smooth approval process for the new line.[34]
Notes
- ^ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2009/2010 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
- ^ "Stationspreisliste 2024" [Station price list 2024] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 24 April 2023. Retrieved 29 November 2023.
- ^ a b "Pendler bleiben ICE treu". Nassauische Neue Presse (in German). 5 July 2012. Retrieved 23 June 2013.
- ^ Neubaustrecke Köln–Rhein/Main: Bauabschnitt Mitte Los B: Selters–Brechen (in German). Frankfurt am Main: DBProjekt GmbH Köln–Rhein/Main, Projektleitung. January 1999. p. 4. (brochure, 20 pages)
- ^ Hans-Peter Günther (4 January 2013). "Bahn-Tochter will Raum nutzen" (in German). mittelhessen.de. Retrieved 23 June 2013.
- ^ "Platform information" (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Retrieved 23 June 2013.
- ^ a b c d e f DBBauProjekt GmbH, ed. (October 2001). "Nächster Halt: ICE-Bahnhof Limburg-Süd". Zum Thema (in German) (5). Darmstadt: Hestra: 4–6.
- ^ Bringfried Belter (2002). "Neubaustrecke Köln–Rhein/Main - Wirtschaftsräume verbinden". Eisenbahnen in der Region Frankfurt RheinMain (in German). Darmstadt: Hestra-Verlag. pp. 146 f. ISBN 3-7771-0304-7.
- ^ "Das Projekt Neubaustrecke Köln–Rhein/Main". Eisenbahn JOURNAL: Tempo 300 - Die Neubaustrecke Köln–Frankfurt (in German) (special 3 ed.). Eisenbahn Journal. 2002. pp. 34–63. ISBN 3-89610-095-5.
- ^ DBBauProjekt GmbH, ed. (June 2001). "Argumente und Ansichten". Zum Thema (in German) (3). Darmstadt: Hestra: 12.
- ^ Christopher Kleinheitz (2010). Einführungsstrategien für Angebotsverbesserungen im Öffentlichen Verkehr (in German). Cologne: ksv-Verlag. p. 59. ISBN 978-3-940685-07-0.
- ^ a b c "Hochgeschwindigkeitsstrecke Köln – Rhein/Main". Eisenbahn-Revue International (in German) (10): 456–459. 2002. ISSN 1421-2811.
- ^ "ICE-Parkhaus ist leer – und Straßen sind voll" (in German). Retrieved 23 June 2013.
- ^ Raimund Berg (1976). "Probleme einer Eisenbahnverbindung für hohe Geschwindigkeiten zwischen den Ballungsräumen Rhein-Ruhr und Rhein-Main". Eisenbahntechnische Rundschau (in German). 25 (12): 738–744. ISSN 0013-2845.
- ^ a b c d e f Walter Engels, Wilfried Zieße (1991). "Die Neubaustrecke Köln–Rhein/Main - eine Zwischenbilanz". Die Bundesbahn (in German) (10): 965–975. ISSN 0007-5876.
- ^ Nina Demuth (September 2004). Die ICE-Bahnhöfe Montabaur und Limburg: Impulse für Wohnstandortwahl, Wohnsiedlungsentwicklung und berufliche Mobilität (PDF) (in German). University of Trier. p. 68. Retrieved 23 June 2013. (thesis)
- ^ a b DBBauProjekt GmbH, ed. (1997). "NBS aktuell: Tunneltaufe am Tag der heiligen Barbara". Zum Thema (in German) (6). Darmstadt: Hestra: 10 f.
- ^ Rüdiger Block (1991). "ICE-Rennbahn: Die Neubaustrecken". Eisenbahn-Kurier (in German) (21: Special: Hochgeschwindigkeitsverkehr): 36–45.
- ^ "Schwenk nach Westen". Der Spiegel (in German) (45): 159. 1989. Retrieved 24 June 2013.
- ^ a b Geschäftsbereich Netz, NBS Köln–Rhein/Main (ed.). Neubaustrecke Köln–Rhein/Main. Bereich Hessen. Planfeststellungsabschnitte Elz–Limburg (PFA 31.1–3) (in German). Deutsche Bahn AG. (four-sided brochure with status of December 1994)
- ^ a b Stadtplanungsamt der Stadt Köln, ed. (c. 1998). Bahnhöfe der Zukunft an den neuen Hochgeschwindigkeitsstrecken (in German). Cologne. p. 15.
- ^ DBBauProjekt GmbH, ed. (December 1995). "Köln–Rhein/Main: auf neuen Schienen in die Zukunft". Zum Thema (in German) (special issue). Darmstadt: Hestra: 6–9.
- ^ DBBauProjekt GmbH, ed. (April 1997). "-". Zum Thema (in German) (2). Darmstadt: Hestra: 8.
- ^ "Limburg beteiligt sich an ICE-Bahnhof". Frankfurter Rundschau (in German). 15 July 1998.
- ^ "Die öffentliche Verschwendung". Bund der Steuerzahler (in German). XXVI: 11. 1998. ISSN 0177-5057.
- ^ a b DBBauProjekt GmbH, ed. (June 2000). "Flughafen Köln/Bonn; Maus zu Gast; Erfolgreicher Bogenschluss; ICE-Bahnhof Limburg; Tunnel Idstein". Zum Thema (in German) (3). Darmstadt: Hestra: 7–9.
- ^ DBBauProjekt GmbH, ed. (February 2001). "DB AG und Stadt Limburg schließen Vertrag; Stiftung zieht letzte Klage zurück; Umbau am Frankfurter Kreuz beendet". Zum Thema (in German) (1). Darmstadt: Hestra: 7f.
- ^ a b Andreas Molitor (2001). "Operation Größenwahn". Die Zeit (in German). No. 31. Retrieved 19 June 2013.
- ^ DBBauProjekt GmbH, ed. (August 1999). "Planmäßiger Verlauf auf der längsten Baustelle Deutschlands". Zum Thema (in German) (4). Darmstadt: Hestra: 4–7.
- ^ DBBauProjekt GmbH, ed. (April 2002). "Argumente und Ansichten". Zum Thema (in German) (2). Darmstadt: Hestra: 12.
- ^ a b DBBauProjekt GmbH, ed. (2002). "Startschuss des Shuttle-Verkehrs am 1. August 2002 um 5:38 Uhr". Zum Thema (in German) (4). Darmstadt: Hestra: 7–9.
- ^ Wilko Manz; Dirk Wittowsky (2007). "Fernpendeln – mit welchem Verkehrsmittel?". Internationales Verkehrswesen (in German). 53 (9): 400–403.
- ^ Gabriel Ahlfeldt, Arne Feddersen (September 2010). "From periphery to core: economic adjustments to high speed rail" (PDF; 2.2 MB). p. 49. Retrieved 19 June 2013.
- ^ Christopher Kopper (2010). "Zu lange, zu groß, zu teuer". Die Zeit (in German). No. 42. Retrieved 19 June 2013.
External links
- "Current departures" (in German). Deutsche Bahn. Retrieved 23 June 2013.
- "Archaeological finds in the area of the station" (in German). www.mobileslandschaftsmuseum.de. Retrieved 23 June 2013.