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Niederau station

Coordinates: 51°10′35″N 13°33′38″E / 51.17639°N 13.56056°E / 51.17639; 13.56056
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Niederau
Deutsche Bahn
Through station
Entrance building
General information
LocationBahnhofsplatz 1, Niederau, Saxony
Germany
Coordinates51°10′35″N 13°33′38″E / 51.17639°N 13.56056°E / 51.17639; 13.56056
Line(s)Leipzig–Dresden railway (km 95.69)
Platforms2
Other information
Station code4482[1]
DS100 codeDNDR[2]
IBNR8012482
Category6[1]
Websitewww.bahnhof.de
History
Opened15 May 1842
Services
Preceding station DB Regio Nordost Following station
Weinböhla
towards Dresden Hbf
RB 31 Priestewitz
Preceding station DB Regio Südost Following station
Priestewitz
towards Leipzig Hbf
RE 50 Weinböhla
towards Dresden Hbf

Niederau station is a regional station on the Leipzig–Dresden railway in Niederau in the German state of Saxony. The railway station, which was opened on 15 May 1842, for a long time had the oldest operating station building in Germany,[3] but Deutsche Bahn stopped using it and sold it after 2000.

History

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At the bottom of this section of a map, the straight road runs from Meissen to Niederau station

After the opening of the Leipzig-Dresden Railway on 7 April 1839, Oberau station was the closest station to Meissen, but the inconvenient location of the station high above a cutting on the approach to Oberau Tunnel, made access difficult and so Meissen sought easier access to the line. These efforts were successful: the new Niederau station was completed on 1 April 1842 after half a year of construction and the station was opened on 15  May 1842. Simultaneously, a new direct access road was built from Meissen to Niederau, now called Niederauer or Meissner Strasse.[4]

For a while the traffic brought by carriage from Meissen made the station competitive for trains to Leipzig or Dresden with the Coswig–Meißen branch line, which opened on 1 December 1860 and allowed direct rail journeys from Meissen to Dresden. A line was completed from Borsdorf to Meissen in December 1868, creating a direct rail link between Meissen and Leipzig. Thus Niederau station lost its importance and traffic fell sharply.[5]

Freight operations in Niederau were abandoned on 1 July 1964.[6]

In 1988, one year before the celebration of the 150th anniversary of the first German long-distance railway between Leipzig and Dresden, the station was completely restored.[7] At that time, the station building was the oldest on the network of Deutsche Reichsbahn[8]

In the early 2000s, Deutsche Bahn sold the railway station building.[9] It is now used as a residence.

The modular building of an electronic interlocking (ESTW-A) has been located on the eastern side of the line to the south of the former station building since 2000. This is operated from the electronic control centre (ESTW-Z) in Priestewitz.

Regional services

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The station is served by Regional-Express service RE 50, running between Leipzig and Dresden and Regionalbahn service RB 31, running between Elsterwerda-Biehla and Dresden (as of December 2014).

Line Route Frequency (min) Operator
RE 50
Saxonia
Dresden Hbf – Dresden-Neustadt – Radebeul Ost – Coswig (b Dresden) – Niederau – Priestewitz – Riesa – Oschatz – Wurzen – Leipzig Hbf 60 DB Regio Südost
RB 31 Elsterwerda-Biehla – Elsterwerda – Großenhain Cottbus – Priestewitz – Niederau – Coswig (b Dresden) – Cossebaude – Dresden Hbf 120 DB Regio Nordost

Infrastructure

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The peculiar two-part main station building is a result of its construction and usage history. The larger part, lying on the left as seen from the tracks, was built as a Restaurationsgebäude (restaurant building), while the building on the right was built as the station building. Later, they were both rebuilt in the Swiss chalet style. The building complex is a heritage-listed building.

Entrance building (originally restaurant building)

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Niederau station from the track side, seen around 1860

Baroness von Werther, the owner of Oberau Castle, built the building and operated it at first as an inn. The half-timbered building was given a wood sheathing in 1862 and it was plastered with the appearance of Cyclopean masonry 15 years later. Also in 1877, the premises of the officials' apartments were renovated and a station restaurant was built in the new rooms.[4] Subsequently the building was used both for residential and station purposes. To emphasize the latter function, it received a station clock and the station sign that broke up the previously empty space on the building's gable during a reorganisation in 1988.[7]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Stationspreisliste 2024" [Station price list 2024] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 24 April 2023. Retrieved 29 November 2023.
  2. ^ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2009/2010 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  3. ^ Thomas Hesse (1992). "150 Jahre Bahnhof Niederau. Das älteste deutsche in Betrieb befindliche Bahnhofsgebäude". Die Bundesbahn (in German) (5 (yearbook 68)): 575–578. ISSN 0007-5876.
  4. ^ a b F. Borchert, ed. (1989). Die Leipzig–Dresdner Eisenbahn, Anfänge und Gegenwart einer 150-jährigen [The Leipzig-Dresden Railway, beginnings and the present of a 150-year-old] (in German). Berlin: transpress VEB Verlag für Verkehrswesen. pp. 102ff.
  5. ^ Norbert Kempke (1989). "Meißner wollten Bahnhof in Niederau". In 220 Minuten von Leipzig nach Dresden (in German). Dresden: Verband der Journalisten des Bezirkes Dresden anläßlich der Solidaritätsaktion 1989. pp. 43f.
  6. ^ "Eisenbahnen in Sachsen" (in German). sachsenschiene.net. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  7. ^ a b Norbert Kempke (1988). "Denkmalpflegerische Arbeiten am Bahnhof Niederau". Signal und Schiene (in German). ISSN 0037-5004.
  8. ^ Norbert Kempke (1989). "Überraschungen unterm Bahnhofsdach". In 220 Minuten von Leipzig nach Dresden (in German). Dresden: Verband der Journalisten des Bezirkes Dresden anläßlich der Solidaritätsaktion 1989. pp. 49f.
  9. ^ "Bahnhöfe vor ungewisser Zukunft". Sächsische Zeitung (in German). 23 December 2009.
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