Lüdenscheid-Brügge Station
History
The Hagen–Dieringhausen railway (also called the Volmetalbahn: “Volme Valley Railway”) from Hagen was opened to Dieringhausen in stages between 1871 and 1893. Numerous apartments for the railwaymen were built around the station area because Brügge was a busy station and many residents were employed in the station’s operation. During this period the signalbox, a roundhouse with a turntable and a water tower were built on the site. Until 1986, there was a direct passenger service to Cologne. In 2009, the former Art Nouveau style station building was demolished because it was in danger of collapse as there had been no restoration to the old building in recent years. The old platform area of Brügge station with the platforms for the line to Dieringhausen and Cologne which were connected via an underground passage to the station forecourt had been removed by 2016. The station was renamed Lüdenscheid-Brügge on 10 December 2017.
Today
The freight operations in Brügge is limited to the line from Krummenerl, which is used by freight trains from the local quarry, which continue on the Volme Valley Railway through Brügge to the north. In 2016 the station was completed rebuild with new track layout and installation of an electronic signal box. There is now a "tongue" platform between two platform tracks, one of which terminates, so it is easily accessible. In December 2017, services on the Volme Valley Railway were extended from Meinerzhagen to Brügge. The facade and roof of the old signal box at Brügge station, which dates back to 1927 have been renovated.
Rail services
The station is served by two Regionalbahn lines:
Line | Route | Frequency |
---|---|---|
RB 52 Volmetal-Bahn | Lüdenscheid – Lüdenscheid-Brügge – Schalksmühle – Hagen – Dortmund | Hourly |
RB 25 Oberbergische Bahn | Köln Hansaring – Cologne Hbf – Köln Messe/Deutz – Overath – Engelskirchen – Dieringhausen – Gummersbach – Meinerzhagen – Lüdenscheid-Brügge – Lüdenscheid | hourly/bihourly |
The RB52 trains reverse at the station.
Bus services
Bus services are operated by Märkische Verkehrsgesellschaft (Märkische Transport Company, MVG) and Busverkehr Ruhr-Sieg (Ruhr-Sieg Bus Transport, BRS) over the following seven bus lines:
Line | Route | Frequency (mins)
(Mon–Fri) |
Frequency (mins)
(Sat) |
Frequency (mins)
(Sun) |
---|---|---|---|---|
47 | Lüdenscheid, Eichholz – Lüdenscheid, Sauerfeld central bus station – Lüdenscheid, Bahnhof –
Lüdenscheid, Brügge station – Halver, Ostendorf Schule |
30 / 60 | 30 / 60 | 60 |
55 | Lüdenscheid, Kulturhaus – Lüdenscheid, Sauerfeld central bus station – Lüdenscheid, Talstraße –
Lüdenscheid, Brügge station – Halver, Sparkasse central bus station – Wipperfürth bus station |
Irregular | No service | No service |
56 | Lüdenscheid, Ahelle – Lüdenscheid, Brügge station – Halver, Ostendorf school –
Lüdenscheid, Brügge school – Lüdenscheid, Wehberg Wendestelle |
Irregular | No service | No service |
57 | Lüdenscheid, Brügge station – Schalksmühle, Strücken – Schalksmühle, Rathausplatz –
Schalksmühle, Mitte – Schalksmühle, Dahlerbrück – Hagen, Rummenohl Mitte |
Irregular | No service | No service |
58 | Lüdenscheid, Kulturhaus – Lüdenscheid, Sauerfeld central bus station – Lüdenscheid, Talstraße –
Lüdenscheid, Brügge station – Kierspe central bus station– Meinerzhagen station / central bus station |
60 | 60 | 60 |
59 | Lüdenscheid, Kulturhaus – Lüdenscheid, Sauerfeld central bus station – Lüdenscheid, Talstraße –
Lüdenscheid, Brügge station – Kierspe central bus station – Kierspe, Feuerwehrgerätehaus |
60 | No service | No service |
134 | Lüdenscheid, Kulturhaus – Lüdenscheid, Sauerfeld central bus station – Lüdenscheid station–
Lüdenscheid, Brügge station – Halver, Sparkasse central bus station – Radevormwald bus station |
30 / 60 | 60 | 60 |
Notes
- ^ "Stationspreisliste 2025" [Station price list 2025] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 28 November 2024. Retrieved 5 December 2024.
- ^ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2009/2010 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
- ^ "Fahrtauskunft". Westfalentarif. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
- ^ "Brügge (Westf) station operations". NRW Rail Archive (in German). André Joost. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
- ^ "Wir sind Brügge i.W." (in German). Retrieved 28 October 2013.
- ^ Händeler, Ralf (2016). "Die Flügel fallen". Eisenbahn-magazin (in German) (12): 43. ISSN 0342-1902.
- ^ "Eröffnung der Bahnstrecke Meinerzhagen - Brügge". Lüdenscheider Nachrichten (in German). 10 December 2017.
- ^ "Brügge (Westf) station".
References
- Sascha Koch, Horst Kowalski; et al. (2005). Eisenbahnen im Oberbergischen und die Geschichte des Bahnbetriebswerkes Dieringhausen (in German). Nümbrecht: Galunder Verlag. ISBN 3-89909-050-0.
External links
- "Bahnbetriebswerk Brügge/Westf" (in German). bahnen-wuppertal.de. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
- "Bahnhof Brügge" (in German). Riedelfoto. Archived from the original on 21 October 2013. Retrieved 28 October 2013.