Langenfelde Station
History
After 1879, when Nothnagel & Co. promoted the idea to build a railway line to transport peat to Altona, the Altona Kaltenkirchen Railway Company was founded, today's Altona Kaltenkirchen Neumünster Railway Company and in 1883 works started for the Hamburg-Altona–Neumünster railway line. On 8 September 1884 passenger traffic was opened. However, between 1911 and 1912, when the line at grade was elevated onto a railway embankment in order to stop hindrances by level crossings, Langenfelde was given up as a stop. With AKN ceding the section of the Altona-Neumünster line between Altona and Eidelstedt to the Deutsche Bundesbahn the latter redeveloped the stations in this section into S-Bahn stations, and reopened Langenfelde station in 1962.
Station layout
The station is an elevated island platform with two tracks and one exit. A lift was added recently.
Station services
Trains
The rapid transit trains of the Hamburg S-Bahn lines S3 and S5 call at the station.
Direction of the trains on track 1 is northbound toward Elbgaustraße (S5), and Pinneberg (S3). On track 2 the trains run southbound in the direction Stade via Holstenstraße (S5) and Neugraben via Altona (S3).
Facilities at the station
A small shop in the station sells fast food and newspapers. Another shop sells bakery products, as well as Turkish take away food. There are no lockerboxes. Expectedly in course of April 2011 a newly installed lift will provide full access also for handicapped people. No personnel are attending the station, but there are SOS and information telephones, ticket machines and bicycle stands.
References
- ^ "Tarifplan" (PDF). Hamburger Verkehrsverbund. 9 December 2018. Retrieved 18 October 2019.
- ^ Liste Bahnhofskategorie 2008 (pdf), DB Station&Service AG, Köthener Straße 2, 10963 Berlin (2008) (in German)
- ^ DB station information (see: External links)
External links
Media related to S-Bahn stations in Hamburg at Wikimedia Commons
- DB station information (in German)
- Line and route network plans at hvv.de (in German and English)