Venlo railway station
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Venlo is the railway station for the city of Venlo in the province of Limburg, The Netherlands.
The first station in Venlo was opened on November 21, 1865. The current building dates to 1958 and is a typical Dutch station of the post-war era, featuring a clock tower and a large canopy spanning the front of the station.
There is a bus station for regional and city buses in front of the station, as well as a car park.
[edit] Operational usage
The following Dutch train lines call at Venlo:
- 1900 Intercity Den Haag Centraal – Venlo (hourly)
- 6200 Sneltrein Nijmegen – Venlo – Roermond (hourly)
- 16200 Stoptrein Nijmegen – Venlo – Roermond (hourly)
- 6500 Stoptrein Eindhoven – Venlo (hourly)
Additionally, one international service to Germany calls at the station:
- 9000 RegionalExpress Venlo – Düsseldorf Hbf – Hamm (Maas-Wupper-Express, hourly)
Venlo is a border station and therefore sees a significant number of shunting movements. On several tracks, the catenary can be switched between the 15 kV 16.7 Hz AC used on the Deutsche Bahn network and the 1500 V DC used by Nederlandse Spoorwegen, though there are no through passenger trains at the moment. German RE13 trains from Hamm pull into the station with the locomotive staying at the eastward end of the train thanks to the use of driving van trailers, then reverse out of the station with the locomotive in front, so that no shunting movements are needed.
[edit] External links
- Satellite image from WikiMapia or Google Local
- Street map from Multimap or GlobalGuide
- Aerial image from TerraServer
Previous station | DB AG | Next station | ||
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Terminus | RE 13 |
toward Hamm
|