Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Haiger station

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Architect
  
Ludwig Hofmann

DS100 code
  
FHG

Platforms in use
  
5

Station code
  
2475

Opened
  
1862

Haiger station

Location
  
Bahnhofstr. 1, Haiger, Hesse Germany

Line(s)
  
Dill Railway (KBS 445) Heller Valley Railway (KBS 462) Haiger–Breitscheid railway

Architectural style
  
Neoclassical / Art Nouveau

Address
  
Bahnhofstraße 3A, 35708 Haiger, Germany

Hours
  
Closed today TuesdayClosedWednesday10AM–10PMThursday10AM–10PMFriday10AM–10PMSaturday10AM–10PMSunday10AM–10PMMondayClosed

Similar
  
Dillenburg station, Herborn station, Wilhelmsturm, Villa Grün, Siegen station

Haiger station serves the town of Haiger in the Lahn-Dill-Kreis of the German state of Hesse. The first station at this point was opened 1862 when the Cologne-Minden Railway Company built the Deutz–Gießen railway, connecting Cologne-Deutz with Gießen. The station became more important when the direct connection was opened to Siegen (now considered part of the Dill line) in 1915.

Contents

Reception building

Between 1911 and 1913 a new station building was built as a “wedge station” (Keilbahnhof) between the old line (now the Heller Valley Railway) and the new line to Siegen. The architect was perhaps Ludwig Hoffmann. The station is located between the two converging railways, which are elevated, allowing the platform subways to be accessed from street level. The facade and much of the buildings themselves are designed around a central axis of symmetry. The façade is dominated by a central projection of yellow sandstone. The ensemble is composed of a mixture of classical elements and Art Nouveau. The station is situated at an altitude of 270 m above sea level. The reception building currently appears neglected and its sidings give the impression of a brownfield.

Lines

Haiger station is on the Siegen–Gießen main line (Dill line) and the Heller Valley Railway from Haiger to Betzdorf, now classified as a single track main line, which was originally part of the Deutz–Giessen line. A third line, the Haiger–Breitscheid line is closed.

References

Haiger station Wikipedia