Deventer railway station

Deventer
Location Netherlands
Coordinates 52°15′26″N 6°9′39″E / 52.25722°N 6.16083°E / 52.25722; 6.16083Coordinates: 52°15′26″N 6°9′39″E / 52.25722°N 6.16083°E / 52.25722; 6.16083
Line(s) Apeldoorn–Deventer railway
Deventer–Almelo railway
Arnhem–Leeuwarden railway
Services
Preceding station   NS International   Following station
Intercity (DB) 140
1x/2 hours; Replaces Intercity 1500 on section Amsterdam Centraal-Deventer. Transfer to Intercity 1500 to/from Enkhuizen at Amsterdam Centraal
Nederlandse Spoorwegen
toward Enkhuizen
NS Intercity 1500
2x/hour; Not on evenings, weekends and when Intercity 140 runs
Terminus
NS Intercity 1600
1x/hour; Combined half-hourly service with Intercity 1700 on section Amersfoort-Enschede. Transfer to Intercity 11700 to/from Den Haag Centraal at Amersfoort
toward Enschede
NS Intercity 1700
1x/hour; Combined half-hourly service with Intercity 1600 on section Amersfoort-Enschede. Transfer to Intercity 11600 to/from Schiphol Airport at Amersfoort
toward Roosendaal
NS Intercity 3600
2x/hour
toward Zwolle
toward Apeldoorn
NS Sprinter 7000
2x/hour, but only 1x/hour on Saturdays; Not on evenings and Sundays
toward Enschede
NS Sprinter 7000
2x/hour, but only 1x/hour Apeldoorn-Deventer on weekdays evenings and only 1x/hour on the whole route on Saturday evenings and Sundays; Evenings and Sundays only
toward Almelo
Location
Deventer
Location within Dutch railway station

Deventer is a railway station in Deventer, the Netherlands. The station was opened on 5 August 1865 and is on the Apeldoorn–Deventer railway, Deventer–Almelo railway and the Arnhem–Leeuwarden railway. The train services are operated by Nederlandse Spoorwegen.

History

In 1860 the state decided to connect the largest towns and cities in the Netherlands with each other. The railway between Arnhem, Zutphen, Deventer, Zwolle, Heerenveen and Leeuwarden was known as State railway A. When the station opened in 1865 it was connected with Arnhem and in 1861 the line to Zwolle opened.

More than 20 years later, in 1887, the railway between Apeldoorn and Deventer opened. A year later this was extended to Almelo. The Arnhem - Zwolle railway and Apeldoorn - Almelo railway were operated by competing companies which resulted in two separate stations being built.

The station was also the terminus of the OLDO, a local railway to Raalte and Ommen which opened in 1910 and closed in 1935. Around the time this line was opened, the other two railways were altered, raising them above ground level to avoid conflicts with road traffic. This is also when the combined station was built for all the railway lines. The current building dates from 1914 and the island platforms were built in 1920.

In 1892, when the line between Apeldoorn and Almelo was upgraded to a main line, it became an important east-west connection. It was decided in 1917 to add a second track on this line. Shortly afterwards the Zwolle to Zutphen line was also doubled. The lines were electrified in the 1950s. This made the station an important interchange from all directions. The station was also on the international route between the western part of the Netherlands and Germany. The Almelo-Salzbergen railway was connected with the line from Apeldoorn in 1892. This meant trains could operate from Amsterdam, Hook of Holland and Rotterdam to Germany, Scandinavia and Russia. Names of these trains included the Holland-Scandinavië Express, Nord-West Express and Hoek-Warszawa Express. The trains had carriages for destinations such as Berlin, Warsaw, Copenhagen and Moscow. From 1991 an increasing amount of trains operated through to Berlin and in 1993 the final international train operated from the Hook of Holland. Today there is a train every two hours between Amsterdam and Berlin, operating via Deventer. Until December 2010, one of these trains rain to the Polish city of Szczecin.

Train services

The station is served by the following services:

From timetable 2013 Deventer no longer had a direct connection with Rotterdam on weekdays; a change of trains was required in Utrecht. In timetable 2015 however, the direct connection to Rotterdam by splitting/joining trains has been restored. The intercity Enkhuizen - Deventer only calls in Deventer at the times the intercity to Berlin (once in two hours) does not call at Deventer, thus calling once in two hours in off-peak hours from Monday to Friday. During peak hours, the frequency is two times an hour with a gap when the intercity to Berlin calls at Deventer.

Bus services

There is a small bus station next to the station. Many town services stop there as well as regional bus services. All services are operated by Syntus.

Town services

Regional services

Facilities

The station has car parking facilities under the Leeuwenbrug building and close to the Saxion University site. There is a free cycle parking facility underground where bikes can also be hired. Taxi's and buses are at the front of the station. The station features a small supermarket and book shop. Outside the station are among others a Starbucks and fast food restaurant.

Modernisation

The fact that the station had just one island platform caused capacity issues at the station for a number of years. In preparation for a large scale modernisation of the station, Deventer gained a temporary third platform on 15 June 2008, placed over the rarely used track 1. This made it possible for 4 trains an hour to operate between Deventer and the west of the country. On 15 June 2014 the permanent Platform 1 was introduced, replacing the temporary platform. The platform features a lift.

The outside area of the station is also being rebuilt. It is an important point for the city and region with 18,000 people entering and leaving the station every day. The city decided to improve the route towards the city centre and improve the cycle parking facilities. The new underground cycle park opened in November 2015 and has a capacity for 3600 bikes.[1] The station gained OV-chipkaart ticket barriers in the summer of 2015 and these will be closed on 21 December 2015. A new bus station will also be built in 2016.[2]

References

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This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.