Brno main railway station
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (December 2023) |
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Czech. (February 2024) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
Brno main railway station Brno hlavní nádraží (in Czech) | |
---|---|
General information | |
Location | Brno, Nádražní street 418/1 Czech Republic |
Coordinates | 49°11′27″N 16°36′46″E / 49.190882°N 16.612652°E |
Owned by | Správa železnic |
Platforms | 6 with 11 tracks (6 through, 5 terminus) |
Connections | Brno Tramway, Brno Trolleybuses, Brno Buses |
Construction | |
Architect | Anton Jüngling Josef Oehm |
Other information | |
Station code | 54332957 |
History | |
Opened | 16 December 1838 |
Rebuilt | 1902–04 1987–89 |
Electrified | yes |
Passengers | |
65,000[when?][citation needed] |
Brno main railway station (Czech: Brno hlavní nádraží, abbreviated as Brno hl. n.) is the principal railway station in Brno, the largest city in Moravia and the second largest in the Czech Republic. The railway station is situated in the city centre on the site of the former city walls. It is one of the oldest railway stations in the Czech Republic, having been in operation since 1839.
History
[edit]First railway station
[edit]Brno main railway station was built in 1838, one of the first railway stations in the world. It was the terminus on the line from Vienna to Brno, one of the branches of Emperor Ferdinand Northern Railway. On 16 November 1838 it was put into operation for trials and exhibitions, and on 7 July 1839 it became fully commercially operational. It was initially designed as a terminal station by Austrian architect Anton Jüngling.
Second railway station
[edit]The railway station became a through station after construction of the rival Northern Railway (Imperial Royal Austrian State Railways) in 1849. As soon as the traffic at the railway station, which was occupied by two competing companies, started to grow, some space limitation caused by bevelled shape between two segments of a polygonal principle Brno Ringstrasse.[clarification needed]
Third railway station
[edit]At the turn of the 19th to 20th centuries the side wings of individual companies were connected with a single Concourse (entrance hall), which served to both of them. The author of this partially Art Nouveau building was architect Josef Oehm. The hall has an outline of 18x25 metres. The oldest transverse subway leads in its axis under the platform 4. The hall construction was finished in 1904. Railway station was partially and surfacing (visual only) modernized in 1947 by architect Bohuslav Fuchs, the last time in 1988.
Platforms
[edit]Brno main railway station has 4 through platforms with 6 lines and 2 terminal platforms, to make a total of 6 platforms. The through platforms are 415 and 310 metres long and built in an S-shape. The terminal platforms are straight and 350 metres long. The platforms are at least 9 metres wide.
Routes
[edit]Brno main station is an important station on the pan-international corridor passing through the country (Děčín – Prague – Pardubice – Brno – Břeclav), with international trains serving the station to and from Germany, Slovakia, Hungary and Austria. It is also located on five other lines, three of which carry intercity trains:
- Brno - Jihlava – České Budějovice – Plzeň
- Brno - Havlíčkův Brod – Prague
- Brno - Přerov – Olomouc/Ostrava
- Brno - Uherské Hradiště
- Brno - Hrušovany nad Jevišovkou
Future plans
[edit]This article needs to be updated.(April 2024) |
Currently[when?] Brno station is approaching at full capacity and therefore in need of expansion, however its location on the edge of the historic center of the city prevents that. Capacity problems are just in one part of the railway station, on the southern station head (switch system), where is a regional transport. The question of how to cope with the substance of railway station has been being discussed for several decades. The idea of moving railway station to the new location, 550 metres southern, emerged already in the 1920s. It was after a sudden increase of transport capacity between 1923 and 1924 (26% more). Such an increase has never happened again. Experts who worked for Brno before World War II abandoned this idea. Later on this idea reappeared several times in the new contexts. In 1970 railway station was relieved from freight transport which was transferred to the modernized track on the South. Since then the railway station has been intended purely for passenger transportation.
The city council have made plans to build a new station in a remote location – 960 metres southeast from the city where personal and cargo transport would be reunited again. This possibility is confronted with a continuous opposition of experts and public. Already in 2004 this situation invoked a citizens-initiated referendum. However, this referendum did not become binding for city because of the insufficient turnout (25%). Legislation required 50% turnout at that time. The overwhelming majority of 85% of voters was for keeping railway station on the current place. Nowadays citizens have initiated a new referendum, which was held simultaneously with regional and senate election[1] on the 7 and 8 October 2016. According to the current legislation only 35% turnout is sufficient for legally binding outcome of the referendum.
Services
[edit]Preceding station | České dráhy | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
toward Praha hl.n. | Railjet | toward Graz |
||
Česká Třebová or Pardubice hl.n. toward Prague |
EuroCity | Břeclav toward Bratislava or Vienna occasional terminus | ||
Blansko toward Prague via Česká Třebová |
Regional fast trains | Vyškov na Moravě toward Olomouc occasional terminus | ||
Terminus | Regional fast trains | Vyškov na Moravě toward Ostrava | ||
Terminus | Regional fast trains | Šakvice toward Břeclav | ||
Brno-Královo Pole toward Prague via Havlíčkův Brod |
Regional fast trains | Terminus | ||
Náměšť nad Oslavou toward Jihlava or České Budějovice |
Regional fast trains | Terminus | ||
Brno-Židenice toward Blansko or Tišnov |
Stopping trains | Brno-Horní Heršpice toward Břeclav, Náměšť nad Oslavou or Hrušovany nad Jevišovkou | ||
Terminus | Stopping trains | Brno-Černovice toward Veselí nad Moravou | ||
Brno-Židenice toward Blansko |
Stopping trains | Brno-Chrlice toward Křenovice |
References
[edit]Notes
[edit]Further reading
[edit]Books
[edit]- ARTL, Gerhard/ GURLICH, Gerhard H. / ZENZ, Hubert (Hrsg.2010), Allerhöchste Eisenbahn. 170 Jahre Nordbahn Wien-Brünn, 2. erw. Aufl., Wien (German)
- HORN, Alfred (1970), Die Kaiser-Ferdinands-Nordbahn. Die Bahnen Österreich-Ungarns, Band 2. Bohmann-Verlag, Wien (German)
- KREJČIŘÍK, Mojmír (2003 and 2005), Česká nádraží I.a II díl. Litoměřice (Vydavatelství dopravní literatury Ing. Luděk Čada). ISBN 80-86765-02-4 (Czech)
Article
[edit]- Czech Radio:Authorities okay moving Brno's main train station out of city centre
- Moravian Integrated Public Transport System
External links
[edit]- Art Nouveau architecture in the Czech Republic
- Art Nouveau railway stations
- Transport in Brno
- Railway stations in South Moravian Region
- Anton Jüngling railway stations
- Transport infrastructure completed in 1904
- Railway stations in the Czech Republic opened in 1839
- 1839 establishments in the Austrian Empire