Hamburg Hauptbahnhof

{{short description|Main railway station of Hamburg, Germany}}

{{Infobox station

| style = Deutsche Bahn

| name = Hamburg Hbf

| other_name = Hamburg Central Station (English translation)

| symbol = rail

| symbol_location = de

| type =

| image = 2013-06-08_Highflyer_HP_L4733.JPG

| alt =

| caption = Aerial view of Hamburg Hauptbahnhof

| address = Hachmannplatz 16, 20099 Hamburg

| country = Germany

| coordinates = {{coord|53|33|10|N|10|00|23|E|region:DE-HH|display=inline,title}}

| line = {{Plainlist|

}}

| platforms = {{Plainlist|

}}

| tracks =

| accessible = Yes

| connections =

| structure = Below grade

| architect =

| architectural_style =

| code = {{Deutsche Bahn station codes|code=2514|ds100=AH|ibnr=8002549|category=1{{DBCatsURL}}}}
IATA: ZMB{{STV|6944285|Hamburg Hauptbahnhof}}

| zone = HVV: A/000{{cite web |title=Tarifplan |url=https://www.hvv.de/resource/blob/22110/3d9e43e8f1ea1b4aff2f08b49624516a/tarifplan-usar-ohne-buslinien-data.pdf |website=Hamburger Verkehrsverbund |access-date=18 October 2019 |date=9 December 2018}}

| website = [https://www.bahnhof.de/en/Hamburg-Hbf www.bahnhof.de]

| opened = 1906

| closed =

| electrified = 10px {{Start date and age|1908|01|29|df=y}}, 6.3 kV AC system (overhead; turned off in 1955)Cf. [http://www.bahnstatistik.de/Direktionen/BD_Hamburg.htm#Elektrifizierungen „Streckenelektrifizierungen“], on: [http://www.bahnstatistik.de/Direktionen/BD_Hamburg.htm Königlich preußische Eisenbahndirection zu Altona], retrieved on 19 January 2018.
10px {{Start date and age|1941|04|10|df=y}}, 1.2 kV DC system (3rd rail)
15px {{Start date and age|1965|04|06|df=y}}, 15 kV AC system (overhead)

| passengers = 480,000 (daily){{cite web| url=http://www.bahnhof.de/site/bahnhoefe/de/sued/muenchen__hbf/daten__und__fakten/daten__und__fakten__.html|title=Bindeglied zwischen Süd- und Osteuropa (Link to Southern and Eastern Europe) |publisher= Deutsche Bahn | access-date=22 February 2010 |language=de| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110718201412/http://www.bahnhof.de/site/bahnhoefe/de/sued/muenchen__hbf/daten__und__fakten/daten__und__fakten__.html| archive-date=18 July 2011}}

| pass_year =

| services = {{Adjacent stations|system1=DB Fernverkehr

|line1=ICE 4|left1=Hamburg Dammtor|right1=Hannover

|line2=ICE 11|left2=Hamburg Dammtor|right2=Hamburg-Harburg|oneway-left2=yes

|line3=ICE 11|left3=Hamburg Dammtor|right3=Berlin-Spandau|oneway-left3=yes

|line4=ICE 12|right4=Hamburg-Harburg|oneway-right4=yes

|line5=ICE 15|left5=Hamburg-Altona|right5=Büchen|to-left5=Hamburg-Altona|to-right5=Saarbrücken

|line8=ICE 18|left8=Hamburg Dammtor|right8=Ludwigslust|to-left8=Kiel

|line9=ICE 20|left9=Hamburg Dammtor|right9=Hamburg-Harburg|to-left9=Hamburg-Altona or Kiel|to-right9=Stuttgart or Zürich

|line10=ICE 22|left10=Hamburg Dammtor|right10=Hamburg-Harburg|oneway-left10=yes|to-right10=Stuttgart or Basel Bad Bf

|line11=ICE 24|left11=Hamburg Dammtor|right11=Hamburg-Harburg

|line13=ICE 25|left13=Hamburg Dammtor|right13=Hamburg-Harburg|to-left13=Hamburg-Altona or Lübeck|to-right13=Munich

|line14=ICE 26|left14=Hamburg Dammtor|right14=Hamburg-Harburg|to-left14=Hamburg-Altona or Westerland|to-right14=Karlsruhe

|line15=ICE 26|left15=Schwerin|right15=Hamburg-Harburg|to-left15=Binz|to-right15=Karlsruhe

|line16=ICE 27|left16=Hamburg-Altona|right16=Büchen|to-left16=Hamburg-Altona|to-right16=Dresden

|line17=ICE 27|left17=Hamburg-Altona|right17=Hamburg-Bergedorf|to-left17=Hamburg-Altona|to-right17=Dresden|oneway-right17=yes

|line18=IC 27|left18=Hamburg Dammtor|right18=Büchen|to-left18=Hamburg-Altona|to-right18=Prague or Budapest

|line19=ICE 28|left19=Hamburg Dammtor|right19=Ludwigslust|to-left19=Hamburg-Altona or Lübeck|to-right19=Munich

|line20=ICE 29|left20=Hamburg Dammtor|right20=Berlin-Spandau|to-left20=Hamburg-Altona|to-right20=Munich

|line21=IC 29|left21=Hamburg Dammtor|right21=Ludwigslust|to-left21=Westerland or Dagebüll Mole|to-right21=Berlin Gesundbrunnen

|line22=ICE 39|left22=Hamburg Dammtor|right22=Essen|to-left22=Hamburg-Altona|to-right22=Köln

|line23=IC 39|left23=Hamburg Dammtor|right23=Hamburg-Harburg|to-left23=Westerland or Dagebüll Mole|to-right23=Köln

|line24=ICE 42|left24=Hamburg Dammtor|right24=Hamburg-Harburg|to-left24=Hamburg-Altona

|line25=ICE 43|left25=Hamburg Dammtor|right25=Hamburg-Harburg|to-left25=Hamburg-Altona

|line27=IC 57|left27=|right27=Ludwigslust|to-right27=Magdeburg

|line28=IC 75|left28=Schleswig|to-left28=Copenhagen Central

|line29=ICE 91|left29=Hamburg Dammtor|right29=Hamburg-Harburg|to-left29=Hamburg-Altona

|system30=ÖBB

|line30=NJ Amsterdam/Hamburg-Austria|left30=Hamburg Dammtor|right30=Hamburg-Harburg|to-left30=Hamburg-Altona

|line31=NJ Hamburg-Zürich|left31=Hamburg Dammtor|right31=Hamburg-Harburg

|system32=Flixtrain

|line32=20|left32=Hamburg-Harburg

|line33=35|right33=Berlin

|system41=DB Regio Nordost

|line41=RE 1-MV|right41=Hamburg-Bergedorf

|system51=Metronom

|line51=RE 3|right51=Hamburg-Harburg

|line52=RE 4|right52=Hamburg-Harburg|to-right52=Bremen

|line53=RB 31|right53=Hamburg-Harburg

|line54=RB 41|right54=Hamburg-Harburg|to-right54=Bremen

|system61=Regionalverkehre Start Deutschland

|line61=RE 5|right61=Hamburg-Harburg|to-right61=Cuxhaven

|system71=DB Regio Nord

|line71=RE 7|left71=Hamburg Dammtor

|line72=RE 8|right72=Bad Oldesloe

|line73=RE 70|left73=Hamburg Dammtor

|line74=RE 80|right74=Ahrensburg

|line75=RB 81-SH|right75=Hamburg Hasselbrook

|system81=nordbahn

|line81=RB 61|left81=Hamburg Dammtor

|system91=Hamburg S-Bahn

|line91=S1|left91=Jungfernstieg|right91=Berliner Tor

|line92=S2|left92=Hamburg Dammtor|right92=Berliner Tor

|line93=S3|left93=Jungfernstieg|right93=Hammerbrook

|line94=S5|left94=Hamburg Dammtor|right94=Hammerbrook

}}

| services_collapsible = yes

| other_services =

| mapframe = yes

| mapframe-custom = {{Maplink|frame=yes|plain=yes|frame-align=center|frame-width=300|frame-height=180|zoom=12|type=point|marker=rail-underground|marker-colour=#009D58}}

| symbol2 = s

| symbol_location2 = hamburg

| symbol3 = u

| symbol_location3 = hamburg

}}

Hamburg Hauptbahnhof (abbrev. Hamburg Hbf), or Hamburg Central Railway Station in English, is the main railway station of the city of Hamburg, Germany. Opened in 1906 to replace four separate terminal stations, today Hamburg Hauptbahnhof is operated by DB Station&Service AG. With an average of 550,000 passengers a day, it is Germany's busiest railway station and the second-busiest in Europe after the Gare du Nord in Paris.{{Cite web|url=https://www.abendblatt.de/hamburg/article215027373/Chaos-im-Hauptbahnhof-SPD-kuendigt-Konsequenzen-fuer-HVV-an.html|title=Chaos im Hauptbahnhof: SPD kündigt Konsequenzen für HVV an|last=Riefenstahl|first=Jörg|date=2018-08-06|website=www.abendblatt.de|language=de-DE|access-date=2018-12-14}} It is classed by Deutsche Bahn as a category 1 railway station.

The station is a through station with island platforms and is one of Germany's major transportation hubs, connecting long-distance Intercity Express routes to the city's U-Bahn and S-Bahn rapid transit networks. It is centrally located in Hamburg in the Hamburg-Mitte borough. The Wandelhalle shopping centre occupies the north side of the station building.

History

{{Stack|

File:Ehemalige Bahnhöfe in Hamburg.svg

File:BerlinerBahnhofHamburg.jpg]]

}}

Before today's central station was opened, Hamburg had several smaller stations located around the city centre. The first railway line (between Hamburg and Bergedorf) was opened on 5 May 1842, coincidentally the same day that the "great fire" (der große Brand) ruined most of the historic city centre. The stations were as follows (each of them only a few hundred metres away from the others):

Temporary railway lines connecting the stations were built partly on squares and streets. When it was decided to erect a common station for all lines, a competition was arranged in 1900. Built between 1902 and 1906, the Hamburg Hauptbahnhof was designed by the architects Heinrich Reinhardt and Georg Süßenguth, modeled after the Galerie des machines of the World's Fair of 1889 in Paris, by Louis Béroud.{{cite web |url=http://www.bahnhof.de/site/shared/de/dateianhaenge/publikationen__broschueren/ub__personenbahnhoefe/100__jahre__hamburg__hbf.pdf |title=100 Jahre Hamburger Hauptbahnhof |access-date=2009-09-07 |year=2006 |publisher=DB Station&Service |language=de |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110722010853/http://www.bahnhof.de/site/shared/de/dateianhaenge/publikationen__broschueren/ub__personenbahnhoefe/100__jahre__hamburg__hbf.pdf |archive-date=22 July 2011}} The German emperor William II declared the first draft to be "simply horrible",{{Citation needed|date=September 2009}} but the second draft was eventually constructed. The emperor personally changed the Art Nouveau style elements to Neo-Renaissance, giving the station a fortification-like character.{{cite encyclopedia |last=Todt |first=Hartwig |title=Hauptbahnhof |encyclopedia=Hamburg Lexikon |page=232|publisher=Ellert&Richter |year=2005 |edition=3 |isbn=3-8319-0179-1 |language=de}} The station was opened for visitors on 4 December 1906, the first train arrived the next day, and scheduled trains started on 6 December 1906.

On 9 November 1941, during the Second World War, the station was badly damaged by Allied bombing. Several areas needed to be rebuilt completely, including the baggage check and the eastern ticket counters. One of the clock towers was destroyed in 1943.

Between 1985 and 1991 the station was renovated.

In 2021, the City of Hamburg announced a competition to design an expansion of the station as well as the redevelopment of the surrounding area.{{Cite web|url=https://www.hamburg.de/pressearchiv-fhh/14871136/2021-02-01-bvm-erweiterung-hauptbahnhof/|title = Städtebaulicher Wettbewerb zur Erweiterung des Hauptbahnhofs gestartet}} In December 2022, it was announced that the expansion is expected to start in 2028.{{Cite web|url=https://www.spiegel.de/wirtschaft/hamburg-hauptbahnhof-erweiterung-kostet-mehrere-milliarden-euro-a-c1d54862-f5da-4eaa-92aa-0d402ed03155|title=Erweiterung des Hamburger Hauptbahnhofs kostet mehrere Milliarden Euro|work=spiegel.de|language=de}}

Facilities

File:Bahnhofshalle Hamburg 2025.jpg

Hamburg Hauptbahnhof is {{convert|206|m|abbr=on}} long, {{convert|135|m|abbr=on}} wide, and {{convert|37|m|abbr=on}} high. It has {{convert|8200|m2|sqft|adj=mid}} rentable area and {{convert|27810|m2|abbr=on}} in total. The clock towers are {{convert|45|m|abbr=on}}, and the clocks have a diameter of {{convert|2.2|m|abbr=on}}. The track shed is constructed of iron and glass and spans the main line platforms and two S-Bahn tracks. The platforms are reached from two bridges at street level, one at each end of the track shed; from the northern bridge by stairs and by lifts, and from the southern bridge by escalators. Two other S-Bahn tracks and the subway tracks are in a connected tunnel system.

The Wandelhalle (Promenade Hall) is a small shopping centre with extended opening hours. It was built in 1991 during the renewal of the beam construction. It is located on the northern bridge and includes restaurants, flower shops, kiosks, a pharmacy, service centres and more. The upper floor also has a gallery surrounding the hall.

Since 2008, in an effort to disperse drug dealers and users from the area, Deutsche Bahn has been playing classical music (e.g. Vivaldi's Four Seasons). According to the German newspaper Hamburger Abendblatt this is a success.{{Cite news |title=Hamburg Journal; 'Judge Merciless' Thinks All Germany Needs Him |url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C04E3DF103BF930A15752C0A9649C8B63 |date=23 January 2002| access-date=21 September 2008|last=Erlanger |first=Steven| newspaper=New York Times}}

Since 2009, the station has switched all its toilets to water-saving {{Convert|3.5|l|gal|adj=on}} toilets. In 2012 they started producing Terra Preta in the basement by filtering the excrement and mixing it with charcoal and microbes. The fluids are cleaned and nutrients are extracted. Even pharmaceuticals can be filtered out.{{Cite web|url=http://www.abendblatt.de/ratgeber/wissen/article108828425/Humus-vom-Hamburger-Hauptbahnhofs-WC.html|title=Humus vom Hamburger Hauptbahnhofs-WC|date=28 August 2012}}

Train services

The following lines connect to the station:

In 2008, 720 regional and long-distance trains, and 982 S-Bahn trains served the station per day. There were 8 platforms for the main lines.{{Citation needed|date=June 2023}}{{Update inline|date=June 2023}}

The station is served by the following services:{{cite web| url=http://kursbuch.bahn.de/hafas/kbview.exe/dn?st_name=Hamburg+hbf&st_filter=&cat_name=&searchmode=station&mainframe=result&orig=sS&dosearch=1&oblig_st=1&submitButton=Suche+starten| title=Elektronisches Kursbuch| trans-title=Timetables for Hamburg Hbf station| language=de| website=Deutsche Bahn}}

= Long distance trains =

Hamburg Hauptbahnhof is one of the largest stations in northern Germany and connects Northern Europe's railway system, through Denmark, with Central Europe, as well as offering connections to Western Europe and Southern Europe. There are permanent InterCityExpress lines to Berlin, Frankfurt (Main), continuing to Stuttgart and Munich, and Bremen, continuing to the Ruhr Area and Cologne. To the north ICE trains connect Hamburg with Aarhus and Copenhagen in Denmark and Kiel in Schleswig-Holstein.ICE Netz 2008, DB Netz AG, Zentrale, Frankfurt am Main There are also several InterCity- and EuroCity- passenger train connections.IC Netz 2008, DB Netz AG, Zentrale, Frankfurt am Main The station is a hub for international travel, and most passengers to or from Scandinavia must change in Hamburg.

class="wikitable"
Line

!colspan=2| Route

! Interval

! Operator

{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|ICE 4}}

| colspan="2" |Kiel – Hamburg – Frankfurt – Frankfurt Flughafen – Mannheim – Stuttgart ( –Ulm –Augsburg –München)

| rowspan="2" |Some trains

| rowspan="13" |DB Fernverkehr

rowspan=2 | {{ric|DB Fernverkehr|ICE 11}}

| colspan="2" | Hamburg-AltonaHamburgBerlinLeipzigErfurtFrankfurtStuttgartMunich

colspan=2| HamburgHannover – Frankfurt – Stuttgart – Frankfurt – Munich

| Some trains at night

{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|ICE 14}}

| colspan="2" |Hamburg – Bremen – Münster – Essen – Cologne – Aachen

| rowspan="2" |Some trains

{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|ICE 15}}

| colspan="2" |Hamburg-AltonaHamburg – Berlin – Berlin-Südkreuz

{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|ICE 18}}

|colspan=2| Hamburg-Altona – Hamburg – Berlin – Halle – Erfurt – NurembergIngolstadt – Munich

| rowspan="3"|Every two hours

{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|ICE 20}}

|colspan=2| (Kiel –) Hamburg – Hannover – {{stn|Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe}} – Frankfurt – MannheimKarlsruheFreiburgBasel - Zürich (- {{rws|Chur}})

{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|ICE 22}}

|colspan=2| (Kiel –) Hamburg – Hannover – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Frankfurt – Frankfurt Airport – Mannheim – (Heidelberg –) Stuttgart

rowspan="2" | {{ric|DB Fernverkehr|ICE 24}}

| rowspan="2" |Hamburg-Altona – Hamburg – Hannover – KasselWürzburg – Augsburg – Munich –

|Schwarzach-St. Veit

| rowspan="2" |Some trains

Innsbruck
{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|ICE 25}}

|colspan=2| (Lübeck –) Hamburg – Hannover – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – FuldaWürzburgNurembergIngolstadtMunich

| rowspan="2"|Every two hours

{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|ICE 26}}

|colspan=2| (Binz / {{stn|Greifswald}} –) {{stn|Stralsund}} – RostockSchwerinHamburg – Hannover – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Gießen – Frankfurt – Heidelberg – Karlsruhe

{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|ICE 27}} / {{ric|DB Fernverkehr|IC 27}}

|colspan=2| (Westerland /{{stn|Flensburg}} –) Hamburg – Berlin (– Dresden)

| Some trains

{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|EC 27}}

|colspan=2| Hamburg – Berlin – Dresden – Prague (– BrnoBudapest)

| rowspan="2"|Every two hours

| ÖBB/DB

{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|ICE 28}}

|colspan=2| Hamburg – Berlin – Leipzig – Erfurt – Nuremberg – Munich

| rowspan="13" | DB Fernverkehr

{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|ICE 29}}

| colspan="2" |Hamburg-Altona – HamburgBerlinErfurt – Nürnberg – Munich

| rowspan="6" |Some trains

rowspan="2" |{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|IC 29}}

|Westerland –

| rowspan="2" |NiebüllItzehoeHamburgLudwigslustBerlin-Gesundbrunnen

Dagebüll Mole –
{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|ICE 39}}

| colspan="2" | Hamburg-Altona – Hamburg – Bremen – Münster – Essen – Cologne

rowspan="2" |{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|IC 39}}

|Westerland –

| rowspan="2" |NiebüllItzehoeHamburg – Bremen – Münster – Dortmund – Cologne

Dagebüll Mole –
{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|ICE 42}}

|colspan=2| Hamburg-Altona – Hamburg HbfBremenMünsterDortmundCologneStuttgart – Munich

| rowspan="2"|Every two hours

rowspan=2 | {{ric|DB Fernverkehr|ICE 43}}

|Hamburg-Altona –

|rowspan=2|Hamburg Hbf – Bremen – Münster – Dortmund – Cologne – Frankfurt Airport – Mannheim – Basel

Binz – Stralsund –

| One train pair

{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|IC 57}}

| colspan="2" |HamburgLudwigslustWittenbergeStendalMagdeburg

| rowspan="2" |Some trains

{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|IC 75}}

| colspan="2" | Hamburg – {{rws|Schleswig}} – {{rws|Padborg}} – {{rws|Kolding}} – {{rws|Odense}} – {{rws|Ringsted}} – Copenhagen

{{ric|DB Fernverkehr|ICE 91}}

|colspan=2|Hamburg-Altona – Hamburg – Hannover – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Fulda – Würzburg – Nuremberg – Regensburg – {{stn|Plattling}} – PassauLinz – {{nowrap|St. Pölten –}} Vienna

| One train pair

{{ric|FlixTrain|20}}

|colspan=2| HamburgHamburg-HarburgOsnabrückMünsterGelsenkirchenEssen - DuisburgDüsseldorfCologne

| 2–3 train pairs

| rowspan="2" |FlixTrain

{{ric|FlixTrain|35}}

|colspan=2| (Kiel –) Hamburg (– Salzwedel – Stendal) – Berlin (– Leipzig)

| 1–4 train pairs

rowspan="3" | Nightjet

| rowspan="2" | Hamburg – Nuremberg (train split) –

|Munich – Innsbruck

| rowspan="4" | One train pair

| rowspan="3" |ÖBB

Linz – Vienna
colspan="2" | Hamburg – Bremen – Karlsruhe – Basel – Zurich
{{rcb|SJ|EuroNight|inline=croute}}

|colspan=2| Berlin – Hamburg – {{rws|Copenhagen Airport}} – MalmöLinköpingStockholm

| SJ

Snälltåget

|colspan=2| Berlin – Hamburg – Copenhagen – Malmö – Linköping – Stockholm

| One train pair seasonally

| Snälltåget

= Regional trains =

There are numerous RegionalExpress and RegionalBahn services to Schleswig-Holstein, Lower Saxony, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania and Bremen.

class="wikitable"
LineRoute
{{ric|DB Regio Nordost|RE 1-MV}}

| Hamburg Hbf – Schwerin – Rostock

{{ric|Metronom|RE 3}}

| Hamburg Hbf – Lüneburg – Uelzen – Hanover

{{ric|Metronom|RE 4}}

| Hamburg Hbf – Buchholz – Rotenburg – Bremen

{{ric|Regionalverkehre Start Deutschland|RE 5}}

| Hamburg Hbf – Buxtehude – Stade – Cuxhaven

{{ric|DB Regio Nord|RE 7}}

| Hamburg Hbf – Neumünster – Flensburg/Kiel

{{ric|DB Regio Nord|RE 8}}

| Hamburg Hbf – Bad Oldesloe – Lübeck

{{ric|DB Regio Nord|RE 70}}

| Hamburg Hbf – Pinneberg – Neumünster – Kiel

{{ric|DB Regio Nord|RE 80}}

| Hamburg Hbf – Bad Oldesloe – Lübeck

{{ric|Metronom|RB 31}}

| Hamburg – Winsen – Lüneburg

{{ric|Metronom|RB 41}}

| Hamburg Hbf – Rotenburg – Bremen

{{ric|nordbahn|RB 61}}

| Hamburg Hbf – Pinneberg – Glückstadt – Itzehoe

{{ric|DB Regio Nord|RB 81-SH}}

| Hamburg Hbf – Ahrensburg – Bad Oldesloe

= Rapid transit =

{{Infobox station

| name = Hauptbahnhof Süd

| symbol = u

| symbol_location = hamburg

| type =

| style =

| image = Hamburg- U-Bahn-Station Hauptbahnhof Süd- auf Bahnsteig Richtung Mümmelmannsberg 8.4.2009.jpg

| image_caption =

| address =

| country = Hamburg, Germany

| coordinates =

| line = {{ric|Hamburg U-Bahn|U1|size=x13}} {{ric|Hamburg U-Bahn|U3|size=x13}}

| other =

| structure = Underground

| platform = 2 island platforms

| depth =

| levels =

| tracks = 4

| parking =

| bicycle =

| baggage_check =

| opened = {{Start date and age|1912|02|15|df=y}}

| closed =

| rebuilt =

| electrified =

| accessible = Yes

| code =

| owned =

| operator = Hamburger Hochbahn AG

| zone = HVV: A/000{{cite web |title=Tarifplan |url=https://www.hvv.de/resource/blob/22110/3d9e43e8f1ea1b4aff2f08b49624516a/tarifplan-usar-ohne-buslinien-data.pdf |website=Hamburger Verkehrsverbund |access-date=18 October 2019 |date=9 December 2018}}

| smartcardname =

| smartcardstatus =

| former = 1912-1968 Hauptbahnhof

| passengers =

| pass_year =

| pass_percent =

| pass_system =

| mpassengers =

| services = {{Adjacent stations|system1=Hamburg U-Bahn

|line1=U1|left1=Steinstraße|right1=Lohmühlenstraße

|line2=U3|left2=Mönckebergstraße|right2=Berliner Tor

}}

| map_locator =

| web =

}}

{{Infobox station

| name = Hauptbahnhof Nord

| symbol = u

| symbol_location = hamburg

| type =

| style =

| image = Hamburg U-Bahn Hauptbahnhof Nord.JPG

| image_caption =

| address =

| country = Hamburg, Germany

| coordinates =

| line = {{ric|Hamburg U-Bahn|U2|size=x13}} {{ric|Hamburg U-Bahn|U4|size=x13}}

| other = Regional and S Bahn

| structure = Underground

| platform = 2 island platforms

| depth =

| levels =

| tracks = 2

| parking =

| bicycle =

| baggage_check =

| opened = {{Start date and age|1968|09|29|df=y}}

| closed =

| rebuilt =

| electrified =

| accessible = Yes

| code =

| owned =

| operator = Hamburger Hochbahn AG

| zone = HVV: A/000{{cite web |title=Tarifplan |url=https://www.hvv.de/resource/blob/22110/3d9e43e8f1ea1b4aff2f08b49624516a/tarifplan-usar-ohne-buslinien-data.pdf |website=Hamburger Verkehrsverbund |access-date=18 October 2019 |date=9 December 2018}}

| smartcardname =

| smartcardstatus =

| former =

| passengers =

| pass_year =

| pass_percent =

| pass_system =

| mpassengers =

| services = {{Adjacent stations|system1=Hamburg U-Bahn

|line1=U2|left1=Jungfernstieg|right1=Berliner Tor

|line2=U4|left2=Jungfernstieg|right2=Berliner Tor

}}

| map_locator =

| web = hvv.de/en

}}

Beside the inter-urban rail services, the Hauptbahnhof is also the central intersection for two of the three rapid transport systems in the city: the Hamburg S-Bahn (suburban railway) and the Hamburg U-Bahn (underground network).{{cite web| url=http://www.hvv.de/pdf/fahrplaene/usar/hvv_usar_regio.pdf| title=Network plan| website=HVV| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090117074514/http://www.hvv.de/pdf/fahrplaene/usar/hvv_usar_regio.pdf| archive-date=17 January 2009}}

The S-Bahn platforms are located inside the station itself (platforms 3 and 4, going eastwards to Barmbek, Harburg and Bergedorf) and in a separate tunnel, adjacent to the station building (platforms 1 and 2, going westwards to Altona, Wedel and Eidelstedt).

The U-Bahn is split in two stations: Hauptbahnhof Süd (south) and serving the lines U1 and U3. This part of the station had been included in the 1900 planning for the new station (the construction for the subway started in 1906, the "ring" was opened in four stages between February and June 1912. Until 28 September 1968, this station was simply called Hauptbahnhof without any suffix. There were two lines: the original Ring (opened in 1912) and the southeastern branch line (opened on 27 July 1915) leading to Rothenburgsort, the tracks and stations of which have been destroyed in the Operation Gomorra on 28 July 1943 and never been rebuilt.

The station Hauptbahnhof Nord (north), opened on 29 September 1968, serves the lines U2 and U4.

Neighbourhood

The station is located on the Wallring in Hamburg's city centre, between the districts Altstadt and St. Georg. Directly nearby are the Deutsches Schauspielhaus theatre in the St. Georg quarter, one of Hamburg's a state theatres, the Kunsthalle, an art gallery, and the Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg,{{cite web |url=http://www.mkg-hamburg.de/mkg.php/en/ |title=WELCOME TO: MUSEUM FÜR KUNST UND GEWERBE HAMBURG |access-date=13 September 2009| url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090904072202/http://www.mkg-hamburg.de/mkg.php/en |archive-date=4 September 2009}} a museum for applied arts. The Hamburg Rathaus is down Mönckebergstraße, centre of a busy shopping district.

See also

References

= Notes =

{{reflist}}

= Further reading =

  • {{cite book|last1=Hoyer|first1=Hermann|last2=Lawrenz|first2=Dierk|last3=Wiesmüller|first3=Benno|title=Hamburg Hauptbahnhof: 1906–2006 – 100 Jahre Zentrum der Stadt|trans-title=Hamburg Hauptbahnhof: 1906–2006 – 100 Years Centre of the City|year=2006|publisher=EK-Verlag|location=Freiburg i.B.|isbn=978-3-88255-721-3|language=de}}