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Berlin Mexikoplatz railway station : ウィキペディア英語版
Berlin Mexikoplatz station

| opened=
*1 November 1904
*1 February 1985
| closed = 1 February 1985
| architect= Gustav Hart and Alfred Lesser
| architectural_style= Art Nouveau
| address = Zehlendorf, Steglitz-Zehlendorf, Berlin
| country = Germany
| coordinates=
| line=
*Wannsee Railway
| services=
}}
Berlin Mexikoplatz (in German ''Bahnhof Berlin Mexikoplatz'') is a railway station in the Zehlendorf district of Berlin, Germany. It is served by the Berlin S-Bahn line S1 and several local bus lines. It is also planned to extend U-Bahn line U3 here.
The station was erected in 1904 as one of the few genuine Art Nouveau buildings in Berlin and it is heritage listed. Its name changed several times: from ''Zehlendorf-Beerenstraße'' to ''Zehlendorf-West'' in 1911, to ''Lindenthaler Allee'' in 1958 and finally to ''Mexikoplatz'' in 1987.
== History ==

The station, which was built to plans by the architects Hart & Lesser, was opened on 1 November 1904 under the name of ''Zehlendorf-Beerenstraße''. Seven years later, on 15 December 1911, its name changed for the first name to ''Zehlendorf-West''. On 15 May 1933, electric operations commenced at the station.
An interesting detail in a decorative manner is an elaborate emblem in wrought iron with the letters "KPEV" on the railway bridge. These letters were once widespread as an emblem, with various variants, standing for the Royal Prussian Railway Administration (''Königlich Preußische Eisenbahn-Verwaltung''), thus indicating that it belonged to the Prussian state railways.
In March 1934, the bridge was one of the first in Germany to be examined with the aid of X-rays and breaks were discovered in the welds under the paint. The bridge railing, including its decorative emblem, was reconstructed as part of the restoration of the entire area to plans by the architects Stuhlemmer for the 750th anniversary of Berlin in 1987.
On 28 September 1958, the station was renamed ''Lindenthaler Allee''. On 18 September 1980, the station was closed as a result of a strike by the workers of Deutsche Reichsbahn who lived in West Berlin.

On 1 February 1985, the station was reopened by the West Berlin organisation of Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe (BVG ). Two years later, in January 1987, the station’s name was changed for the third time, this time to its current name of ''Mexikoplatz'', which is named after Mexikoplatz (“Mexico Square”), which received its current name on 23 September 1959.
On 1 June 2001, the Bundeseisenbahnvermögen sold the station building to two Berlin businessmen. The station's bookshop, which had been operating for 25 years, was closed and regularly scheduled lectures and discussion forums in the station hall were abandoned. A citizens' initiative to convert the station into a ''Kulturbahnhof'' (“culture station”), which would have meant that the station would have become "a cultural meeting place", was unsuccessful.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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