翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Essive case
・ Essive-formal case
・ Essive-modal case
・ Essjay controversy
・ Essl
・ ESSL (disambiguation)
・ Essl Social Prize
・ Esslemont
・ Esslemont & Macintosh
・ Esslemont (surname)
・ Esslemont Castle
・ Esslemont railway station
・ Essling
・ Esslingen
・ Esslingen (district)
Esslingen (Neckar) station
・ Esslingen am Neckar
・ Esslingen railbus
・ Esslingen University of Applied Sciences
・ Esslingen, Switzerland
・ Esslinger
・ Esslingeriana
・ ESSM Energija Elektrėnai
・ ESSM Le Portel
・ ESSMG Lyon
・ EssNet
・ ESSO
・ Esso
・ Esso Atlantic class supertankers
・ Esso Australia


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Esslingen (Neckar) station : ウィキペディア英語版
Esslingen (Neckar) station

| opened = 20 November 1845
| architect = Michael Knoll (1846)
| architectural_style =
*Rundbogenstil (1846)
*Renaissance Revival (1882/83)
| address = Esslingen am Neckar, Baden-Württemberg
| country = Germany
| coordinates=
| line= Fils Valley Railway (, )
}}
Esslingen (Neckar) station is the most important station in the town of Esslingen am Neckar in the German state of Baden-Württemberg and is located from Stuttgart Hauptbahnhof on the Fils Valley Railway.
==History==
The former imperial city of Esslingen (then spelt ''Eßlingen'') was at the end of the first railway line in Württemberg, the Württemberg Central Railway ((ドイツ語:Württembergischen Centralbahn)), connecting Esslingen, Stuttgart and Ludwigsburg. Benefitting from the flat route along the Neckar, the work went forward quickly and Eßlingen station was opened to traffic on 20 November 1845. It had a two-storey entrance building and a locomotive depot. Later a residence for railway officials was added.
Not all members of the district’s council saw the new transport mode as an advantage. It was the end of the line, but it was not long before construction of the Fils Valley line continued. They feared that Eßlingen station would become a minor maintenance station on the Eastern Railway between Stuttgart and Ulm. Due to the geographical location in the valley between the Filder plateau and Schurwald range, there was no question of it becoming a railway junction. Nevertheless, Eßlingen subsequently industrialised along with the rest of Germany. The numerous old factory buildings in the western part of Esslingen still bear witness to the industrialisation in the late 19th and early 20th century.
In 1852 the Royal Württemberg State Railways (''Königlich Württembergische Staats-Eisenbahnen'', KWStE), built a second track on the Fils Valley line between Cannstatt and Plochingen.
The station was overloaded and had to be enlarged. This resulted in a shift of the entire complex to the west. The KWStE constructed of a new entrance building on Friedrichstraße (now called Berliner Straße). Now there were ten tracks and four platforms. The freight yard had several sheds. In 1884, the city built the Bahnhofsplatz (“railway forecourt”) in front of the station. The depot premises at 2 Bahnhofsplatz 1899 is obliquely across from the post office that was built in the neo-Gothic style in 1901 and demolished in 2001. In 1909 the customs house in Eisenbahnstraße (now Fleischmannstraße) was added in the Art Nouveau style.
At the beginning of the 20th century a new railway was proposed to relieve the busy Fils Valley line, especially of freight traffic. The line would run along the south bank of the Neckar through Esslingen with a station south of the Neckar in the Pliensauvorstadt district. In 1909, decided the Württemberg State Railways decided for cost reasons not to build the new line as far as Plochingen, but only up to the existing Eßlingen station, running over a 260-metre-long bridge over the Neckar. Since the proposed railway line was always in competition with proposals to quadruplicate the Fils Valley line, it was postponed and ultimately never built.
In 1912, the Eslingen Tramway (''Eßlinger Städtische Straßenbahn'') was opened. The tram stop on Bahnhofsplatz served both of its lines: the through line from Obertürkheim to Oberesslingen and the city line, running on a ring through the old town. The latter ran only until 1915. Trams ran on the through line until 1944, when it was replaced by the Esslingen am Neckar trolleybus system.
The Esslingen–Nellingen–Denkendorf Tramway (''Straßenbahn Esslingen–Nellingen–Denkendorf GmbH'', END) terminated at a return loop in the Bahnhofsplatz from 1926 to 1978. The interurban tramway linked the communities on the Filder plateau, Nellingen and Denkendorf with Esslingen. In 1929, a branch to Scharnhausen and Neuhausen auf den Fildern was added.
From 14 October 1931, the Fils Valley line between Stuttgart Hauptbahnhof and Esslingen was made four-track. Electrification was inaugurated on the line on 15 May 1933 and suburban services were subsequently established to Stuttgart; these later developed into the Stuttgart S-Bahn. On 15 May 1939 Eßlingen station was renamed Eßlingen (Neckar) station. The station was renamed Esslingen (Neckar) station on 27 September 1965, after the city had similarly changed its spelling in the previous year.
It appears that the statement of the skeptical city officials in the mid-19th century has become true in part. Although Esslingen station is now a transfer point between the S-Bahn and regional trains, all long-distance trains pass by without stopping. Nevertheless, it is not an insignificant station.
==Entrance building==

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Esslingen (Neckar) station」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.