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Wanne-Eickel Central Station : ウィキペディア英語版
Wanne-Eickel Hauptbahnhof

| opened=
* 1856 (freight yard)
* 1864 (passenger station)
| architect=
| address = Herne, North Rhine-Westphalia
| country = Germany
| coordinates=
| line=
* Wanne-Eickel–Hamburg
* Dortmund–Duisburg
* Duisburg-Ruhrort–Dortmund
* Bochum–Gelsenkirchen
}}
Wanne-Eickel Hauptbahnhof is a railway station in the former city of Wanne-Eickel, now part of Herne in western Germany.
==History ==

The station grew out of the ''Pluto-Thies'' freight yard, opened in 1856 on the Duisburg–Dortmund line section of the Cologne-Minden Railway Company's trunk line, which was opened in 1847. In 1864, a halt was opened there for passengers. In 1867 a new freight yard was opened, which was initially called ''Pluto'', but changed to ''Wanne'' (literally “basin”, a description of the landscape) in 1869, because the surrounding villages could not agree on a name for the yard. The station's name was reflected in 1875 when the villages of Eickel, Bicker, Crange, Holsterhausen and Röhlinghausen were merged under the name of Amt Wanne.〔

With the opening of the line to Münster on 1 January 1870, Wanne station became a railway junction. In 1913 the station building and the track work were rebuilt and extended.
After the formation of the city of Wanne-Eickel in 1926, the station was renamed ''Wanne-Eickel Hauptbahnhof''. It became the largest marshalling yard in the central Ruhr area and the only station in the Ruhr that included all four forms of rail operations: in addition to its role as a marshalling yard, it was the home depot for over 300 locomotives along with associated rolling stock, a freight yard and a passenger station.

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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