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Valby railway station

Coordinates: 55°39′50″N 12°30′52″E / 55.66389°N 12.51444°E / 55.66389; 12.51444
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Valby
S-train and DSB station
Valby station in 2008
General information
LocationMellemtoftevej 1A
2500 Valby[1]
Copenhagen Municipality
Denmark
Coordinates55°39′50″N 12°30′52″E / 55.66389°N 12.51444°E / 55.66389; 12.51444
Elevation13.4 metres (44 ft)[2]
Owned byDSB and Banedanmark
Line(s)
Platforms1 side platform, 2 island platforms
Tracks5 (3 S-train, 2 mainline)
Train operatorsDSB[3]
Bus routesBus interchange 4A, 18, 133, 888
Construction
Structure typeAt-grade
ArchitectHeinrich Wenck (1911)[4]
Other information
Station codeVal[5]
Fare zone2
WebsiteOfficial website Edit this at Wikidata
History
Opened1911 (Mainline)
1 November 1934 (S-train)
Electrified1934 (S-train), 1988 (Mainline)
Services
Preceding station Danish State Railways DSB Following station
København H
towards Østerport
CopenhagenEsbjerg Høje Taastrup
towards Esbjerg
CopenhagenSønderborg/Padborg Høje Taastrup
towards Padborg
København H
towards Helsingør
ElsinoreCopenhagenRoskildeNæstved Høje Taastrup
towards Næstved
København H CopenhagenSlagelse Høje Taastrup
towards Slagelse
København H
towards Østerport
CopenhagenNykøbing F Høje Taastrup
towards Nykøbing F
CopenhagenHolbæk Høje Taastrup
towards Holbæk
Preceding station S-train Following station
Langgade
towards Ballerup
H
Mon–Fri
Carlsberg
towards Østerport
Langgade C Carlsberg
towards Klampenborg
Danshøj Bx
Peak hours
Carlsberg
towards Buddinge
B Carlsberg
towards Farum
Location
Valby station is located in Copenhagen
Valby station
Valby station
Location within Copenhagen
Valby station is located in Greater Copenhagen
Valby station
Valby station
Valby station (Greater Copenhagen)
Valby station is located in Denmark
Valby station
Valby station
Valby station (Denmark)
Map

Valby station is a main line and S-train railway station serving the district of Valby in Copenhagen, Denmark.[1] The station is located in the central part of the district where one of its main arteries Toftegårds Allé crosses the railway line. It is located in a highly populated area, close to the location of the historic village of Valby.

Valby station is one of the most used stations in Copenhagen, and hence regional trains and some intercity trains also stop here.[1] It's an important railway junction, where the Tåstrup and Frederikssund radials of the S-train network diverge, and is served by trains on or from either radial.[3] Several express buses to Jutland also terminate and depart from this station.

History

[edit]

The first railway station in Valby opened on 26 June 1847 as an intermediate station on the new Copenhagen–Roskilde railway line, the first railway line in the Kingdom of Denmark[a].[7] The station was located slightly east of the current station, and was originally meant to serve mostly leisure trips to nearby Frederiksberg; it had a booming traffic in the railway's first years, which however dwindled as the novelty wore off. The station was closed in 1864 when the second main station in Copenhagen opened and the railway line out of Copenhagen was displaced through Frederiksberg station instead of Valby station.

In 1911 the current (third) central station was inaugurated almost at the site of the first one, and the railway moved back to its original alignment through Valby. The current station was built, this time as a junction between the railways to Roskilde and Frederikssund. Over the years the city had grown towards Valby, so the station now had a sizeable native passenger base.

First generation S-train at Valby station in 1975.

On 1 November 1934, S-trains began running from central Copenhagen to a temporary platform at Valby east of Toftegårds Allé. When the inner part of Frederikssundbanen until Vanløse was electrified on 23 September 1941 the temporary platform closed and the S-trains now stopped at Valby station proper on their way to Vanløse.

In 1950–1953, the station was rebuilt once again with a grade-separated junction west of the platforms to join the S-train line towards Vanløse with the new line along Vestbanen, which was inaugurated on 17 June 1953.

Layout

[edit]
The S-train platforms at Valby station, seen from the Toftegårds Allé bridge

The station has two island platforms plus one track extra, for the S-trains towards Ballerup and (further out) Frederikssund. S-trains in direction to Copenhagen City Centre from Høje Taastrup and Ballerup/Frederikssund use one track each. And regional trains (and a few other trains) uses the other platform, with its two tracks.

All tracks are electrified, however some regional trains and Inter City trains, do still in 2017 use diesel.

See also

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Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The first railway line in the then Danish Monarchy was the Kiel-Altona railway line in the Duchy of Holstein which had been completed three years earlier. However, Holstein was later lost to the Kingdom of Prussia after the Second Schleswig War in 1864, and that railway line is today part of the German rail network.[6]

References

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Citations

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  1. ^ a b c "Valby Station" (in Danish). DSB. Retrieved 6 July 2024.
  2. ^ "Valby Station (Val)". danskejernbaner.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 6 July 2024.
  3. ^ a b "S-tog" (in Danish). DSB. Retrieved 6 July 2024.
  4. ^ Vigand Rasmussen. "Heinrich Wenck". Kunstindeks Danmark & Weilbach Kunstnerleksikon. Retrieved February 25, 2023.
  5. ^ "Stationsforkortelser" (in Danish). DSB. Retrieved 6 July 2024.
  6. ^ Jensen 1972, p. 11.
  7. ^ Jensen 1972, p. 12-15.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Jensen, Niels (1972). Danske Jernbaner 1847–1972 [Danish railways 1847–1972] (in Danish). Copenhagen: J. Fr. Clausens Forlag. ISBN 87-11-01765-1.
  • Poulsen, John (1997). Byens Baner: Jernbanen i København gennem 150 år (in Danish). Roskilde: Bane Bøger. ISBN 87-88632-67-9.
  • Poulsen, John; Christensen, Jens Ole; Thomassen, Peer; Zeeberg, Nils Kristian (1984). Københavns S-bane 1934-1984 (in Danish). Roskilde: Bane Bøger. ISBN 87-88632-01-6.
  • Poulsen, John; Larsen, Morten Flindt (2009). S-banen 1934-2009 (in Danish). Roskilde: Bane Bøger. ISBN 978-87-91434-20-4.
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