翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Priest's House Museum
・ Priest's Spell Compendium
・ Priest, California
・ Priest, Live and Rare
・ Priest...Live!
・ Priest=Aura
・ Priestdale, Queensland
・ Priester
・ Priesterbäker See
・ Priesterweg station
・ Priestess
・ Priestess (album)
・ Priestess (band)
・ Priestess of Avalon
・ Priestewitz
Priestewitz station
・ Priestfield
・ Priestfield railway station
・ Priestfield Stadium
・ Priestfield tram stop
・ Priesthill
・ Priesthill & Darnley railway station
・ Priesthill Group
・ Priesthood (album)
・ Priesthood (Ancient Israel)
・ Priesthood (Catholic Church)
・ Priesthood (Community of Christ)
・ Priesthood (Latter Day Saints)
・ Priesthood (LDS Church)
・ Priesthood (Orthodox Church)


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

Priestewitz station : ウィキペディア英語版
Priestewitz station

| trains=
| opened= 9 April 1839
| address = Priestewitz, Saxony
| country = Germany
| latd = 51.250711
| longd = 13.508531
| coordinates_display = yes
| coordinates_format=dms
| iso_region = DE-SN
| line=
* Leipzig Hbf–Dresden-Neustadt (km 84.70)
* Großenhain Cottb Bf–Priestewitz (km 5.26)
}}
Priestewitz station is on the Leipzig–Dresden railway and the Großenhain–Priestewitz railway, which branches off it. The station is in the town of Priestewitz in the German state of Saxony.
== History ==

Priestewitz station was opened on 9 April 1839 during the construction of the first German long-distance railway, the Leipzig–Dresden railway. It was established because it was near to the major towns of Meissen and Großenhain, which both received direect rail connections about two decades later.
After the opening of the line, a shed used during its construction was used as a freight receiving facility and waggon depot. The town of Großenhain built a guesthouse at it own expense, which was used for the handling of passengers. The station building itself consisted of a small wooden platform hall for passengers, a barn-like freight shed, an open hall for the reloading the freight onto waggons and a blacksmith for the repair of waggons. There was a "cistern" for the supply of water to locomotives.〔 (reprinted 1988)〕
Priestewitz benefited from the railway, so the town quickly experienced an economic boom. Even before 1860, a new building was built for handling ticket sales, baggage and freight. It replaced the first station buildings from 1839, which no longer coped with the increasing volume of traffic.〔Borchert, p.100〕
The town of Großenhain was very interested in having its own connection to the rail network. Therefore, some citizens of Großenhain established the Großenhain Branch Railway Company (''Zweig-Eisenbahngesellschaft zu Großenhain'') to build a connection to the Leipzig–Dresden railway. The Großenhain–Priestewitz railway was opened on 14 October 1862. In 1870, the line was continued by the Cottbus-Großenhain Railway Company to Cottbus as the Großenhain–Cottbus railway. Thus Priestewitz had become a railway junction.
The Verkehrsverbund Oberelbe (Upper Elbe Transport Association, VVO) invested approximately €1.3 million in a new interchange in front of the station in 2005. The interchange was opened on 30 November 2005.
Renovation of the platform facilities commenced in August 2006 and was completed in November of the same year. The total cost of the renovation of the railway facilities was approximately €1.54 million.〔
As part of the renovation the old guesthouse and the three signal boxes were demolished.

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「Priestewitz 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.