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Hedehusene railway station

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Railway station in Greater Copenhagen, Denmark
Hedehusene
railway station
Hedehusene station in 2014
General information
LocationHovedgaden 437
2640 Hedehusene
Høje-Taastrup Municipality
Denmark
Coordinates55°38′55″N 12°11′51″E / 55.64861°N 12.19750°E / 55.64861; 12.19750
Elevation33.0 metres (108.3 ft)
Owned byBanedanmark
Operated byDSB
Line(s)Copenhagen–Fredericia/Taulov Line
Platforms3
Tracks4
Construction
ArchitectHeinrich Wenck (1917)
History
Opened27 June 1847
Rebuilt1917
Services
Preceding station Danish State Railways DSB Following station
Høje Taastruptowards Helsingør ElsinoreCopenhagenRoskildeNæstvedRegional train Trekronertowards Næstved
Høje Taastruptowards Østerport CopenhagenHolbækRegional train Trekronertowards Holbæk
Location
Hedehusene railway station is located in DenmarkHedehusene railway stationHedehusene railway stationLocation within DenmarkShow map of DenmarkHedehusene railway station is located in Capital RegionHedehusene railway stationHedehusene railway stationHedehusene railway station (Capital Region)Show map of Capital Region

Hedehusene railway station is a railway station serving the railway town of Hedehusene, a suburban town of Copenhagen in Zealand, Denmark. It is located in the centre of the town, immediately adjacent to Hedehusene's bus station.

The station is located on the Copenhagen–Fredericia railway line between Copenhagen and Roskilde. It opened in 1847 with the opening of the Copenhagen-Roskilde railway line, the first railway line in the Kingdom of Denmark. It offers direct regional train services to Copenhagen and Roskilde. The train services are operated by the national railway company DSB.

History

DSB regional train to Copenhagen calling at Hedehusene in 1981.

Hedehusene station opened on 27 June 1847 as one of the original intermediate stops on the new railway line from Copenhagen to Roskilde, the first railway line in the Kingdom of Denmark. The railway line was completed for Det Sjællandske Jernbaneselskab (English: the Zealand Railway Company) by British engineering company William Radford. The station originally opened as a railway halt where the railway line crossed the highway between Copenhagen and Roskilde. It was promoted to a railway station in 1880.

Architecture

The station building in 2008.

The station's second and current station building was built in 1917 to designs by Danish architect Heinrich Wenck (1851–1936), known for the numerous railway stations he designed across Denmark in his capacity of head architect of the Danish State Railways from 1894 to 1921.

Operations

DSB IC4-train calling at Hedehusene in 2017.

The train services are operated by the national railway company DSB. The station offers regional train services to Copenhagen, Elsinore, and Roskilde.

See also

Note

  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, the Duchy of 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.

References

Citations

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Hedehusene railway station" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (April 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
  1. ^ "Hedehusene Station". dsb.dk (in Danish). DSB. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  2. ^ Hedehusene Station (Hh) on Danske Jernbaner
  3. ^ Vigand Rasmussen. "Heinrich Wenck". Kunstindeks Danmark & Weilbach Kunstnerleksikon. Retrieved 27 September 2024.
  4. Jensen 1972, p. 11.
  5. Jensen 1972, p. 12-15.

Bibliography

  • Jensen, Niels (1972). Danske Jernbaner 1847–1892 (in Danish). Copenhagen: J.Fr. Clausens Forlag. ISBN 87-11-01765-1.
  • Jensen, Niels (1975). Nordsjællandske jernbaner (in Danish). Copenhagen: J.Fr. Clausens Forlag. ISBN 87-11-03879-9.
  • Jensen, Niels (1978). Vestsjællandske jernbaner (in Danish). Copenhagen: J.Fr. Clausens Forlag. ISBN 87-11-03671-0.

External links

Western suburbs of Copenhagen
Administrative subdivisions
Suburban neighbourhoods
Parks and open spaces
Museums and cultural institutions
Other landmarks
Railway stations
Heinrich Wenck
Buildings


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