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Berlin-Lankwitz station

Berlin-Lankwitz
S-Bahn-Logo.svg
Through station
Berlin metro station Lankwitz.jpg
Lankwitz station from the north
Location Lankwitz, Steglitz-Zehlendorf, Berlin
Germany
Coordinates 52°26′19″N 13°20′30″E / 52.43861°N 13.34167°E / 52.43861; 13.34167Coordinates: 52°26′19″N 13°20′30″E / 52.43861°N 13.34167°E / 52.43861; 13.34167
Line(s) Anhalt Suburban Line (KBS 200.25)
Platforms 1
Tracks 1
Other information
Station code 7144
DS100 code BLAK
IBNR 8089114
Category 6
History
Opened
  • 1 December 1895
  • 28 May 1995
Closed 9 January 1984
Previous names Lankwitz-Viktoriastraße (1895–1899)
Services
Preceding station   Berlin S-Bahn   Following station
toward Teltow Stadt
S25
toward Hennigsdorf

Lankwitz station is on the Anhalt Suburban Line in the suburb of Lankwitz in the Berlin borough of Steglitz-Zehlendorf. It is served by S-Bahn line S25. It has a south-western entrance on Brucknerstraße. Its north-eastern entrance connects to a path which runs to the south-east through a pedestrian tunnel running under the S-Bahn and the mainline to the square in front of Lankwitz Rathaus (town hall). In the other direction (to the north-west), this path provides a barrier-free access to Kaulbachstraße.

The track was built in 1841 at ground level as a single track. It had been duplicated by 1849. The first station in Lankwitz was opened on 1 December 1895, following a sustained campaign by local councillor August Bruchwitz, as Lankwitz-Viktoriastraße station to the north of the current Leonorenstraße (called Viktoriastraße until 1937). On 30 September 1899, the station was renamed Lankwitz. Shortly later the line was raised above street level and upgraded to four tracks, while the station was rebuilt south of Leonorenstraße at its present elevated position and opened in 1901. Only suburban trains have since stopped in Lankwitz. Electric train services commenced in 1903 on the first electrified track in Berlin and were converted in 1929 to the 750 volts DC system, which is still used on the Berlin S-Bahn.

During the Second World War, the bridge over the Teltow Canal was destroyed. The line between Lankwitz and Südende was rebuilt as a single track and reopened on 17 August 1945. Following the takeover of the S-Bahn by the Berliner Verkehrsbetriebe (BVG, Berlin Transportation Company) on 9 January 1984, the route from Priesterweg to Lichterfelde Süd through Lankwitz was shut down. It was not planned to restart operations and the bridge over Leonorenstraße was demolished.

After the fall of the Berlin Wall, the importance of the line grew. It was reopened after renovations on 28 May 1995. At the same time, the single-track section over the Teltow Canal was extended towards the south, so the line through Lankwitz station has had one track since then. The eastern edge of the former island platform is now used for trains running in both directions. It is currently the only single-track railway station in Berlin with S-Bahn services running at 10-minute intervals. Until the introduction of driver only operations using monitors (Zugfahrerselbstabfertigung, ZAT), the S-Bahn station was monitored remotely by staff at Südende station.


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