Julius-Leber-Brücke
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Bf | |
First S-Bahn train departing from Julius-Leber-Brücke station on May 2nd, 2008
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Location |
Tempelhof-Schöneberg, Berlin, Berlin Germany |
Other information | |
Station code | n/a |
DS100 code | BJLB |
Category | 4 |
History | |
Opened | 15 October 1881 2 May 2008 |
Closed | 3 July 1944 |
Electrified | 15 May 1933 |
Previous names | 1881-1/12/1932 Schöneberg 1932-1944 Kolonnenstraße |
Julius-Leber-Brücke is a railway station in the Schöneberg district of Berlin. Located under a bridge over the cutting created for the Berlin-Potsdam-Magdeburg railway. It was officially opened on 2 May 2008 and is served by the S-Bahn line S1.
The bridge is named after Resistance fighter Julius Leber. It was formerly named Sedanbrücke, after the Prusso-German victory in the Battle of Sedan in the Prusso-German war against France in 1870/71. The bridge connects the two ends of Kolonnenstraße.
The station has two platforms, of which only the inner platform edges are being used, serving the Wannseebahn line of the Berlin S-Bahn running between them.
The station is located next to the original site of the historic Bahnhof Schöneberg, opened in 1881 at the Südringspitzkehre, the branch terminal line closing the southern Ringbahn by a switchback or hairpin turn at the Berlin Potsdamer Bahnhof, where the circular trains reversed, and could change the steam locomotives for servicing them and refilling with coal and water. In 1932 it received the name Kolonnenstraße according to the name of the street crossing the bridge, to distinguish it from the newly erected interchange station Berlin-Schöneberg at the crossing of the Ringbahn with the Wannseebahn S-Bahn line.