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Frankfurt West station

Frankfurt (Main) West
Frankfurt Westbahnhof
SS-Bahn-Logo.svg
Through station
Mk Frankfurt S-Bahn Wbf.jpg
Elevated section
Location Kasseler Str. 7, Frankfurt, Hesse
Germany
Coordinates 50°07′09″N 8°38′22″E / 50.11917°N 8.63944°E / 50.11917; 8.63944Coordinates: 50°07′09″N 8°38′22″E / 50.11917°N 8.63944°E / 50.11917; 8.63944
Line(s)
Platforms
  • 3 main line
  • 2 S-Bahn
Construction
Architect Julius Eugen Ruhl
Other information
Station code 1858
DS100 code FFW
Category 3
Website www.bahnhof.de
History
Opened 1848
Services
Preceding station   Deutsche Bahn   Following station
toward Dillenburg
RB 40
Mittelhessen-Express
Terminus
Preceding station   Rhine-Main S-Bahn   Following station
toward Bad Soden
S3Frankfurt S3.svg
toward Kronberg
S4Frankfurt S4.svg
toward Langen
S5Frankfurt S5.svg
toward Südbahnhof
toward Friedberg
S6Frankfurt S6.svg
toward Südbahnhof

Frankfurt (Main) West station (German: Bahnhof Frankfurt (Main) West or Frankfurt Westbahnhof) is a railway station for regional and S-Bahn services in Frankfurt, Germany, on the Main-Weser Railway, in the district of Bockenheim, near the Frankfurt Trade Fair grounds and the Bockenheim campus of the Goethe University Frankfurt.

The station was opened as Bockenheim Station in 1849 during the construction of the Main-Weser Railway from Frankfurt to Kassel. The then independent city of Bockenheim was until 1866 in the territory of the Electorate of Hesse-Kassel. The station building was built in a relatively elaborate Renaissance Revival style to a design by Julius Eugen Ruhl.

The first major change in the railways to affect Bockenheim station occurred in1888 with the opening of the new Frankfurt Central Station. As part of this project a connection was opened on 10 May 1884 from Bockenheim Station to the Homburg Railway, a connection that could not be built fifteen years earlier during the Homburg line’s original construction because the various small states involved failed to come to an agreement.

In addition, a sweeping curve was built for the Main-Weser line’s northern approach to the new Central Station. The old ran from the old Main-Weser terminus to Am Hauptbahnhof (the square in front of the Hauptbahnhof) along the current Kaiserstrasse and then turned north. Its abandoned path to Bockenheim Station was turned into a street, which was initially called Bahnstraße and it is now a series of streets: Hamburger Allee, Friedrich-Ebert-Anlage and Düsseldorfer Straße.


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