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Horten Station

Horten
Horten stasjon.jpg
Location Horten, Norway
Coordinates 59°24′15″N 10°28′53″E / 59.4041°N 10.4815°E / 59.4041; 10.4815Coordinates: 59°24′15″N 10°28′53″E / 59.4041°N 10.4815°E / 59.4041; 10.4815
Elevation 2.2 m (7 ft)
Owned by Norwegian State Railways
Line(s) Horten Line
Distance 106.51 km (66.18 mi)
Construction
Architect Balthazar Lange
History
Opened 7 December 1881
Closed 28 May 1967
Electrified 11 December 1957

Horten Station (Norwegian: Horten stasjon) is a former railway station in Horten, Norway, which was the terminus of the Horten Line and in use between 1881 and 1967. The station was designed in Swiss chalet style by Balthazar Lange and was wedged between the town and the Oslofjord. It was located 106.51 kilometers (66.18 mi) from Oslo.

When the Vestfold Line was being planned, some plans called for it to run via Horten. Instead, a more inland route was chosen and a 7.0-kilometer (4.3 mi) branch line was built to the town. Traffic peaked in the 1920s, when ca. 200,000 people traveled on the line, and the station saw a peak thirteen daily services during the 1940. The line past the station was converted to standard gauge in 1949 and electrified in 1957. By then the Norwegian State Railways (NSB) had started to run a bus service to Skoppum Station and gradually reduced service to Horten. From 1967 all passenger traffic was terminated. The station building has since burned down.

There were a large number of proposals for which route the Vestfold Line should follow, while it was being planned during the late 1860s and early 1870s. The main two proposals were an interior route and a coastal route. The latter had three sub-proposals, two of which ran west of Horten and one which ran through the town. Horten was regarded as a sufficiently important settlement that all alternatives which did not run through it called for a branch line to reach Horten. Part of the reason for the towns importance was that it hosted Karljohansvern, the main base of the Royal Norwegian Navy.

The route issue was not settled until Parliament chose the "compromise coastal alternative" on 8 June 1875, in which the Vestfold Line bypassed Horten, but a branch was to be built from Skoppum. The station was officially opened on 13 October 1881, although regular traffic did not start until 7 December. The line was originally built with narrow gauge (3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm)) and the line and station were converted to standard gauge on 3 October 1949, as the last section to be converted in Norway. The line was electrified on 11 December 1957. NSB decided that it was cheaper to operate all services by bus, and closed down all passenger services on the Horten Line from 26 May 1967. A modest amount of freight traffic was retained.


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