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Kellinghusenstraße (Hamburg U-Bahn station)

U-Bahn.svg Kellinghusenstraße
Hamburg U-Bahn station
Hamburg - U-Bahn Kellinghusenstrasse.jpg
Location Kellinghusenstraße
20249 Hamburg, Germany
Coordinates 53°35′20″N 09°59′28″E / 53.58889°N 9.99111°E / 53.58889; 9.99111Coordinates: 53°35′20″N 09°59′28″E / 53.58889°N 9.99111°E / 53.58889; 9.99111
Operated by Hamburger Hochbahn AG
Line(s) U 1 U 3
Platforms 2 island platforms
Tracks 4
Connections Bus
Construction
Structure type elevated
Disabled access Yes
Other information
Station code HHA: KE
Fare zone 000, 103, 105
History
Opened 10 May 1912
Location
 Kellinghusenstraße is located in Hamburg
 Kellinghusenstraße
U-Bahn.svg Kellinghusenstraße
Location within Hamburg
 Kellinghusenstraße is located in Germany
 Kellinghusenstraße
U-Bahn.svg Kellinghusenstraße
U-Bahn.svg Kellinghusenstraße (Germany)

Kellinghusenstraße is a public transport railway station for the rapid transit trains of Hamburg U-Bahn lines U1 and U3. It is located in the Hamburg, Germany quarter of Eppendorf, in the borough of Hamburg-Nord.

The area of Kellinghusenpark and around the station used to be owned by a Hamburg mayor, Dr. Heinrich Kellinghusen (1796 - 1879). After a station called Olderfelder Straße had originally been planned south-west of the current station, the plans were revised to include a branch line to Ohlsdorf, with the new station having four lines.

The architects for the new station were Ludwig Raabe und Otto Wöhleke, who also designed Landungsbrücken and Mundsburg stations, and the stone figures decorating the station were sculptured by Johann Michael Bossard (1874-1950).

Kellinghusenstraße station was built from 1909 to 1910 on an embankment for which some houses needed to be demolished.

When the station opened on 10 May 1912, it was a terminus for trains from Barmbeck, now Barmbek. From 25 May 1912, it was no longer a terminal, as the trains ran to Millerntor, now St. Pauli. These trains used the outer two lines of the four. The inner two lines were used from 1 December 1914, when the line from Kellinghusenstraße to Ohlsdorf was opened, and the station was a terminus for that line until 2 June 1929, when the line was extended to Stephansplatz. In the meantime, in 1926, a bridge designed by Walther Puritz was built between the two platforms at the south end after they had been lengthened from 60 to 90 meters.

The station is close to the 1914-built art deco Holthusenbad swimming baths and to Kellinghusenpark, and is on the corner of Kellinghusenstraße and Goernerstraße.


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