Cheb railway station
Cheb railway station is a railway station in the city of Cheb in the Karlovy Vary Region in the western part of the Czech Republic.
Tracks
The station is the most important transport junction in the region. Trains are operated by Czech Railways and multiple Czech and German private transport companies which run trains to Germany. The station is located at a crossing of five railway lines:- 140 – Chomutov–Cheb
- 146 – Cheb–Tršnice–Luby u Chebu
- 148 – Cheb–Hranice v Čechách
- 170 – Plzeň–Cheb
- 179 – Nuremberg–Cheb
History
The railway station was built in Neorenaissance style in 1865 and was designed by Viennese architect Heinrich von Hügel. In 1870 a service connecting the Ore Mountains area with Prague was started by the private railway company Buštěhrad Railway. In the same year the railway line to Chomutov was connected.In 1872 the private company Emperor Franz Joseph Railway started to operate rail transport from Cheb to České Budějovice. In 1881 the line to Nuremberg was opened. Each company operating in Cheb had its own station house.
After the fall of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and declaration of independent Czechoslovakia the station was renamed to Cheb, but because of the huge German-speaking population in the city all station signs were bilingual. During the Second World War, on 8 April 1945, the United States air forces conducted a raid on the town and most of the station area, except the main building, was destroyed. Since 1946 after the expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia the station has been known only by its Czech name.
The absence of a new solid station building lasted till 1962. The design, which was prepared in 1956-59 by the architect Josef Danda in Brussels style, was declared by the Czech Ministry of Culture as a cultural monument.
In 2007 a new bus terminus in the front of the station was finished and is served by city public bus transport and serves as the main bus terminus in Cheb.
Literature
- Wilfried Rettig: Die Eisenbahnen im Vogtland – Band 1: Entwicklung, Hauptstrecken, Fahrzeuge, Bahnbetriebswerke und Hochbauten, EK-Verlag, Freiburg 2001,, S. 78
- Siegfried Bufe, Heribert Schröpfer: Eisenbahnen im Sudetenland, Bufe-Fachbuchverlag, Egglham, 1991 ; S. 77