Velbert-Nierenhof station
Velbert-Nierenhof station is located in the city of Velbert in the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia. It is on the Wuppertal-Vohwinkel–Essen-Überruhr line and is served by S-Bahn line S 9.
History
The area of Nierenhof station was the location of the terminus of the Deil Valley Coal Railway, the line of the first German railway company, which was laid next to the Deilbach from Nierenhof to Hinsbeck to serve the coal mines in the Deilbach valley, including the mine in Nierenhof. The narrow-gauge railway with iron rails was to be steam-powered, which would have made it the first steam railway in Germany. Nevertheless, the concession issued by the district government did not initially allow steam operation, even though successful trial runs were carried out. After its opening by Prince Wilhelm of Prussia on 20 September 1831, the railway was initially operated as a horse-drawn tramway for freight, although occasional passenger services soon began. During its extension to Steele and Vohwinkel, which started in 1844 and was completed in 1847, the railway was converted to standard gauge and subsequently operated by steam. This involved converting the terminus at Nierenhof into a through station with its own signal box.The station was the only station in the municipality of Niederbonsfeld, which was independent until 1926, and which included Nierenhof at the time. The Deilbach, which historically divided the Rhineland from Westphalia, flows through the town. The centre of the village of Eierhof was in Westphalia, but the station was on the western side of the river in Vossnacken in the Rhineland. In addition to a siding for general freight at the station, there was an industrial siding that ran for about 900 metres from the station to the west of the Deilbach, unlike the main line, to a brickworks. Tram line 17 of Bergischen Kleinbahn AG, which ran mostly parallel to the railway line between Wuppertal-Elberfeld and Essen-Steele, passed the station until the middle of the 20th century.
The station building, a slated two-storey half-timbered building with a pitched roof built in 1847, housed an apartment for staff on the upper floor and a waiting room, a staff room and a station restaurant on the ground floor. The building was demolished in 1972. The immediately adjacent signal box and crossing keeper's house was demolished in 1991. These buildings were replaced by a parking area.