Haarlem railway station

Haarlem
Main entrance, built in the 1900s
Location Netherlands
Coordinates 52°23′16″N 4°38′20″E / 52.38778°N 4.63889°E / 52.38778; 4.63889Coordinates: 52°23′16″N 4°38′20″E / 52.38778°N 4.63889°E / 52.38778; 4.63889
Operated by Nederlandse Spoorwegen
Line(s) Amsterdam–Rotterdam railway
Haarlem–Uitgeest railway
Haarlem–Zandvoort railway
Platforms 6
Other information
Station code Hlm
History
Opened 20 September 1839
Services
Preceding station   Nederlandse Spoorwegen   Following station
NS Intercity 2100
toward Vlissingen
NS Intercity 2200
toward Alkmaar
NS Intercity 3400Terminus
toward Hoorn
NS Sprinter 4800
toward Zandvoort
NS Sprinter 5400
NS Sprinter 6300Terminus
toward Zandvoort
NS Sprinter 15400
Location
Haarlem
Location within Northern Randstad
Haarlem
Haarlem (Netherlands)

Haarlem railway station is located in Haarlem, the Netherlands. The station opened at September 20, 1839, on the Amsterdam–Rotterdam railway, the first railway line in the Netherlands. The station building itself is a rijksmonument.

History

The original, wooden station was built on the Oude Weg, just outside the Amsterdamse Poort in 1839 to accommodate the passengers of the first railway in the Netherlands between Haarlem and Amsterdam. This had a broad gauge rail width of the Dutch broad gauge 1,945 mm (6 ft 4 916 in).[1] The station was built outside the city, on the current location of the Centrale Werkplaats (maintenance depot) of the Hollandsche IJzeren Spoorweg-Maatschappij. At great expense, the rail width was later reduced to 1.435 metres (4 ft 8 12 in) in order to conform to George Stephenson's standard gauge.[1] The train engine "De Snelheid" was the twin of the Amsterdam "Arend", which along with the carriages, were designed by Stephenson's apprentice, the English rail engineer Thomas Longridge Gooch of R.B. Longridge & Co.[1] There were 4 trains per day to Amsterdam, scheduled at 9:00, 14:00, 16:00, and 18:00. The prices of the tickets for 1st (closed carriage), 2nd, and 3rd class (char-à-banc) were 1.20, 80c, and 40c (guilders).[1]

1842 neo-classical station by F.W. Conrad.

Within a few years the new railway turned out to be a great success, and in 1842 a permanent station was built on the current location. It was designed by Frederick Willem Conrad[2] in a semi-Greek neo-classicistic style. The front of the building was open to the street.

Mouthaan

In 1867 the station was re-designed by P.J. Mouthaan.[3] An extra floor was put on the building and the front of the building was enclosed.

Current station

The current building was built between 1906 and 1908. The design is by the railway station specialist Dirk Margadant (1849-1915). The tracks were elevated, to avoid conflict with the traffic in the city. It is the only train station in the Netherlands that is built in Art Nouveau style.

Train services

Inside Haarlem station today.

As of 11 December 2016, the following services call at Haarlem:

  • 2x per hour intercity service Amsterdam - Haarlem - Leiden - The Hague
  • 2x per hour intercity service Amsterdam - Haarlem - Leiden - The Hague - Rotterdam - Dordrecht
  • 2x per hour intercity service Alkmaar - Haarlem (Only on weekdays rush hours in the peak direction)
  • 2x per hour local service (sprinter) Hoorn - Alkmaar - Uitgeest - Haarlem - Amsterdam
  • 2x per hour local service (sprinter) Zandvoort - Haarlem - Amsterdam
  • 2x per hour local service (sprinter) The Hague - Leiden - Haarlem
  • 2x per hour local service (sprinter) Zandvoort - Haarlem (summer only)

Bus services

All services except line 50 are operated by Connexxion, line 50 is operated by Arriva.

  • 2 Haarlem Noord - Station - Spaarnwoude
  • 3 IJmuiden - Driehuis - Velserbroek - Haarlem Noord - Station - Schalkwijk
  • 8 Haarlem - Hogeschool Inholland - Overveen - Haarlem
  • 14 Heemstede-Aerdenhout - Haarlem - Haarlem Noord - Spaarndam
  • 15 Station - Waarderpolder - Spaarnwoude
  • 50 Haarlem - Heemstede - Bennebroek - Hillegom - Lisse - Sassenheim - Leiden
  • 73 Uitgeest - Heemskerk - Beverwijk - Velserbroek - Haarlem Noord - Haarlem - Schalkwijk
  • 75 IJmuiden aan Zee - IJmuiden - Driehuis - Haarlem Noord - Haarlem
  • 81 Haarlem - Bloemendaal aan Zee - Zandvoort
  • 84 Haarlem - Bloemendaal aan Zee - Zandvoort
  • 140 Haarlem - Heemstede - Hoofddorp - Aalsmeer - Uithoorn
  • 175 Haarlem - Amstelveen - Amsterdam Bijlmer ArenA
  • 176 Haarlem - VU - Amsterdam Zuid
  • 177 Haarlem - Badhoevedorp (- Schiphol Oost)
  • 277 IJmuiden - Haarlem - Schiphol Airport (peak hours only)
  • 300 Haarlem - Schalkwijk - Vijfhuizen - Hoofddorp - Schiphol Airport - Amstelveen - Amsterdam Bijlmer ArenA

Trivia

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 'Haarlem en de spoorwegen', Haerlem jaarboek (1989), Historische Werkgroep Haerlem, pp 86-118
  2. https://www.gracesguide.co.uk/Frederick_Willem_Conrad
  3. http://www.stationsweb.nl/arch.asp?rec=10
  4. "Filming locations for Ocean's Twelve". IMDb. Retrieved 5 April 2012.
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