Lenzburg Stadt railway station

Lenzburg Stadt
The station in April 1984
General information
LocationBahnhofstrasse 4 / Seetalplatz / Malagarain
Lenzburg
Switzerland
Coordinates47°23′19″N 8°10′41″E / 47.38867°N 8.17794°E / 47.38867; 8.17794
Elevation397 m (1,302 ft)
Owned bySwiss Federal Railways (1922-2005), Schweizerische Seethalbahn (1895-1922)
Line(s)Seetal line
Tracks2
Train operatorsSwiss Federal Railways
Construction
ArchitectEmil Vogt (1895)[1]
History
Opened1 October 1895 (1895-10-01)
Closed2 June 1984 (1984-06-02) (passenger),
31 March 2005 (2005-03-31) (cargo)
Electrified1910
Location
Lenzburg Stadt
Location within Switzerland
Lenzburg Stadt
Lenzburg Stadt (Canton of Aargau)
Railways around Lenzburg
elev
in m
4.02
Wildegg
354
2.06
Niederlenz
383
Lenzburg Industrie
Lenzburg
406
0.42
397
0.00
Lenzburg Spitzkehre
Seon
446

Lenzburg Stadt railway station (German: Bahnhof Lenzburg Stadt) was a railway station in Lenzburg in the Swiss canton of Aargau.[2] It was located at the station square (German: Seetalplatz) in Bahnhofstrasse.

The station was opened in 1895 by Schweizerische Seethalbahn Aktiengesellschaft, on the Seetal line to Wildegg. The station building by Emil Vogt[1] had a small restaurant. By 1910, the line was electrified. The station (and line) were nationalized by Swiss Federal Railways in 1922. The present-day Malagarain street is built on some of the right of way.

Trains from Lenzburg Stadt to Lenzburg had to reverse at "Lenzburg Spitzkehre".[3] Towards Wildegg, the line passed through a small, now pedestrian, tunnel in the railway embankment.[4][5]

Closure

With the opening of the Heitersberg railway line in 1975, service from Lenzburg station further improved and Lenzburg Stadt was less used.[6] Passenger service ended on 2 June 1984 and installations were gradually dismantled. The station building was destroyed in 2003.[1][2] Cargo traffic continued to spring 2005 for UFA AG, a Fenaco subsidiary, who opposed the closure of the line.[7]

After the tracks were removed, a covered bypass road (Kerntangente) was built on the land. The (former) building remained in the canton's building inventory until 2017.[1] A house across the tracks of the former station still exists in 2021.[2]

References