Mechelen railway station (Dutch: Station Mechelen; French: Gare de Malines)[a] is a railway station in Mechelen, Antwerp, Belgium. The station opened on 5 May 1835 on railway lines 25, 27 and 53. The train services are operated by the National Railway Company of Belgium (NMBS/SNCB).[1]
Railway Station | |||||
General information | |||||
Location | Mechelen, Antwerp Belgium | ||||
Coordinates | 51°01′03″N 4°29′01″E / 51.01750°N 4.48361°E | ||||
Owned by | NMBS/SNCB | ||||
Operated by | NMBS/SNCB | ||||
Line(s) | 25, 27, 53 | ||||
Platforms | 10 | ||||
Tracks | 10 | ||||
Other information | |||||
Station code | FM | ||||
History | |||||
Opened | 5 May 1835 | ||||
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History
editOn 5 May 1835, the first public train journey on the European mainland arrived near the station.[2] The train line stopped just south of the station, as there was no bridge over the canal until 1836. Lines were built in all directions from the station: North to Antwerp, south to Brussels and France, east to Leuven, Liège and Verviers and west to Dendermonde, Ghent, Bruges and Ostend.
In 2013, major plans to modernise and rebuild the station started. This project is called Mechelen in Beweging.[3] A 3-level underground car park has since been constructed. The current station buildings and tracks will be demolished and replaced. The building work is expected to take more than a decade as the work will need to be carried out platform by platform to retain enough capacity for the station.
Features
editThe station has twelve platforms; the six on the eastern side are a few metres higher than the others. In 2012, a new high-speed railway (line 25N) opened between Mechelen and Schaerbeek, in northern Brussels. This line also links Mechelen with Brussels Airport. Platforms 11 and 12 were added to the station in December 2020 to accommodate the additional trains from this line.[4]
To the east of the station is the large Mechelen Train Works, where trains receive maintenance and heavy works, such as refurbishment.
Train services
editThe following services currently serve the station:
- Intercity services (IC-05) Antwerp - Mechelen - Brussels - Nivelles - Charleroi
- Intercity services (IC-08) Antwerp - Mechelen - Brussels Airport - Leuven - Hasselt
- Intercity services (IC-11) Binche - Braine-le-Comte - Halle - Brussels - Mechelen - Turnhout (weekdays)
- Intercity services (IC-21) Ghent - Dendermonde - Mechelen - Leuven
- Intercity services (IC-22) Essen - Antwerp - Mechelen - Brussels (weekdays)
- Intercity services (IC-22) Antwerp - Mechelen - Brussels - Halle - Braine-le-Comte - Binche (weekends)
- Intercity services (IC-31) Antwerp - Mechelen - Brussels (weekdays)
- Intercity services (IC-31) Antwerp - Mechelen - Brussels - Nivelles - Charleroi (weekends)
- Intercity services (IC-35) Amsterdam - The Hague - Rotterdam - Roosendaal - Antwerp - Brussels Airport - Brussels
- Local services (L-02) Zeebrugge - Bruges – Ghent – Dendermonde – Mechelen (weekdays)
- Local services (L-20) Sint-Niklaas – Mechelen – Leuven (weekdays)
- Local services (L-20) Mechelen - Leuven (weekends)
- Local services (L-27) Sint-Niklaas - Mechelen (weekends)
- Local services (L-28) Ghent - Dendermonde - Mechelen (weekends)
- Brussels RER services (S1) Antwerp - Mechelen - Brussels - Waterloo - Nivelles (weekdays)
- Brussels RER services (S1) Antwerp - Mechelen - Brussels (weekends)
- Brussels RER services (S5) Mechelen - Brussels-Luxembourg - Etterbeek - Halle - Enghien (- Geraardsbergen)
- Brussels RER services (S7) Mechelen - Merode - Halle
See also
editReferences
editFootnotes
editCitations
edit- ^ "MECHELEN". www.belgianrail.be. Retrieved 6 November 2023.
- ^ Wolmar 2010, p. 18–20.
- ^ "Mechelen in Beweging" [Mechelen on the move] (in Dutch).
- ^ "Opening bijkomende spoorlijn en perrons 11&12" [Opening additional railway line and platforms 11&12] (in Dutch). Retrieved 4 April 2021.
Bibliography
edit- Wolmar, Christian (2010). Blood, Iron & Gold: How the Railways transformed the World. London: Grove Atlantic. ISBN 978-1-84887-171-7.