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Nürnberger Strasse station is located at the 2.7 kilometre point of the Rems Railway (German: Remsbahn) in the German state of Baden-Württemberg and is a station on the Stuttgart S-Bahn network.

Stuttgart Nürnberger Straße
Through station
General information
LocationNürnberger Strasse, Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg
Germany
Coordinates48°48′22″N 9°14′5″E
Owned byDeutsche Bahn
Operated by
  • DB Netz
  • DB Station&Service
Line(s)
Platforms2 side platforms
Tracks4
Train operatorsS-Bahn Stuttgart
ConnectionsS 2 S 3
Other information
Station code6074[1]
DS100 codeTSNU[2]
IBNR08004357
Category5[1]
Fare zone: 1[3]
Websitewww.bahnhof.de
History
Opened27 September 1981
Services
Preceding station Stuttgart S-Bahn Following station
Bad Cannstatt
towards Filderstadt
S 2 Sommerrain
towards Schorndorf
Bad Cannstatt S 3 Sommerrain
towards Backnang
Location
Stuttgart Nürnberger Straße
Location in Baden-Württemberg
Stuttgart Nürnberger Straße
Location in Germany
Stuttgart Nürnberger Straße
Location in Europe

History


As early as 1906, there was a proposal for an additional station on the Rems Railway in Cannstatt in the vicinity of the regional hospital. As the track in this area has a slope of 1.4 percent, it was not possible to provide a station for arriving and departing passengers served by the steam locomotives of the time. The parliament of Württemberg rejected the project for this reason.

Cannstatt expanded further east in the late 1920s and into the 1930s. The residential areas of Geiger and Espan had been built along the road to Fellbach, which since 1936 had been called Nürnberger Strasse (Nuremberg Road). Tram line 1 had been extended to Fellbach in 1929, connecting its residents to Stuttgart's public transport system.

Construction, mostly of apartment buildings, continued in the 1950s. In 1957, Stuttgart City Council commissioned traffic engineer Professor Walther Lambert to develop a new transport concept for the city of Stuttgart and the surrounding districts. In May 1962, he presented his result. Lambert saw a need for a new station in Bad Cannstatt. An S-Bahn station should be built in the future at Kienbach junction, where a connecting track to the Untertürkheim freight yard branched off the Rems Railway. He called the proposed station Kienbach station after an old name for the area.

In 1978, construction began in preparation for S-Bahn operations on the Rems Railway. The double-track section between Bad Cannstatt and Waiblingen received an additional pair of tracks. The new Nürnbergerstraße station was built at the crossing of the former federal highway B 14. It was opened with the commissioning of S-Bahn lines S2 and S3 on 27 September 1981. It developed into a new transfer point between the S-Bahn and tram line 1, now Stuttgart Stadtbahn line U 1. The Stadtbahn stop is now also called Nürnberger Strasse.


Rail operations


The station is served by lines S 2 and S 3 of the Stuttgart S-Bahn. Platform track 1 is used by S-Bahn services towards Bad Cannstatt and track 4 is used by services S-Bahn towards Waiblingen. Tracks 2 and 3 are used by trains that do not stop and do not have platforms.

Nürnberger Straße station is classified by Deutsche Bahn as a category 5 station.[1]


S-Bahn


Line Route
S 2 Schorndorf – Weinstadt – Waiblingen – Nürnberger Straße – Bad Cannstatt – Hauptbahnhof – Schwabstraße – Vaihingen – RohrStuttgart Flughafen/MesseFilderstadt
(extra trains in the peak between Schorndorf and Vaihingen.)
S 3 BacknangWinnenden – Waiblingen – Nürnberger Straße – Bad Cannstatt – Hauptbahnhof – Vaihingen – Rohr – Flughafen/Messe
(extra trains in the peak between Backnang and Vaihingen).

Stadtbahn


Nürnberger Straße is also a stop on Stadtbahn line U 1.

Line Route (1435 mm gauge)
Fellbach Lutherkirche – Nürnberger Straße – Bad Cannstatt – Charlottenplatz – Heslach – Vaihingen

References



Footnotes


  1. "Stationspreisliste 2022" [Station price list 2022] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 7 February 2022. Retrieved 13 March 2022.
  2. Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (10 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2017. ISBN 978-3-89494-146-8.
  3. "Tarifzoneneinteilung" (PDF). Verkehrs- und Tarifverbund Stuttgart. 1 April 2020. Retrieved 16 April 2020.

Sources





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