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Utrecht Centraal, officially Station Utrecht Centraal (pronounced [staːˈʃɔn ˈytrɛxt sɛnˈtraːl]), is the transit hub that integrates three bicycle parkings, two bus stations, two tram stops and the central railway station for the city of Utrecht in the province of Utrecht, Netherlands.

Utrecht Centraal
Utrecht Centraal in 2019
General information
LocationUtrecht, Province of Utrecht
Netherlands
Coordinates52°5′21″N 5°6′35″E
Owned byProRail
Operated byNederlandse Spoorwegen
Line(s)Amsterdam–Arnhem railway
Utrecht–Rotterdam railway
Utrecht–Boxtel railway
Utrecht–Kampen railway
Tracks16
Connections U-OV, Qbuzz Tram: 20, 21, 22
U-OV, Qbuzz: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 12, 24, 28, 38, 41, 47, 50, 55, 65, 73, 74, 77, 85, 285
Provincie Utrecht, Syntus: 50, 102, 107, 120, 195/295
Drechtsteden, Qbuzz: 90, 387, 388
Bravo, Arriva: 400, 401
Arriva: 195/295
Flixbus: 056, 086, 800, 817, 833, N31, N800, K947
Construction
Platform levels2
ParkingN/A
Bicycle facilities29232 (not including OV-Fiets (Rental))
Disabled accessLifts, escalators and 24/7 staff to aid with boarding.
ArchitectBenthem Crouwel
Other information
Station codeUt
Fare zone5000
Websitehttps://www.ns.nl/stationsinformatie/ut/utrecht-centraal
History
Opened18 December 1843
Passengers
207.360 daily railway passengers (excluding transfers, 2019 statistics)[1]
Location
Utrecht Centraal
Location within Northeastern Randstad

Both the railway station and the bus station are the largest and busiest in the Netherlands. The bicycle parking station on the east side is the largest in the world.[2]

The railway station has sixteen platform tracks (of which twelve are through tracks) and 207.360 embarking and disembarking passengers per day, excluding transfers.[3] Because of its central location in the Netherlands, Utrecht Centraal is the most important railway hub of the country with more than 1000 departures per day.


History


Inside the station hall
Inside the station hall

The first railway station at the site was opened on December 18, 1843, when the Nederlandsche Rhijnspoorweg-Maatschappij opened the first station on Utrecht territory.

In 1938, the station became the central station as the Maliebaanstation, on the other side of the city, was closed and the line from Hilversum was diverted into the central station. The station building of 1865 remained in place, though a fundamental renovation was done in 1936. Two years later, a fire burned down most of the building, which was subsequently rebuilt.

The station building was demolished in the 1970s to make way for Hoog Catharijne, then Europe's largest enclosed shopping mall, which opened on 17 December 1973. From that moment onwards, the station no longer had a real entrance; the passageways of the shopping mall just continued into the station. In 1989 the station hall was enlarged (tripling the original size) to increase capacity and to solve bottlenecks. In 1995, the station hall was again enlarged, with the construction of a new platform.

Between 2011 and 2016, the station underwent a major reconstruction as one of the NSP[4] projects of the Dutch government and as part of a general reconstruction of the Utrecht station area.[5][6] The station hall was replaced by a new, much larger hall, housing all modes of public transport. The new structure with its curved roof, was designed by Benthem Crouwel Architekten. The roof has three curves: a large one in the middle for the railway station and two smaller ones for the bus/tram stations on either side. New sheltering roofs were built for all platforms and the station was separated from the Hoog Catharijne shopping area.[7]

A scale model of Utrecht Centraal is on display at Madurodam.[8]


Tram and bus facilities


Light-rail (sneltram) service at Utrecht Centraal began in 1983 with the opening of the SUNIJ line (sneltram Utrecht-Nieuwegein/IJsselstein).[9] Its tram stop (named Utrecht Centraal) was originally located on the east side of the station. In 2009, when the nearby Moreelsepark tram terminal was closed, the Centraal stop was adapted to be the new terminal for the shortened SUNIJ line. At this time, the Centraal stop was given a minor makeover including provision for the OV-chipkaart and travel information displays.[10]

In 2013, to accommodate construction work at the railway station, the SUNIJ line was further shortened. The Centraal stop on the east side of the station was closed and replaced by a stop at Jaarbeursplein on the west side of the railway station, becoming the temporary terminal of the SUNIJ line.[11] The temporary Jaarbeursplein terminal had 3 tracks.[12]

In July 2016, the bus terminal on the east side of the station was also relocated to the west side ('Jaarbeurszijde'). This move made space available on the east side of the station for the construction of a new Centrumzijde (downtown side) bus and tram terminal as well as the construction of a new tram line (Uithoflijn), a new station square (Stationsplein), a bicycle storage facility and the Moreelse bridge.[13]

On 9 December 2019, the Centrumzijde bus and tram terminal opened at Utrecht Centraal. It is located under the main hall on the east side of the railway station, and riders can access it directly from the main hall.[14] On 16 December 2019, the Uithof line (Uithoflijn, tram route 22) started operation running from Centrumzijde to P+R Science Centre in the Uithof district.[15] Passengers who wanted to transfer between the SUNIJ and Uithof lines had to walk 500 metres (1,600 ft) between the Jaarbeursplein and Centrumzide stops.[16] There was a track between the two stops, but it was used only for Uithof trams returning to the depot without passengers. The platform heights for the SUNIJ and Uithof lines were incompatible.[17]

On 4 July 2020, the SUNIJ line was shut down for renovation including rebuilding the Jaarbeursplein stop. The stop was converted from a terminal for high-floor trams to a through-station for longer, low-floor trams. The old platforms were demolished, and the stub siding was eliminated. New side platforms were built along the through-tracks. Electrical overhead wires and track switches were also replaced.[18] On 3 January 2021, the Jaarbeursplein tram stop reopened with low-level platforms.[19]

On 2 July 2022, through-passenger service started between the Jaarbeursplein and Centrumzijde stops, thus eliminating the 500-metre walking transfer between the two stops at Utrecht Centraal. Trams would travel via the station between Nieuwegein and IJsselstein on the SUNIJ line and the Uithof district on the Uithof line (Uithoflijn).[16]


Redesign of the track layout


Schematic view of the new track layout
Schematic view of the new track layout

As the central hub of the Dutch railway network, disruptions at Utrecht Centraal can easily affect the rest of the country's railway network. 2–3 times per year, such disruptions led to a snowball effect, resulting in a total standstill of railway traffic in a wide area around Utrecht Centraal.[20][21][22]

As part of a general effort to improve the reliability of the Dutch railway network and because of the High-Frequency programme (PHS) of the Dutch government, it was decided to remodel the track layout of the station, an investment of €270 million.[23]


Reasons for the redesign


The Ministry of Infrastructure described the reasons for the project as follows:[24]


The problem of the old layout


The main measures


The goals


The design: learning from Japan


The idea for the new track layout was based on the layout of Shinagawa station in Tokyo. Based on Shinagawa and other Japanese examples,[25] a new design philosophy for track layout was developed within ProRail. It contains the following hierarchy:

  1. The main traffic flows are physically separated from each other (as far as possible within the given space) and have their own dedicated tracks.
  2. The layout of these tracks is optimized for speed and headways, this is the main function of the stations.
  3. Additional switches are added for reaching the depots. In the case of Utrecht, there are three depots and each platform track has access to at least one depot.
  4. As a last step, switches are added where necessary to enable traffic management in case of disruptions. These switches have to fulfill a number of conditions:
    • The switches for disruption management cannot compromise the main function.
    • Switches are only added for a fixed number of disruption scenarios (alternative platform track, complete or partial blockage of a line).
    • For each switch, a cost benefit analysis is made (including financial and operational aspects, such as delay minutes). Only switches with a positive result are included in the final design.

The result


The new layout has around 60 switches (compared to around 200 for the old layout) and results in a doubling of capacity.

This capacity growth is due to the separating of the flows, the shorter headways and the extra platform. A part of this capacity growth is used for the implementation of the PHS High Frequency Programme, in which the basic frequency of several corridors is increased from 4 to 6 trains per hour. The station has capacity for a basic frequency of 8 trains per hour on all corridors, which makes it future proof for the foreseen growth up to 2040.[26]


Train services


International, national and local train services call at the station, most notably the Intercity-Express and NightJet trains to Germany, Switzerland and Austria, domestic Intercity services to all parts of the Netherlands, and local (Sprinter) services providing access to towns all over Utrecht province. Freight services also pass through the station, on the Amsterdam – Betuweroute – Ruhr corridor as well as the Antwerp – Northeast Germany corridor.

The following passenger services call at Utrecht Centraal, adding up to around 70 departures per hour (2022 timetable):


Tracks 1–4: Sprinter (local) services North & Northeast



Tracks 5/7 and 18/19: Intercity / International services Northwest, South & East



Tracks 8–12: Intercity services Northeast & West



Tracks 14/15: Sprinter (local) services Northwest & East



Tracks 20/21: Sprinter (local) services West & South



Timetable


The train services are scheduled in such a way, that there is a basic frequency of an Intercity and a Sprinter every 15 minutes in every direction from Utrecht Centraal. The Intercity trains on the routes Amsterdam – Utrecht, Schiphol – Utrecht, Utrecht – Arnhem and Utrecht – Eindhoven run every 10 minutes.

Some services run only during the peak hour, but on most lines the basic frequency is offered all day. On Sunday mornings and late evenings some services do not run, but even during those times, there is always an Intercity and a Sprinter at least every 30 minutes in every direction.


Bus services


Utrecht Centraal has two bus stations. One on the east side of the railway station (Busstation Centrumzijde) and the other on the west side (Busstation Jaarbeurszijde). The majority of the bus services in and around the city is operated by Qbuzz under the U-OV brand. Syntus Utrecht (Keolis) and Arriva operate some of the regional bus services.


Busstation Centrumzijde



Busstation Jaarbeurszijde


International bus services (Flixbus, Ecolines) call at a separate bus stop near the station.


Tram services


Utrecht Centraal has two light rail (sneltram) stops: Jaarbeursplein on the west side of the station, and Centrumzijde ("downtown side") on the east side of the station. There are three tram routes passing Utrecht Centraal; all three routes stop at both the Jaarbeursplein and Centrumzijde stops.[16]

On weekdays until 21:30, all three routes travel between Centrumzijde and P+R Science Park (in the Uithof district). In late evening, and on weekends or holidays, there is no service to P+R Science Park at which times tram routes 20 and 21 will terminate at Centrumzijde, and there is no tram 22 service.[16]


Bicycles


On both sides of the station, there is a large three-floor bicycle parking station. The parking on the east side is the world's largest bicycle parking station. It opened fully on the 19th of August 2019 at the cost of an estimated €48 million and holds 12,500 bicycles.[27]


References


  1. "Openbaar vervoer". utrecht-monitor.nl.
  2. "Dutch take cycling to a new level, with world's biggest multistorey bike park". the Guardian. 19 August 2019. Retrieved 24 March 2022.
  3. "Openbaar vervoer". utrecht-monitor.nl.
  4. "Nieuwe SleutelProjecten – Definitie op Infrasite.nl". www.infrasite.nl. Retrieved 15 June 2019.
  5. "Utrecht Central – Public transport terminal – CU2030". www.cu2030.nl. Retrieved 15 June 2019.
  6. "Reasons to build". CU2030. Retrieved 24 November 2014.
  7. "Public transport terminal". CU2030. Retrieved 24 November 2014.
  8. "Spot all the trains". Madurodam. Retrieved 15 June 2019.
  9. "Utrecht Trams Holland". The Aylesbury News. Retrieved 18 January 2020.
  10. "Sneltramhalte Utrecht Centraal begin december nieuwe begin-/eindhalte". Stationsgebied Utrecht – CU2030 (in Dutch). 6 November 2009. Archived from the original on 30 May 2012.
  11. "Nieuwe eindhalte tram op Jaarbeursplein geopend". Stationsgebied Utrecht – CU2030 (in Dutch). 23 April 2013. Archived from the original on 28 April 2015. Retrieved 26 January 2020.
  12. "Graafwerk bij tramhalte Jaarbeursplein Utrecht" (in Dutch). Regiotram Utrecht. 6 February 2020. Archived from the original on 3 March 2020. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
  13. "Verhuizing buslijnen Utrecht Centraal per 2 juli". Province of Utrecht (in Dutch). 1 July 2016. Archived from the original on 12 April 2018. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  14. "Nieuw busstation Utrecht Centraal Centrumzijde open". RTV Utrecht (in Dutch). 9 December 2019. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  15. "Utrecht (system map)". Urban Rail. 2019. Retrieved 18 January 2020.
  16. "Vanaf begin juli zonder overstap met de tram reizen" (in Dutch). RegioTram Utrecht. 22 June 2022. Archived from the original on 22 June 2022.
  17. "Veelgestelde vragen". Uithoflijn (in Dutch). City of Utrecht. Archived from the original on 20 January 2020. Retrieved 18 January 2020.
  18. "Haltebouw Jaarbeursplein Fast Forward" (in Dutch). RegioTram Utrecht. 18 September 2020. Archived from the original on 15 November 2020. Retrieved 15 November 2020.
  19. "Vernieuwde tramlijn 60 Utrecht-Nieuwegein/Zuid rijdt vanaf 3 januari" (in Dutch). RegioTram Utrecht. 28 December 2020. Archived from the original on 5 January 2021. Retrieved 5 January 2021.
  20. "Treinverkeer Utrecht uren stil door storing". nos.nl.
  21. "Utrecht Centraal plat door winterweer". Treinreiziger.nl.
  22. "Treinverkeer Randstad ontregeld door storingen". Treinreiziger.nl. Archived from the original on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  23. "270-miljoen-euro-om-spaghetti-van-sporen-utrecht-cs-te-ontwarren". ad.nl.
  24. Waterstaat, Ministerie van Infrastructuur en (23 May 2013). "Doorstroomstation Utrecht – Rapport – Rijksoverheid.nl". www.rijksoverheid.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  25. "Japan op Nederlands spoor: eenvoud loont" (PDF). micheljansen.org.
  26. "NMCA: tegen 2040 loopt het ov vast | OV-Magazine". www.ovmagazine.nl. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  27. See: Utrecht to build world's biggest bike park – for 12,500 bikes, DutchNews.nl, Sunday 27 April 2014. Accessed on 28 April 2014.


Media related to Utrecht Central station at Wikimedia Commons


На других языках


[de] Bahnhof Utrecht Centraal

Der Bahnhof Utrecht Centraal, umgangssprachlich Utrecht CS, ist der Hauptbahnhof der niederländischen Stadt Utrecht. Er ist der größte Bahnhof der Niederlande mit 16 Gleisen an 8 Bahnsteigen, sowie der am meisten frequentierte Bahnhof der Niederlande mit rund 1.500 Zügen[1] und 207.360 (2019)[2] Fahrgästen pro Tag. Utrecht CS ist mittels ICE International zweistündlich mit Deutschland verbunden. Es gibt Direktzüge nach Oberhausen, Düsseldorf, Köln und Frankfurt am Main. Der Bahnhof ist ein wichtiger Umsteigeknoten im Herzen der Niederlande. Fast jede Großstadt der Niederlande hat eine Zugverbindung mit Utrecht. Der Bahnhof liegt an den Bahnstrecken Centraalspoorweg (Utrecht–Kampen), Rhijnspoorweg (Amsterdam–Arnheim), Staatslijn H (Utrecht–Boxtel) und Goudselijn (Utrecht–Rotterdam).
- [en] Utrecht Centraal railway station



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