Berlin Wollankstraße station

Wollankstraße
Hp
Location Pankow, Berlin, Berlin
Germany
Coordinates 52°33′55″N 13°23′32″E / 52.56528°N 13.39222°E / 52.56528; 13.39222Coordinates: 52°33′55″N 13°23′32″E / 52.56528°N 13.39222°E / 52.56528; 13.39222
Line(s)
Platforms 2
Other information
Station code 6871
DS100 codeBWOK
Category4 [1]
Website www.bahnhof.de
History
Opened
  • 10 July 1877
  • 1 October 1984

Berlin Wollankstraße (German: Bahnhof Wollankstraße) is a railway station in the Pankow district of Berlin, Germany. It is served by the Berlin S-Bahn and several local buses.

History

The station opened as Bahnhof Prinzenallee on 10 July 1877 at the Nordbahn railway line from Berlin to Neubrandenburg. In 1893 it received the name Pankow (Nordbahn), while the former Pankow railway station was called Pankow-Schönhausen. The Nordbahn line was connected to the S-Bahn system on 5 June 1925 and the station was renamed Wollankstraße on 3 October 1937.

After World War II the train service was resumed on 19 July 1945. From 1949 the station was situated next to the border between East and West Berlin, on the east side, in Berlin's Pankow district. In 1961 the Berlin Wall was built just to the east of the station. The station remained in service within the West Berlin S-Bahn system, and could only be reached by passengers from the adjacent West Berlin borough of Wedding. The entrances to the east remained bricked up until 1989. Nevertheless, during this period, the station was staffed and controlled by East German railway officials, and while the West Berlin S-Bahn trains were passing between Wollankstrasse station and Friedrichstrasse station, they were driven by an East German State railway driver who returned home to East Berlin every day. This was at a time when only the select few were allowed to exit East Germany. Friedrichstrasse station was situated inside East Berlin, but the West Berlin S-Bahn service operating from that station was not accessible to East Berliners.

In popular culture

The station features prominently in the 2011 thriller The Debt as a location along the border where an attempt is made to smuggle a Nazi war criminal from East Berlin to West Berlin. The film suggests that it would be possible to access a train stopped at the station from an adjacent property. In reality, the scenes depicted in the film could not have taken place, since the station is built on a viaduct and trains are elevated above street level.

Notes

  1. "Stationspreisliste 2016" [Station price list 2016] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 1 December 2015. Retrieved 24 January 2016.

External links

Preceding station   Berlin S-Bahn   Following station
toward Oranienburg
S1
toward Wannsee
toward Hennigsdorf
S25
toward Teltow Stadt
S85
toward Grünau
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/24/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.