Rehovot Railway Station

Rehovot Railway Station
תחנת הרכבת רחובות
محطة الشوارع
Coordinates 31°54′32″N 34°48′23″E / 31.90889°N 34.80639°E / 31.90889; 34.80639Coordinates: 31°54′32″N 34°48′23″E / 31.90889°N 34.80639°E / 31.90889; 34.80639
Owned by Israel Railways
Line(s) Coastal railway line
Platforms 3
Tracks 3
Construction
Parking 150
Disabled access Yes
History
Opened 1920
Services

Binyamina/Netanya - Rehovot/Ashkelon suburban line

Binyamina/Netanya - Rehovot/Ashkelon suburban line
Legend
Binyamina
Caesarea-Pardes Hanna
Hadera Ma'arav
Netanya
Beit Yehoshua
Herzliya
to Hod Hasharon, Lod
Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv Savidor Central
Tel Aviv HaShalom
Tel Aviv HaHagana
to Rishon LeZion Moshe Dayan
to Ben Gurion Airport, Modi'in
Kfar Chabad
Lod
to Be'er Sheva, Jerusalem
Be'er Ya'akov
to Rishon LeZion HaRishonim
Rehovot
Yavne East
to Yavne West
Ashdod Ad Halom
Ashkelon

Source:[1]

Rehovot Railway Station (Hebrew: תחנת הרכבת רחובות, Taḥanat HaRakevet Rehovot) is an Israel Railways passenger station located in the city of Rehovot. It serves the city, the Weizmann Institute of Science and the nearby science industries park, as well as the city of Ness Ziona. The station is named after Ehud Hadar, CEO of Israel Railways between 1994 and 1996.

Location

The station is situated on the East-West AshkelonLod branch of the Tel AvivBe'er Sheva line. It is located in the northern part of Rehovot, 600 meters north of the main gate of the Weizmann Institute and about 1.5 km north of the city center.

History

The station opened in 1920 on the historic El KantaraHaifa railway. The station was mostly used for freight, transporting oranges from the many orchards in Rehovot to the Port of Haifa, with a daily passenger train to Jaffa. The regular passenger service was disrupted in 1927, and continued to operate sporadically during the 1930s.

During World War II the station was used by the allied forces which were sent to the North African front. The warehouses that previously housed citrus fruits were used as barracks and even as a military hospital. In 1943, a group of 714 children who escaped from Poland arrived at the station via Tehran and Port Said. This group was known in Israel as the "Tehran Children". On May 14, 1948, only hours before the Israeli Declaration of Independence, the last British military train left the station for Egypt. The citrus freight service continued until the 1960s.

The station was reopened in 1990 with a suburban service to Tel Aviv. It proved to be a major success, since most residents of Rehovot work in Tel Aviv. Following this success, extensive reconstruction work began in 2000, which included the construction of two new passenger terminals, a pedestrian tunnel under the railway, a bus terminal and two large parking lots. The renovated station opened on December 31, 2001. The Rehovot - Lod railway was double-tracked in 2001.

Following the June 21, 2005 railway disaster near Kibbutz Revadim, trains from Be'er Sheva were diverted through the Kiryat Gat – Ashkelon line and non-stop through Rehovot for a day. This led to severe disruptions of the Ashkelon - Tel Aviv suburban service. Trains from Be'er Sheva were also periodically diverted through Rehovot during the reconstruction of the Lod - Kiryat Gat line.

Future plans

A road bridge designed to carry Route 412 over the railway just west of the station is under construction, and it is due for completion in 2014.

A new railway line between Tel Aviv and Ashdod is currently under construction. When completed, It will allow passenger trains between these two cities to bypass Rehovot. Despite this, Israel Railways plans to double-track the Rehovot-Ashdod line to provide for more freight capacity from the Port of Ashdod.

Design

The station consists of a side platform and an island platform, numbered 1 to 3 from north to south. Between the side platform and the island platform there are two parallel rail tracks, and an additional track to the south of platform 3. There is land available for a fourth rail track and a second side platform which are not built as of 2009.

There are two passenger terminals. The larger northern terminal serves passengers from Nes Ziyyona and the science industries park. A small bus terminal was built next to the northern terminal serving south bound buses, and all northbound buses stop on Route 412, just west of the terminal. The northern terminal houses the station manager's office, the cafeteria and toilets, as well as ticket cashiers and two ticket machines. The southern terminal mostly serves passengers from the city, the Weizmann Institute and the Hebrew University's Faculty of Agriculture and Veterinary Studies. There is a parking lot adjacent to each terminal.

Platform 1 is used for northbound trains, platform 2 for southbound trains and platform 3 is used for trains terminating at the station.

Train service

The station is situated on the Tel Aviv suburban line (Binyamina/Netanya – Tel Aviv – Rehovot/Ashkelon Suburban Service). All trains in this service stop at Rehovot, and some trains terminate at the station.

On weekdays the station is served by 38 southbound and 38 northbound suburban trains. First train departs at 05:57 and last train arrives at 23:31.

Overnight service to Tel Aviv through Ben Gurion Airport is expected to start in August 2012.

Public transport connections

Bus Lines:

Facilities

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rehovot train station.
Preceding station   Israel Railways   Following station
Towards: Binyamina
Be'er Ya'akov
  Binyamina/Netanya - Tel Aviv - Ashdod/Ashkelon
Suburban Service
  Towards: Ashkelon
Yavne East
  1. "Route Map". Israel Railways.
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