Aghost station is a closed or never openedtrain station through which revenue-servicepassenger trains (especiallyrapid transit trains) pass but at which they do not stop. The term is also sometimes used for any unused underground station or any unused station, whether or not trains pass through them. In Germany, a station that has been built in the course of constructing something else as a so-called "Bauvorleistung" (roughly: construction pre-effort) is referred to as a "ghost station", despite the different purpose and origin of the terms. Some English-language publications also refer to "pre-built" stations or parts thereof that have yet to see service as "ghost stations".
The term "ghost station" is acalque of theGerman wordGeisterbahnhof (pluralGeisterbahnhöfe). The German term was coined to describe certain stations onBerlin'sU-Bahn andS-Bahn networks that were closed during the period of Berlin's division during theCold War because they were an integral part of a transit line mostly located on the eastern side of theBerlin Wall. Soon after the wall fell, most of these stations reopened.
Sign atUnter den Linden in 2007, unchanged since the 1930s. It has since been covered by a modern sign showing the station's new name, "Brandenburger Tor".Map of ghost stations in Berlin
In August 1961 theEast German government built theBerlin Wall, ending freedom of movement betweenEast andWest Berlin. As a result, the Berlin public transit network, which had formerly spanned both halves of the city, was also divided into two. SomeU- andS-Bahn lines fell entirely into one half of the city or the other; other lines were divided between the two jurisdictions, with trains running only to the border and then turning back. However, there were three lines—theU-Bahn lines now designatedU6 andU8, and theNord–Süd Tunnel on theS-Bahn—that ran for the most part through West Berlin but passed for a short distance through the borough ofMitte (the historic city centre), which was East Berlin territory. These lines continued to be open toWest Berliners; however, trains did not stop at most of the stations located withinEast Berlin, though for technical reasons they did have to slow down significantly while passing through.[1] The nameGeisterbahnhof was soon aptly applied to these dimly lit, heavily guarded stations by travellers from West Berlin, who watched them pass by through the carriage windows. However, the term was never official; West BerlinU-Bahn maps of the period simply labelled these stations "Bahnhöfe, auf denen die Züge nicht halten" ("stations at which the trains do not stop"). East Berlin maps neither depicted the West Berlin lines nor the ghost stations.U-Bahn maps in theFriedrichstraße transfer station were unique: They depicted all the Western lines, but not theGeisterbahnhöfe, and showed the city divided into "Berlin, Hauptstadt der DDR" ("Berlin, capital of theGerman Democratic Republic") and "Westberlin", theofficial terminology used by East Germany.
The lines were a vital part of theWest Berlin transit network, but because part of the route of some of the lines lay in East Berlin territory, it was difficult for Western support staff to perform maintenance work on the tracks and tunnels. If a train on a West Berlin line broke down in East Berlin territory, then passengers had to wait for Eastern border police to appear and escort them out. The East German government occasionally hinted that it might someday block access to the tunnels at the border and run its own service on the East Berlin sections of these lines. However, this awkward status quo persisted for the entire 28-year period of the division of Berlin.[citation needed]
At the closed stations,barbed wire fences were installed to prevent any would-be escapees from East Berlin from accessing the track bed, and the electrically livethird rail served as an additional and potentially lethal deterrent. An alarm was triggered if anyone breached one of the barriers. As for the entrances, the signage was removed, walkways were walled up and stairways were sealed with concrete slabs. Police stations were built into the windowed platform service booths, from which the whole platform area could be monitored.[citation needed]
A wide white line on the wall marked the exact location of the border. Later, gates were installed at some stations that could be rolled into place at night while the guards were off-duty. Guard posts at other stations were staffed continuously, creating additional employment positions with thetransport police. In the platform area, the guards always worked in pairs, and care was taken in their assignment to assure that there would be no personal ties between them. In addition, superior officers could conduct surprise inspections at any time, thus, maintaining maximum security. Other stations were secured by theEast German border guards.[citation needed]
Friedrichstraße station, though served by Western lines and located in East Berlin territory, was not aGeisterbahnhof. Instead, it served as a transfer point betweenU6 and severalS-Bahn lines. Western passengers could walk from one platform to another without ever leaving the station or having to show papers, much like air travellers changing planes at an international airport. Westerners with appropriatevisas could also enter East Berlin there (they could even get a visa in the station). There was anIntershop in the station that could be accessed without having to pass a border or customs checkpoint of either East or West Germany and it was thus a popular place for westerners to buy cheap alcohol in D-Mark, but the West Berlin customs considered goods bought there contraband and did spot checks on what they considered customs evasion.
TheBornholmer Straße S-Bahn station was the only ghost station not located in a tunnel. It was situated close to the wall near theBornholmer Straße border crossing. West Berlin trains passed through it without stopping. East BerlinS-Bahn trains passed the same station but on different tracks. The tracks used by Western and Eastern trains were sealed off from each other by a tall fence.
Another oddity wasWollankstraße station. LikeBornholmer Straße, it was anS-Bahn stop served by West Berlin trains, but located on East Berlin territory just behind the border. However,Wollankstraße was in use and accessible for West Berliners, as one of its exits opened on a West Berlin street. This exit was exactly on the border line, a warning sign next to it informing passengers about the situation. Its other exits to East Berlin streets were blocked.
The reopening ofJannowitzbrücke U-Bahn station on 11 November 1989, the first of the ghost stations to be reopened after the Fall of the Berlin Wall
The first people to enter the ghost stations after the fall of theBerlin Wall in November 1989 found that they lived up to their informal name, with ads and signage on the walls unchanged since 1961. None of them have been preserved.
The first ghost station to reopen to passenger traffic wasJannowitzbrücke (U8) on 11 November 1989, two days after the fall of the Wall. It was equipped with acheckpoint within the station akin toFriedrichstraße, whereEast German customs and border control were provisionally installed to facilitate passengers heading to or coming from East Berlin. Hand-drawn destination signs were hung up covering the old ones from pre-1961; these signs were both crumbling from age and obviously missing the termini of post-1961 line extensions. On 22 December 1989,Rosenthaler Platz (U8) was reopened with a similar provisional checkpoint.
On 12 April 1990, the third station to reopen wasBernauer Straße (U8). As its northern exit was directly on the border, it could be opened with direct access to West Berlin without the need of a checkpoint. Its southern exit towards East Berlin was not reopened until 1 July 1990.
Discussions on reopening all the U6 and U8 stations including the S-Bahn stationOranienburger Straße,Unter den Linden andNordbahnhof had begun on 13 April 1990 without border controls. These took two months to clean up, removing all the dirt and refurbishing the interiors; all stations had been reopened on 1 July 1990 at 11 a.m., as East Berlin and East Germany had adopted the West German currency (DM), leaving the border checkpoints abandoned.
On 2 July 1990,Oranienburger Straße was the first ghost station on theNord-Süd-S-Bahn to reopen. On 1 September 1990,Unter den Linden andNordbahnhof were opened following reconstruction works. On 12 December 1990,Bornholmer Straße was reopened for West Berlin trains; a second platform for East Berlin trains allowing interchange followed on 5 August 1991. The very last ghost station to reopen wasPotsdamer Platz, which opened on 3 March 1992, following an extensive restoration of the entire North–South tunnel.
In the following years, the city and German government put a great deal of effort into restoring and reunifying theS-Bahn andU-Bahn networks in Berlin. The U-Bahn system reached its pre-war status in 1995 with the reopening ofWarschauer Straße onU1. TheS-Bahn system reached a preliminary completion in 2002 (with the reopening of the ring), even though there are still disused sections of lines closed in the aftermath of the wall. Decisions on reopening of some of these sections are still to be made. There was a political promise made in the course of reunification that all S-Bahn lines and services shut down due to partition were to be restored – with federal funds if need be – but as of 2021 this is still not the case and some former services are seen to be as of lower importance than proposed entirely new construction.
This list only includes those stations in East Berlin territory that western trains passed through without stopping. There were other stations on both sides of the wall that were closed during the division because those sections of track were not in use.
Temporary checkpoints were set up for stations with access toEast Berlin that were reopened before 1 July 1990. Checkpoints were no longer necessary for those reopened after that date when border checks were eliminated with the currency union between East and West Germany.
List of Berlin's ghost stations as a result of the Cold War
From approximately 1951 to 1971, theSchwartzkopffstraße station bore the nameWalter-Ulbricht-Stadion after a nearby stadium named in honour ofWalter Ulbricht, then the First Secretary of theSocialist Unity Party (SED) andde facto leader of East Germany. In 1971, whenUlbricht was deposed and replaced byErich Honecker, the stadium and station were renamedStadion der Weltjugend (Stadium of World Youth). The original name was restored in 1991.
Only direct access to West Berlin was opened on this date (without the need for a checkpoint). The southern exit to East Berlin was not reopened until 1 July 1990.
Only theU8 station was closed. East Berlin Underground line A (part of today'sU2), and line E (today numberedU5), as well asS-Bahn trains continued to stop here.
Only theU8 station was closed. East Berlin S-Bahn trains continued to stop here. After reopening, checkpoints were set up forborder crossing into East Berlin.
In contrast with the above-listed stations, multiple stations in the Berlin area that were of high importance during the Cold War rapidly lost importance and passengers after reunification, some to the point of becoming ghost stations. The most notable examples are:
Genshagener Heide(in German): station on theBerlin Outer Ring located due south of Berlin, quite far from any populated place, lost its importance with the resumption of direct routes from thePotsdam area to East Berlin and due to the reduction of the workforce in theIndustriewerke Ludwigsfelde factory located nearby. Trains running between Potsdam and theBerlin Schönefeld Flughafen station stopped at the station until December 2012. Since then all passenger trains pass through without stopping and it was officially reclassified to aBetriebsbahnhof (service station). A train stop namedLudwigsfelde-Struveshof was built 2 km to the west (closer to populated areas) and brought into service with the closure of theGenshagener Heide station.
Potsdam Pirschheide: aninterchange station also located on the Berlin Outer Ring on the outskirts ofPotsdam, namedPotsdam Hauptbahnhof (Potsdam Main station) between 1961 and 1993, was the most important station of Potsdam when the traffic flow to West Berlin (Berlin–Magdeburg railway) was severely restricted. After resumption of service between Potsdam andBerlin-Wannsee station, thePirschheide station lost its importance, became unstaffed in 1994. Tracks on the upper deck were demolished in 1999 (leaving only a pair of through tracks not adjacent to any platform), and on the lower deck only a single platform was left in service for use by the local trains from Potsdam toMichendorf. Although its present-day importance is negligible and its decaying appearance is not unlike "real" ghost stations from the Cold War era, it still has regular passenger trains stopping at it.
Französische Straße (Berlin U-Bahn) mentioned above shut down permanently in December 2020 when the new interchange station with the extended U5 opened as the two are too close to each other. It is thus the only Berlin U-Bahn station to be a ghost station twice over and for entirely different reasons.
Alberti Norte station in 1913 (top/left) and 2009 (bottom/right)
TheBuenos Aires Underground has four ghost stations. The two stations onLine A were originally two single-platform stations closed in 1953 since their close proximity meant trains had to stop in quick succession and frequencies were reduced. Their opposing platforms, located just metres away from each of the ghost stations, still remain open asPasco andAlberti stations. The stations are preserved to maintain their original appearance and can still be seen when travelling on the line, even being used as a display for a time.[2]
OnLine E, the two stations were closed in 1966 when the line was re-routed closer to the centre ofBuenos Aires in order to improve passenger numbers. They have both been used as maintenance areas for Line E andLine C, while one of the stations served as a set for the 1996 Argentine filmMoebius. The stations were under consideration to be re-purposed as part of the newLine F, however it was later decided to build new tunnels instead.[3]
There are also two stations (Apeadero Boedo andApeadero Carranza) on Line E andLine D which were designed to be used as temporary stations while their respective lines were being extended. Though the platforms remain, they cannot be considered true ghost stations since they were never intended to be a permanent part of the network and designed to be re-purposed as electrical substations once the permanent stations were built.
Royal National Park on theSouth Coast railway line – station in operation until 1991 when the Royal National Park branch closed. (Not an underground station, nor part of an underground network.)
Vienna Underground Railway (U-Bahn): StationLerchenfelder Straße of line U2 closed in 2003 and the oldWestbahnhof station. The U2 stationAn den alten Schanzen is planned to be in use in 2024, but not yet opened.
Vienna Rapid Transit (S-Bahn): several stations have been closed:Radetzkyplatz,Brigittenau Vorortebahnhof,Baumgarten in 1939, the oldPraterstern station,Strandbäder in 2000,Kahlenbergerdorf in 2004,Breitenleer Straße in 2010
Diretor Pestana station, inPorto Alegre. An old station formerly used in a passenger train line fromPorto Alegre toSanta Maria, and currently only cargo trains pass through it in service, while metropolitan trains operated by theTrensurb line only pass there while maneuvering.Aeroporto station of the Trensurb, serving Porto Alegre airport, was built right beside theDiretor Pestana station.
St. Naum Station (Станция Свети Наум) andNDK Station (Станция НДК) of theSofia Metro. Both stations were built in the 1980s, together with theNational Palace of Culture and the redevelopment of the surrounding area. Currently these stations are fully completed and had become operational on 31 August 2012. St. Naum Station is operating under the name ofEuropean Union Metro Station.
Moderno Predgradie Station (Станция Модерно предградие). The station should be in operation with lines 2 & 4 by 2035.
Lower Bay inToronto. Below the main platform for Bay station is an abandoned level which was used for only six months in 1966 when theToronto Transit Commission (TTC) experimentally interlined portions of both theYonge–University andBloor–Danforth lines. This abandoned platform is sometimes referred to as "Lower Bay" by the general public or "Bay Lower" by the TTC.[4]
Municipal Building inCalgary. A downtown subway was originally planned under 8th Avenue for the CalgaryC-Train. In preparation, a short section of tunnel and underground LRT station were built under the Calgary Municipal Building when it was constructed in 1985. Subway plans were halted because the initial surface line on 7th Avenue turned out to have much more passenger capacity than expected. The underground station and downtown subway may be completed in the foreseeable future asfuture C-Train lines which are under construction and proposed will exceed the capacity of the 7th Avenue surface line.[5]
Edmonton LRT. An underground LRT station was built betweenStadium andChurchill stations as a proposed future light rail station. There is concrete poured to form two elevator shafts and part of the platform. There are concrete walls that block stairs that go to theEdmonton Remand Centre and to theEdmonton Law Courts.
Libertad station, located betweenCumming andQuinta Normal inLine 5 of theSantiago Metro, is a ghost station that was never opened because of insufficient passenger demand for the station due to the low density of people traveling around and through it.
Echeverría is a ghost station located inLine 4A, also closed because of the low density of people traveling around and through it.
The western section of Line 1 of the Beijing Subway,Fushouling andStation 53 (Gaojing), has not yet been opened to the public. Fushouling station is under renovation and will open to the public in 2026 or 2027.
Liaoning Road station onLine 3 of theChangchun Rail Transit was permanently closed in 2017 and will no longer reopened, making it the firstlight rail station to be permanently close in China. The station was demolished in August 2021.
Xinhualu station [zh] was the former terminus ofLine 1 of theTianjin Metro. After Line 1 was shut down for renovation on 2001, the station was permanently closed. It was the first subway station in Chinese history to be permanently closed. The surface entrance has been demolished, and it can only be accessed via the track.Xinhualu station will be renovated and reopen to public in future.[6][7][8] Line 1 also have a relocated stationYingkoudao, which relocated to the east side of now-abandoned former station.
OnLine 7 of theShenzhen Metro, there are two stations that have not been opened to the public. They areWenti Park station and Fulin station. Fulin station was initially opposed by most of the surrounding residents during construction, so it was reserved for the development of theLok Ma Chau Loop area. Currently, all trains on Line 7 can only pass through Fulin station without stopping. Although Wenti Park station has been fully built, it is currently only open to internal subway employees commuting to the Shenyun depot and has not yet been opened to the public. The opening date is yet to be determined.
TheKamppi metro station has an unused north–south station, below and at right angles to the east–west one currently in use. Excavated at the same time as the east–west station, it was never outfitted, because the corresponding north–south metro line was never built.[9]
TheHakaniemi metro station has another similar ghost station, built for the U-line which was eventually not constructed, and its excavation remains incomplete. They have no trains and are not accessible.
Under Munkkivuori Shopping Centre in Helsinki is an unfinished space forHelsinki Metro station. The space was reserved during expansion work of the shopping centre in early 60s but never used.
Altenburg-Rheinau, located in Baden-Württemberg but on a line owned and operated by Swiss Federall Railways, closed in 2010 due to low passenger frequency
On some German high speed lines there are provisions made at overtaking stations (which serve an important function for operating trains, but do not appear obvious to most passengers as having any purpose) to allow for (conversion to) passenger service more easily in the future. In some cases this is as little as leaving more space between tracks to allow for the future construction of platforms, while in others there are significant parts of a passenger station constructed before the decision to not serve it after all is made. An example that has attracted particular public debate regarding the feasibility and desirability of passenger service isIlmenau-Wolfsberg service station in a forest nearIlmenau along theNuremberg–Erfurt high-speed railway.
Rumsey station in theMTR. This platform was originally reserved for theEast Kowloon line proposal in the 1970s, in order to minimise the effects on theIsland line. However, these platforms are now abandoned and brick walls have been placed at the two ends of the 60 m (200 ft) long platforms to block them off. The station is now merged intoSheung Wan and formerly served as the terminus of theIsland line before the opening ofWest Island line. Since the platforms were built as the upper platforms, and the proposed Rumsey station concourse was redeveloped as east concourse of Sheung Wan station, passengers going to and from exit E (proposed exit for Rumsey station) must pass through the abandoned platforms. In preparation for the opening of the West Island line extension the station was renovated, and the track area along the platforms was walled off.
A ghost station,Kwu Tung exists on theLok Ma Chau Spur Line of theEast Rail line. Currently, the station only has an underground station box structure and a ventilation shaft. Construction of the station resumes in 2023 and will start operations in 2027.
Abandoned Pondok Rajeg station, photo was taken on 10 June 2016 (2016-06-10).Abandoned Gunung Putri station, photo was taken on 20 March 2015 (2015-03-20).
Brennanstown station exists on theGreen Line of theLuas tram system inDublin, betweenBallyogan Wood andCarrickmines. It was intended to service new suburbs, but, thepost-2008 Irish economic downturn meant that the suburbs were never built and the tram passes through empty fields at that point on the line. The station is labelled "Future Stop" on the route map.[16][17]
Italy does not have a long list of ghost stations. Amongst the few examples isQuintiliani, onLine B of theRome Metro. It was built in 1990 as part of the extension towards the northeast of Line B, but was kept unused because it was meant to serve a planned business district calledSistema Direzionale Orientale (Eastern Directional District) that was never realized.[18]
In the early 2000s the project of the S.D.O. was cancelled and the station, which was in the middle of nowhere, was taken in charge by the Municipality of Rome and renewed to make it compliant with the new security rules issued in the meantime; a new bus line was established to link the station to the nearby Sandro Pertini general hospital. On 23 June 2003 it was officially opened to passenger traffic,[18] ending a 13-year long period of ghost station status.
Sri Rampai station on thePUTRA LRT/Kelana Jaya line inKuala Lumpur. Partially completed during construction between 1994 and 1999 but remaining inactive and mothballed for a decade after the opening of the line, as ridership via the station was initially projected to be too low. Completed and opened in December 2010 following new property developments around the station.
Pervomayskaya (depot) andKaluzhskaya (depot): Temporary stations built in the respective metro depots. After the lines they were serving were extended and proper stations built, these were closed.
Yarmarka, located between theMoskovskaya andStrelka stations. Its construction was started in 1993, but was discontinued in 1996. At first, in this station there was aheadshunt for trains. After the opening of the Strelka station you can see the branch and expansion of thetunnel for the station. Presumably this station will be completed after 2020.[19]
Bukit Brown is an unopened station along theCircle line. It is currently only a shell station with only a ventilation shaft. It is located on top ofBukit Brown Chinese Cemetery and Jalan Mashhor, an abandoned road. SMRT, the operator of the Circle Line, is currently reviewing the possibilities to open the station, however, and it should be open in the future.Hume station is also a ventilation shaft, but opened as a fully-operational station on 28 February 2025.
Currently,Mount Pleasant andMarina South are also ghost stations, to be opened in tandem with housing estates in the area. A shell station calledTagore also exists betweenSpringleaf andLentor station, and will open along with surrounding developments.
Several stations on thePunggol LRT, including the entire West Loop, did not open with the rest of the line in 2005. All of these stations have since opened for service alongside developments in their respective areas. The last station to open, which wasTeck Lee, opened on 15 August 2024, nearly two decades since the line began operations.[20]
Ten Mile Junction station on theBukit Panjang LRT opened in November 1999, and was permanently closed on 13 January 2019, to facilitate upgrading works for the line. The station was previously closed from late 2010 to early 2012 for refurbishment works.
Founders' Memorial station is currently a ghost station withMount Pleasant andMarina South MRT station stations on the same line network. It would open together with the upcoming Founders' Memorial attraction, which the station was named after.
Chamberí onLine 1 ofMadrid Metro – one of the first stations to open, it was closed after train and platform lengths increased to such a degree that the distance from it to the neighboring stations was deemed too short. It is now a museum.
Mercat Central onLine 10 ofMetrovalencia was the only completed station on the section planned, but later abandoned, from Alacant to Tavernes Blanques.[21]
Vevey-Funi, closed in 2024, services replaced by a rush-hour bus line
Weesen refers to two railway stations, one of which was closed in 1969 and the other one in 2013 with the opening of the St. Gallen S-Bahn system, shortly reopened during the ESAF 2025
Zürich Letten, closed in 1989 with the opening of theZurich S-Bahn system, for which a new tunnel was built and which resulted in the closing of the line to Letten station. Its former railway yard became the site of a drug scene during the early 1990's after the closure of the nearbyPlatzspitz park
^Originally 15 km/h (9 mph), after an East German policeman tried to jump on a moving train the mandatory speed was later increased to 25 km/h (16 mph).Jürgen Meyer-Kronthaler, Klaus Kurpjuweit, Berliner U-Bahn – In Fahrt seit über hundert Jahren, be.bra verlag 2009 p. 119