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Munich-Pasing station

Coordinates:48°9′0″N11°27′41″E / 48.15000°N 11.46139°E /48.15000; 11.46139
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromMünchen-Pasing station)
Railway station in Munich, Germany
‹ ThetemplateInfobox station is beingconsidered for merging. ›
München Pasing
s-bahnDeutsche BahnMunich tramway
Entrance building (south side)
General information
LocationPasinger Bahnhofsplatz 7-9 6-10, Pasing-Obermenzing,Munich,Bavaria
Germany
Coordinates48°9′0″N11°27′41″E / 48.15000°N 11.46139°E /48.15000; 11.46139
Owned byDeutsche Bahn
Operated by
Lines
Platforms9
Connections
  • Munich tramwayN19
  • Bus5657
130, 157, 159, 160, 161, 162, 259, 265, HEX, N77, N80, N81, X730, X732
Construction
AccessibleYes (not platform 2)
Other information
Station code4266
DS100 codeMP[1]
Category2[2]
Fare zoneMVV: M and 1[3]
Website
History
Opened
  • 7 October 1840 (original station)
  • 1873 (current station)
Passengers
200885,000 daily, including approximately 65,000 S-Bahn
Services
Preceding stationDB FernverkehrFollowing station
Augsburg HbfICE 2
Sprinter
München Hbf
One-way operation
Augsburg HbfICE 11München Hbf
Augsburg HbfICE 18München Hbf
Terminus
Augsburg HbfIC 18
Augsburg HbfIC 24
Königssee
Munich East
Augsburg HbfICE 25München Hbf
Terminus
Augsburg HbfICE 42
Augsburg HbfICE 78
Augsburg HbfIC 87München Hbf
towardsWien Hbf
Preceding stationDB Regio BayernFollowing station
Weilheim (Oberbay)
towardsMittenwald
RE 61München Hbf
Terminus
Weilheim (Oberbay)
towardsLermoos
RE 62
GeltendorfRE 70
Geltendorf
towardsOberstdorf
RE 76
TutzingRB 6
TutzingRB 60
StarnbergRB 65
Starnberg
towardsKochel
RB 66
Fürstenfeldbruck
towardsBuchloe
RB 74
Preceding stationFollowing station
Mering
towardsUlm Hbf
RE 9München Hbf
Terminus
MeringRE 80
Mering
towardsAalen Hbf
RE 89
MammendorfRB 86
MammendorfRB 87
Geltendorf
towardsMemmingen
RE 72
BuchloeRE 96
Preceding stationFollowing station
Geltendorf
towardsFüssen
RB 68München Hbf
Terminus
Preceding stationMunich S-BahnFollowing station
Langwied
towardsMammendorf
S3Laim
Leienfelsstraße
towardsGeltendorf
S4Laim
towardsEbersberg
Westkreuz
towardsTutzing
S6
Westkreuz
towardsHerrsching
S8Laim
towardsFlughafen
Aubing
towardsGeltendorf
S20Heimeranplatz
Location
Map
Old Pasing station, 2008

Munich-Pasing is a railway station in the west ofMunich.[4] It is the third-largest station in the city, afterMünchen Hauptbahnhof andMünchen Ost.

History

[edit]

When thefirst Munich railway was built from Munich toLochhausen on the western outskirts of Munich in 1839, a station with two wooden huts was built in the municipality of Pasing. The line was completed toAugsburg on 7 October 1840. In 1847, a brick station building designed byFriedrich Bürklein was built on the southern side of the railway tracks in Pasing.[5] Bürklein also designed theMunich Central Station (Hauptbahnhof), theMaximilianeum and the brickwork of theMaximilianstraße. The station building, a two-story building with two wings and a waiting room is the oldest surviving railway station in Bavaria.[6] Theline to Starnberg was opened on 21 May 1854.

South side of the station building in 2006

When the construction ofanother line from Munich west toBuchloe began a short time later in 1873, the station had to be expanded to six tracks with 25 houses for railway workers due to the strong growth of the town. This was accompanied by the construction of a new, larger station building. The current station building was designed by George Frederick Seidel and is heritage-listed; it was built about one hundred metres west of the old "Bürklein station" and opened to the public on 1 May 1873. A goods shed was built to the north of the tracks.

Pasing quickly became a popular destination for excursions and the station became a major transport hub due to its convenient transport links to the neighbouring city of Munich and its location at a junction with four lines—in 1903 wasthe last line was added toHerrsching. 64,842 tickets were sold at Pasing station in 1874 and the figure was more than a million in 1900.[7] In 1905, trains ran at 7.5-minute intervals on the 12 minute run between Pasing and Munich Hauptbahnhof—a train density, which comes close to the current S-Bahn service. The development of Pasing as a "college town" in western Munich promoted traffic. The freight station was established east of the passenger station about 1900. The lines passing through Pasing were electrified between 1916 and 1927.

The station was renamedMünchen-Pasing on 1 October 1938 after the Nazi regime had forced the annexation of Pasing by Munich. TheReichsbahnbaudirektion (Reichsbahn Construction Authority) had far-reaching plans to transform the railway facilities in Munich, including the conversion of Munich Hauptbahnhof into a through station and it relocation to the vicinity of Friedenheimer Bridge and the construction of a boulevard betweenStachus and Pasing. Because of the outbreak of war, only the construction of a train depot to the west of Pasing station, which was redesignated as theWestbahnhof (west station), and a smaller construction depot were in fact built. The idea that was developed at this time of building an S-Bahn system in Munich was not implemented until nearly 30 years after the war.

Between 1951 and 1958, as part of a comprehensive expansion of capacity, the entire track area was shifted by about 60 metres to the north and lowered by about two metres. The old platforms were removed or replaced. The station underpass under the western part of the station was rebuilt as a mail and baggage tunnel with lifts to the platforms. The station building was now separated from the railway tracks. Furthermore, from 1954 to 1957, the former six signal boxes at Pasing station were replaced by arelay interlocking built bySiemens & Halske. This work cost 34 millionmarks. Finally in 1959, the approach to the line towards Augsburg was rebuilt with aflying junction so entries and exits from the station to the Augsburg line could run independently from traffic running to the depot to the west of the station.

On 28 May 1972, a few months before the opening of theSummer Olympics in Munich, theMunich S-Bahn went into regular operation. This was accompanied in the Pasing station area with further modifications of the junctions of the four suburban lines as an important junction for the new S-Bahn network. The tracks running to Westkreuz (now linesS 6 andS 8) now ran under the lines towards Aubing (S 4) and Lochhausen (S 3).

In addition to the numerous S-Bahn services, long-distance services stopped in Pasing. While originallyIntercity (IC) trains only stopped at Pasing station in the peak hours, Pasing was upgraded in the timetable of the summer of 1991 as an IC network station. Since 1992 Pasing has been connected directly toMunich Airport by line S 8 at 20-minute intervals.

Current situation

[edit]

Pasing station is currently used by 85,000 daily passengers and is the fourth busiest station in Bavaria. Most of the regional and long-distance trains, including severalICE and IC services operated by Deutsche Bahn towards Augsburg, Buchloe and Tutzing andAlex services toLindau andOberstdorf, stop in Pasing and are timed to stop at about 0 and 30 minutes past each hour in order to create connections.

Railways

[edit]
ICE 1Heppenheim/Bergstraße in München-Pasing station running towardsFrankfurt

South of the railway tracks is the station building of 1873, which is still used today and contains administrative offices of Deutsche Bahn, a travel centre, aServicePoint and a fast food restaurant. To its north it is adjoined by a flat, hall-like building, the so-calledWürmtaldächer; its ceiling is supported by cast-iron bars of the original platform hall and houses the ticket office, the newsagent and other catering establishments. From here an inclined ramp leads to a tunnel under the tracks from which the platforms can be reached. Since the commissioning of the electronic signal box on 16 August 2011, the tracks are numbered from south to north, starting at track 2, until then, the numbers of all tracks were one less. The central platforms of tracks 3 to 10 and the side platform of track 2 are accessible by stairs from the main tunnel; there are also lifts on tracks 5/6, 7/8 and 9/10. After passing under tracks without platforms, the tunnel connects on the north side of the station with a small staircase toAugust-Exter-Straße, where there is a taxi rank and bus stops and thePasinger Fabrik cultural centre is adjacent. South of the station building is the station forecourt (Bahnhofsvorplatz) with a taxi rank, bus stops and short-term parking.[4] Currently,tram line 19 is being extended from Pasing Marienplatz to Pasing station. There are bicycle stands to the west between the entrance building and sidings. An operations tunnel runs under the tracks from the parking area. Disabled people can use this tunnel, which is only accessible from the south, to reach the platforms by lifts. East of the entrance building is the first Pasing station building, called the Bürklein station. Another tunnel runs under the tracks from here, which is usable by pedestrians and cyclists. This was equipped with stairs to tracks 3–10 in 2009 as part of the restructuring of the regional and mainline platforms.

In the immediate vicinity of the station two streets pass (Offenbachstraße to the east, Lortzingstraße/Alte Allee/Pippinger Straße to the west) under the tracks, connecting thePasing Villenkolonien (“villa colonies”, wealthy suburbs) and the other districts lying north of the railway with central Pasing, south Pasing and the Landsbergerstraße/Bodenseestraße (B 2), which runs parallel with railway to central Munich in an east–west direction. Between the station and the western underpass, the rail tracks cross the Pasing–Nymphenburg canal and theWürm river, which has a pedestrian and bicycle path (Hermann-HesseWeg) running along its landscaped shore.

The platform tracks in regular operation are as follows: track 2 at the south of the station is used for trains on S-Bahnline S 20 to and fromDeisenhofen. Track 3 and 4 are used by regional trains to and fromTutzing andBuchloe. Track 5 and 6 are reserved for S-Bahn services running into the city and tracks 7 and 8 for S-Bahn services running out of the city. Platform 9 and 10 is used by regional and long-distance trains on the line toAugsburg. By the use of appropriate crossovers in the stations tracks, individual platforms can be used very flexibly in case of malfunctions.

The lengths of the platforms are as follows:[8]

  • Platform 0 (track 2): 221 m
  • Platform I (tracks 3 and 4): 280 m
  • Platform II (tracks 5 and 6): 210 m
  • Platform III (tracks 7 and 8): 210 m
  • Platform IV (tracks 9 and 10): 410 m

The platform edges of all the platforms previously had a height of 85 cm and therefore were not built to a normal German standard. Modification to the standard S-Bahn height of 96 cm for tracks 5-8 and to the standard long-distance/regional height of 76 cm for tracks 2–4 and 9 and 10 has begun.

All platforms are fitted with LCD screens, indicating the next services. On the southern and northern end of the underpass and on the stairways to the platforms there are also screens that can display the destination and departure times for up to seven trains and information about service disruptions.

Rail connections

[edit]

The lines from Munich Central Station separate at Pasing and run to the west and south-west. All lines are fully electrified and duplicated and the lines to Starnberg and Lochhausen have four tracks. The following timetable routes pass through the station or start here:

Long distance services

[edit]

München-Pasing station is served by the following services:

LineRouteFrequency
ICE 11Berlin OstbfBerlinLeipzigErfurtFuldaFrankfurtMannheimStuttgartUlmAugsburgMünchen-PasingMunichEvery 2 hours
ICE 18Hamburg-Altona – Berlin Hbf –Halle – Erfurt –Nuremberg –Ingolstadt/Augsburg –München-Pasing – MunichIndividual services
ICE 24Hamburg-Altona – Hamburg –HannoverGöttingenKassel-WilhelmshöheWürzburgDonauwörth – Augsburg –München-Pasing – Munich –RosenheimWörglSchwarzach-St. VeitSome trains
Garmisch-PartenkirchenInnsbruck
IC 24Hamburg-Altona – Hamburg – Hannover – Göttingen – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Würzburg – Donauwörth – Augsburg –München-PasingMünchen OstBerchtesgaden1 train pair
ICE 25Hamburg-Altona –HamburgHannover – Göttingen – Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe – Fulda –Würzburg – (Nuremberg –) Augsburg –München-Pasing – MunichEvery 2 hours
(Oldenburg –)Bremen
IC 28(Warnemünde – Berlin –Berlin SüdkreuzLutherstadt Wittenberg – Leipzig – Jena Paradies –SaalfeldLichtenfelsBambergErlangen –) Nuremberg –Donauwörth – Augsburg –München-Pasing – Munich2 train pairs
ICE 42(Hamburg-Altona – Hamburg – Bremen –Münster –)DortmundEssenDuisburgDüsseldorfCologneSiegburg/BonnFrankfurt Airport – Mannheim – Stuttgart – Ulm – Augsburg –München-Pasing – MunichEvery 2 hours
IC 87Stuttgart – München –Rosenheim – Salzburg –LinzSt. PöltenWien1 train pair

Most trains run non-stop from Pasing to Munich Hauptbahnhof, only a few services run through theLandsberger Straße junction and theSouth Ring directly toMünchen Ost station, without stopping at Munich Hauptbahnhof.

Regional services

[edit]

In Pasing numerousRegional-Express andRegionalbahn services regularly offer connections toMittenwald,Innsbruck,Garmisch-Partenkirchen,Weilheim,Memmingen,Kempten, Oberstdorf, Lindau and Augsburg. Also some trains, especially in the peak hours, stop at the end points of the S-Bahn lines and at selected other busy commuter stations (Fürstenfeldbruck/S4 and Starnberg/S6) and give rapid connections to the city of Munich.

Train classRouteFrequency
RE 9MunichMünchen-PasingAugsburgUlmHourly
RE 61

RE 62

Werdenfelsbahn:
Munich –München-PasingTutzingWeilheimMurnauGarmisch-PartenkirchenMittenwald / Lermoos
Some trains
RE 70 /

RE 76

Munich –Munich-PasingKauferingBuchloeKaufbeurenKempten – Immenstadt –Lindau-Reutin /OberstdorfEvery 2 hours
RE 72Munich –Munich-PasingGeltendorf – Kaufering – Buchloe – Türkheim –Mindelheim – MemmingenEvery 2 hours
RB 74Munich –Munich-PasingFürstenfeldbruck – Geltendorf – Kaufering – BuchloeHourly
RE 96Munich –Munich-Pasing – Kaufering – Buchloe – Memmingen – Kißlegg – Lindau-Insel – Lindau-ReutinEvery 2 hours
RB 6 /

RB 60

Werdenfelsbahn:
Munich –München-Pasing – Tutzing – Weilheim – Murnau – Garmisch-Partenkirchen
(– Mittenwald – Seefeld –Innsbruck / – Reutte in Tirol – Pfronten-Steinach)
Hourly
RB 65/

RB 66

Werdenfelsbahn:
Munich –München-Pasing – Tutzing – Weilheim / Kochel
Hourly
RB 68Munich –Munich-Pasing – Kaufering – Buchloe – Kaufbeuren –Füssen3 train pairs
RB 86/

RB 87

Munich –München-PasingMering – Augsburg – (Dinkelscherben) /Donauwörth (–NördlingenAalen)Hourly

S-Bahn

[edit]

Munich S-Bahn lines,S3Holzkirchen-Mammendorf,S4 (Ebersberg-Geltendorf),S6Munich East-Tutzing,S8Munich Airport-Herrsching andS20 (Pasing-Deisenhofen) call at the station.

Four of these five S-Bahn lines are bundled on the so-calledS-Bahn trunk line through the centre of Munich, giving the S-Bahn a very high frequency of trains between Munich East and Pasing. During peak hour lines S 3 and S 8 operate every 10 minutes and lines S 4 and S 6 operate every 20 minutes, producing 18 services an hour to the city centre, and there are also some regional services that can also be used with the tickets of theMünchner Verkehrs- und Tarifverbund (Munich Transport and Tariff Association) to the Hauptbahnhof.

Pasing is also the terminus of services on S-Bahn line S 20, which runs non-stop throughLaim on the so-calledSendlinger Spange (Sendling link) to connect to the south on the route of line S 7 and fromSolln over theGroßhesselohe Bridge over theIsar toDeisenhofen. It is one of only three S-Bahn lines that does not serve the central section: (Laim–)Donnersbergerbrücke–Hauptbahnhof–Marienplatz–East Munich.

During peak hour, there are also additional S-Bahn trains running from outer areas that run without stopping from Pasing to the Hauptbahnhof, where they end, or continue from Pasing as a service of line S 20.

Tram and bus

[edit]

Apart from its numerous rail connections, Pasing station is a major inner-city transport hub, due to Pasing's historical development as an originally separate town.Tram line 19 terminates in front of the station, having been extended fromPasinger Marienplatz in December 2013.[9] The station is also served during the day by a total of six inner-city bus routes, including two very frequent Metrobus routes, which stop at the south or the north sides of the station (south: lines 56, 57, 157, 160, 161, 162; north: 160).

At night, central Munich is accessible hourly by night tram N19 from Pasing. On weekends this runs every half-hour and is complemented by two night bus routes to Neuaubing (N47) and Aubing Gröbenzell, Puchheim and Germering (N80/N81).

Moreover, Pasing is the end of the regional bus route 732 toOdelzhausen.

Pasing station is used daily by a total about 21,000 bus passengers (arriving, departing or transferring). In addition about 4,900 passengers come by tram to Pasing Marienplatz.

Future extension plans

[edit]

An extension of theMunich U-Bahn fromLaimer Platz to Pasing station has been considered, but is unlikely to be carried out for some years.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2009/2010 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009.ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  2. ^"Stationspreisliste 2025" [Station price list 2025](PDF) (in German).DB InfraGO. 28 November 2024. Retrieved5 December 2024.
  3. ^"S-Bahn, U-Bahn, Regionalzug, Tram und ExpressBus im MVV"(PDF).Münchner Verkehrs- und Tarifverbund. December 2019. Retrieved28 February 2020.
  4. ^ab"Map of the station area, showing the S-Bahn station, bus stops and disabled access"(PDF) (in German). MVV. Retrieved24 March 2013.
  5. ^Ralf Roman Rossberg (2011). "Ein über 160-jähriges Juwel strahlt wieder".Eisenbahnmagazin (in German).9 (42).ISSN 0342-1902.
  6. ^Renate Mayer-Zaky, Reinhard Bauer (1996).Pasing. Stadt in der Stadt. Das Stadtteilbuch (in German). Munich: Bavarica-Verlag Dr. Reinhard Bauer. p. 134.ISBN 3-923395-02-7.
  7. ^Renate Mayer-Zaky, Reinhard Bauer (1996).Pasing. Stadt in der Stadt. Das Stadtteilbuch (in German). Munich: Bavarica-Verlag Dr. Reinhard Bauer. p. 133.ISBN 3-923395-02-7.
  8. ^"Platform information on München-Pasing" (in German).Deutsche Bahn. Retrieved25 March 2013.
  9. ^"Munich opens Pasing tram extension".Rail Journal. Simmons-Boardman Publishing Inc. Retrieved10 April 2014.

Sources

[edit]
  • Renate Mayer-Zaky, Reinhard Bauer (1996).Pasing. Stadt in der Stadt. Das Stadtteilbuch (in German). Munich: Bavarica-Verlag Dr. Reinhard Bauer.ISBN 3-923395-02-7.
  • Peter Lisson, ed. (1991).Drehscheibe des Südens. Eisenbahnknoten München (in German). Darmstadt: Hestra-Verlag.ISBN 3-7771-0236-9.
Wikimedia Commons has media related toMünchen-Pasing station.
U-Bahn
  • U1
  • U2
  • U3
  • U4
  • U5
  • U6
  • U7
  • U8
S-Bahn
  • S1
  • S2
  • S3
  • S3 old(defunct)
  • S4
  • S5
  • S5 old(defunct)
  • S6
  • S7
  • S8
  • S20
  • S27(defunct)
  • A(defunct)
Tram
  • 12
  • 16
  • 17
  • 18
  • 19
  • 20
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
  • 25
  • 27
  • 28
  • N17
  • N19
  • N20
  • N27
BusBus
Fare Zones
  • Farezone
  • Farezone
  • Farezone
  • Farezone
  • Farezone
  • Farezone
  • Farezone
Projects
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