Liège-Guillemins railway station
Liège-Guillemins
|
|
---|---|
![]() |
|
File:View on liege-Guillemins station.jpg | |
Location | Place des Guillemins, Liège |
Coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Owned by | Infrabel |
Operated by | National Railway Company of Belgium |
Line(s) | 4, 34, 36, 37, 40, 43, 125 |
Platforms | 5 |
Tracks | 10 |
History | |
Opened | 1842-05-01 2009-09-18 |
Rebuilt | 2009-09-18 |
Traffic | |
Passengers (2009) | 6.26 millions |
Liège-Guillemins railway station (IATA: XHN) is the main station of the city of Liège, the third largest city in Belgium. It is one of the most important hubs in the country and is one of the 3 Belgian stations on the high-speed rail network. The station is used by 15,000[1] people every day which makes it the eleventh busiest station in Belgium and the third in Wallonia.
Contents
History
In 1838, only three years after the first continental railway, a line linking Brussels and Ans, in the northern suburbs of Liège, was opened. The first railway station of Liège-Guillemins was inaugurated in May 1842, linking the valley to the upper Ans station. In 1843, the first international railway connection was born, linking Liège to Aachen and Cologne.
The station was modernised and improved in 1882 and in 1905 for the World Fair in Liège. This Beaux-Arts station was replaced in 1958 by a modern International style building that was used until June 2009, a few months before the opening of the new Calatrava-designed station. The second station was completely demolished to complete the remaining sections of the new station.
New station
The new station by the architect Santiago Calatrava was officially opened on 18 September 2009, with a show by Franco Dragone. It has 9 tracks and 5 platforms (three of 450 m and two of 350 m). All the tracks around the station have been modernised to allow high speed arrival and departure.
The new station is made of steel, glass and white concrete. It includes a monumental arch, 160 metres long and 32 metres high.
The building costs were €312 million.
Train services
Liège-Guillemins station is served by InterCity- and InterRegio trains, connecting Liège with all major Belgian cities, as well as several international destinations such as Aachen, Lille, and Maastricht. In addition to the national traffic, Liège-Guillemins station welcomes Thalys and ICE trains, connecting Liège to Brussels, Paris, Aachen, Cologne, and Frankfurt. Two new dedicated high-speed tracks were built: HSL 2 (Brussels-Liège) and HSL 3 (Liège-German border).
There are also plans for Eurostar and ICE to link Liège to London directly.[citation needed]
The station is served by the following services:
- High speed services (Thalys) Paris - Brussels - Liège - Aachen - Cologne - Düsseldorf - Essen
- High speed services (ICE) Brussels - Liège - Aachen - Cologne - Frankfurt
- Intercity services (IC-01) Ostend - Bruges - Gent - Brussels - Leuven - Liège - Welkenraedt - Eupen
- Intercity services (IC-09) Antwerp - Lier - Aarschot - Hasselt - Liège (weekends)
- Intercity services (IC-12) Kortrijk - Gent - Brussels - Leuven - Liège - Welkenraedt (weekdays)
- Intercity services (IC-13) Hasselt - Liers - Liège - Visè - Maastricht (weekdays)
- Intercity services (IC-13) Liège - Visè - Maastricht (weekends)
- Intercity services (IC-14) Quiévrain - Mons - Braine-le-Comte - Brussels - Leuven - Liège (weekdays)
- Intercity services (IC-18) Brussels - Namur - Liège (weekdays)
- Intercity services (IC-25) Mons - Charleroi - Namur - Huy - Liège (weekdays)
- Intercity services (IC-25) Mouscron - Tournai - Saint-Ghislain - Mons - Charleroi - Namur - Huy - Liège - Liers (weekends)
- Intercity services (IC-33) Liers - Liège - Rivage - Vielsalm - Troisvierges - Ettelbruck - Luxembourg
- Local services (L-01) Namur - Huy - Liège
- Local services (L-15) Liers - Liège - Esneux - Rivage - Marche-en-Famenne - Marloie
- Local services (L-17) Herstal - Liège - Pepinster - Verviers
- Local services (L-21) Waremme - Liege (weekdays)
- Local services (L-21) Landen - Waremme - Liege (weekends)
Preceding station | Thalys | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
toward Paris-Nord
|
Thalys |
toward Essen Hbf
|
||
Preceding station | Deutsche Bahn | Following station | ||
towards Bruxelles-Midi
|
ICE 79 |
towards Frankfurt (Main) Hbf
|
||
Preceding station | SNCB / NMBS | Following station | ||
toward Oostende
|
IC 01 |
toward Eupen
|
||
toward Antwerpen-Centraal
|
IC 09
weekends
|
Terminus | ||
toward Kortrijk
|
IC 12
weekdays
|
toward Welkenraedt
|
||
toward Hasselt
|
IC 13
weekdays
|
toward Maastricht
|
||
Terminus | IC 13
weekends
|
toward Maastricht
|
||
toward Quiévrain
|
IC 14
weekdays
|
Terminus | ||
IC 18
weekdays
|
Terminus | |||
toward Mons
|
IC 25
weekdays
|
toward Liège-Palais
|
||
toward Mouscron
|
IC 25
weekends
|
toward Liers
|
||
toward Liers
|
IC 33 |
toward Luxembourg
|
||
toward Namur
|
L 01 | Terminus | ||
toward Liers
|
L 15 |
toward Marloie
|
||
toward Herstal
|
L 17 |
toward Verviers-Centraal
|
||
toward Waremme
|
L 21
weekdays
|
Terminus | ||
toward Landen
|
L 21
weekends
|
Terminus |
The national trains to Brussels also use the high speed track at 200 km/h, while the Thalys and ICE can go up to 300 km/h (bring Brussels at only 39' minutes from Liège).[2]
Road Connections
Liège-Guillemins is also a transport hub for TEC Bus: more than 1,620 buses carrying 15,000 people serve the station every day. It is one of the rare railway stations in Europe directly connected to the highway network (E40-E25). The connection gives direct access to the large 850 spot parking structure behind the station.[3] No cycling path connection exists between the station and the city.
See also
![]() |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.. |
- National Railway Company of Belgium
- Rail transport in Belgium
- High-speed rail in Belgium
- List of TGV stations
References
- ↑ (xls) Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
External links
- Pages with broken file links
- Articles using Infobox station with markup inside type
- Articles using Infobox station with images inside type
- Articles with unsourced statements from August 2011
- Railway stations in Belgium
- Railway stations in Liège (province)
- Buildings and structures in Liège
- Railway stations opened in 1842
- Santiago Calatrava structures
- Neo-futurism architecture
- Railway stations opened in 2009