Bartolomeu
Căile Ferate Române
New station building
General information
LocationCalea Făgărașului nr. 2, Brașov, Romania
Coordinates45°39′45″N 25°34′28″E / 45.6626°N 25.5745°E / 45.6626; 25.5745
Owned byCFR
Line(s)200 Brașov–FăgărașSibiu
203 Brașov–Zărnești
Platforms4
Tracks10
Construction
Structure typejunction
Platform levels1
Parkingyes
History
Opened1891
Rebuilt~1966
Electrifiedno
Services
Preceding station CFR Following station
Ghimbav
towards Arad
CFR Intercity 200 Brașov
Cristian
towards Zărnești
CFR Intercity 203 Brașov
Terminus
Location
Bartolomeu is located in Romania
Bartolomeu
Bartolomeu
Location in Romania
Bartolomeu is located in Europe
Bartolomeu
Bartolomeu
Location in Europe

Bartolomeu railway station (Romanian: Gara Bartolomeu) is a railway station in the North-West part of Brașov, Romania.

Name and etymology

The station takes its name from the surrounding neighborhood, which in turn was named after Saint Bartholomew Church, the oldest standing church in Brașov, dedicated to one of the twelve apostles. In other languages it is called:

  • Hungarian: Bertalan/Brassó-Bertalan
  • German: Bartholomä/(Kronstädter) Westbahnhof

History

The station's history is closely tied to the establishment and exploitation of the Brașov–Zărnești local railway. The line and its dependencies were built by a company named "Brassó-Háromszéki Helyi Érdekű Vasutak" (BHHÉV), established in 1890. The station was inaugurated on 6 June 1891 and the first official train passed through it on 13 June 1891.[1]

From the very beginning, the exploitation of the line and thus the station was undertaken by MÁV, the Hungarian Royal State Railways. From 1919 on, it was continued by CFR, the Romanian State Railway Company, who nationalized the line in 1932.[2]

Between 7 March 1892 and 16 mai 1933 it was also the terminus station of the Brașov–Satulung Suburban Railway and, from 27 September 1908 on, a station on the Brașov–FăgărașSibiu railway.[3]

In its first years, the station had only three-four tracks, a small warehouse with a platform and a small locomotive depot, with water supply and a turntable. The main building had a hallway, a waiting room for the first and second classes, a ticket sales office, and two rooms for the personnel's office. In 1908 it was extended sideways to include a third class waiting room and an apartment for the station master. The latrines were outside. The personnel consisted of a station master, a station supervisor and two switchmen.[1][4][5]

On 9 October 1916, during the World War I Battle of Brașov, a Romanian company from the 24th Infantry Regiment defending the railway station was surprised by a machine gun section of the German 189th Regiment and completely wiped out.[6]

In 1964–1966 a new, larger station building was erected to the South-West of the old one and the tracks were extended to 10 in 1972–1973. Centralized traffic control was also introduced in 1964.[7]

Starting in 2005, private rail company Regiotrans was granted exclusivity on the Brașov–Zărnești Railway.[8][9]

Industrial junctions

Current status

As of 2017,[10] 29 passenger trains are stopping in this station, all but one being low speed local trains. Of those, 18 belong to Regiotrans, the rest to CFR. Seven CFR InterRegio passenger trains pass through the station without stopping. There is also goods traffic present.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Bellu 1995, p. 82.
  2. Law nr. 1396, published in "Monitorul Oficial" nr. 94 from 20 April 1932.
  3. Bellu 1995, p. 103.
  4. Adressenbuch der Stadt Kronstadt Band 1896.
  5. Arhivele Naționale ale României. Direcția județeană Brașov. Fond Primăria Brașov, 1908.
  6. Kirițescu, Constantin (December 1925). Istoria războiului pentru întregirea României (1916–1919). Vol. 1. pp. 337–338.
  7. Bellu 1995, pp. 83–84.
  8. Onciu, Camelia (16 May 2006). "Glasul roților de tren particular". Monitorul Expres.
  9. "Primul patron de tren de călători". Libertatea. 19 April 2006.
  10. "(home)". Informatica Feroviară.
  • Bellu, Radu (1995). Mică monografie a căilor ferate din România (in Romanian). Vol. I. București: Filaret.
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