Solna station

Coordinates: 59°21′53″N 18°0′37″E / 59.36472°N 18.01028°E / 59.36472; 18.01028
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Solna
Pendeltåg
View in 2023 towards the nearby Westfield Mall of Scandinavia
General information
PlatformsIsland
Construction
Structure typeat-grade
History
Opened1895
Rebuilt1911
Passengers
201920,900 boarding per weekday[1] (commuter rail)
20195,200 boarding per weekday[1] (Tvärbanan)
Services
Preceding station Stockholm commuter rail Following station
Ulriksdal 40 Stockholm Odenplan
Ulriksdal
towards Märsta
41
42X Stockholm Odenplan
towards Nynäshamn

Solna is a station in Solna Municipality in Stockholm for commuter trains and the Tvärbanan light rail. The lines J40 (Uppsala C-Södertälje C), J41 (Märsta-Södertälje C), J42 (Märsta-Nynäshamn) and L30 (Sickla-Solna station) stop here, as well as ten bus lines. The commuter train station opened in 1895, but was moved a 100 meters in 1903 and moved again in 1911, when the tunnel through the hill Hagalundsberget to the south was completed. In 1955 the name of the station was changed from "Hagalund" to "Solna".[2] The northern entrance is located at a bridge connecting the Arenastaden and Frösunda areas of the Järva district. Arenastaden is home to the Friends Arena and the Westfield Mall of Scandinavia. The southern entrance is located between the districts Hagalund and Råsunda.[3] In 2014 the Tvärbanan line was extended to the south entrance, with a stop called Solna station.[4] A metro station, named "Arenastaden", on a new extension from Odenplan, is planned to have its southern entrance next to the Tvärbanan station, on the other side from the railway station entrance, while the northern exit will be just south of the Arenastaden area.[5] On an average day, 20 900 journeys are done by commuter train from Solna station, 5 200 by Tvärbanan and 4 600 by bus.[1]

59°21′53″N 18°0′37″E / 59.36472°N 18.01028°E / 59.36472; 18.01028

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "Fakta om SL och regionen 2019" (PDF) (in Swedish). Storstockholms Lokaltrafik. p. 40. Archived (PDF) from the original on 27 December 2020. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  2. ^ "När järnvägen till Solna bytte spår". DN.SE. February 15, 2013.
  3. ^ "Gällande detaljplaner - Solna stad". www.solna.se.
  4. ^ "Tvärbanan går hela vägen till Solna station". www.sll.se.
  5. ^ "Var ska stationerna ligga? - Nya tunnelbanan". www.nyatunnelbanan.sll.se. Archived from the original on 2016-02-15.