The station is located in Nuremberg's Nordostbahnhof district and extends in a north-south direction under Leipziger Platz between Mommsenstraße and Kieslingstraße. From both platform heads, stairways lead to a distribution floor spanning the entire platform area. From the south end of the distribution floor, stairways lead to the south side of Leipziger Platz, Elbinger Straße and Mommsenstraße, partly as ramps. From the north end of the distribution floor, staircases lead directly to Leipziger Platz and the bus station, to the north side of Kieslingstraße via a ramp to Nürnberg Nordost station and under the Nuremberg Ring Railway to Bessemerstraße. An elevator connects the platform level with the distribution floor and Leipziger Platz.
Building and architecture
The station building is 160 m long, 17 m wide and 11 m deep. Construction work began on 1 June 1992 and was carried out using the open method with Berlin shoring (Berliner Verbau). When Leipziger Platz was completed, there should have been a four-storey office building above the underground station. The northern part of the station was left open at the top and protected against wind and weather by an easily removable temporary roof construction. To date, the plans have not been implemented in this form, so that the provisional roof construction is still above the open station.
The design of the station was entrusted to Johannes Peter Hölzinger, who at the time was professor at the Academy of Fine Arts, Nuremberg. He designed red colour ribbons which run vertically in the middle of the platform, inclined towards the end of the platform. These are intended to symbolise standstill, acceleration and braking of underground trains.
Station name and ribbons
Platform level
Station concourse with provisional roof construction above
Traffic
The station is served by the underground line . On the surface there is a bus station, which is served by the city bus lines 30, 35, 45, 46, 49, 65 and 95, as well as the DBrailway stationNürnberg Nordost, where the regional train line R21 starts. The night bus line N1 also operates on weekends and before public holidays.
Literature
Stadt Nürnberg/Baureferat (Hrsg.): U-Bahn Nürnberg 14. Presse- und Informationsamt der Stadt Nürnberg, Nürnberg 1996.
Michael Schedel: Nürnberg U-Bahn Album. Robert Schwandl Verlag, Berlin 2007, ISBN3-936573-11-5.