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Home > Railway station layouts


 

At its most basic, a railway station consists of one or more platforms constructed alongside a line of railway. However, railway stations come in many different configurations - influenced by such factors as the geographical nature of the site, the need to serve more than one route which may or may not be connected. Examples include:

This page presents some examples of these more unusual station layouts.

1 Stations in a tunnel

While many railways stations are at ground level, in cities the railway and hence the station platforms are often on an elevated level to facilitate crossings. Also the particular geography of a line sometimes dictates they be elevated (on a bridge, viaduct, or embankment ), be built below the level of the adjoining terrain (in a cutting) or sometimes even inside a tunnel. Examples of individual tunnel stations (i.e. not forming part of a complete metro, or underground railway, system) are:

The Netherlands:

BelgiumFor alternate meanings, see Belgium (disambiguation). Belgian redirects here. For the horse breed commonly used as a draft horse, see Belgian. The Kingdom of Belgium ( Dutch: Belgi French: Belgique German: Belgien is a country in Western Europe, bordered: ItalyThe Italian Republic or Italy ( Italian: Italia is a country in the south of Europe, consisting mainly of a boot-shaped peninsula together with two large islands in the Mediterranean Sea: Sicily and Sardinia. To the north, where it borders France, Switzer: MonacoThe Principality of Monaco known as Munegu in the local dialect, is a city state and the second-smallest country in the world, wedged in between the Mediterranean Sea and France along the French Riviera or Cote d'Azur (The Blue Coast). Consisting mostly o: Norway: Poland: United States of America:

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