Djursholms Ösby

Coordinates: 59°23′53″N 18°03′32″E / 59.39806°N 18.05889°E / 59.39806; 18.05889
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Djursholm's Ösby
General information
LocationDjursholmDanderyd
Sweden
Coordinates59°23′53″N 18°03′32″E / 59.39806°N 18.05889°E / 59.39806; 18.05889
Operated byStorstockholms Lokaltrafik/Arriva
Line(s)Roslag Railway
ConnectionsBus: 509
History
Opened1890
Passengers
20191,000 boarding per weekday[1]
Djursholms Ösby in March 2010, showing the old station building
Old signal box at Djursholms Ösby used until 1984

Djursholms Ösby is a branch railway station on Roslagsbanan, a suburban commuter railway north of Stockholm in Sweden. It serves Ösby in Djursholm in Danderyd Municipality and is 6.6 km from Stockholm East Station.

The station opened in 1890 when Djursholmsbanan line was inaugurated, at the site where this line branched off from the tracks to Rimbo, and was originally called Djursholm. From 1893 to 1920 the name of the station was Ösby and since then it has been Djursholms Ösby. The line was electrified on 15 May 1895. In 1910 another branch was opened, also from this site, first to Altorp, later extended to Lahäll and Näsbypark. With local traffic in four directions, the station became very busy, with approximately 340 trains per day in the early 1950s, making it one of Sweden's busiest railway stations at the time. It originally had a train shed for Djursholmsbanan.

The original Djursholmsbanan (the Eddavägen branch line) was closed in 1976, and during the 1970s and 1980s the whole Roslagsbanan was threatened with closure, but in the late 1990s Djursholms Ösby station was completely renovated.

There are four platforms: two for the Kårsta and Österskär lines and two for the Näsbypark line. The old station building remains in the middle, and is now rented by a private tenant. A signal box, which was still in use into the 1980s, also remains.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Fakta om SL och regionen 2019" (PDF) (in Swedish). Storstockholms Lokaltrafik. p. 54. Archived (PDF) from the original on 27 December 2020. Retrieved 2 April 2021.