Järve railway station

Coordinates: 59°24′02″N 24°43′28″E / 59.400561°N 24.724389°E / 59.400561; 24.724389
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Järve
railway station
Järve railway station in 2013
General information
LocationJärve, Kristiine, Tallinn, Harju County
 Estonia
Coordinates59°24′02″N 24°43′28″E / 59.400561°N 24.724389°E / 59.400561; 24.724389
Owned byEesti Raudtee (EVR)
Line(s)Tallinn commuter rail
Platforms2
Tracks2
Train operatorsElron[1]
History
Opened1923
Electrified3 kV DC OHLE
Services
Preceding station Elron Following station
Tondi
towards Tallinn
Tallinn–Turba/Paldiski Rahumäe
towards Turba or Paldiski
Location
Järve railway station is located in Estonia
Järve railway station
Järve railway station
Location within Estonia
Järve railway station is located in Harju County
Järve railway station
Järve railway station
Järve railway station (Harju County)
Järve railway station is located in Tallinn
Järve railway station
Järve railway station
Järve railway station (Tallinn)
Map

Järve railway station (Estonian: Järve raudteepeatus) is a railway station in the Kristiine district of Tallinn, Estonia. The station serves the Järve sub-district which has approximately 3000 residents.

The station is located approximately 5 km (3.1 mi) south from the Baltic station (Estonian: Balti jaam) which is the main railway station of Tallinn, near the Baltic Sea. Järve station is located between the Tondi and Rahumäe railway stations of the Tallinn-Keila railway line.

The station was opened in 1923, and the station building was completed in 1926. There are two platforms along the two-track railway, both 150 meters long.

History[edit]

Although the Tallinn-Paldiski railway opened already in 1870, a station on this site was not opened before 1923. The station building was completed in 1926. Ticket sale was terminated in the station building in 1998.

Operations[edit]

Elron's electric trains from Tallinn to Keila, Paldiski, Turba and Klooga-Rand stop at Järve station.[1] The station belongs to the Zone I, within which traffic is free for Tallinners. In 2022, there were approximately 56 train departures per day at Rahumäe railway station towards Tallinn city center.[2]

There is a possibility to transfer to TLT (Tallinn City Transport) bus line 5, 18, 32, and 57 at a bus station on Pärnu maantee.

Architecture[edit]

The station building from 1926.

The station building in national romantic style was built in 1926 to designs by the Estonian architect and painter Karl Burman (1882–1965).

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Network and Stations". Elron. Retrieved 2 February 2023.
  2. ^ "Elron: Järve-Tallinn".

External links[edit]