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  2. Hamburg Airport S-Bahn line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamburg_Airport_S-Bahn_line

    The journey time from Hamburg Hauptbahnhof to the airport is 24 minutes and it is 25 minutes in the opposite direction. [2] Trains between the city and the airport run at ten-minute intervals during the day and at 20-minute intervals in the early morning and the late evening.

  3. Hamburg Airport station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamburg_Airport_station

    Hamburg Airport (Flughafen) is a station on line S1 of the Hamburg S-Bahn, serving Hamburg's airport in the quarter of Fuhlsbüttel in the northeast of the city. It opened in 2008. It opened in 2008. According to S-Bahn Hamburg GmbH — owner and operator of the S-Bahn — about 13,500 passengers used the service per day in 2009, [ 4 ] with an ...

  4. Hamburg Airport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamburg_Airport

    In the early 1990s, the airport had begun extensive modernisation. The plan, called HAM21, included a new 500-metre (1,600 ft) pier extension, a new terminal (Terminal 1), and the Airport Plaza between Terminals 1 and 2, which includes a consolidated security area. [6] The airport's shareholders are the City of Hamburg and AviAlliance.

  5. List of Intercity-Express lines in Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Intercity-Express...

    Line Direction between ICE 2 (Düsseldorf and Munich) ICE 4 (Kiel, Hamburg and Frankfurt) ICE 8: Berlin and Munich: ICE 9 (Berlin, Cologne and Bonn) ICE 10: Berlin, Hanover and Düsseldorf/Cologne

  6. Intercity Express - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intercity_Express

    Intercity Express (commonly known as ICE (German pronunciation: [iːtseːˈʔeː] ⓘ) and running under this category) is a high-speed rail system in Germany.It also serves destinations in Austria, France, Belgium, Switzerland and the Netherlands as part of cross-border services.

  7. High-speed rail in Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-speed_rail_in_Germany

    Since June 2007, ICEs service Paris from Frankfurt and Saarbrücken via the LGV Est. Unlike the Shinkansen in Japan, Germany has experienced a fatal accident on a high-speed service. In the Eschede train disaster of 1998, a first generation ICE experienced catastrophic wheel failure while travelling at 200 km/h (124 mph) near Eschede ...