Liljeholmen
Stockholm metro station
General information
Coordinates59°18′37″N 18°1′21″E / 59.31028°N 18.02250°E / 59.31028; 18.02250
Elevation4.6 m (15 ft) above sea level
Owned byStorstockholms Lokaltrafik
Platforms2 island platforms and 1 side platform (Red Line trains)
2 side platforms (Tvärbanan)
Tracks4 (2 for each T13 and T14)
2 (Tvärbanan)
ConnectionsTvärbanan tram
Construction
Structure typePartially underground
AccessibleYes
Other information
Station codeLIH
History
Opened5 April 1964 (5 April 1964)
Passengers
201936,350 boarding per weekday[1] (metro)
201915,200 boarding per weekday[1] (Tvärbanan)
Services
Preceding station Stockholm metro Following station
Aspudden
towards Norsborg
Line 13 Hornstull
towards Ropsten
Midsommarkransen
towards Fruängen
Line 14 Hornstull
Location

Liljeholmen is a Stockholm metro station in the city's southern Liljeholmen district. It is on the Red line (T13 and T14). The station is also an interchange with the Tvärbanan tramway, and a bus terminal. Liljeholmen metro station is also connected to Nybodadepån, a depot/garage for subway trains and buses, which is located in the south part of Liljeholmen.

Liljeholmen was opened on 5 April 1964 as part of the first stretch of the Red line, between T-Centralen and Fruängen, with a branch to Örnsberg.[2] It was a surface-level station with two platforms and only one exit at the southern part of the station, where it was a bus terminal. But since 2000, there is also a second exit towards the north part of Liljeholmen, which is connected to the Tvärbanan tramway station Liljeholmen. In the beginning of the 2000s (decade), the station was rebuilt to an indoor-station (though still above ground), with a new 3rd platform for trains towards Fruängen/Norsborg, which is connected to a new underground-bus-terminal, and above the station, new squares and houses were built.[3]

References

  1. 1 2 "Fakta om SL och regionen 2019" (PDF) (in Swedish). Storstockholms Lokaltrafik. pp. 51, 55. Archived (PDF) from the original on 27 December 2020. Retrieved 29 March 2021.
  2. Schwandl, Robert. "Stockholm". urbanrail.
  3. "Liljeholmen".
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