Prinzenstraße
Berlin U-Bahn
General information
LocationGitschiner Straße/Prinzenstraße
Kreuzberg, Berlin
Germany
Coordinates52°29′54″N 13°24′22″E / 52.49833°N 13.40611°E / 52.49833; 13.40611
Owned byBerliner Verkehrsbetriebe
Operated byBerliner Verkehrsbetriebe
Platforms2 side platforms
Tracks2
Connections: 140, N1
Construction
Structure typeElevated
Bicycle facilitiesYes
AccessibleYes (eastbound only)
Other information
Fare zoneVerkehrsverbund Berlin-Brandenburg (VBB): Berlin A/5555[1]
History
Opened18 February 1902 (1902-02-18)
Services
Preceding station Berlin U-Bahn Following station
Hallesches Tor U1 Kottbusser Tor
Hallesches Tor
towards Krumme Lanke
U3
Location
Prinzenstraße is located in Berlin
Prinzenstraße
Prinzenstraße
Location within Berlin

Prinzenstraße is a Berlin U-Bahn station on lines U1 and U3.

Overview

It is located roughly where the eponymous street crosses the Landwehrkanal in Kreuzberg. The nearby Böcklerpark, a small park with a hall where music events are often held, and the Sommerbad Kreuzberg swimming pool, colloquially called Prinzenbad, are among the most popular venues in central Kreuzberg. The street and subsequently the station were named after Prince William I, the later German Emperor.

U-Bahn station Prinzenstraße, about 1900

The station on the first U-Bahn line from Potsdamer Platz to Stralauer Tor was opened on 18 February 1902. Because the station is on a viaduct above the junction of Prinzenstraße and Gitschiner Straße, a street level entrance hall could only be erected on its south side on the grounds of a gas plant, while the stairs to the northern platform had to be included in the opposite residential building.

Destroyed in World War II on 28/29 January 1944 and 3 February 1945, the station was rebuilt in the 1950s. It later received new entrance halls in a hotly disputed Postmodern style, in 1984[2] for the north wing and 1991 for the south wing. Inside, a preserved detail of the old station is found at the northern platform, a small sculpture of a frog with a crown and a ball, alluding to the Frog Prince fairy tale.

References

  1. "Alle Zielorte". Verkehrsverbund Berlin-Brandenburg. 1 January 2021. p. 64. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
  2. J. Meyer-Kronthaler, Berlins U-Bahnhöfe, Berlin: be.bra, 1996
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