Narva raudteejaam (Narva)

Estonia / Ida-Viru / Narva / Vaksali Street, 22
 train station, head house (train station)

The main building of the Narva railway station has been officially recognised as a building monument. The corresponding order was signed by the Minister of Culture Indrek Saar. Completed in 1953, the station is one of the most valuable buildings of Stalinist architecture in Estonia. Narva Railway Station is the easternmost railway station in the Republic of Estonia, located at Vaksali 22 in the city of Narva in Ida-Viru County. Narva Station has two 400 m long platforms. In autumn 2014, the construction of a new full-size inter-rail platform with a height of 550 mm was completed. The station has 25 tracks, 7 of which are designed to accommodate trains up to 1,500 m long. The station can also be used for loading and unloading goods onto and from trains. The station currently has a total of 25.1 km of tracks and covers a total area of ​​28 hectares. The capacity of Narva Station in 2004 was up to 23 pairs of trains per day. In 2011, Estonian Railways began reconstruction of Narva Station, which included widening some of the station tracks and replacing the existing security system with a completely new digital system.
Nearby cities:
Coordinates:   59°22'7"N   28°11'55"E
This article was last modified 10 months ago