Tel Aviv–HaShalom railway station
Tel Aviv HaShalom תחנת תל אביב השלום | |
---|---|
Israel Railways | |
General information | |
Location | 10 Givat HaTahmoshet St., Tel Aviv |
Coordinates | 32°04′24″N 34°47′35.5″E / 32.07333°N 34.793194°E |
Line(s) | Ayalon Railway |
Platforms | 2 |
Tracks | 3 |
Construction | |
Parking | No Parking |
Bicycle facilities | 50 spaces |
Accessible | Yes |
History | |
Opened | 5 May 1996 |
Electrified | Yes |
Passengers | |
2019 | 15,352,944[1] |
Rank | 1 out of 68 |
Tel Aviv HaShalom railway station (Hebrew: תַּחֲנַת תֵּל אָבִיב הַשָּלוֹם) is a major railway station on the Ayalon Railway in central Tel Aviv, Israel, serving most lines of Israel Railways. It is located in the median of the Ayalon Highway at the HaShalom interchange, near the city's main commercial area and HaKirya IDF base. In 2019, over 15 million passengers used the station, making it the busiest in the country.
The station was built by the Polish company Mostostal Warszawa[2] and opened in 1996 with two tracks served by two side platforms. One of the platforms was turned into an island platform when a third track was added in 2006. The station building is located above the platforms, with entrances on the north side of HaShalom Road and via a bridge connected to the Azrieli Center mall and the Shaul HaMelech light rail station.
Exit-only stairways were opened in 2008 to provide direct access to bus stops on the southern side of HaShalom Road. In February 2021 Israel Railways completed the construction of a second passenger terminal building located on the southern side of HaShalom road, opposite from the existing passenger building.
Electronic boards display the timetable in the station building, on the platforms, and in the shopping mall.
Electrification works in the station were completed in 2020. An additional side platform and fourth track are expected to be added to the station in the mid-2020s as part of the project to add a fourth track to the Ayalon Railway.
Access
[edit]The station is located near several major crossroads in central Tel Aviv. HaShalom Road continues east toward Givatayim and Ramat Gan while Kaplan Street proceeds west into Tel Aviv. Dozens of bus lines pass along the parallel Begin Road on their way to and from the central bus station.
The buses serving the station area are operated primarily by Egged and Dan, as well as Kavim, Superbus, Afikim and Nateev Express.
Gallery
[edit]-
The new southern entrance under construction
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The station platform
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View from the Ayalon Highway in 2007
Train service
[edit]Preceding station | Israel Railways | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Tel Aviv–Savidor Central towards Nahariya
|
Nahariya–Modi'in | Tel Aviv–HaHagana towards Modi'in Central
| ||
Nahariya–Beersheba | Tel Aviv–HaHagana towards Be'er Sheva–Center
| |||
Tel Aviv–Savidor Central towards Karmiel
|
Karmiel–Beersheba | |||
Tel Aviv–Savidor Central towards Binyamina
|
Binyamina–Beersheba | |||
Tel Aviv–Savidor Central towards Netanya
|
Netanya–Beit Shemesh | Tel Aviv–HaHagana towards Beit Shemesh
| ||
Netanya–Rehovot | Tel Aviv–HaHagana towards Rehovot
| |||
Tel Aviv–Savidor Central towards Herzliya
|
Herzliya–Ashkelon | Tel Aviv–HaHagana towards Ashkelon
| ||
Herzliya–Jerusalem | Tel Aviv–HaHagana towards Jerusalem–Yitzhak Navon
|
Station layout
[edit]Platform numbers increase in a West-to-East direction
Side platform | |
Platform 1 | Nahariya–Modi'in and Nahariya–Beersheba trains toward Nahariya (Tel Aviv–Savidor Central) → Nahariya–Beersheba trains toward Tel Aviv–Savidor Central (terminus) (selected trains during off-peak hours) → Karmiel–Beersheba trains toward Karmiel (Tel Aviv–Savidor Central) → Binyamina–Beersheba trains toward Binyamina (Tel Aviv–Savidor Central) → Netanya–Rehovot trains toward Netanya (Tel Aviv–Savidor Central) (peak hours only) → Netanya–Beit Shemesh trains toward Netanya (Tel Aviv–Savidor Central) (during peak hours) → Netanya–Beit Shemesh trains toward Tel Aviv–Savidor Central (terminus) (off-peak hours) → Herzliya–Jerusalem trains toward Herzliya (Tel Aviv–Savidor Central) → Binyamina–Jerusalem trains toward Binyamina (nights only) do not stop here → |
Platform 2 | ← Nahariya–Modi'in trains toward Modi'in Central (Tel Aviv–HaHagana) ← Nahariya–Beersheba, Karmiel–Beersheba and Binyamina–Beersheba trains toward Be'er Sheva–Center (Tel Aviv–HaHagana) ← Netanya–Rehovot trains toward Rehovot (Tel Aviv–HaHagana) (peak hours only) ← Netanya–Beit Shemesh trains toward Beit Shemesh (Tel Aviv–HaHagana) ← Herzliya–Jerusalem trains toward Jerusalem–Yitzhak Navon (Tel Aviv–HaHagana) ← Binyamina–Jerusalem trains toward Jerusalem–Yitzhak Navon (nights only, except Wed.-Thu. nights) do not stop here ← Binyamina–Jerusalem trains toward Ben Gurion Airport (Wed.-Thu. nights only) do not stop here |
Island platform | |
Platform 3 | Herzliya–Ashkelon trains toward Herzliya (Tel Aviv–Savidor Central) → ← Herzliya–Ashkelon trains toward Ashkelon (Tel Aviv–HaHagana) |
Ridership
[edit]Year | Passengers | Rank | Source |
---|---|---|---|
2021 | 8,425,111 ( 2,790,019) | 1 of 66 () | 2021 Freedom of Information Law Annual Report |
2020 | 5,635,092 ( 9,717,852) | 1 of 68 () | 2020 Freedom of Information Law Annual Report |
2019 | 15,352,944 | 1 of 68 | 2019 Freedom of Information Law Annual Report |
References
[edit]- ^ "2019 Freedom of Information Law Annual Report" (PDF). Israel Railways.
- ^ Eli Barbur "Właśnie Izrael"