Helsingør Station
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Helsingør Station
Summary
Helsingør Station is a dead-end railway station[1]. It draws 27 Wikipedia views per month (dead_end_railway_station category, ranking #44 of 81).[2]
Key Facts
- Helsingør Station is located in Helsingør Municipality[3].
- Helsingør Station is in the country of Denmark[4].
- Helsingør Station's instance of is recorded as dead-end railway station[5].
- Helsingør Station's instance of is recorded as railway station[6].
- Helsingør Station's instance of is recorded as border train station[7].
- Helsingør Station's connecting line is recorded as Coast Line[8].
- Helsingør Station's connecting line is recorded as Lille Nord[9].
- Helsingør Station's connecting line is recorded as Hornbæk Line[10].
- Helsingør Station's architect is recorded as Heinrich Wenck[11].
- Helsingør Station is owned by DSB[12].
- Helsingør Station is operated by DSB[13].
- Helsingør Station is operated by Lokaltog[14].
- Helsingør is named after Helsingør Station[15].
- Helsingør Station's adjacent station is recorded as Snekkersten Station[16].
- Helsingør Station's adjacent station is recorded as Grønnehave station[17].
- Helsingør Station took place at Helsingør[18].
- Helsingør Station's postal code is recorded as 3000[19].
- Helsingør Station's station code is recorded as Hg[20].
- Helsingør Station is part of Denmark–Sweden border[21].
- Helsingør Station's Commons category is recorded as Helsingør Station[22].
- Helsingør Station's located in time zone is recorded as Central European Time[23].
- Helsingør Station's located in time zone is recorded as Central European Summer Time[24].
- Helsingør Station's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 56.033333333333, 'lon': 12.614166666667}[25].
- Helsingør Station's official website is recorded as https://www.dsb.dk/kundeservice/stationer/helsingor/[26].
- Helsingør Station's number of platform tracks is recorded as {'amount': '+5'}[27].
Why It Matters
Helsingør Station draws 27 Wikipedia views per month (dead_end_railway_station category, ranking #44 of 81).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]