Ohlsdorf station
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Ohlsdorf station
Summary
Ohlsdorf station is a S-Bahn station[1]. It draws 12 Wikipedia views per month (s_bahn_station category, ranking #13 of 78).[2]
Key Facts
- Ohlsdorf station is located in Hamburg-Nord[3].
- Ohlsdorf station is in the country of Germany[4].
- Ohlsdorf station's transport network is recorded as Hamburg U-Bahn[5].
- Ohlsdorf station's transport network is recorded as Hamburg S-Bahn[6].
- Ohlsdorf station is on the continent of Europe[7].
- Ohlsdorf station's instance of is recorded as S-Bahn station[8].
- Ohlsdorf station's instance of is recorded as metro station[9].
- Ohlsdorf station's instance of is recorded as through station[10].
- Ohlsdorf station's instance of is recorded as elevated station[11].
- Ohlsdorf station's connecting line is recorded as Hamburg-Altona link line[12].
- Ohlsdorf station's connecting line is recorded as Hamburg Airport S-Bahn line[13].
- Ohlsdorf station's connecting line is recorded as Alster Valley Railway[14].
- Ohlsdorf station's connecting line is recorded as Hamburg-Ohlsdorf–Hamburg-Ochsenzoll railway[15].
- Ohlsdorf station's connecting line is recorded as Ohlsdorfer Linie[16].
- Ohlsdorf station's connecting line is recorded as Langenhorner Bahn[17].
- Ohlsdorf station's architect is recorded as Henry Grell[18].
- Ohlsdorf station is operated by DB Regio[19].
- Ohlsdorf station is operated by Hamburger Hochbahn AG[20].
- Ohlsdorf station is operated by DB Station&Service[21].
- Ohlsdorf is named after Ohlsdorf station[22].
- Ohlsdorf station's architectural style is recorded as country house[23].
- Ohlsdorf station's architectural style is recorded as Heimatschutz Architecture[24].
- Ohlsdorf station's adjacent station is recorded as Klein Borstel[25].
- Ohlsdorf station's adjacent station is recorded as Sengelmannstraße[26].
- Ohlsdorf station's adjacent station is recorded as Rübenkamp station[27].
Why It Matters
Ohlsdorf station draws 12 Wikipedia views per month (s_bahn_station category, ranking #13 of 78).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 6 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]