place

Liljeholmen metro station

Railway stations opened in 1964Stockholm Metro stubsStockholm metro stationsSwedish railway station stubs
Stockholm subway liljeholmen 20050903 002
Stockholm subway liljeholmen 20050903 002

Liljeholmen is a Stockholm metro station in the city's southern Liljeholmen district. It is on the Red line (T13 and T14). The station is also an interchange with the Tvärbanan tramway, and a bus terminal. Liljeholmen metro station is also connected to Nybodadepån, a depot/garage for subway trains and buses, which is located in the south part of Liljeholmen. Liljeholmen was opened on 5 April 1964 as part of the first stretch of the Red line, between T-Centralen and Fruängen, with a branch to Örnsberg. It was a surface-level station with two platforms and only one exit at the southern part of the station, where it was a bus terminal. But since 2000, there is also a second exit towards the north part of Liljeholmen, which is connected to the Tvärbanan tramway station Liljeholmen. In the beginning of the 2000s (decade), the station was rebuilt to an underground-station, with a new 3rd platform for trains towards Fruängen/Norsborg, which is connected to a new underground-bus-terminal, and above the station, new squares and houses were built.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Liljeholmen metro station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Liljeholmen metro station
Liljeholmstorget, Stockholm Liljeholmen (Hägersten-Älvsjö stadsdelsområde)

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Liljeholmen metro stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 59.310277777778 ° E 18.0225 °
placeShow on map

Address

Liljeholmstorget 108
117 43 Stockholm, Liljeholmen (Hägersten-Älvsjö stadsdelsområde)
Sweden
mapOpen on Google Maps

Stockholm subway liljeholmen 20050903 002
Stockholm subway liljeholmen 20050903 002
Share experience

Nearby Places

Reimersholme
Reimersholme

Reimersholme is a small island in central Stockholm, lying to the west of Södermalm and to the south of the neighbouring island Långholmen. As of 2006 Reimersholme is inhabited by 2,324 people, living in 1,527 dwellings, and with an average annual income of SEK 306,500. 12 percent of the inhabitants have a foreign background. Until June 24, 1798 Reimersholme was called Räkneholmen. Its present name refers to Anders Reimer (1727-1816), a hatter and magistrate whose estate can still be found on the east side of the island. Despite its vicinity to Södermalm, Reimersholme formed part of Brännkyrka parish and Liljeholmen municipality from 1898 until 1912, both of which are now part of the southern suburbs, and was not incorporated into the city of Stockholm until 1913 together with the remaining part of Brännkyrka. It formed part of the parish of Brännkyrka until 1957 when it became part of Högalid parish, the western part of Södermalm. The first housing on the island was built in the 1880s close to Charlottenburg. A wool manufacturing plant, Stockholms Yllefabrik, was built during the 1860s where prisoners from Långholmen Prison used to work. The factory was declared bankrupt in 1934 and the area was bought by HSB, a corporative housing association, in 1939. HSB had 900 apartments built on the northern and eastern part of the island during the period 1942–1946. In the 1980s the remaining southern part of the island, previously a site occupied by the alcohol manufacturer Reymersholms Spritförädlings AB, was transformed into a housing area. Reimersholme is connected to Stockholm by the bridge Reimersholmsbron, which is 39 meters long and 13 meters wide. Bus services to the city have been operated since 1967 by bus line 66 and since 1986 by bus line 40. In 2015, the bus line 40 was discontinued and replaced with the new line 54.