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Berlin-Spindlersfeld station

Berlin S-Bahn stationsRailway stations in Germany opened in 1892Railway stations in Treptow-Köpenick
S Bahn Berlin Spindlersfeld
S Bahn Berlin Spindlersfeld

Spindlersfeld is a railway station in the Treptow-Köpenick district of Berlin on the Schöneweide–Spindlersfeld branch line. It is the eastern terminus of the S-Bahn line . It is located at the corner of Oberspreestraße and Ernst-Grube-Straße. A two-track development of the station is not in sight; even if the proposed duplication of the whole line goes ahead, the terminus will still have only one track.

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

Berlin-Spindlersfeld station
Ernst-Grube-Straße, Berlin Köpenick

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Berlin-Spindlersfeld stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.4472 ° E 13.5613 °
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Address

S Spindlersfeld

Ernst-Grube-Straße
12555 Berlin, Köpenick
Germany
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S Bahn Berlin Spindlersfeld
S Bahn Berlin Spindlersfeld
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Nearby Places

Köpenick Palace
Köpenick Palace

Schloss Köpenick is a Baroque water palace of the Hohenzollern electors of Brandenburg which stands on an island in the Dahme River surrounded by an English-style park and gives its name to Köpenick, a district of Berlin. The castle was originally built on the foundations of a Slavic castle (6th century) in 1558 as a hunting lodge by order of Elector Joachim II Hector of Brandenburg. The building in a Renaissance style was located on the river island at the site of the former medieval fort. Joachim II died here in 1571. In 1631 it served as the headquarters of King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden, where he - without results - asked his brother-in-law Elector George William for assistance in the Thirty Years' War. Frederick I of Prussia had the lodge rebuilt and enlarged from 1677 and lived here together with his first wife Elizabeth Henrietta of Hesse-Kassel. In 1730 Frederick II of Prussia, then Crown Prince, and his friend Hans Hermann von Katte faced the court-martial for desertion at Schloss Köpenick. Today the castle surrounded by a small park serves as the Museum of Decorative Arts, run by the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation as part of the Berlin State Museums. Since 1963, Köpenick Palace has been used by the Kunstgewerbemuseum as an exhibition space. Being renovated in 2004, the palace accommodates museum of arts with the permanent exhibition "RoomArt", featuring the decorative arts of the Renaissance, Baroque and Rococo periods. The museum also presents the outstanding masterworks in interior design from the 16th to 18th centuries.