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Berkel-Enschot railway station

Defunct railway stations in the NetherlandsDutch railway station stubsPages with no open date in Infobox stationProposed railway stations in the Netherlands

Berkel-Enschot is a planned railway station between 's-Hertogenbosch and Tilburg. A station operated here on the Tilburg–Nijmegen railway between 1881 and 1938. There were plans to reopen a station to relieve stress on other lines, but the motion was rejected in 2010. On 28 November 2014 it was announced that the station would certainly not be built before 2028.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Berkel-Enschot railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Berkel-Enschot railway station
De Hemeltjens, Tilburg

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.590555555556 ° E 5.1347222222222 °
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De Hemeltjens
5056 RB Tilburg
North Brabant, Netherlands
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Heuvelse kerk
Heuvelse kerk

The Heuvelse kerk (Heuvel church; also Sint-Jozefkerk) is a neo-Gothic Catholic church in the center of the Dutch city Tilburg. Dedicated to Saint Joseph, it is one of two major Catholic churches in the city center together with the Heikese kerk. It is located along the square Heuvel, after which it is named. A 1921 statue of the Sacred Heart is located in front of the building. Construction of the church was divided into two phases due to financial constraints. The first part of the Heuvelse kerk was built in the period 1871–73, while the second phase took place between 1887 and 1889 and included the current front facade with its two towers. The church was consecrated in 1889 by the bishop of the Diocese of 's-Hertogenbosch. It was built in the garden of a barracks and was meant to accommodate Tilburg's increasing population. The barracks were renovated simultaneously to become a clergy house. The only major adjustment to the original building, designed by Hendrik van Tulder, was an extension of both transepts in the 1950s. The Heuvelse kerk has the floor plan of a cruciform basilica. Its most prominent exterior feature are the two towers with their height of 72 metres (236 ft). Three portals in the front facade contain entrances, the central one being decorated with a relief showing the flight into Egypt. A copper-gilded statue of Saint Joseph sits on top of a gable between the towers. The interior is covered by a four-part rib vault and includes two organs and a winged altarpiece by Hendrik van der Geld, created between 1878 and 1881. Frescos of the Stations of the Cross were painted two decades after the church's inauguration by Georges de Geetere. In 2019, the parish announced plans to sell the Heuvelse kerk, but the bishop has postponed those plans.