Copenhagen Central Station

København H
Main entrance
General information
LocationBanegårdspladsen 7
1570 Copenhagen V
Copenhagen Municipality
Denmark
Coordinates55°40′22″N 12°33′52″E / 55.67278°N 12.56444°E / 55.67278; 12.56444
Elevation3 m (9.8 ft) above sea level
SystemS-train, Metro and national railway station
Owned byDSB (station infrastructure)
Banedanmark (rail infrastructure)
Operated byDSB
Platforms7 (island platforms including Metro, 1 long-distance)
Tracks15 (9 InterCity/Regional/International, 802, RE, 6 S-train, 2 Metro)

Train operatorsDSB
Copenhagen Metro
Metroselskabet
SJ
Skånetrafiken
Snälltåget
Øresundståg

Bus routes 11, 17, 23, 26, 31, 33, 37, 68, 71, 72, 74, 2A, 7A, 7E, 5C, 250S, 93N, 97N, 888, 666, CopenhellBus, Kombardo Expresses, FlixBus, Flextraffic, FlexBus, Telebus, Plustur, Flextur, GoByBus, Swebus Express, Euroline, Shuttle bus, DFDS Shuttlebus, Hop On-Hop Off Bus Sightseeing, RED Sightseeing Copenhagen, TrainBus
Construction
Platform levels2
ArchitectHeinrich Wenck
Other information
Station codeKh
Fare zone1
History
Opened1 December 1911 (1911-12-01)
Rebuilt15 May 1934 (S-train)
Electrified 1934 (S-train), 1986 (Mainline)
Location
København H
Location within Copenhagen
København H
København H (Greater Copenhagen)
København H
København H (Denmark)

Copenhagen Central Station (Danish: Københavns Hovedbanegård [kʰøpm̩ˈhɑwns ˈhoːð̩pɛnəˌkɒˀ]; abbreviated København H, colloquially usually referred to as Hovedbanegården or simply Hovedbanen) is the main railway station in Copenhagen, Denmark, and the largest railway station in Denmark. With more than 100,000 travellers every day, it is the second busiest station in Denmark after Nørreport station. It is located in central Copenhagen, situated between the districts of Indre By and Vesterbro with entrances from Bernstorffsgade (opposite Tivoli Gardens), Banegårdspladsen, Reventlowsgade and access to platforms from Tietgensgade.

Copenhagen Central Station is the hub of the DSB railway network serving Denmark and international destinations. It offers International Train services to Sweden and Germany, InterCity and Express train services across Denmark, regular and frequent regional train services to and from Zealand and southern Sweden (also referred to as Øresund trains), commuter rail services of the Copenhagen S-train network across the Greater Copenhagen area, as well as lines M3 (City Circle Line) & M4 of the Copenhagen Metro network.

The first station in Copenhagen opened in 1847. The current station building opened in 1911 and is the work of architect Heinrich Wenck. The station has 7 platforms and 13 tracks. On the station concourse there are many small shops, restaurants, cafés, and fast food outlets.