The Jesenice railway station (Slovene: Železniška postaja Jesenice) is a railway station in the town of Jesenice, in northwestern Slovenia. It is operated by Slovenian Railways (SŽ).
In addition to the station facilities, the building contains a bar, shops, and a restaurant. The two boarding platforms are connected by an underground pedestrian tunnel.
Destinations
Destinations served from the station are:
Rosenbach (Slovene: Podrožca) and Villach (Slovene: Beljak) on the mainline to the north (both in Austria, via Karawanks Tunnel)
Kranj and Ljubljana on the Tarvisio-Ljubljana Railway line to the south-east
The station opened in 1870 as a stop on the Tarvisio-Ljubljana Railway. In 1906, it became a junction when two main lines of the Cisleithanian "New Alpine Railways" project were completed: the Bohinj Railway (Wocheinerbahn) to Trieste and the Karawanks Tunnel to Villach and the present-day Austrian Rosental line to Sankt Veit.
The station was rebuilt between 1953 and 1955 upon plans designed by Stanislav Rohrman [sl] to replace a prewar structure destroyed by Allied air raids in early 1945, when the Upper Carniola region was occupied by German Wehrmacht forces. Architecturally, the new building is unusually distinctive for a train station in the area, being a stark modernist box faced in white marble and featuring hexagonal windows.