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Monthly Archives: May 2019

Trainstation Delft prt11

This is how railway station Delft looks on the outside. Nothing special. The trains used to be on a brick stone viaduct. So you can imagine what a space was created by going underground.

(looks best full screen; click once; and once more on the image and then F11)

Trainstation Delft prt8

Upstairs is the station hall, with the entrances and shops etc. The walls and ceilings are not orthogonal, but curved and the ceramic pieces on the lower half of the walls refer to the famous Delft Blue pottery.

Trainstation Delft prt9

Trainstation Delft prt10

Trainstation Delft prt3

From the train platforms you get up one level, to a small square, from where you can choose: get a next train on an other platform; get out to the bike parking (prt5); or get to the next level and leave the station. When you look up, there is a white slat ceiling with, printed in black fragments, the city-map of the old situation of the area around the station. Whether you see it, depends on your point of view.

Trainstation Delft prt4

Trainstation Delft prt5

Trainstation Delft prt1

We entered Delft by train and stepped out, underground, into the in 2017 finished new Delft Central station. First thing I liked was the ceiling. They designed a connector to let the ceiling-slats rotate 90 degrees, from horizontal, above the walking passengers, where they reach the platform; to vertical, where the trains stop and speed up again. Horizontal-slow; vertical-fast. You can ‘feel the departing’… Small thing, but brilliant idea!

Trainstation Delft prt2

(looks best full screen; click once; and once more on the image and then F11)

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