You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Dutch. (November 2020) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Dutch Wikipedia article at [[:nl:Station Haarlem]]; see its history for attribution.
You may also add the template {{Translated|nl|Station Haarlem}} to the talk page.
Within a few years the new railway turned out to be a great success, and in 1842 a permanent station was built on the current location. It was designed by Frederick Willem Conrad[2] in a semi-Greek neo-classicistic style. The front of the building was open to the street.
Mouthaan
In 1867 the station was re-designed by P.J. Mouthaan.[3] An extra floor was put on the building and the front of the building was enclosed.
Current station
The current building was built between 1906 and 1908. The design is by the railway station specialist Dirk Margadant (1849-1915). The tracks were elevated, to avoid conflict with the traffic in the city. It is the only train station in the Netherlands that is built in Art Nouveau style.
Train services
As of 9 December 2018, the following services call at Haarlem:
Only in service between the 9th of March and the 29th of September and only on busy days, at events in Bloemendaal and Zandvoort and when temperatures are 25 °C of above.
255
Haarlem Station - Amsterdam Zuidoost
Only in service during peak hours
300
Haarlem Station - Vijfhuizen - Hoofddorp - De Hoek - Schiphol-Centrum - Schiphol-Noord - Amstelveen - Ouderkerk aan de Amstel - Amsterdam Zuidoost
Haarlem Station - Amsterdam VUmc - Amsterdam Station Zuid
356
Haarlem Station - Badhoevedorp - Schiphol-Noord - Amstelveen - Ouderkerk aan de Amstel - Amsterdam Zuidoost
385
Haarlem Station - Santpoort - Driehuis - IJmuiden (- IJmuiden aan Zee)
Services to IJmuiden aan Zee only during summer
Busses under the brand R-net
507
Haarlem Station - Cruquius Paswerk
In the morning: one service toward Cruquius Paswerk
In the afternoon: one service toward Haarlem Station
Busses under the brand R-net
N30
IJmuiden - Driehuis - Santpoort-Noord - Haarlem Station - Vijfhuizen - Hoofddorp - De Hoek - Schiphol-Centrum - Schiphol-Noord - Amstelveen - Ouderkerk aan de Amstel - Amsterdam-Zuidoost
Nightbusses under the brand R-net
N80
Amsterdam Centrum → Halfweg → Haarlem Station → Velserbroek → Driehuis → IJmuiden
Gallery
1900s decoration depicting the history of the Amsterdam-Haarlem train route from the trekschuit to carriageway along the haarlemmertrekvaart.
In this commemorative tile tablet for Beijnes, now in the Spoorwegmuseum, the old Beijnes factory across from the Haarlem station can be seen, that was built in the same style as the station itself in 1867. The Beijnes hall and workshop was situated across from the station, and is where the train locomotives were serviced and where the train and tram carriages were made.
Waiting room first class; the cow-catchers depicted on the train engines are historically inaccurate and were never found on Dutch train engines.
1939 tile memorial plaque celebrating 100 years of railway history shows accurate early engine on the left.