Bungle158
Member
Padang Besar, station situated within Malaysia, but has permanent Malaysian and Thai customs and immigration facilities.
Oh yes. Even doing the interchange between West Berlin U-Bahn lines there was quite disconcerting the first time.
Or indeed anyone going between East and West Berlin by S-Bahn.
It is obvious that the border controls above for customers are all closed. Sad story.
Tirano RhB in Italy has a customs office.
Would Vaallimaa in Finland count?
I don't know if it counts, but travelling between Bulgaria and Romania
Kensington Olympia had facilities for emergency use if Waterloo was ever out of action to Eurostar.
Immigration formalities were carried out at the stations on each side
There are quite a lot of former borders, so there are probably stations which met your criteria in the past but which are now not near a border.
It's your list, so your choice, just interested in your criteria so can pick suggestions more helpfully.
If you mean Customs and Immigration controls, then Dover Marine, Folkestone Harbour, Newhaven Marine, Harwich PQ (?still existing) and of course their onetime mainland equivalents from Dieppe to Hoek.
When I first travelled on the Dublin-Belfast line in 1978, there were customs facilities at both Dublin Connolly and Belfast Central....and Dundalk station was completely rebuilt in the early 1920s to facilitate customs examination of passengers on the majority of cross-border services which stopped there. IIRC, the present Newry station was built after customs formalities between NI and the ROI had been effectively abolished.
There are border controls inside the station building at Ungheni, Moldova.
As far as I'm aware Cerbère/Portbou on the French/Spanish border had infrastructure for border checks (and I've had my passport checked at both a couple of times). I'm not sure whether Puigcerdà/La Tour de Carol do/did but I would have thought so.
Dundalk had the full customs infrastructure, but I had forgotten that Goraghwood (now closed) was rebuilt at the same time and dealt with customs formalities for Northbound services which were not non-stop from Dublin to Belfast. The cross-border 'Enterprise' services terminated at the old - and latterly much-bombed - Great Victoria Street station until the opening of Central (now Lanyon Place) in the mid-1970s....and it too had full customs facilities until closure. When the new Great Victoria Street/Europa rail/bus interchange was built more recently, it was - very shortsightedly - only provided with platforms long enough for six car DMUs, but it is currently being remodelled with longer platforms to enable the 'Enterprise' services to once again take their rightful place in a city-centre terminus.I wonder if Dundalk had actual infrastructure, or if it was simply a place with offices so that people could be inspected on an ad-hoc basis?
Newry appears to have been opened in 2009, but the older station was reopened in 1984 - so maybe something did exist between 1984-1993.
https://www.pressreader.com/uk/the-railway-magazine/20210503/281702617570488 - there's a fascinating article here about the Irish border and the railway customs posts. It confirms that Great Victoria Street was used for the direct Belfast-Dublin trains, too.
I was thinking of there too as in the 1980s I travelled on an SBB train from Zürich which reversed there before continuing along the southern side of the lake. I've just done a little online research and I've found some information at this link (in German):Anyone mentioned Konstanz yet?
Border controls at Puttgarden and Rødby F. in Denmark were mostly done on the train, with German staff joining Denmark-bound trains as far back as Lubeck. There were controls in the station/terminal for passengers using local services, but they always seemed fairly casual.For Germany you can add Emmerich, Aachen, Flensburg and Puttgarden, unless I missed them.
I'm not certain whether that meets the OP's criteria. When I arrived in China that way in 2007, the border check was done on the train, if I remember rightly somewhere near the gauge-changing shed, although that doesn't exclude the possibility of controls in the station for people arriving from Monglia and finishing their journey there, or vice versa (I can't remember whether the train entered the station before the border control and gauge changing, but we -- continuing to Beijing on the same train, but not leaving for a while -- were confined to the train until after all that).Erlian
Until sometime in the 1980s Nijmegen had Customs Facilities in the station building for the trains running to and from West Germany on the now closed line via Kleve.Rotterdam Central and Amsterdam Central in the Netherlands obviously have them in their Eurostar facilities.
As far as I know those are the only border control facilities within stations the Netherlands ever had. Roosendaal and Maastricht have quite large buildings which used to house customs and other border control related staff, but I don't remember actual border checks inside the station.
Likewise Geneve Cornavin IIRC.Basel SNCF/SBB had Customs in the main station building to go through before being allowed into the SBB part of the station or vice versa.
Yes. I couldn’t remember whether it was a Customs grip on the platform at Cornavin or you actually went through the station building (given access to and from the platforms was by subway). The last time prior to Schengenisation I went that way from France to Switzerland was on a through coach to Basel that got shunted via the carriage sidings east of Cornavin station.Likewise Geneve Cornavin IIRC.
Yes. I couldn’t remember whether it was a Customs grip on the platform at Cornavin or you actually went through the station building (given access to and from the platforms was by subway). The last time prior to Schengenisation I went that way from France to Switzerland was on a through coach to Basel that got shunted via the carriage sidings east of Cornavin station.
I'm wondering whether Frankfurt an der Oder might have had a similar arrangement to Görlitz for passengers ariving from Poland and disembarking, or vice versa, but never having done that I don't remember noticing it. Can anyone else shed any light on this?
There were controls in the station/terminal for passengers using local services, but they always seemed fairly casual.
The second-last photo shows the entrance to the former passport/customs control area at the station.
When I took a train from Frankfurt an der Oder to Poland in 2007, someone on the platform asked for my passport as I boarded the carriage. I encountered no other border controls at that station.I'm wondering whether Frankfurt an der Oder might have had a similar arrangement to Görlitz for passengers ariving from Poland and disembarking, or vice versa, but never having done that I don't remember noticing it. Can anyone else shed any light on this?
When I took a train from Frankfurt an der Oder to Poland in 2007, someone on the platform asked for my passport as I boarded the carriage. I encountered no other border controls at that station.
Thankyou. Three of my four pre-Schengen crossings of the border by that route were in the small hours of the morning, so I just sleepily handed over my passport without noticing exactly where we were -- it could well have been Kunowice (I had at least one passport stamp saying 'Kunowice', which suggests as a minimum that the staff were based there).To the best of my knowledge (having spent an absurd amount of time on this), no, it didn't. It seems that all controls were carried out at Kunowice by both Poland and the DDR/Germany. This doesn't explain Słubice station however, which was opened in 2002, and I don't think there's anywhere for trains to start/terminate between there and the Oder bridge? So, it is possible that controls were also carried out within Frankfurt (Oder) station, but I've never found any evidence of them. There is some evidence that the Oderbrucke station served as a transit point between the Polish and East German railways, but it's very unclear as to whether passengers were processed here, or just freight.
When I took a train from Frankfurt an der Oder to Poland in 2007, someone on the platform asked for my passport as I boarded the carriage. I encountered no other border controls at that station.