Sandvika Station () is a
railway station
Rail transport (also known as train transport) is a means of transport using wheeled vehicles running in railway track, tracks, which usually consist of two parallel steel railway track, rails. Rail transport is one of the two primary means of ...
located at
Sandvika
Sandvika () is the administrative centre of the municipality of Bærum in Norway. It was declared a List of cities in Norway, city by the municipal council (Norway), municipal council in Bærum on 4 June 2003.
Sandvika is situated approximately ...
in
Bærum
Bærum () is a list of municipalities of Norway, municipality in the Greater Oslo Region in Akershus County, Norway. It forms an affluent suburb of Oslo on the west coast of the city. Bærum is Norway's fifth largest municipality with a populatio ...
,
Norway
Norway, officially the Kingdom of Norway, is a Nordic countries, Nordic country located on the Scandinavian Peninsula in Northern Europe. The remote Arctic island of Jan Mayen and the archipelago of Svalbard also form part of the Kingdom of ...
. Situated on the
Drammen Line, from
Oslo S, it also an intermediate station of the
Asker Line.
Vy serves the station with local and regional, with about 7,000 passengers using the station daily. It is also served by the
Airport Express Train and serves as the main bus terminal for the town. The station is elevated and has two
island platform
An island platform (also center platform (American English) or centre platform (British English)) is a station layout arrangement where a single platform is positioned between two tracks within a railway station, tram stop or transitway inte ...
s and four tracks.
The station opened along with the Drammen Line on 7 October 1872, until 1922 being named Sandviken. The original station building was designed by
Georg Andreas Bull in
Swiss chalet style. The station underwent a renewal from 1917 to 1922, receiving
gauge conversion to
standard gauge
A standard-gauge railway is a railway with a track gauge of . The standard gauge is also called Stephenson gauge (after George Stephenson), international gauge, UIC gauge, uniform gauge, normal gauge in Europe, and SGR in East Africa. It is the ...
,
electrification
Electrification is the process of powering by electricity and, in many contexts, the introduction of such power by changing over from an earlier power source. In the context of history of technology and economic development, electrification refe ...
. A new station building designed by
Gudmund Hoel opened in 1919. The tracks east of the station were
doubled in 1922, the line westwards in 1958. A new, four-track station building opened in 1994, designed by
Arne Henriksen. The Asker Line opened in two stages, in 2005 and 2011.
History

Construction of the Drammen Line was passed by
Parliament
In modern politics and history, a parliament is a legislative body of government. Generally, a modern parliament has three functions: Representation (politics), representing the Election#Suffrage, electorate, making laws, and overseeing ...
on 16 June 1869.
[Bjerke & Holom: 189] As one of the municipalities through which the railway was to run, Bærum was expected to buy shares in the railway company. Of the total cost of 1.6 million
Norwegian speciedaler, the municipalities had to buy for 260,000. Bærum bought shares for 2000 speciedaler, but was unable to pay all its dues. It therefore borrowed the money from its midwife fund and issued a new tax of 8 shillings per house to finance it.
[Jakobsen: 64]
Bærum Municipal Council was asked where it wanted the station placed. There was consensus to establish one in Sandvika, although there was disagreement regarding the placement of the other. The council finally voted in favor of building
Lysaker Station. To build the station the former shop of Shoemaker Jakobsen had to be demolished. The railway paid 254 specidaler in expropriation. A station building was built, designed by Georg Andreas Bull.
[Bjerke & Holom: 193] Originally named Sandviken Station, it and the Drammen Line opened on 7 October 1872,
[Bjerke & Holom: 192] as a
narrow gauge
A narrow-gauge railway (narrow-gauge railroad in the US) is a railway with a track gauge (distance between the rails) narrower than . Most narrow-gauge railways are between and .
Since narrow-gauge railways are usually built with Minimum railw ...
railway.
Travel time from Sandvika to
Oslo West Station (Oslo V) was originally 27 minutes.

The arrival of the railway had a dramatic impact on Sandvika. First of all is spurred the centralization of many commercial activities in Sandvika, with the subsequent increase to population. Secondly the line cut through the town. This creased a social divide, with workers and craftsmen settling north of the station, and the bourgeois settling on the south side, along the fjord. The railway also brought some tourism with people on day trips from Oslo.
The line from Sandvika to Oslo was substantially upgraded between 1917 and 1922.
[Bjerke & Holom: 196] As part of this a new station building was built, designed by
Gudmund Hoel at
NSB Arkitektkontor. The new station was designed in
Baroque Revival architecture and opened in 1919.
[Hartmann: 126] The two-story building featured a waiting room with benches along the walls, a ticket office, a freight office, a kiosk and washrooms. The upper floor was an apartment for the station master. The building had details in natural stone.
The old station building became a residence and a freight-handling facility.
All–standard gauge operations commenced on 9 February 1920, although the
dual gauge
Dual gauge railroad track has three or four rails, allowing vehicles of two track gauges to run on it.
Signalling and sidings are more expensive to install on dual gauge tracks than on two single gauge tracks. Dual gauge is used when there i ...
was not removed until 1922. Electric traction started operation on 30 August 1922.
An
interlocking system was installed on 6 October 1924.
From 1922 a half-hour headway was introduced on local trains between Sandvika and Oslo. The station took its current name on 1 October 1922.

The segment of the Drammen Line between Sandvika and Asker was converted to double track between 1955 and 1958, with the section from
Billingstad Station to Sandvika completed on 9 November 1958.
[Bjerke & Holom: 195] As part of this work new tracks were built at Sandvika and the cargo division expanded. A new building for ticket sales and a waiting room was erected between tracks 3 and 4 in 1961.
From 1981, with the opening of the
Oslo Tunnel, most trains serving Sandvika started running through the
Oslo Tunnel to Oslo Central Station. In December 1988 the municipality bought the old cargo facility at Kjøbo for 27 million
Norwegian krone
The krone (, currency sign, abbreviation: kr (also NKr for distinction); ISO 4217, code: NOK), plural ''kroner'', is the currency of the Kingdom of Norway (including List of possessions of Norway, overseas territories and dependencies). It was t ...
. The structure was demolished and made way for a new bus terminal as part of the new station project. The line past the station received
centralized traffic control and
automatic train stop on 3 December 1992.
In 1991 NSB decided to build a new station in Sandvika and chose
Arne Henriksen's design. The station saw the tracks raised through Sandvika, allowing the town to be freed from the bonds of a railway running through it. Work was combined with the construction of a new bus terminal and a parking garage. In addition to increasing capacity, the goal was also to make Sandvika a more attractive site to travel through. NSB hoped that the new station would contribute to make Sandvika "softer". This saw the road past the station closed for traffic, shorter transfer distance between trains and buses. Construction commenced in late 1991.
A controversy arose over the fate of Hoel's station building. Several locals wanted to preserve the building, but it was in the way for the design of the new station. Both it and the platform building from 1961 were demolished.
The Airport Express Train started services on 27 September 1998.

The Asker Line was built to allow regional trains to bypass local trains on the Drammen Line, increasing both capacity, speed and regularity through the West Corridor. The first segment was the section from Asker to Sandvika, which started in 2001 and was opened on 27 August 2005. Construction of the second stage, from Sandvika to Lysaker, commenced in 2007 and it was opened on 26 August 2011.
The Asker Line allows trains to bypass all intermediate stations along the Drammen Line between Asker and Lysaker, while still stopping at Sandvika. In addition to faster travel times, it allows the West Corridor eleven more departures per direction per hour.
Facilities
Sandvika Station is situated on the Drammen and Asker Lines, at a distance of from
Oslo Central Station at an elevation of
above mean sea level
Height above mean sea level is a measure of a location's vertical distance (height, elevation or altitude) in reference to a vertical datum based on a historic mean sea level. In geodesy, it is formalized as orthometric height. The zero level ...
.
The outer tracks at the station are connected to the Asker Line and the inner tracks to the Drammen Line. However, there are switches allowing crossover. To the west of the station the four tracks run parallel over a bridge. At about the site of the closed
Jong Station the Asker Line runs into each their own tube of the
Tanum Tunnel while the Drammen Line continues at grade.
To the east a similar track arrangement is followed allowing the Asker Line access to the Bærum Tunnel. The Asker Line has a speed limit of , but this speed is limited to past Sandvika because of a curve in the arrangement west of the station.
The station is elevated and located centrally in Sandvika. The station building is built under the tracks and acts as a common waiting room for both bus and train passengers. Also part of the facility is a parking garage with place for 300 cars.
The station has two island platforms and four tracks. The platforms are long, respectively, and tall. The platforms are
universally accessible from street level, but the platforms are too low to allow step-free access to the trains. Track 1 is to the north and 4 to the south, with eastbound trains stopping at the island platform with tracks 3 and 4. Tracks 1 and 4 normally serve trains along the Asker Line, while track 2 and 3 serve trains along the Drammen Line.
Akershus Kollektivterminaler operates a bus terminal at the station. The station is not staffed, but is equipped with ticket vending machines and features and indoor waiting room and kiosk. All platforms are covered. The station features locked bicycle parking, a taxi stand, and nearby parking garage.
The original station building had an unusual design in that it had a common entrance for passengers from the port side through a door situated below an veranda. It further featured a
lean-on roof held up with console-supported columns. The wooden building was detailed with intricate carpentry work. The ground floor consisted of a first and second-class waiting room and associated offices for the railway. Bull's station is preserved and listed as a heritage site along with the interlocking building from 1923.
The latter was designed by
Bjarne F. Baastad and is unique in Norway in that it was building upon two towers with a central section over the tracks. The concrete building is now used for elevators.
Services
Vy serves Asker Station both with
Oslo Commuter Rail trains as well as regional trains. The commuter L1 service runs from
Spikkestad Station past Sandvika on the Drammen Line and onwards to Oslo S and to
Lillestrøm Station, calling at all stations. There are NSB services which run along the Asker Line to Oslo S: L12, L13, L14 and R10. These variously continue eastwards along the
Gardermoen Line, the
Trunk Line and the
Kongsvinger Line. Westwards they run to
Drammen Station, some continuing on the
Vestfold Line and others on the
Sørlandet Line.
Travel time to Oslo S is 15 minutes along the Asker Line. NSB had 7,000 an average daily passengers to and from Sandvika in 2008.
The
Airport Express Train runs every 20 minutes to
Oslo Airport, Gardermoen.
Local transport is organized by
Ruter, who has Sandvika in fare zone 2A. Sandvika Station acts as the main bus terminal for Sandvika.
Future
The government is working on plans to build the
Ringerike Line, a extension of the
Bergen Line
The Bergen Line, or the Bergen Railway ( or ), is a long scenic overlook, scenic standard gauge railway line between Bergen and Hønefoss, Norway. The name is often applied to the entire route from Bergen to Oslo, including the Randsfjord Line ...
from Hønefoss which is planned to connect to the Asker Line at Sandvika Station. It would allow 50 minutes shorter travel time between Hønefoss and Sandvika. The
Kolsås Line of the
Oslo Metro runs through Bærum, terminating at
Kolsås. There are plans to extend this line to
Rykkinn and possibly a branch to Sandvika Station.
References
Bibliography
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{{Flytoget
Sandvika
Railway stations in Bærum
Railway stations on the Asker Line
Railway stations on the Drammen Line
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Bus stations in Norway
Railway stations in Norway opened in 1872
Railway stations in Norway opened in 1993