When the
Berlin–Stettin railway was opened in 1842, the tracks ran farther northwestwards with a hazardous
level crossing on Badstraße. Nearby Gesundbrunnen station was inaugurated on 1 January 1872 with the northern
Ringbahn line; it became an important railway hub with the opening of the
Berlin Northern Railway to
Neubrandenburg; the junction was finished on 10 July 1877. From 1 May 1897, it also offered access to the Berlin–Stettin line, whose original tracks were shifted southwards to meet the parallel
Ringbahn here. On 8 August 1924 Gesundbrunnen was one of the first stations to become part of the Berlin S-Bahn system when
third rail trains ran from
Stettiner Bahnhof to
Bernau. After the opening of the
Nord-Süd Tunnel in 1939, trains ran from Gesundbrunnen via
Humboldthain station and Stettiner Bahnhof directly to
Anhalter Bahnhof in the south. Plans for an access of Gesundbrunnen station to the
Berlin U-Bahn network were already developed by the
AEG electric company prior to World War I. Nevertheless, the present-day station, located on the , was not opened until 18 April 1930. Designed in a
New Objectivity style according to plans by
Alfred Grenander with a separate reception building, the U-Bahn platform crossed deep beneath the railway tracks and served as an
air-raid shelter during the
bombing of Berlin in World War II.
World War II and Cold War On 3 February 1945, this station was destroyed by an air raid. After World War II and the division of Berlin, long-distance train service diminished and was finally discontinued on 18 May 1952. The S-Bahn system was also affected by the construction of the
Berlin Wall in 1961, when the network was partitioned into an eastern and western half.
Fall of the Berlin Wall In the Pilzkonzept master plan the station was modernized as Berlin's northern long-distance train station and during 2005 there were discussions to rename the station to
Nordkreuz (North Cross) reflecting the names of the other connection stations on the Ringbahn namely
Ostkreuz (East Cross),
Südkreuz (South Cross) and
Westkreuz (West Cross). Work on the railway hub was completed on 26 May 2006, with no development on the rename until 2016, when
Nordkreuz was appended to Gesundbrunnen as an official alternative name. Despite its station category 1 the station had no representative entrance building - the old entrance building had been demolished and it had never been replaced giving the new station a peculiar appearance. The area designated for the entrance building was left as a public open space (Hanne-Sobek-Platz). The planning was stopped not only by financial cuts but also due to the existence of the nearby
Gesundbrunnen-Center shopping center that was opened in 1997 offering 25000 square meters of shopping facilities plus a direct connection to the railway station. The planning resumed during 2010 and construction work on a new entrance building began by the end of 2011, with the 3300 square meters projected to cost a total of 7.4 million
euros. The new entrance building opened in autumn 2015. ==Rail services==