The station was located on the south-eastern edge of the
Wallring, in the area of the modern
Deichtorhallen. Present-day
Hamburg Hauptbahnhof lies a few hundred meters to the north, the Oberhafen (upper port) to the south. In 1865, the
Lübecker Bahnhof (Lübeck line station) was built about 600 metres to the east at the end of the
Lübeck–Hamburg railway and, in 1866,
Hamburg Klosterthor station was built at the end of the
Hamburg-Altona link line about 200 metres to the north. From this, a connecting track was later laid to the entrance of Hamburg Hauptbahnhof. The establishment of the first Hamburg Elbe bridge, which was usable only by the railways, connected to the
Hannoverscher Bahnhof (Hanovarian station) on Grasbrook island, which lies opposite at the end of the
line from the Ruhr, opened in 1874, and the
line from Hanover, opened in 1847 from Celle to
Harburg. Operations at the Hannoverscher Bahnhof began in 1872. ==End of operations ==