The present-day station stands on the spot of a
halt on the
Jezreel Valley railway, constructed by the
Ottoman Empire in 1903–1904. In 1937, as part of converting the old
narrow-gauge Ottoman railway to
standard gauge, the British
Mandate for Palestine constructed the station building at this location. During the
Second World War, the British extended the railway north of
Acre to
Beirut and Tripoli, thereby placing Kiryat Motzkin railway station on the busy
Beirut to
Cairo line. This was Kiryat Motzkin's only means of transport to and from the surrounding areas, especially the city of Haifa. The old British station building is preserved, and is currently used as a warehouse. The new building was constructed next to it in the early 1990s, according to the present
passenger station format of Israel Railways. In the late 1990s, a tunnel was constructed just north of the station, replacing the dangerous
level crossing that existed in its place. During the
2006 Israel–Lebanon conflict train service to the station was suspended after a
Hezbollah Katyusha rocket hit a train depot in Haifa on July 16, 2006, killing eight Israel Railways workers. It was restored 29 days later, on August 14, two days after the
ceasefire went into effect. In the 2010s the station was renovated at a cost of ILS 40 million, finishing in early 2018. == Design ==