At the opening of the Lauter Valley Railway in 1883, a station was opened on the southwestern outskirts of Lauterecken. When choosing its location, care was taken that it was feasible to build a connecting line to the already proposed Glan Valley Railway. The station remained well-situated after the opening of the northern section of the line later called the Glan Valley Railway to
Odernheim in 1896, as a direct extension of the Lauter Valley Railway. In the same year Lauterecken halt (
Haltepunkt Lauterecken) was built as a
request stop between Friedhofsweg and the current federal highway 270 to improve access to northern Lauterecken and the surrounding communities. It had a small building to serve passenger services and operations.
Creation of Lauterecken-Grumbach station During the planning of the remainder of the Glan Valley Railway between Altenglan and Homburg, however, it turned out that Lauterecken station was poorly located for a junction of the two lines. It was decided that the new station at the junction of the Lauter and the Glan line would be called
Lauterecken-Grumbach and lie on the north-western outskirts just 200 metres north of Lauterecken halt, which had opened in 1896. Its construction proved to be very costly. The station's railway yards were very long, covering a whole kilometre and its embankment had to be built two metres high due to the high risk of flooding from the adjacent Glan. A total of 250,000 cubic metres of material was obtained from nearby quarries. The superstructure was largely completed on 21 January 1904 and a test run was held on 25 March between Homburg and Lauterecken-Grumbach. The new station was finally put into operation with the opening of the entire Glan Valley Railway from Homburg to Bad Munster on 1 May 1904. The new line had a total of 26 stations. The country town of Lauterecken, which then had approximately 2000 inhabitants, briefly had three stations, After the First World War, the southern part of the Glan Valley Railway between Homburg and Jägersburg became part of the Saar, which was controlled by the United Kingdom and France. To adjust to the establishment of the
Saar Railway (
Saareisenbahn), the new
Deutsche Reichsbahn had to operate trains to Homburg. For this purpose, it was necessary to accommodate two more locomotives at Lauterecken. This led to plans to expand the roundhouse, which, however, were not realized. The Reichsbahndirektion (
railway division of) Ludwigshafen founded in 1922, to which the station had belonged, was dissolved in 1937. In contrast to the rest of the Lauter Valley Railway, which was allocated to the
Reichsbahndirektion Saarbrücken, it, together with the section of the Glan Valley Railway that was north of Altenglan, was allocated to the
Reichsbahndirektion Mainz. In the period between 6 and 31 December 1944, several air raids were made on the station. All the tracks in the vicinity of the No 2 signal box were destroyed. The locomotive shed was burnt and was not repaired in the following period; only the accommodation for train drivers was put back into operation after the war. In March of the following year there was another heavy air raid on the station, which also affected several houses of the town.
Deutsche Bundesbahn (1945–1993) The locomotive depot was closed on 1 October 1948. In the late 1970s, the Lauterecken track supervisor's office, which for decades had been in charge of the maintenance of the Glan Valley Railway and the Lauter Valley Railway near the town, was closed. In 1983, the Lauter Valley Railway celebrated its centenary and for this purpose a
Trans Europ Express (TEE) service ran between Kaiserslautern and Lauterecken-Grumbach. As Meisenheim and Odernheim were the only stations that handled freight on this section and the former was approached from the south, the section between Meisenheim and Odernheim subsequently also had no regular traffic. In 1992, the closure process for the Altenglan–Lauterecken section was initiated, but this was affected by the conversion of Deutsche Bundesbahn into Deutsche Bahn on 31 December 1993. On 6 July 1993, a weed-spraying made the last run over the section. On 27 February 1993, the operation of freight to Meisenheim also ended.
Deutsche Bahn and the opening of the Draisine line (since 1994) In the 1990s, the station was the only one on the Lauter Valley Railway that had a platform canopy. During the same decade, the “home” platform was renovated and raised to 55 cm. The Altenglan–Lauterecken-Grumbach section of the Glan Valley Railway was closed at the turn of 1995/1996. On 10 May 1996, the
Federal Railway Authority also approved the closure of the northern section of the Glan Valley Railway to Staudernheim, which came into force on 1 July 1996. Meanwhile, a report was prepared which concluded that the reactivation of the Lauterecken–Staudernheim section of the Glan Valley Railway was economically viable, but it was not realised for financial reasons. Students of the
Kaiserslautern University of Technology proposed the establishment of a
draisine operation on the Altenglan–Staudernhein section of the line to prevent its final closure and the dismantling of its track. The supporters of this project included a councillor of
Kusel district, Winfried Hirschberg. It was implemented in 2000. Since 2000 Lauterecken-Grumbach station is, along with Altenglan and Staudernheim, one of three stations offering draisine rides on the Glan line. In January 2001, the redesigned station forecourt was inaugurated, which was already used for the operation of regional bus routes. In the period from 16 to 18 December 2005, the signal box, which had previously been operated with
mechanical interlocking technology for over 100 years, was replaced by an
electronic interlocking technology of the “Bruchsal G” type. Since then the railway facilities have been controlled by an electronic interlocking at
Neustadt an der Weinstraße. The signal box at Lauterecken was taken out of service at this time. ==Infrastructure==