The first Linz central
station building was completed in 1858, to coincide with the arrival of the
Empress Elisabeth Railway company's Western Railway from Vienna. The station was rebuilt from 1936 by the
Nazis - being the closest city to
Adolf Hitler's birthplace - in a severe
modernist style characterized by a reinforced concrete frame, high ceilings, and elongated windows. But by the time of its completion, Linz had already been designated one of five "Führer cities" where complete remodelling would take place. The site of the station in the remodelling plan was designated as the site of the
Führermuseum, with the station to be moved to the south at the opposite end of a new main boulevard. However, these remodelling plans never came to fruition, and with the rebuilt station building damaged by Allied bombing during
World War II, the station was rebuilt for a second time between 1949-1955 in a contemporary sober style. By the end of the twentieth century, it was no longer appropriate to the increasing requirements of contemporary public transport. Between 2002-2004, the rebuilt station building was completely replaced with a new building designed by
Wilhelm Holzbauer. This redevelopment also added the
Terminal Tower skyscraper as part of a mixed-use complex. ==Station building==