Construction of the
Leipzig–Dresden railway, built from 1837 to 1839, was begun from both ends simultaneously. The section from Dresden to Weintraube was opened on 19 July 1838 and at the same time the modern
Radebeul-Weintraube station was opened as the first station in what is now the city of Radebeul. The section from Weintraube via
Coswig to
Oberau, at the end of the now demolished
Oberau Tunnel, was opened on 16 September 1838. The Leipzig–Dresden railway was completed in 1839, it was duplicated in 1839 and 1840 and
Kötzschenbroda station was also opened in 1840. Radebeul station was opened on the line in the rural community of Radebeul on 29 November 1860 and a station hotel (
Bahnhofshotel) was built on the south side of the tracks. Two days later, on 1 December 1860, the
branch line from Coswig to Meissen, was opened. A station restaurant was built by Moritz Ziller in 1865 and it had been converted into a station hotel by 1888. The first entrance building was built in 1874. This was north of the railway tracks and south of the present building. In 1900, it was demolished after the new, modern station building had been erected. The freight tracks were established on 15 October 1876 and Radebeul was reclassified from a halt (
Haltepunkt) to a station (
Bahnhof) on 1 May 1881. The Kötzschenbroda timetable of 1876 indicates that not all of the 37 train services per day stopped in Radebeul, some only stopped "as required". Since then, both the standard gauge and the narrow-gauge railway lines have run to the south of the station building. That same year, four-track operations began between Radebeul and Coswig and these were extended between Radebeul and Dresden-Neustadt in 1901 with the opening of the new
Dresden-Neustadt station. The level crossing of the street now called
Hauptstraße (main street) was replaced by a road bridge and the new railway station was lit at night by electricity with power from the Niederlößnitz power station. The station was named Radebeul Ost on 5 May 1941. Several tracks were dismantled for
war reparations to the
Soviet Union in 1945. In Radebeul Ost station the tracks concerned were tracks 2 and 3. Track 1 and the remaining narrow gauge tracks (4 and 5) were the only tracks left in the station area. Outside the station area the only track left was the more southerly track 5. In the early 1960s, a central track was built in preparation for a future mixed-gauge operation with a correspondingly large clearance gauge so that it could handle Soviet broad-gauge wagons (
1520 mm gauge). The narrow gauge part remained unchanged. Platform 5 has been decommissioned. It is to be replaced by a three-track upgrade of the line to Dresden and a platform 6 is planned as a bay platform for additional peak-hour services from Dresden. == Transport services==