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Dresden Main Railway Station. Track 3 with Eurocity train to Budapest via Prague. From Dresden to Prague the train is pulled by a Czech multisystem locomotive, in order to allow seamless service on German and Czech rail net.
WIKIPEDIA: "Dresden Hauptbahnhof is part of the railway system that provides direct connections to Berlin, Prague and Nuremberg. Opening in 1897, it replaced three stations in the south of the city.
The station was damaged by the bombing of Dresden starting in February 1945. This was limited in extent until a specific attack in April 1945.
The station was repaired after the war. It had suffered significant damage to the train sheds and the glazing that had previously covered the train sheds was replaced by timber.
In the postwar era, Dresden Hauptbahnhof became one of the important railway stations in East Germany. However, the legacy of wartime damage subsequently compounded by poor maintenance saw the structure deteriorate to the point where remedial conservation was required.
Assessments of the structure during its 1997-2006 refurbishment project further revealed that the steel arches of the train shed had even been distorted out of alignment by wartime damage. It was also discovered that the structure had been damaged by corrosion since the war, rendering it unsuitable to carry the weight of a glazed roof and leading architects to use lightweight fabric instead.
During the floods in August 2002, the station hall was badly damaged by flooding from the river Weißeritz. The entrance hall and the lower platforms were flooded up to one metre by muddy water from the left tributary of the river Elbe coming from the Ore Mountains. Major damage to several tracks around Dresden closed the station for a month. The main reconstruction project was only temporarily interrupted.
In 2007, the station's reconstruction was a contender for the £20,000 Royal Institute of British Architects Stirling Prize for excellence in architecture in Europe."
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Dresda è tristemente famosa per una dei più devastanti bombardamenti della seconda guerra mondiale, ma oggi, ricostruita in maniera accurata, riporta il visitatore ai fasti dei principi di Sassonia.Qui vennero a dipingere il Canaletto ed il Bellotto, qui è stato costruito il Semperoper uno dei teatri d'opera più importanti del mondo, per tradizione e acustica.