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Cultural heritage monument · Narvik Municipality
Cultural heritage monument
Narvik is a railway station located in Narvik Municipality in Nordland, Norway on the Ofoten Line. The station is located about 3.7 kilometres (2.3 mi) from the end of the line at the Port of Narvik. It is served by a daily passenger train to Luleå, via Kiruna and Boden, all these destinations are in Sweden. Since December 2024, this passenger services is operated by SJ, a state-owned passenger train operator in Sweden. Since 2020 a local summer seasonal passenger service, called 'The Arctic Train' has been operated between Narvik and Bjørnfjell and back. Tickets are sold to general public but cruise ship passengers are a target group. The station is the northernmost station in the Schengen Area and the northernmost standard-gauge railway station in the world. Until April 2026, it was the northern terminus for one of Europe's most celebrated night trains, the Norrlandståget which leaves Stockholm around six every afternoon, reaches Lappmarken by early the following morning, and then traverses the mountains that delimit the modern frontier between Sweden and Norway to reach the Ofotfjord, on the south shore of which lies the port of Narvik, where it arrives early afternoon. It is a...
Prior to the line opening the station was known as Taraldsvik station, it was constructed in 1900/1901. The station opened for passengers in 1902 along with Ofoten Line, to the Swedish border, and its continuation, the Iron Ore Line, in Sweden.
The station was officially opened and renamed as Narvik by King Oscar II on 14 July 1903.
The building was designed by Paul Armin Due, the ground floor was built of cut granite and fitted with arched windows, while the first floor was constructed of wood in the Swiss style.
In 1914 the station had one long-distance sleeper service to and from Boden Central Station. By 1939 there were two sleeper services that ran through to Stockholm.
The station was badly damaged during World War II and was rebuilt afterwards, reopening in 1951. The new station was described as "small, modern and convenient".