Hazur Sahib Nanded railway station, railway station in Nanded, Maharashtra, India
Hazur Sahib Nanded is a railway station in India with four platforms and seven broad gauge tracks. The station sits at ground level in a central location and features covered waiting areas, lifts, a ticket office, food vendors, and small shops for travelers.
The railway line through Nanded was built around 1900 during British times with narrow gauge tracks. The tracks were converted to broad gauge in the 1990s and 2000s, allowing faster and more reliable train services for the region.
The station is named after Hazur Sahib, honoring a sacred Sikh site nearby where many pilgrims travel through. This religious connection shapes how local people and visitors experience the place as a spiritual gateway to the city.
The station is easy to access with lifts and ramps for people with mobility needs, and tickets can be booked at counters or online. Parking, waiting rooms, ATMs, a railway hospital, and taxi or bus services are all available directly at the station.
The station was renamed in 2008 as Hazur Sahib to honor a sacred Sikh site where Guru Gobind Singh, the tenth Sikh Guru, spent his final days and died in 1708. This connection makes the station an important spiritual passage for visitors from across the country.
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