Zug railway station is situated in Bahnhofplatz, right in the heart of the city centre, a short distance from the shore of Lake Zug.
History
The first railway station in Zug was built in 1863-1864 by the architect Friedrich Jacob Wanner, in what is now the Bundesplatz. It was a terminal station, which could be reached only from the direction of Cham and Knonau. With an additional junction, trains could be turned. In 1897, as the railway lines to Zürich via Thalwil and to Arth-Goldau were opened, the station had to be moved to its current site. The original station building was dismantled and rebuilt in Zürich Wollishofen.
Station building
Between 2001 and 2004, a redesigned station building was constructed at the station, at a cost of some 65 million Swiss francs. The building area is approximately 6500 m². The redesigned building consists of a basement used for storage, one retail space at street level and another at platform level, and three floors of office space above. A total of 14 retail stores are located in the retail spaces. A new passage to the station entrance was specially built, so that pedestrians can reach the concourse more easily. Additionally, the separate Grafenau and Metalli quarters are now easier to reach. For the cyclists, new shelters were built. The newly created Bahnhofsplatz serves as a bus turning area. There are also internet connections, via wireless LAN, at certain locations within the station. From the onset of dusk until 23:00 hours, the station building is illuminated by a light installation by artist James Turrell. For that purpose, the southern glass facade is equipped with fluorescent tubes, which are mounted so that the colors red, green and blue and resulting mixed colors can be created. As the control system of the light elements can suffer technical problems during long-lasting cold weather, the installation is shut down in such weather. On 19 October 2005, the station received a Brunel Award for its architecture and light installation.
Station yard
The station yard consists of seven tracks, of which one is a terminating track, while the other six tracks are through tracks. Altogether, there are a side platform and three island platforms, one of which is laid out in a wedge shape. One of the remaining island platforms is a partial side platform, due to the head track status of track 1. Passenger movements are usually handled as follows:
Track 1: Terminal track, serves the S24 to Zürich HB - Winterthur
Track 2: IC/EC/IR to Arth-Goldau-Ticino
Track 3: IC/EC/IR to Zürich HB, S2 to Baar Lindenpark and Erstfeld
Track 4: IR to Luzern, S1 to Rotkreuz and Luzern
Track 5: IR to Zürich HB/Zürich Flughafen, S1 to Baar
Track 6: A sidetrack, mostly used if another track is occupied
Track 7: S5 to Affoltern-Zürich-Uster-Pfäffikon SZ
Services
The following services call at Zug:
EuroCity: service every two hours between Zürich Hauptbahnhof and ; one train per day continues to.
InterCity: service every two hours between Zürich Hauptbahnhof and.
InterRegio:
* service every hour between Zürich Hauptbahnhof and.
* service every hour between and Lucerne.
* service every two hours between Zürich Hauptbahnhof and.
Lucerne S-Bahn /Zug Stadtbahn : service every fifteen minutes between Rotkreuz and, with every other train continuing from Rotkreuz to.
Zürich S-Bahn:
* : half-hourly service to.
* : half-hourly service to, trains continue from Winterthur to either or.