[1][2] It is located in the Norrmalm district of central Stockholm on Vasagatan, extending from Vattugatan in the south to Kungsbron in the north.
Since 2001, the station building has been owned and managed by Jernhusen, while the platforms and tracks are overseen by the Swedish Transport Administration.
The most significant changes took place between 1925 and 1928 when the large central hall, designed by architect Folke Zettervall, was added.
In the mid-1950s, the station was integrated with the Stockholm Metro through a new underground passageway and concourse to T-Centralen.
[4] In July 2017, the adjoining Stockholm City Station opened, located beneath T-Centralen.
[7] The station consists of two parts: On level with the Northern Railway Square are service depots for long-distance and regional trains.
Terminating trains from the south arrive on tracks 17 to 19 where passengers alight, and then continue to the service depots to the north where they are cleaned and have their supplies refilled.
A bus terminal called Cityterminalen is located adjacent to the main station, directly connected by a short pedestrian tunnel.
Services on all lines of the Stockholm Metro network are provided on a separate station named T-Centralen.
He was a Swedish scenographer and a decoration painter, who worked at the royal dramatic theater at the same time as Natan Johansson.
In this painting we see a lake in the color blue mixed with light green, sunlight cutting through the clouds over the mountains surrounded by bushes and trees.
A winter land painting, there are multiple pine trees with heavy snow weighing down on the branches.
In this painting we can see the entree of a chateau framed by a lot of green nature, The path to the entre is a bridge over water, in the background we can see a yard.