Kemer railway station () is a railway station in ðzmir. The station is the oldest railway station in Turkey, built in 1857. ðZBAN operates commuter trains north to AliaÃÂa and Menemen and south to Cumaovasñ and Tepeköy.
In 1856 the Ottoman Empire granted a concession to an English company to build a railway from ðzmir to Aydñn. The Ottoman Railway Company (ORC) started construction in late 1856 and completed a line, from the start at Alsancak to Kemer. Kemer station was opened in 1857 as Caravan Bridge (), named after a nearby ancient bridge with the same name. Kemer was chosen to be the main freight depot of the ORC in ðzmir. When the railway reached the town of Torbalñ in 1860, the first trains started to operate on the line. Freight trains carrying mainly figs, would unload at Kemer depot and would be distributed in ðzmir via horse pulled wagons. Freight trains from the south as well as horse pulled caravans from the east and north would unload at Kemer. In its early years Kemer station was the main freight depot in ðzmir. When the railway reached Aydñn in 1866, most freight would be unloaded in Alsancak. The Turkish State Railways became the new owners of the station in 1935, when they bought the ORC. The station was renamed as Kemer around that time. The station was electrified with 25 kV AC catenary in 2001. In 2006 the station was closed to passenger traffic and rebuilt in 2008, to be re-opened to service in 2010.
ESHOT operates regional bus service, accessible from the station.