Birmingham station group explained

The Birmingham station group is a station group of three railway stations in Birmingham city centre, consisting of New Street, Moor Street, and Snow Hill. The station group is printed on national railway tickets as BIRMINGHAM STNS and does not include the international station of Birmingham International, which is located some east of the city centre next to Birmingham Airport and National Exhibition Centre.

There are two other railway stations in central Birmingham, namely Five Ways in the south west of the city centre with connections on the New Street to Redditch line, and Jewellery Quarter in the north west of the city centre with connections on the Snow Hill to Worcester line and the West Midlands Metro.

Stations

Birmingham New Street

See main article: Birmingham New Street railway station. Birmingham New Street is Birmingham's principal railway station and one of the principal stations of the UK rail network.[1] The station is managed by Network Rail[2] and its main entrance is located on Stephenson Street. New Street is the main gateway for most people arriving in the city and serves most of the city rail services, providing links all across the United Kingdom. Services are provided by Avanti West Coast, CrossCountry, Transport for Wales and West Midlands Trains.[3]

Train

CrossCountry

Some services continue towards Aberdeen, Glasgow Central, Paignton and Penzance.

West Midlands Trains

Transport for Wales

Tram

West Midlands Metro services from Wolverhampton St. Georges terminate here, and run at up to a 6-8 minute frequency.

Birmingham Moor Street

See main article: Birmingham Moor Street railway station.

Birmingham Moor Street is the city's second busiest station[4] and is currently served by local trains the lines through Shirley and Henley-in-Arden to Stratford-upon-Avon and to Leamington via Solihull, and Chiltern Clubman services to London Marylebone. Chiltern also operate a limited number of weekday services from Marylebone terminating at Moor Street formed of class 67 locomotives and hauled coaching stock. On summer Sundays it is used by steam locomotives running tourist specials between Snow Hill and Stratford upon Avon and trains between Snow Hill and Tyseley for Vintage Trains. The station is located on Moor Street Queensway opposite the Pavilions Shopping Centre and the Bull Ring. Services are provided by Chiltern Railways and West Midlands Trains.

Birmingham Snow Hill

See main article: Birmingham Snow Hill railway station. Birmingham Snow Hill is located on Colmore Row and Livery Street and is managed by West Midlands Trains. Snow Hill provides a link between the Snow Hill Lines and the West Midlands Metro.

Long distance services

Snow Hill is served by regular Chiltern services to and from London Marylebone. Some Chiltern services continue beyond Birmingham to Kidderminster. The Chiltern service is:

Local services

Local services from Snow Hill, like most local services in the West Midlands, are supported by Transport for West Midlands. They are operated by West Midlands Railway. There are six West Midlands Railway trains per hour (tph) passing through Snow Hill in each direction, running as follows:

Eastbound:

of which one continues to

of which one continues to

some peak hour West Midlands Railway services continue from Dorridge to Leamington Spa

Westbound:

of which four continue to :

of which two continue to

(services beyond Worcester, to Malvern and Hereford are irregular, generally about one per hour)

Metro

See main article: West Midlands Metro.

Connections

Tickets marked as BIRMINGHAM STNS may be used to exit the railway network at any of the three city stations, as stated above Birmingham International is not part of the station group. All three city centre stations are less than a mile from each other, with the shortest distance being between Moor Street and New Street. Birmingham New Street is a half mile walk from Snow Hill[5] and a quarter mile walk from Moor Street.[6]

A direct and regular train service is in operation between Moor Street and Snow Hill through a tunnel, and since mid-2016 the Midland Metro provides a link between Snow Hill and New Street.[7]

Birmingham New Street and Moor Street are close to the major shopping centres in the city including Grand Central (formerly known as The Pallasades) and the Bullring. All three stations have a good interchange with bus services mostly operated by National Express West Midlands.[8] [9] [10]

See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: UK: 100 Busiest Railway Stations. The Geographist. 18 August 2014. 3 July 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150713213635/https://thegeographist.wordpress.com/2014/08/18/stations-annual-traffic-uk/. 13 July 2015. dead.
  2. Web site: Our stations. Network Rail. 30 April 2018.
  3. Web site: Birmingham & West Midlands Regional Map. National Rail Enquiries. 30 April 2018.
  4. Station usage 2016-17 data. Office of Rail and Road. 30 April 2018.
  5. Google Maps . Map of route from Snow Hill to New Street station (walking).
  6. Google Maps . Map of route from New Street to Moor Street station (walking).
  7. Web site: Midland Metro News. https://web.archive.org/web/20140305103348/http://www.centro.org.uk/transport/metro. dead. 2014-03-05. Centro.
  8. Web site: Birmingham New Street Onward Journey Information. National Rail. 30 April 2018.
  9. Web site: Birmingham Moor Street Onward Journey Information. National Rail. 30 April 2018.
  10. Web site: Birmingham Snow Hill Onward Journey Information. National Rail. 30 April 2018.