Chesterfield | |
Symbol Location: | gb |
Symbol: | rail |
Borough: | Chesterfield, Chesterfield |
Country: | England |
Grid Name: | Grid reference |
Manager: | East Midlands Railway |
Platforms: | 3 |
Tracks: | 4 |
Code: | CHD |
Classification: | DfT category C1 |
Original: | North Midland Railway |
Pregroup: | Midland Railway |
Postgroup: | London, Midland and Scottish Railway |
Events1: | Original station opened |
Years2: | 2 May 1870 |
Events2: | Resited |
Years3: | 25 September 1950 |
Events3: | Renamed Chesterfield St Mary's |
Years4: | 18 June 1951 |
Events4: | Renamed Chesterfield Midland |
Years5: | 7 September 1964 |
Events5: | Renamed Chesterfield |
Footnotes: | Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road |
Chesterfield railway station serves the market town of Chesterfield in Derbyshire, England. It lies on the Midland Main Line. Four tracks pass through the station which has three platforms. It is currently operated by East Midlands Railway.
The station has the PlusBus scheme where train and bus tickets can be bought together at a saving.Chesterfield is a Penalty fare station for East Midlands Railway services.
The first line into Chesterfield was the North Midland Railway from Derby to Leeds in 1840. The original station was built in a Jacobean style similar to the one at Ambergate but it was replaced in 1870 by a new one further south in the current location, when the Midland Railway built the "New Road" to Sheffield. This new station of 1870 was designed by the company architect John Holloway Sanders.[1]
In 1892 the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway, later to become the Great Central Railway, crossed under the North Midland line 0.5miles south, at Horns Bridge, to a station two hundred yards west of this station. In 1897, the Lancashire, Derbyshire and East Coast Railway arrived, crossing both North Midland and Great Central lines at Horns Bridge with a viaduct seven hundred feet long, leading to a station at West Bars, near the Market Place.[2]
The line into Market Place station closed to passengers in 1951 due to problems in Bolsover Tunnel, although the station remained open for goods traffic until March 1957, when it was closed completely. The station building was demolished in 1972. The Great Central station closed in March 1963 and was demolished in 1973 to make way for the town's inner relief road.
The Midland station was demolished and rebuilt in 1963. Most of the buildings from 1963 were demolished in the late 1990s, shortly after privatisation. Most of the buildings on site now date from then.
This station is owned by Network Rail but is operated by East Midlands Railway, which operates trains between Sheffield and London St Pancras International. The station was extensively rebuilt shortly after Midland Mainline took over its operation from British Rail in 1996. Midland Mainline lost their franchise in November 2007. The running of the station was passed to East Midlands Trains, who ran the station for nearly 12 years. Operation then passed to East Midlands Railway.[3] [4]
Entrance to the station is on Crow Lane and includes a car park, taxi rank and bus stop. There is also a small car park on the other side of Crow Lane, which used to be free but now has a parking charge. The main entrance leads to the station concourse, which was built in the late 1990s; it includes a ticket office, a newsagent, a café and a waiting room. The concourse and the waiting room both have direct access to platform 1. There is also a waiting room on platform 2, which is accessed via a tunnel, using the stairs or lift in the concourse.
The fast lines have two large side platforms, one for each direction; these platforms are covered for around half their length. The goods lines pass around the rear of platform 2 and there is a third large platform here that serves the northbound goods line.
Platform 1 is for northbound trains, calling at stations to Sheffield, Manchester Piccadilly, Manchester Oxford Road, Liverpool Lime Street, Leeds, York, Doncaster, Newcastle, Edinburgh Waverley and Glasgow Central.
Platform 2 is for southbound trains, calling at stations to London St Pancras International, Derby, Nottingham, Peterborough, Norwich, Cambridge, Leicester, Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff Central, Bournemouth, Southampton, Plymouth and Penzance.
Platform 3 is bi-directional and was opened in July 2010. As of May 2015, it is used by some services on the Leeds-Nottingham and Liverpool-Norwich routes at peak periods and during engineering works to reduce dependence on replacement bus services.[13] It is located on the down slow line, backing on to Platform 2, and is long enough to accommodate a 10 car train. Platform 3 had existed in a previous incarnation decades earlier, although it was a bay platform.[14] [15] The building of platform 3 was originally planned for 2007/8 to go with the East Midlands North Erewash resignalling scheme; it would have allowed passenger services to run on the bi-directional down slow line (goods line) from a new Chesterfield South Junction to Tapton Junction during perturbation or engineering work on the fast lines in this area. It would have also facilitated the turn back of trains at Chesterfield during the Bradway Tunnel blockade in 2008/9.[16] Work on the platform actually began in March 2010 and it was completed in July 2010, at a cost of £2.6 million.[17]
The 07:39 East Midlands Railway Master Cutler service runs to London via Derby and Leicester Mondays to Fridays providing a fast business train, arriving at London by 09:37.[18]
Typical weekday service pattern:
Based on the above, there are typically 12 passenger trains per hour passing through the station on weekdays (6 in each direction), with 10 of those calling.
A pivotal scene in Frederick Forsyth's novel The Fourth Protocol took place at Chesterfield railway station, including on the station platform and ensuing action on nearby streets.[23]
Chesterfield was once served by three railway stations; the others were Chesterfield Central station (closed in 1963) and Chesterfield Market Place station (closed in 1957).
High Speed 2 trains were planned to serve Chesterfield. A branch off the eastern section of the HS2 line south of Chesterfield will route via the M1 running parallel to HS2, allowing trains to continue to and through Chesterfield to Sheffield Midland station was in the original plan. On 17 July 2017, the government confirmed a stop at Chesterfield after approval of the M18/Eastern Route.[24] However, an alteration to the HS2 plan in November 2021, said that HS2 will no longer go via Chesterfield, Sheffield and Leeds.