Chichester | |
Symbol Location: | gb |
Symbol: | rail |
Borough: | Chichester |
Country: | England |
Grid Name: | Grid reference |
Manager: | Southern |
Platforms: | 2 |
Code: | CCH |
Classification: | DfT category C2 |
Opened: | 8 June 1846[1] |
Years1: | 1957-1958 |
Events1: | station extensively rebuilt |
Footnotes: | Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road |
Chichester railway station is a railway station in the city of Chichester in West Sussex, England. It is from .[2]
The station is located on the Brighton to Portsmouth line of the LBSCR. Passenger services are operated under the brand name West Coastway Line which runs between Brighton and Southampton. The station and all passenger services are operated by Southern.
The station opened in 1846 and by the 1920s was listed in the top ten most prestigious Southern Railway stations due to royal use for Goodwood Racecourse race days. By the 1950s the station had become dilapidated and was demolished and replaced with the modern station, which re-opened in 1961.[3]
There used to be a branch line north to Midhurst and an additional two platforms which were up and down bay platforms at the west end of the station on the north side. An additional bay platform on the south side remains in situ but is disused.
Services at Chichester are operated by Southern using Class 377 EMUs.
The typical off peak service in trains per hour is:
On Sunday, the services to London Victoria and Southampton Central each reduce to 1 tph, the service to Portsmouth & Southsea reduces to 2 tph (although both continue to Portsmouth Harbour), and the service to Brighton reduces to 2 tph, with none of these trains running via Littlehampton.
Until May 2022, Great Western Railway operated limited services between Brighton, Portsmouth Harbour and Bristol Temple Meads that called at Chichester.[4] [5] [6]