Elgin railway station explained

Elgin
Native Name:Gaelic; Scottish Gaelic: Eilginn
Symbol Location:gb
Symbol:rail
Borough:Elgin, Moray
Country:Scotland
Coordinates:57.6428°N -3.311°W
Grid Name:Grid reference
Manager:ScotRail
Platforms:2
Code:ELG[1]
Years:10 August 1852
Events:GNSR station opened
Years1:25 March 1858
Events1:Highland station opened
Years2:6 May 1968
Events2:GNSR station closed
Years3:1990
Events3:Highland station rebuilt
Footnotes:Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

Elgin railway station is a railway station serving the town of Elgin, Moray in Scotland. The station is managed and served by ScotRail and is on the Aberdeen to Inverness Line, between Keith and Forres, measured 12miles from Forres.[2]

History

See main article: Morayshire Railway. The first station in Elgin was opened by the Great North of Scotland Railway (GNSR) on 10 August 1852 by the Morayshire Railway. The second owned by the Highland Railway was opened on 25 March 1858 by the Inverness and Aberdeen Junction Railway and later known as Elgin West. The GNSR lines to Lossiemouth and (where it joined the Strathspey Railway (GNoSR)) were subsequently joined by the GNSR Morayshire Coast line in 1886–7.

The GNSR company prepared plans in the mid-1890s for a new station building which was intended to be a joint station with the Highland Railway. Mr P.M. Barnett, engineer-in-chief of the GNSR submitted a plan which proposed a diversion from the Highland company mainline and a new double line, with platforms on all, which would have resulted in the Highland company's existing lines becoming joint. GNSR trains from Craigellachie and Lossiemouth could run into different lines, and the Highland company's trains would stop opposite, allowing easy exchange between carriages.[3] Despite a meeting between Barnett and Mr Roberts, the Highland company engineer, an agreement could not be reached. The GNSR proceeded with plans of their own in 1898[4] on their existing site, with a new building with a front elevation of 130feet in length. Construction started in 1899 and the new station was modified during construction. It resulted in a frontage of 250feet. The new building opened on Saturday 30 August 1902.[5] The upper part of the building provided accommodation to the manager's apartments, clerks and tea-rooms, and the western portion was the station masters's house. The ground floor comprised a large waiting-room with a circular glass roof, about 70 ft in length and 30 ft in width. All four platforms had an iron and glass canopy with the ironwork painted in pale blue colour. The clerk's office contained a row of telegraph instruments, and telephones communicating with the locomotive department, the signal cabins and with the Highland station. A pneumatic tube system conveying messages to and from other offices was also installed.[6] The architect was the company engineer, P.M. Barnett.

All three of the GNSR routes were closed in the 1960s as a result of the Beeching Axe, with the Lossiemouth branch the first to go in April 1964 and the other two routes following in May 1968.

Both stations were located about one mile to the south of Elgin town centre, which made them inconvenient for local journeys, e.g. to Lossiemouth, and bus services soon eliminated much of the local passenger traffic - passengers would generally only use the train service if they were connecting to long-distance trains. The stations were less than 500 metres apart and linked by a footpath.

The present station, formerly the West (ex-Highland) station, was retained in 1968-69 was rebuilt and the platforms were raised. The new passenger facilities proved inadequate and it was rebuilt again in a modern style by British Rail in 1990 at a cost of £400,000[7] .

The GNSR station (known as Elgin East) was closed with the end of services on the coast and Craigellachie lines on 6 May 1968.[8] The GNSR station building is still used as office accommodation and stands on the site of the original Morayshire Railway station. A sizeable goods yard is still in operation on this site.

Recent infrastructure improvements

As well as the aforementioned timetable improvements, Transport Scotland agreed in 2014 to fund a £170 million infrastructure upgrade project for the line. This included signalling improvements, a longer loop and platform extensions for Elgin.[9]

A 10-day engineering blockade between Keith and Inverness saw the signalling and track improvements both here and in Forres completed, with the Elgin loop extended by 400m (1,300feet) and new colour light signals commissioned under the control of the signalling centre at Inverness. The level crossing was also converted to remote operation by CCTV from the location. The line reopened as scheduled on 17 October 2017.

Facilities

The station has a ticket office, ticket machine and accessible toilets on platform 1, adjacent to which is the car park and bike racks. Both platforms are equipped with waiting shelters, benches and help points, and are linked by a footbridge and lifts.[10]

Passenger services

Passenger Volume at Elgin[11] !!2002–03!2004–05!2005–06!2006–07!2007–08!2008–09!2009–10!2010–11!2011–12!2012–13!2013–14!2014–15!2015–16!2016–17!2017–18!2018–19!2019–20!2020–21!2021–22!2022–23
Entries and exits187,789225,516245,980240,365246,662261,296272,928297,546306,964322,324334,537342,466343,652317,456299,484306,206304,67064,492196,958228,902
The statistics cover twelve month periods that start in April.

Services

As of May 2022, the basic service at the station is (roughly) two-hourly in each direction, west to Inverness and east to, though a number of trains also start/terminate here from the Inverness direction to give an approximately hourly service westbound. The first eastbound train each weekday continues through to and Edinburgh Waverley, with another service terminating at Stonehaven in the evening. On Sundays, there are five trains each way to the main termini (one of which runs through to via Aberdeen) and two from Glasgow via Inverness that terminate here.[12]

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Deaves . Phil . Railway Codes . railwaycodes.org.uk . 27 September 2022.
  2. Book: TRACKatlas of Mainland Britain: A Comprehensive Geographic Atlas Showing the Rail Network of Great Britain . Platform 5 Publishing Ltd . 2017 . 978 1909431 26 3 . Bridge . Mike . 3rd . Sheffield . 100.
  3. News: . Proposed New Railway Station at Elgin . Huntly Express . Scotland . 12 October 1895 . 15 November 2021 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription .
  4. News: . New Station for Elgin . Aberdeen Press and Journal . Scotland . 7 April 1898 . 15 November 2021 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription .
  5. News: . Elgin Great North Railway Station . Banffshire Journal and General Advertiser . Scotland . 2 September 1902 . 15 November 2021 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription .
  6. News: . Great North’s New Station at Elgin . Northern Scot and Moray & Nairn Express . Scotland . 6 September 1902 . 15 November 2021 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription .
  7. News: . Elgin's Showpiece Station Opens . Aberdeen Press and Journal . Scotland . 8 March 1990 . 15 November 2021 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription .
  8. Butt (1995). Page 90.
  9. https://www.pressandjournal.co.uk/fp/uncategorized/46165/millions-to-be-spent-on-rail-line-upgrade/ "Millions to be spent on rail line upgrade"
  10. Web site: National Rail Enquiries - . 2022-08-19 . www.nationalrail.co.uk.
  11. Web site: Estimates of station usage ORR Data Portal . 25 December 2023 . dataportal.orr.gov.uk.
  12. eNRT May 2022 Edition, Table 214