Glounthaune railway station explained

Glounthaune
Native Name:Gleanntán
Native Name Lang:GA
Symbol:rail
Symbol Location:ie
Address:Glounthaune
County Cork
T45 PN82
Country:Ireland
Coordinates:51.9112°N -8.3251°W
Owned:Iarnród Éireann
Operator:Iarnród Éireann
Line:Cork–Cobh
Cork–Midleton
Platforms:2
Tracks:2
Structure:At-grade
Parking:Yes
Accessible:Limited
Code:GHANE (380)
Original:Cork and Youghal Railway
Pregroup:Great Southern and Western Railway
Postgroup:Great Southern Railways
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Zoom:12

Glounthaune railway station (Irish: Gleanntán) is an Iarnród Éireann station serving the town of Glounthaune in County Cork, Ireland. The station is at is the junction between Cobh and Midleton on the Cork Commuter line.[1]

History

The station opened on 10 November 1859 by the Cork, Youghal & Queenstown Railway,[2] with services initially only running onwards to Youghal. On 10 March 1862, passenger services began running to Cobh from the junction as well. The line onward to Midleton and Youghal closed to passenger services in 1963[3] before re-opening again in August 2009 as far as Midleton[4] The station was originally named "Queenstown Junction" and was renamed first "Cobh Junction" in 1928, and finally "Glounthaune" in 1994;[5] tickets issued from Iarnród Éireann portable ticket machines still print the station name as "Cobh Jct".

Services

The station is unstaffed, with two ticket machines near the entrance in the carpark and two leap card validators (one at the entrance and the other on the platform). There are two platforms serving the double track. Platform 1 is on the near side and is fully wheelchair accessible with eastbound trains from Cork to Cobh and Midleton. There is a footbridge to bring passengers from platform 1 to platform 2 meaning there is no wheelchair access to platform 2 and the westbound trains running to Little Island and Cork city. As of 2020, Cork County Council published plans to add more parking spaces (48 as of January 2020) and to improve accessibility to bicycles and improve onward bus connections in the 2020s.[6]

With around 40 trains per day in each direction, this is a frequent commuter station with four trains per hour running into Cork city at peak time on weekdays and twice per hour (1 from Cobh and 1 from Midleton) off peak. Travel time to Cork:11 minutes, Midleton:13 minutes and Cobh:14 minutes.[7] The station is usually served by IE 2600 Class diesel trains in 2 or 4 carriage setups.

Under the Cork metropolitan area transport strategy, published in 2019, it was planned to increase services to the station and potentially electrify the line by approximately 2040.[8]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Printable Timetables. Irish Rail. 2012-08-14. https://web.archive.org/web/20120825205834/http://www.irishrail.ie/index.jsp?p=119&n=147. 2012-08-25. dead.
  2. Web site: 6. On Track, Cork & its Railway Heritage Cork Heritage. corkheritage.ie. 2020-04-05.
  3. Web site: Bring back the old Youghal railway. Echo Live. 19 May 2018 . 2020-04-05.
  4. Web site: 2009-07-30. Service begins on Cork-Midleton line. en. rte.ie.
  5. Web site: Cobh Junction . Railscot - Irish Railways . 2024-03-21.
  6. Web site: Strategic Cycleway Scheme, Bury's Bridge to Carrigtwohill. January 2020. 5 April 2020. 12 February 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210212013933/https://www.corkcoco.ie/sites/default/files/2020-01/scheme-drawings-burys-bridge-to-carrigtwohill-rev-1.pdf. dead.
  7. Web site: Train Timetables by Station. Irish Rail. irishrail.ie . en. 2020-04-05.
  8. Web site: CMATS - Cork Metropolitan Area Draft Transport Strategy 2040. 2019-05-15. Cork Chamber - Advancing Business Together. en-US. 2020-04-05. 19 January 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210119233717/https://www.corkchamber.ie/cmats-cork-metropolitan-area-draft-transport-strategy-2040/. dead.