Gobowen railway station explained

Gobowen
Symbol Location:gb
Symbol:rail
Borough:Gobowen, Shropshire
Country:England
Coordinates:52.8935°N -3.0371°W
Grid Name:Grid reference
Manager:Transport for Wales
Lines:Shrewsbury–Chester
Platforms:2
Code:GOB
Classification:DfT category E
Original:Shrewsbury, Oswestry and Chester Junction Railway
Pregroup:Great Western Railway
Years:12 October 1848
Events:Opened[1]
Footnotes:Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

Gobowen railway station is a railway station on the Shrewsbury to Chester Line of the former Great Western Railway's London Paddington to Birkenhead Woodside via Birmingham Snow Hill line, serving the village of Gobowen in Shropshire, England. It is the nearest station to the town of Oswestry.

History

The station building was designed by Thomas Mainwaring Penson,[2] and is a Grade II listed building. The station was built between 1846 and 1848 by the Shrewsbury and Chester Railway in a notable Florentine (or Italianate) style with white stucco facing and a small turret. The awnings and the footbridge were added later by the Great Western Railway (the footbridge was demolished in 1987). Although a very small village, Gobowen was the junction station for the much larger regional town of Oswestry some three miles away. When rail services to Oswestry ceased in November 1966, Gobowen was retained as the railhead for the surrounding area. There is a scheme in progress to open this branch as a heritage railway.[3] Until 1967 Gobowen was served by the GWR, latterly BR Western Region, express services between London Paddington and Birkenhead Woodside.

Severn-Dee Travel was established in 1995 and managed by the late David Lloyd, who was also a keen campaigner for the restoration of a direct rail link between the area and London. Following his death, the Wrexham & Shropshire locomotive 67015 was named in his honour, and a replica nameplate from the locomotive can be seen in the booking office.

Future

Gobowen station may become the northern terminus of the proposed Cambrian Heritage Railways line to Llynclys, Pant and Blodwel via Oswestry. Shropshire Council was to acquire the coal yard at Gobowen for railway-related uses, including car parking for the station. If the plans are fully realised, the station would have three platforms, one of which would be for the Heritage Railway.[4]

Facilities

The main building, which was renovated in 2005, is used as small business space. The booking office is now located in the waiting room on the southbound platform. Unusually, it is not operated directly by the train operating company but by an independent travel agent, Severn-Dee Travel. It is staffed on weekdays from 07:15 to 16:00 and on Saturdays from 07:15 to midday. At other times tickets must be purchased on the train.

A vending machine and disabled access toilet is located in the ticket hall.[5] Train running information is offered via CIS displays, timetable posters and automatic announcements. Level access to both platforms is via the staffed barrier level crossing at the north end which is controlled from the adjacent signal box.[6]

There are no waiting shelters, but canopies are provided on both platforms:

Services

, train services run on two routes:

These combine to give a basic hourly frequency between Shrewsbury and (Mon - Sat). Two early morning northbound trains terminate short at on weekdays (one of which connects with the Avanti West Coast service to London Euston), whilst one morning and one evening train start from there. Others at the start and end of day run between Chester and Shrewsbury only, though there is also one late evening weekday through train to Manchester Piccadilly and three that run to rather than Holyhead (with one in the opposite direction). On Sundays, there is a two-hourly service (with occasional extras) each way, mostly running between Chester and Birmingham International (though there are three trains to Holyhead and two to Cardiff).[7]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. p.105
  2. Book: Newman, John. Pevsner. Nikolaus. Nikolaus Pevsner. The Buildings of England. Shropshire. Yale University Press. 2006. New Haven; London. 272–273. 0-300-12083-4 .
  3. News: Oswestry Advertizer. 2008-07-15. 3.
  4. News: Council in talks to buy up rail land. 2016-03-30. Shropshire Star. 2008-11-24. https://web.archive.org/web/20110525211910/http://www.shropshirestar.com/latest/2008/11/24/council-in-talks-to-buy-up-rail-land/. 2011-05-25.
  5. http://www.nationalrail.co.uk/stations/GOB/details.html Gobowen station facilities
  6. https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/4024045 Gobowen signal box and B5069 level crossing
  7. GB eNRT December 2018 Edition, Table 75