Lostock | |
Symbol Location: | gb |
Symbol: | rail |
Borough: | Lostock, Bolton |
Country: | England |
Coordinates: | 53.573°N -2.494°W |
Grid Name: | Grid reference |
Manager: | Northern Trains |
Platforms: | 2 |
Tracks: | 4 |
Code: | LOT |
Classification: | DfT category E |
Transit Authority: | Greater Manchester |
Original: | Liverpool and Bury Railway |
Pregroup: | Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway |
Postgroup: | London, Midland and Scottish Railway |
Events: | Station opened as Lostock Junction |
Years1: | 7 November 1966 |
Events1: | Station closed |
Years2: | 16 May 1988 |
Events2: | Reopened as Lostock Parkway |
Years3: | ? |
Events3: | Renamed Lostock |
Footnotes: | Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road |
Lostock railway station serves the suburbs of Heaton and Lostock in Bolton, Greater Manchester, England. Built for the Liverpool and Bury Railway in 1852, the station was closed in 1966, then reopened on a smaller scale in 1988 to serve commuters.
According to large scale Ordnance Survey maps and local usage, the surrounding area is named Lostock Junction and the station is referred to as such by many local people. Network Rail's "location map" uses the same name.[1] This is similar to the situation in London where Clapham Junction railway station is in fact in Battersea, and the surrounding area has taken the name of Clapham Junction. Lostock itself is over a mile to the west of the station.
The railway line between and had opened as far as (between Adlington and) on 4 February 1841, and among the original stations on this route, the first station out of Bolton was at .[2] On 20 November 1848, the Liverpool and Bury Railway was opened giving a route between Bolton and Wigan, and the point where it connected to the Bolton–Preston line was named Lostock Junction; the first station out of Bolton on this route was . Later, a station was constructed at the junction, also named Lostock Junction, which opened around August 1852. The station gave its name to the village which grew around it.[3] This station had platforms on both the Preston and Wigan routes.[4]
On 17 July 1920, four people were killed and 148 were injured in a near head-on collision between two Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway passenger trains at Lostock Junction due to a signal having erroneously been ignored at danger.[5]
Lostock Junction Station closed on 7 November 1966 as part of the programme of cuts initiated by the Beeching Report of 1963. However, on 16 May 1988 the station was reopened, but now with platforms only on the Preston route and renamed Lostock Parkway, a large car park for the use of park-and-ride commuters having been provided. The suffix "Parkway" was later dropped.[6]
The two-platform station is served by two Northern services per hour southbound to via and northbound to and . It is a popular commuter station.[7]
Saturday and Sunday services were replaced by buses most weekends from May 2015 until November 2018 due to the late-running electrification work on the route.[8] Weekend services resumed on Sunday 11 November 2018 after the completion of the electrification engineering work.
Electric service commenced on Monday 11 February 2019, operated by Class 319 electric multiple units.[9]
Sunday services are reduced to 1 train per hour, with 4 services on Sunday mornings terminating at . All services are operated using electric units.
Before the December 2022 timetable change, services from Lostock were one train per hour in each direction, with only the Airport services stopping here. The amount of trains was increased from one to two trains per hour after the services were rerouted to both terminate at Manchester Airport.
Most recently in early 2009, the station has had a passenger information display system installed, giving waiting passengers on the platforms information about trains that are due to arrive. Fully computer automated, it is also equipped with an audio speaker system, giving the benefit of announcements of train arrivals and delays. During December 2008 - Spring 2009 the car park facilities were greatly improved by extending and resurfacing the land surrounding the railway, with the addition of floodlighting and CCTV. In April 2023, the stations information dot-matrix display screens were replaced.
The station has a ticket office, which is staffed from start of service until 19:35, six days per week (closed Sundays). A ticket vending machine is in place for purchase of tickets or promise to pay coupons when the ticket office is closed and for the collection of pre-paid tickets. Shelters are located on each platform and both have step-free access (via ramps northbound).[10]