Swinton railway station (Greater Manchester) explained

Swinton
Symbol Location:gb
Symbol:rail
Borough:Swinton, Salford
Country:England
Grid Name:Grid reference
Manager:Northern Trains
Platforms:2
Code:SNN
Classification:DfT category E
Transit Authority:Greater Manchester
Opened:13 June 1887
Footnotes:Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

Swinton railway station serves the towns of Swinton and Pendlebury in the City of Salford, Greater Manchester, England. It is actually located in Pendlebury and not Swinton itself; the boundary between the two districts is about 40 yards further down Station Road (B5231), beyond the junction with Boundary Road and nearer the town centre. It opened, along with the line to passenger trains, in June 1887.

Swinton is on the Manchester to Southport Line. The station is located 5miles north-west of Manchester Victoria,[1] There are regular Northern Trains services to destinations such as Wigan North Western, Wigan Wallgate, Kirkby, Blackburn and Leeds; these services stop at local towns such as Salford, Atherton and Hindley. Onward trains take passengers on to Southport, although occasional services are direct.

Although the station is in the City of Salford, rather than Manchester, the name Swinton (Manchester) is used by National Rail to refer to the station; this is to avoid confusion with Swinton railway station in South Yorkshire.

Facilities

Swinton station has relatively basic facilities. For example, the ticket office is only open until 12:50 on weekdays and 13:50 on Saturdays; it is closed on Sundays. When closed, one must purchase tickets on board the train or on-line. A screen in the booking hall lists live departure times of the trains showing any delays or cancellations; screens are also now installed in the centre of the island platform, showing live train departure information to commuters waiting on the platforms.

An intercom unit is also installed on the platform which passengers can use in the event of an emergency or if they need help or information when the station is unstaffed. As the ticket office is at street level on the bridge above, and is connected to the platforms via a staircase, no step-free access is available for wheelchair or mobility-impaired users.[2]

Service

Monday to Saturday daytimes, two trains per hour go eastbound towards Manchester Victoria and two per hour towards Wigan, both to with one per hour extending to westbound.[3]

Most Manchester trains continue through to and or via the Caldervale Line. Passengers for stations to Southport need to change at Wigan, as only a limited number run through on weekdays since the May 2019 timetable change.

The evening service is similar, though there are no trains to Kirkby after 19:00 and services mostly terminate at Wigan Wallgate with one late service terminating at . On Sundays there is one per hour each way to Manchester Victoria and Blackburn and to .

A normal service operates on most bank holidays.

Reinstatement of Sunday service

During much of the 1970s, 1980s, 1990s and 2000s, there were no Sunday services serving Swinton. After several years of successful lobbying from passenger user groups and station friends' groups, Northern Rail introduced a 12-month trial Sunday service beginning on 23 May 2010 with the funding support from Greater Manchester Passenger Transport Executive.

The service still continues to operate in the spring 2021 timetable and is included in the new Northern franchise agreement that came into effect in April 2016.

External links

53.5148°N -2.3367°W

Notes and References

  1. Book: Yonge, John . Jacobs . Gerald . Railway Track Diagrams 4: Midlands & North West . 2nd . March 2005 . 1990 . Trackmaps . Bradford on Avon . 0-9549866-0-1 . map 48A .
  2. http://www.nationalrail.co.uk/stations/SNN/details.html Swinton (Manchester) station facilities
  3. https://d11vpqhghel6qd.cloudfront.net/images/timetables/bucket2/manchester-to-southport-and-kirkby-4386-qtcl35.pdf Northern Trains timetable 14 - Manchester to Southport and Kirkby, 16 May - 11 December 2021