Welshpool railway station explained

Welshpool
Native Name:Welsh: Y Trallwng
Symbol Location:gb
Symbol:rail
Borough:Welshpool, Powys
Country:Wales
Coordinates:52.6575°N -3.1399°W
Grid Name:Grid reference
Manager:Transport for Wales
Platforms:2
Code:WLP
Classification:DfT category F1
Years:14 August 1860
Events:opened
Years1:18 May 1992[1]
Events1:Original station closed and new station opened on track realignment.
Footnotes:Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

Welshpool railway station is a railway station on the Cambrian Line in Powys, mid-Wales. It was first opened in August 1860, but the current station was opened in May 1992 to allow for track re-alignment, the same day that the original closed, and is a short distance from the original. The station serves the town of Welshpool (Welsh: Y Trallwng), as well as its surroundings.

History

Built by the Oswestry & Newtown Railway, the original station opened on 14 August 1860. The line was initially operated by the London & North Western Railway before being absorbed by the Cambrian Railways, which became part of the Great Western Railway at the grouping which came into effect on 1 January 1923.

Midland Counties Dairy bought and operated the creamery at Cilcewydd. A siding from the station gave access for milk trains to the creamery.

About 100 metres north of the station were exchange sidings with the narrow gauge Welshpool & Llanfair Light Railway which opened for freight traffic in 1903 and closed in 1956 with a separate station serving passenger traffic until 1931. By 2017 the only remains are part of the cattle dock which has mixed gauge track embedded into concrete track bed. All other remains of this station and the site of the railway were obliterated by the construction of the new A483 road.

Present

There was some severe rationalisation of services under the Beeching cuts in the 1960s, with the old Cambrian main line to Whitchurch via closed to passengers in January 1965 and most local stations towards Aberystwyth following suit later that year. Two of the four platforms at the old station were later taken out of use. Subsequent development of the A483 road Welshpool bypass (opened in July 1993)[2] required the railway line to be shifted to the south. To enable this the original station was closed, and a new single island platform constructed by British Rail south of it, to allow realignment in May 1992.

The replacement station platform is reached by a pedestrian bridge crossing both the railway and the A483, with long uncovered inclines to the north and stepped access from the south. There are no facilities beyond a ticket vending machine, small shelter, bench seating, passenger information displays and a customer help point (though the National Rail Enquiries station page does have directions to a local travel agent with National Rail ticketing facilities).[3] The original station building can still be seen across the road, and has been converted into a shop and café.

The passing loop was later extended to to allow for an hourly train service, and to reduce the impact of delays on the line.

Services

Trains run from here westwards to and then either or via (most trains convey a portion for both routes) and eastwards to & . There is a basic two-hourly service each way - on weekdays & Saturdays with additional hourly Shrewsbury to Aberystwyth services until mid morning & again during late afternoon and early evenings. On Sundays there is a two-hourly service on the Shrewsbury - Aberystwyth axis, but only a limited service along the coast to/from Pwllheli (three in summer and one in winter).[4]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. http://www.disused-stations.org.uk/w/welshpool_1st/index.shtml Disused Stations - Welshpool (1st Site)
  2. https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/written-answers/1993/jul/26/welshpool-bypass Hansard
  3. http://www.nationalrail.co.uk/stations/WLP/details.html Welshpool station facilities
  4. GB eNRT May 2017 Edition, Table 76 (Network Rail)