Biggleswade railway station
Biggleswade | |
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The entrance to the station | |
Location | |
Place | Biggleswade |
Local authority | District of Central Bedfordshire |
Grid reference | TL192443 |
Operations | |
Station code | BIW |
Managed by | Great Northern |
Number of platforms | 4 |
DfT category | D |
Live arrivals/departures, station information and onward connections from National Rail Enquiries | |
Annual rail passenger usage* | |
2010/11 | 0.740 million |
2011/12 | 0.788 million |
2012/13 | 0.819 million |
2013/14 | 0.858 million |
2014/15 | 0.943 million |
National Rail – UK railway stations | |
* Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Biggleswade from Office of Rail and Road statistics. Methodology may vary year on year. | |
UK Railways portal |
Biggleswade Railway Station serves the town of Biggleswade in Bedfordshire, England. The station is 41 miles (66 km) north of London Kings Cross on the East Coast Main Line. Biggleswade is managed and served by Great Northern.
Biggleswade station was originally built in 1850 for the Great Northern railway. This made Biggleswade the first town in Bedfordshire to have a mainline railway station. The original station consisted of two lines but was rebuilt in 1901 to allow the present four line arrangement to be built.
Biggleswade has two large platforms and four main rail lines, a pair of "up and down" slow lines used by stopping services and a pair of "up and down" fast lines used by fast InterCity East Coast passing through at high speed and Great Northern services at peak times running non-stop to/from London. A fifth line extends off the "down" slow line which links into the remaining sidings used by the Plasmor block company.[1]
The station's platforms have been lengthened so that they can cope with 12 car trains, which are now serving the station. The station currently has four 12-car services in the morning and two in the evening. Larger numbers of 12-car services will serve the station following the completion of the Thameslink Programme.[2]
Facilities
Following a £60,000 refurbishment in July 2009 [3] by former franchise holder First Capital Connect [4] the station now has two waiting rooms and two sets of toilets on Platforms 1/2, and also a small cafe at the bottom of the stairs. Platforms 3/4 currently only have a small shelter. The station has another small cafe in the old station buildings, as well as a ticket office.
There are two modern touch screen ticket machines located in front of the booking office, and both sheltered and secure cycle storage is provided next to the station buildings. There are four helpoints located at various points in the station, including one in the main car park.
Biggleswade station does not currently have automatic ticket gates, and is unlikely to do so in the future, as with the current footbridge it is not possible.
Services
Biggleswade station is served by a half-hourly service southbound to London Kings Cross and northbound to Peterborough. There is an hourly service in each direction on Sundays.[5] There are also extra fast services to/from London in the morning and evening weekday peaks.
History
Biggleswade station was once a busy goods yard with several sidings used for loading trains of market produce to be taken to London markets. The decline of this led to a reduction in the use of the station, and it is now used solely for passenger traffic. Plasmor Concrete Products Ltd owns the yard where the former goods depot was sited. These lines into the sidings are still active with train workings of breeze block bricks brought down from Heck to Biggleswade, where they are then unloaded onto lorries for distribution. The goods depot, stables and weighbridge office have all now been demolished but the old goods weighbridge remains on site as well as the remains of a luggage/parcels weighbridge next to the station building, although out of use.
Biggleswade also had a signal box but this was closed when semaphore signals were replaced in the early 1970s. The station was used as a Red Star parcel office but this was closed in the mid 1980s when parcel traffic was forced to use Stevenage station. The line through the station was electrified in 1988, as part of the wider ECML electrification scheme. Prior to that (from 1977-88), local services only operated between Hitchin & Huntingdon outside of peak hours. Local trains connected at Hitchin with the suburban services between Kings Cross and Royston and through passengers had to change there.
Gallery
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The station entrance in 2006.
Route
Preceding station | National Rail | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Great Northern Great Northern Peterborough Line | ||||
Great Northern Great Northern fasts | ||||
Great Northern Great Northern fasts | ||||
Great Northern Great Northern fasts |
References
- ↑ Yonge, John (September 2006) [1994]. Jacobs, Gerald, ed. Railway Track Diagrams 2: Eastern (3rd ed.). Bradford on Avon: Trackmaps. map 15C. ISBN 0-9549866-2-8.
- ↑ http://www.firstcapitalconnect.co.uk/about-us/major-programmes-and-developments/more-seats-for-you/the-future/
- ↑ "£60,000 of improvements for railway station". www.allrailjobs.co.uk. Retrieved 2015-10-11.
- ↑ http://www.firstcapitalconnect.co.uk/Main.php?sEvent=News&sFileName=News.php&iId=180 Archived August 18, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Table 25 National Rail timetable, May 2016
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Biggleswade railway station. |
- Train times and station information for Biggleswade railway station from National Rail
Coordinates: 52°05′06″N 0°15′40″W / 52.085°N 0.261°W