Effingham Junction railway station

Effingham Junction National Rail
Location
Place Effingham
Local authority Borough of Guildford
Grid reference TQ102558
Operations
Station code EFF
Managed by South West Trains
Number of platforms 2
DfT category D
Live arrivals/departures, station information and onward connections
from National Rail Enquiries
Annual rail passenger usage*
2010/11 Decrease 0.268 million
– Interchange  Decrease 13,385
2011/12 Increase 0.285 million
– Interchange  Increase 16,328
2012/13 Increase 0.303 million
– Interchange  Increase 18,622
2013/14 Increase 0.309 million
– Interchange  Decrease 17,566
2014/15 Increase 0.317 million
– Interchange  Increase 19,755
History
Key dates Opened 1888 (1888)
National Rail – UK railway stations
* Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Effingham Junction from Office of Rail and Road statistics. Methodology may vary year on year.
UK Railways portal
Platform view (1991)

Effingham Junction railway station is just north of the far northern border of the village of Effingham, closer to the centre of East Horsley, homes of which it borders, in Surrey, England. Although the station takes its name from the former town, and the immediate vicinity has itself become known as Effingham Junction, it is actually in the latter. Effingham Junction is at the junction of the New Guildford Line, from London Waterloo to Guildford, and the line from Leatherhead, which carries trains from London Waterloo via Epsom.

The London and South Western Railway opened the station on 2 July 1888,[1] three years after completing the two routes that serve it.[2] Both routes were subsequently electrified by the Southern Railway in 1925 and for many years it served as the terminus for trains from the Epsom direction, with a seven-road carriage shed south of the station provided by the SR to allow empty EMU sets to be reversed and stabled clear of the main running lines.[3] This still stands, though it ceased to be used for carriage storage in 1993 - it is now used by Colas Rail as a maintenance base for Network Rail MPVs and track machines.[4]

The station is managed and primarily serviced by South West Trains, though Southern also provides some peak period services. The latter are a holdover from the British Rail-era timetables of the 1970s and 1980s, when the Epsom line had regular services to London Victoria as well as to Waterloo.[5] It was also served in the late 1980s/early 1990s by Thameslink services between Luton and Guildford via Herne Hill & West Croydon, but these ended in 1994 shortly before the privatisation of the UK railway network.[6]

Services

South West Trains[7]

Southern (Peak Time Only)[8]

Notes

  1. Mallinson, Howard (2006). Guildford via Cobham. p. 152.
  2. Body, p.88
  3. A view of the carriage shed at Effingham Junction in February 1983Railway Herald; Retrieved 2015-03-01
  4. MPVs at Effingham Junction www.bloodandcustard.com; Retrieved 2015-03-01
  5. Body, p.89
  6. GB National Rail Timetable May 1994 Edition, Table 52
  7. GB NRT December 2015-May 2016, Table 152
  8. GB NRT 2015-16, Table 182

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Effingham Junction railway station.
Preceding station National Rail Following station
Cobham & Stoke d'Abernon   South West Trains
Waterloo-Guildford via Cobham
  Horsley
Bookham   South West Trains
Mole Valley Line
Bookham Branch
 
Bookham   Southern
Peak periods only
  Guildford

Coordinates: 51°17′28″N 0°25′12″W / 51.291°N 0.420°W / 51.291; -0.420


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.