Swindon railway station
Swindon | |
---|---|
Location | |
Place | Swindon |
Local authority | Borough of Swindon |
Coordinates | 51°33′56″N 1°47′07″W / 51.5656°N 1.7854°WCoordinates: 51°33′56″N 1°47′07″W / 51.5656°N 1.7854°W |
Grid reference | SU149851 |
Operations | |
Station code | SWI |
Managed by | Great Western Railway |
Number of platforms | 4 |
DfT category | C1 |
Live arrivals/departures, station information and onward connections from National Rail Enquiries | |
Annual rail passenger usage* | |
2009/10 | 2.835 million |
2010/11 | 3.039 million |
2011/12 | 3.235 million |
2012/13 | 3.220 million |
2013/14 | 3.350 million |
History | |
Original company | Great Western Railway |
Pre-grouping | GWR |
Post-grouping | GWR |
1842 | "Swindon Junction" opened |
1961 | Renamed "Swindon" |
National Rail – UK railway stations | |
* Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Swindon from Office of Rail and Road statistics. Methodology may vary year on year. | |
UK Railways portal |
Swindon railway station is a main line railway station serving the town of Swindon in Wiltshire, South West England. It is an important junction, where the former Great Western Railway line to Gloucester and Cheltenham Spa, the Great Western Main Line to Bristol Temple Meads and the South Wales Main Line route to Bristol Parkway and South Wales diverge. The station is managed by Great Western Railway (GWR), who operate all trains serving it.
It is approximately 220 yards (200 m) from the central bus station and the town centre. It is served by GWR services from London Paddington to Bristol Temple Meads, Cardiff Central, Cheltenham Spa via Gloucester, Swansea and the rest of South Wales, and from Swindon to Westbury. There is also an early morning service to Southampton which originates at Gloucester reversing at Swindon.
History
With the railway passing through the town in early 1841, the Goddard Arms public house in Old Swindon was used as a railway booking office in lieu of a station. Tickets purchased included the fare for a horse-drawn carriage to the line at the bottom of the hill.[1]
Swindon railway station opened in 1842 with construction of the Great Western Railway's engineering works continuing. Until 1895, every train stopped here for at least 10 minutes to change locomotives. Swindon station hosted the first recorded railway refreshment rooms, divided according to class. Swindonians, for a time, were eminently proud that even the current King and Queen of the time had partaken of refreshments there.[1] The station in 1842 was built of three storeys, with the refreshment rooms on the ground floor, the upper floors comprising the station hotel and lounge. Until 1961, when Swindon Town station closed, the station was known as Swindon Junction.
The building was demolished in 1972, with today's modern station and office block erected on the site.[1]
The Travel Centre (i.e. booking office) at Swindon was APTIS-equipped by the end of October 1986, making it one of the very first stations with the ticketing system which was eventually found across the UK at all staffed British Rail stations by the end of the 1980s.
On 2 June 2003 Platform 4 opened.[2] Prior to this all westbound trains had used Platform 3 and eastbound services Platform 1. Services terminating or starting here on the lines to Westbury via Chippenham and Gloucester use platform 2, a west-facing inset bay.
Awards
- 2004 – Station Excellence of the Year Award won. The year-old Platform 4 had saved hundreds of minutes of passenger time, as it removed a bottleneck at the station.
- 2005 – Staff at the station received an internal award, First for Service, for their outstanding customer treatment.
Services
Railway lines in Swindon | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Preceding station | National Rail | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Terminus | Great Western Railway Cheltenham Spa – Swindon |
Kemble | ||
Reading or Didcot Parkway |
Great Western Railway London – Cardiff/Swansea |
Bristol Parkway | ||
Great Western Railway London – Bristol |
Chippenham | |||
Great Western Railway London – Cheltenham Spa |
Kemble | |||
Terminus | Great Western Railway Swindon-Westbury/Southampton (Limited service) |
Chippenham | ||
Historical railways | ||||
Terminus | Great Western Railway Cheltenham and Great Western Union Railway |
Purton Line open, station closed | ||
Stratton Park Halt Line open, station closed |
Great Western Railway Main Line |
Wootton Bassett Line open, station closed | ||
Disused railways | ||||
Stratton Line and station closed |
Great Western Railway Highworth Branch Line |
Terminus |
Panel Box
The railway in the vicinity of Swindon station and for a distance of about 20–30 miles in each direction towards Didcot, Bristol, South Wales and Gloucester is controlled from a signal box situation behind platform number 4. The panel box is a Western Region Integra design built by Henry Williams (Darlington) and opened in March 1968. The panel box was decommissioned in February 2016[3] and has been secured for preservation at Didcot Railway Centre.[4]
Plans
It was announced in December 2005 that stations in the Thames Valley region were to be upgraded.[5]
In August 2014, Network Rail completed the redoubling of the track between Swindon and Kemble in order to improve rail services between London and Cheltenham/Gloucester, and to allow for maintenance work in the Severn Tunnel when Swansea services are diverted via Gloucester. When originally laid in 1842 the line was double-track throughout, however some 12 1⁄4 miles (19.7 km) of the second track were removed in 1968/69.[6] As of July 2008, the Office of Rail Regulation was receiving submissions to restore this project (previously omitted) to Network Rail's plans for 2009–2014.[7] The project cost was estimated at £50.2 million and received backing from the South West Development Agency and others[8] but stalled when it was left out of the new Coalition Government's Spending Review in October 2010.[9] Work commenced in January 2013[10] and was completed in August 2014.[11]
On 1 March 2011, Secretary of State for Transport Phillip Hammond announced that plans for electrifying the Great Western main line west from Didcot through Swindon to Bristol and Cardiff had resumed at a planned cost of £704 million.[12] The electrification project had first been announced by the previous Government's Transport Secretary Andrew Adonis, on 23 July 2009.[13]
References
- 1 2 3 Mark Child (2002). Swindon : An Illustrated History. United Kingdom: Breedon Books Publishing. ISBN 1-85983-322-5.
- ↑ "It's Official: Swindon Platform 4 is Now Open". DfT. Archived from the original on 2007-02-06. Retrieved 2008-04-01.
- ↑ "Swindon Signal Panel - The Signal Box Forum"Signalbox.org; Retrieved 29 September 2016
- ↑ http://www.swindonpanel.org.uk
- ↑ Plans for stations improvements bbc.co.uk 13 December 2005
- ↑ Allen, G. Freeman (1979). The Western since 1948. Ian Allan. pp. 27–29, 153, 157–8. ISBN 0-7110-0883-3.
- ↑ A recent Parliamentary debate on the Swindon-Kemble line
- ↑ 'This is Gloucestershire' reporting on doubling the Swindon – Kemble line
- ↑ 'This is Gloucestershire' Swindon – Kemble redoubling project
- ↑ m Swindon to Kemble rail upgrade begins BBC News 11 January 2013
- ↑ Swindon to Kemble rail line redoubling work complete BBC News 25 August 2014
- ↑ Cabinet Office
- ↑ Adonis, Andrew (23 July 2009). "How to get Britains railways back on track". The Times. London.
External links
Media related to Swindon railway station at Wikimedia Commons