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Manchester Oxford Road railway station

 
Wikipedia: Manchester Oxford Road railway station
 
Manchester Oxford Road
Manchester Oxford Road railway station
Location
Place Manchester
Local authority Manchester
Coordinates 53°28′26″N 2°14′32″W / 53.4739°N 2.2422°W / 53.4739; -2.2422Coordinates: 53°28′26″N 2°14′32″W / 53.4739°N 2.2422°W / 53.4739; -2.2422
Operations
Station code MCO
Managed by Northern Rail
Platforms in use 5
Live arrivals/departures and station information from National Rail
Annual rail passenger usage
2004/05 * 0.562 million
2005/06 * 0.625 million
2006/07 * 4.331 million
2007/08 * 1.213 million
History
Opened 1849
Rebuilt 1960 (1849
Rebuilt 1960
)
National Rail - UK railway stations
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
* Annual passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Manchester Oxford Road from Office of Rail Regulation statistics.
 v  d  e Manchester Lines - City Centre and North, (Past, Present and Future)
To Bury
uCONTg CONTu
To Rochdale
Moston
uSTR BHF
Bowker Vale
uBHF STR CONTu
To Oldham
Newton Heath
uSTR eBHF BHF
Dean Lane
Crumpsall
uBHF uexSTRrg emKRZu mueABZrf
Central Park
uSTR uexCPICl eCPICr STR CONTu
To Tameside
Abraham Moss;Monsall
ueBHF uexBHF ABZrg STRrf eBHF
Clayton Bridge
Woodlands Road
uBHF uexSTR STR eBHF
Park
Queens Road
ueBHF uexSTR ABZld STRq ABZrd uCONTg
To Tameside
Miles Platting
ueABZrg uexSTRrf eBHF STR uexBHF
Edge Lane
STRrg umKRZu eABZ3rg STRrf STR uexBHF
Clayton
Oldham Road
STR uSTR exKBHFe STRrg STRrf uexBHF
New East
Victoria Station
CPICl uCPICr uexSTRrg uexBHFq emKRZu uexBHFq uexSTRrf
Holt Town/Sportcity
Exchange
eBHF uSTR uexSTR ABZlf STRq STRlg
To Salford
CONTd uSTR uexSTR STR STR
Pollard Street
uexSTRrg ueABZrf uexBHF STRrg ABZdr BHFq ABZlg
Ardwick
Shudehill
uexSTR uBHF uexSTR eABZlf xSTRl+r STRlg BHF
Ashburys
High Street; Piccadilly Station; Manchester Mayfield
uexSTR ueBHF uxCPICla CPICm exCPICr CONTd STR
To South Manchester
Market Street; Piccadilly Gardens
uexSTR uBHF uBHF eABZrg exSTRrf STRrg ABZrf
uexSTR uABZld uSTRrf STR CONTd BHF
To Belle Vue;Gorton
Moseley Street;Oxford Road
uexSTR uBHF BHF exSTRrg eABZrd
St Peter's Square
uexSTR uBHF STR exCONTd STR
To Hyde Road
uexSTRlf uxABZ3lf uSTRlg STR CONTd
To Tameside
Manchester Central/G-Mex
exCPICla uCPICm CPICr
Deansgate
Liverpool Road
exKBHFa exSTRlf meuxABZlg STR
xABZrg STRq umKRZo ABZrl STRlg
To Salford;Cornbrook
CONTd uBHF eBHF
Cornbrook
uSTRrg uABZrl uSTRlg STR
Pomona
uBHF STRrg umKRZu STRrf
To Eccles
uCONTf STR uBHF
Trafford Bar
To Warrington
CONTd ueABZlf uexBHFq uexSTRlg
Firswood
To Altrincham
uCONTf uCONTf
To Chorlton

Manchester Oxford Road Railway Station is a railway station in the city of Manchester, England.

The station is at the junction of Whitworth Street West and Oxford Street, on an elevated track between Deansgate and Piccadilly stations.

It serves the southern part of Manchester city centre, including the University of Manchester and Manchester Metropolitan University, and is on the most-served bus route in Europe[1] , with up to 140 buses an hour serving various suburbs of south Manchester[citation needed]. It also serves the BBC's offices in Manchester and is within walking distance of Manchester's main shopping district.

The station has a ticket office, waiting rooms, automatic ticket gates, toilets, a buffet and a newsagent.

This station lies on lines from Liverpool to Manchester and Manchester to Preston. Trains from this station go to Liverpool, Blackpool, Leeds, Sheffield and other towns across Northern England.

Contents

History

The station opened as Oxford Road on 20 July, 1849 by the Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway (MSJAR)[2]. The station was the Headquarters of the MSJAR from opening until 1904. On opening it had 2 platforms and 2 sidings and temporary wooden buildings. To allow the operation of extra trains in connection with the Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition in Trafford in 1857 extra platforms and sidings were built. In 1874 the station was completely rebuilt. The station then had two bay platforms and three through platforms. Further reconstruction took place during 1903-04. From 1931 it was served by the MSJAR's 1500 V DC electric trains to Altrincham.

As the station had become dilapidated by the 1950s, and as part of the electrification and modernisation of the Manchester to London line, it was replaced by the current building in 1960 (architects W. R. Headley, Max Glendinning). This was designed in a distinctive style in concrete and wood with curves bringing to mind the Sydney Opera House. It is a grade II listed building. From July 1959 the Altrincham electric trains began terminating at Oxford Road in two new bay platforms. The remaining three platforms were electrified at 25 kV AC from Manchester Piccadilly with one being a terminus platform. The whole station was reopened on 12 September, 1960.

Due to the closure of Manchester Central railway station in 1969 further rebuilding of Oxford Road station took place with one of the bay platforms being taken out of use and a new through platform being built (platform 1) and the others being renumbered accordingly. The track layout was also changed so that there were now four through platforms and one bay platform. The whole station became electrified at 25 kV AC with the re-electrification of the line to Altrincham in 1971.

Use of the station increased from May 1988 with the construction of the Windsor Link between Deansgate and Salford Crescent, linking the lines to the north and south of Manchester. This led to further investment in the station, including the installation of computer screens. For years the station's platform buildings were encased in scaffolding (to hold the structure up) and the whole station was in a sorry state: eventually refurbishment was completed in 2004.

Service pattern

Northern Rail

First TransPennine Express

Arriva Trains Wales

East Midlands Trains

This is reduced on a Sunday, most services operating hourly. There are various other peak services.

It should also be noted that of the above 8tph call Manchester Piccadily en route to their final destinations.

References

  1. ^ "Mannchester travel guide". http://wikitravel.org/en/Manchester#By_bus. Retrieved on 2009-20-03. 
  2. ^ Dixon, Frank (1994). The Manchester South Junction & Altrincham Railway (2nd ed.). The Oakwood Press. 

External links

Preceding station National Rail Following station
Manchester
Piccadilly
  First TransPennine Express
North TransPennine
  Birchwood
Manchester
Piccadilly
  First TransPennine Express
TransPennine North West
  Deansgate
Manchester
Piccadilly
  East Midlands Trains
Liverpool-Norwich
  Birchwood or
Warrington Central
Manchester
Piccadilly
  Arriva Trains Wales
Chester to Manchester Line
  Newton-le-Willows
Manchester
Piccadilly
  Northern Rail
Liverpool to Manchester Line
  Deansgate
Manchester
Piccadilly
  Northern Rail
Liverpool to Manchester Airport Line
  Newton-le-Willows
Manchester
Piccadilly
  Northern Rail
Manchester to Preston Line
  Deansgate
Manchester
Piccadilly
  Northern Rail
Stafford-Manchester Line
  Deansgate
Manchester
Piccadilly
  Northern Rail
Manchester Airport-Southport
  Salford Crescent

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