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Milton Keynes Central railway station

 
Wikipedia: Milton Keynes Central railway station
Milton Keynes Central
Milton Keynes Central
The frontage to Milton Keynes Central, soon to change with redevelopment of Station Square.
Location
Place Milton Keynes
Local authority Milton Keynes
Coordinates 52°02′05″N 0°46′23″W / 52.0347°N 0.773°W / 52.0347; -0.773Coordinates: 52°02′05″N 0°46′23″W / 52.0347°N 0.773°W / 52.0347; -0.773
Operations
Station code MKC
Managed by London Midland
Platforms in use 7
Live arrivals/departures and station information
from National Rail
Annual rail passenger usage
2004/05 * 3.815 million
2005/06 * 4.134 million
2006/07 * 4.557 million
2007/08 * 4.690 million
History
Opened 15 May 1982 (15 May 1982)
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 Milton Keynes Central from Office of Rail Regulation statistics.
Looking south from Milton Keynes Central, showing the bay platform 2A and the track on the left, which leads into platform 1 under the bridge. The bridge in the middle distance carries H6 Childs Way.
The main body of Milton Keynes Central, showing the triple island platform layout and the footbridge. The large station building provides the backdrop. Platform 6 is closest to the camera.

Milton Keynes Central is a large railway station that serves Central Milton Keynes and the surrounding area of Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire. The station is located on the West Coast Main Line between the stations of Bletchley and Wolverton, both of which are also within Milton Keynes. The station is served by Virgin Trains inter-city services and by London Midland local services. Also, Southern provide services to East Croydon via West London.

This station is one of the five stations serving Milton Keynes. The others are Wolverton (north Milton Keynes), Bletchley (south Milton Keynes), Fenny Stratford (also south Milton Keynes) and Bow Brickhill (south-east Milton Keynes). In addition, Woburn Sands railway station is just outside the Milton Keynes boundary and serves the south-east of the Borough. Milton Keynes Central is by far the busiest and most important of these, as well as being the largest in terms of platforms in use, having overtaken Bletchley when platforms 2A and 6 became operational.

Contents

Scale

Milton Keynes Central has a total of seven platforms. Platforms 1 and 3 are the south and northbound slow platforms, while 4 and 6 are the south and northbound fast platforms. Platforms 2 and 5 are reversible, being slow and fast respectively. Platform 2A is a four-car south-facing bay platform built for the extension of Marston Vale Line services into Milton Keynes Central. To the north of the station the six lines reduce to four (two slow and two fast), whilst there is a mile of five-track running to the south before this also reduces back to four.

2006–08 developments

In May 2006, the Department of Transport announced a plan to upgrade the station.[1] The first phase added a down fast line platform 6, so that the existing platform 5 could be used for stopping express trains in either direction. The second phase provided an additional terminating bay platform (2A) for the Marston Vale Line Bedford/Bletchley service via the WCML to Milton Keynes Central. This new 4-car bay platform is indented into platform 1. The original platform 1 line was extended northwards from 'bay' to 'through' (becoming the up slow line), and platform 2 line is now a 'centre' terminating and reversing line, avoiding conflicting crossing movements. This work was completed on 29 December 2008. However, Marston Vale Line services to Bedford are not expected to start before 2012 at the earliest.[2]

Future plans

More speculatively, a "strong" case has been made to Government to reopen the western section of the historic Varsity Line from Oxford and extend the service via Bletchley and the WCML to Milton Keynes Central.[3]

Local facilities and interchange

The station is the terminus for many bus services and almost all intra-city buses stop there. The frontage of the station has six bus stops, four for local services and two for long-distance services. Virgin Trains operate a coach service from the station to Luton Airport, providing a direct link between Milton Keynes and the Midland Main Line at Luton Airport Parkway station. Stagecoach stop here on their route from Oxford to Cambridge and their route from Milton Keynes to Northampton and Peterborough.

The station building is home to a shop and there are other shops and restaurants on the south side of the station square. There are a number of hotels on Midsummer Boulevard (which begins opposite the station and leads up into Central Milton Keynes). Numerous bus services each hour traverse Midsummer Boulevard, connecting the station to Midsummer Place and Central Milton Keynes Shopping Centre. The Milton Keynes redway system, a comprehesive network of cycle/pedestrian paths, connects to the station and its cycle parking facilities.

The station square itself is a favourite site for skateboarding and freestyle BMX and as a result the granite facings of the planting surrounds have suffered from the continuous bumping and grinding. This has lessened somewhat since the opening of a dedicated skateboarding park (Sk8 MK) close to the central bus station.[4] The Borough Council has plans for a comprehensive redevelopment of the square.[5]

Services

Milton Keynes Central is a principal stop on London Midland's services from Birmingham New Street to London and from Crewe to London. All London-bound trains run to London Euston, with some only stopping at Watford Junction and others stopping at every single station to Euston (a total of eleven intermediate stops). Northbound, London Midland's services operate to Northampton, Rugby and Coventry whilst the Crewe trains serve Nuneaton, Tamworth, Stafford and Stoke-on-Trent. There are four departures per hour to London Euston on a weekday, and three departures to Northampton per hour.

Virgin Trains stop many of their inter-city trains here to and from Birmingham, Manchester, Liverpool,Holyhead and Glasgow.

Since 2009 Milton Keynes has also been served by Southern, who provide an hourly service to East Croydon, running via west London and connecting with services to Brighton.

Preceding station National Rail Following station
Northampton   London Midland
London - Crewe
  Watford Junction
Wolverton   London Midland
West Coast Main Line
  Bletchley
Rugby or
Crewe
  Virgin Trains
West Coast Main Line
  Watford Junction or
London Euston
Northampton   Virgin Trains
Northampton Loop
  Watford Junction
Terminus   Southern
Milton Keynes - East Croydon
  Bletchley

In film

The station and its plaza was used in the movie Superman IV as a substitute for the United Nations building. Other scenes were shot in the Central Milton Keynes area.

References

External links


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