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York railway station

 
Wikipedia: York railway station
This article is about a railway station in England. For the similarly named subway station in Brooklyn, New York City, see York Street (IND Sixth Avenue Line).
York
York
Location
Place York
Local authority City of York
Coordinates 53°57′30″N 1°05′35″W / 53.9583°N 1.0930°W / 53.9583; -1.0930Coordinates: 53°57′30″N 1°05′35″W / 53.9583°N 1.0930°W / 53.9583; -1.0930
Grid reference SE596517
Operations
Station code YRK
Managed by East Coast
Platforms in use 11
Live arrivals/departures and station information
from National Rail
Annual rail passenger usage
2004/05 * 5.796 million
2005/06 * 6.148 million
2006/07 * 6.363 million
2007/08 * 6.534 million
History
1877 Opened
1909 Extended
1938 Footbridge Built
1947 Repaired
2008 Currently being refurbished
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 York from Office of Rail Regulation statistics.

York railway station is a main-line railway station in the historic city of York, England. It lies on the East Coast Main Line (ECML) 188.5 miles (303 km) north of London's King's Cross station towards Edinburgh's Waverley Station. Originally it was part of the North Eastern Railway.

York is one of the most important railway junction stations on the British railway network, marking the approximate half way point on the ECML between London and Edinburgh; it is also the point where the southbound Leeds branch of ECML diverges (and thereon to the Cross Country Route); as well as being a terminus for some east-west Trans-Pennine routes. The junction was historically a major site for rolling stock manufacture, maintenance and repair.

Contents

History

The first York railway station was a temporary building on Queen Street outside the walls of the city, opened in 1839 by the York and North Midland Railway, and was the terminus of the original trunk route for trains to London, via Derby and Birmingham. A second station, inside the walls, was built by George Townsend Andrews in 1840 and opened on 4 January 1841. This station closed in 1877 when the present station opened but remained in use for a further 88 years as carriage storage space. Andrews also designed the neo-Tudor arch where the walls were breached and the hotel across the head of the lines, completed in 1853. This station was the first to incorporate a hotel in its structure. The hotel and flanking departure and arrival buildings, now used as offices, still stand (on Toft Green/Tanner Row), although the train-shed was largely demolished in 1965.[1]

It was replaced by the present station, designed by the North Eastern Railway architect Thomas Prosser and William Peachey. On completion in 1877, it had 13 platforms and was the largest in the world.

In 1909 new platforms were added, and in 1938 the current footbridge was built and the station resignalled. The building was damaged during the Second World War and extensively repaired in 1947. The track layout through and around the station was remodelled again in 1988 as part of the resignalling scheme that was carried out prior to the electrification of the ECML shortly afterwards. This resulted in several bay platforms (mainly on the eastern side) being taken out of service and the track to them removed. At the same time a new signalling centre (York IECC) was commissioned on the western side of the station to control the new layout and also take over the function of several other signal boxes on the main line. The IECC here now supervises the main line from Temple Hirst (near Doncaster) through to Northallerton, along with sections of the various routes branching from it. It has also (since 2001–2) taken over responsibility for the control area of the former power box at Leeds and thus signals trains as far away as Gargrave and Morley.

In 2006–7, the approaches to the station were reorganised in order to improve facilities for bus, taxi and car users as well as pedestrians and cyclists. The former motive power depot and goods station now house the National Railway Museum.

Layout

All the platforms except 9/10/11 are under the large, curved, glass and iron roof. They are accessed via a long footbridge (which also connects to the National Railway Museum) or via lifts and either of two pedestrian tunnels.

Major renovation

Measures are now underway to completely renovate the station. This has already started with the reconstruction of Platform 9 (now completed).

Phase 2 will continue in 2009 with a new first class lounge to be built and extensive lighting alterations. New automated Leeds Station style ticket gates were planned, but first rejected by City of York council to try and keep the historic nature of the station intact. The then operator National Express East Coast planned to appeal the decision but the plans were scrapped altogether upon handover to East Coast. [2]

Platforms

The platforms at York have been renumbered several times, the current use is:

  • Platform 1: South-facing bay platform mostly used for services to Hull and for stabling empty stock.
  • Platform 2: North-facing bay platform connected only to the Scarborough branch, used mostly for stabling a spare TPX unit (along with the accompanying station siding).
  • Platform 3: Main southbound platform (but is signalled bi-directionally), accessible directly from the station concourse. Most southbound East Coast or CrossCountry services and some Westbound First Trans-Pennine Express services use this.
  • Platform 4: Northward continuation of platform 3 connected only to the Scarborough branch, used by most First Trans-Pennine Express services from Scarborough.
  • Platform 5: Main northbound platform (but is signalled bi-directionally), accessible by footbridge or tunnel. Most northbound East Coast or CrossCountry services and some North/Eastbound First Trans-Pennine Express services use this.
  • Platform 6: South-facing bay platform used mostly by Northern Rail commuter services, and sometimes by East Midlands Trains services to London St. Pancras.
  • Platform 7: South-facing bay platform used mostly by Northern Rail commuter services.
  • Platform 8: North-facing bay platform used almost exclusively by Northern Rail trains on the Harrogate Line.
  • Platforms 9, 10, 11: Bidirectional platforms used by East Coast, Cross-Country and First TransPennine Express services.

Platforms 10 and 11 exist outside the main body of the station. Another siding (the former fruit dock) exists opposite Platform 11.

Services

York railway station from the air
The arched roof over the platforms
Replica zero post for the companies that used York station before Grouping.

The station is operated by East Coast on behalf of Network Rail, and provides services to:

The station is used by the following TOCs

Preceding station   National Rail   Following station
CrossCountry
East Midlands Trains
St Pancras-York (Winter only)
St Pancras-Scarborough (Summer only)
Terminus
First TransPennine Express
Terminus
Grand Central
London-Sunderland
East Coast (train operating company)
East Coast Main Line
Northern Rail Terminus
Northern Rail
Northern Rail
Northern Rail
Historical railways
Terminus   Y&NMR
York to Scarborough Line
  Haxby
Station closed; Line open
Disused railways
Terminus   NER
York to Beverley Line
  Earswick

References

  1. ^ Pevsner, Nikolaus; and Neave, David (1995) [1972]. Yorkshire: York and the East Riding (2nd edition ed.). London: Penguin Books. pp. 201–2. ISBN 0-14071-061-2. 
  2. ^ "East Coast: Press Release". East Coast. November 13 2009. http://www.eastcoast.co.uk/About-us/Press-Release/2008/EAST-COAST-MAIN-LINE-COMPANY-PLEDGES-TO-IMPROVE-SERVICES-AND-INVEST-FOR-THE-FUTURE/. 

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