Banbury railway station
Banbury railway station serves the historic market town of Banbury in Oxfordshire, England. The station is a stop on the Chiltern Main Line; it is operated by Chiltern Railways and has four platforms in use.
History
Banbury Bridge Street station opened on 2 September 1850, some four months after the Buckinghamshire Railway opened its terminus. When meadows and the recently disused racecourse at Grimsbury were sold to the Great Western Railway in about 1850, the owner also sold the other part of his land, north of the Middleton road to the Banbury Freehold Land Society; this was financially backed by Cobb's Bank, on which to build middle-class houses, but development was slow at the time and some plots were never built upon.The station was going to be part of the GWR's Oxford and Rugby Railway, before the problems with changing gauges at prevented it. The single track extension from Oxford to Banbury did open. At first, Banbury was just a single platform through station ; however, the popularity of the line meant that the route was soon double tracked barely two years later and the station was given an extra platform in an up and down configuration. By 1882, an extra up goods line had been laid on the east side of the station, outside the train shed, together with a transfer line to the LNWR route.
In 1903, Banbury had south and north bays cut into the up platform, along with an extra bay on the downside at the north end. There was a down goods loop north of the station; all of this was to cope with traffic from the Great Central Main Line, which joined at Banbury North Junction in 1900. The inclusion of terminating bays and goods loops reflected Banbury's increasing strategic position in the national network. In 1904, the refreshment rooms were rebuilt to the designs of Percy Emerson Culverhouse. The station was rebuilt into its present form in 1958.
Banbury was once a junction for the line to, which closed in the 1960s. There was also another station nearby at. Banbury Bridge Street station occupied one of the most strategic and important locations in the entire rail network in Britain. For example:
- The to express used the branch of the GCR through Banbury as part of its journey
- The Ports to Ports Express between the North-East and South Wales used the Great Central Railway branch line
- The Banbury and Cheltenham Direct Railway passed through Banbury, as well as Newcastle —, Newcastle — Southampton, the — sleeper and Bournemouth — / services.
After nationalisation in 1948, the station was renamed Banbury General to distinguish it from Banbury Merton Street station. Merton Street was closed in 1966, and the suffix was officially discontinued by 1974, although it remained on tickets until the Edmondson type ticket machines were replaced in the early 1980s.
The current station is on the site of the Great Western Railway line that opened to Banbury in 1850. The original station's overall roof survived until 1953, five years before a rebuild in 1958. The rebuilding of the station was delayed due to the Second World War and could have been based on the GWR's new station at Leamington Spa, which was finished just before war commenced. The new station of 1958 was designed by Howard Cavanagh.
Passenger traffic at Banbury has grown rapidly; between 2003 and 2010, the number of passengers using the station increased by 85%.
Layout
After the rebuilding of the station in 1956–58, there were six numbered platforms. These were formed into two islands: the western one having two through tracks and a single bay at its northern end, whilst the eastern island had a single through platform, but two bays, one at each end. The two islands were connected to each other and to the station entrance hall, by a footbridge.At that time, the three through platforms were numbered 1, 3 and 4 from west to east, whilst the three bays were numbered 2, 5 and 6. All but one have since been redesignated; the present-day platform 2 was formerly platform 3, whilst the unnumbered bay at its northern end was originally platform 2, and present-day platforms 3 and 4 were formerly platforms 4 and 5 respectively. Platform 6, a bay platform at the southern end of the present platform 3, has lost both its track and its number, although was in use as Platform 4 until 2016.
The present station has four numbered platforms, numbered 1 to 4 from west to east, grouped as two island platforms:
- Platform 1 is a through platform used as a bay by Chiltern Railways for terminating services to and from London Marylebone. All terminating trains at this platform travel a short distance up the line before reversing back to the same platform and boarding outbound passengers, unless a train has since occupied the platform, which then means the train reverses to platform 3 to board passengers. Platform 1 is also used in emergencies if one of the others is out of use.
- Platform 2 is for Chiltern services north to Birmingham Moor Street/Snow Hill and Stourport Junction, and CrossCountry services to Birmingham New Street, Manchester Piccadilly and Newcastle.
- Platform 3 is for Chiltern services to London via Bicester, and CrossCountry services to Oxford, Reading, Southampton and Bournemouth.
- Platform 4 is a through platform used as a bay by Great Western Railway's terminating local trains to and commuter trains beyond to and London Paddington. An unnumbered bay platform was used by terminating Chiltern services to and from Birmingham and Stratford until it was filled in during August 2016. Freight loops serve as main through lines for non-stopping freight trains. Most passenger services passing Banbury stop at the station and heritage steam locomotives stop here to fill up with water.
Two new lower-quadrant semaphore signals were installed in late 2010, to allow passenger trains in platforms 1 and 2 to depart in the up direction. Their numbers were BS27 and BS33, and they were controlled from Banbury South signal box.
A nine-day long blockade to resignal and complete alterations to the track layout at the station layout began on 30 July 2016. Both remaining manual signal boxes were closed with new multiple aspect signalling commissioned and all lines through the station coming under the control of the West Midlands Signalling Centre at Saltley.
Services
Services at Banbury are provided by three train operating companies:- Chiltern Railways provides most trains to Banbury; their weekday off-peak service consists of:
- * 2 trains per hour to
- * 2 trains per hour to, of which one continues to
- Great Western Railway operates local services from, which operate Mondays to Saturdays only.
- CrossCountry operates services between Manchester Piccadilly,,, Southampton, and.