Castleton railway station


Castleton railway station serves Castleton in the Metropolitan Borough of Rochdale, Greater Manchester, England. It is 8¾ miles north of Manchester Victoria on the Caldervale Line, with services operated by Northern Trains.

History

The original station opened in 1839, at Blue Pits on the western side of the Rochdale-Manchester Road bridge. It was originally called Blue Pits for Heywood. The current station opened on 1 November 1875. The Liverpool and Bury Railway from used to join the main line at a triangular junction a short distance south of the station. This was at one time a busy passenger and freight route often used by trains avoiding the busy Manchester area, but was closed to passengers on 5 October 1970.

The station was also part of the Oldham Loop Line, on which there were through services to, via. This route was closed in 2009 and has now been converted for light rail use by Manchester Metrolink.

Facilities

The station is not staffed, but a ticket machine is available. Shelters and passenger information screens are located on each platform and both have step-free access from the street; there are also staircases from Manchester Road bridge to both platforms.

Services

On Monday to Saturday daytimes, Northern Trains operates a half-hourly service in each direction. The basic pattern is for trains to start at Rochdale, then stop at all stations to Manchester Victoria, then via Salford Central, Salford Crescent, Bolton and to Blackburn, with alternate trains continuing through to.
On Sundays, the service pattern is hourly in each direction between Manchester Victoria, Rochdale, Todmorden, Burnley, Accrington and Blackburn. Southbound trains continue beyond Victoria to and, via Atherton.

East Lancashire Railway future

The western portion of this line was retained for freight traffic after passenger trains ceased ; it now forms the link with the East Lancashire Railway heritage route at.
The heritage line plans to extend its services along and towards a possible new bay platform adjacent to the main station in the future, subject to permission being granted by Network Rail.
The bay platform, named Castleton Village, will be adjacent to the main station at Castleton, from where passengers could alight and change station sides directly to Northern Trains' services on the national network. Rochdale Council commissioned a study by transport consultants Mouchel in conjunction with the ELR regarding the proposals in 2010; their report covers the tourism and regeneration aspects of any such future development.