Filey railway station
Filey railway station is a Grade II* listed station opened in 1846 on the Hull to Scarborough Line, which serves the seaside town of Filey in North Yorkshire, England.
It is operated by Northern Trains, who provide all passenger train services.
History
The station was on the York and North Midland Railway's branch from its York to Scarborough Railway at Seamer to Bridlington, part of which connected to the Hull and Selby Railway at Bridlington; both branches were sanctioned in 1845 and opened in 1846.The station building was completed in 1846 to the designs of G.T. Andrews; a single storey red brick structure with slate roof and sandstone dressings, with a 7 bay main entrance projected from the station. The platforms were long. The trainshed roof was common Andrew's design using a wrought iron truss structure supporting a wood and slate roof.
The first train ran from Seamer station on 5 October 1846, arriving at 1 pm, with a large celebration and dinner including the presence of George Hudson. The regular service began the following day.
The rail facilities at Filey also included a goods shed, also an Andrew's design, on the opposite side of the level crossing northwest of the station, and a coal depot with sidings to the south east of the station, and a gas works adjacent to it.
A North Eastern Railway footbridge was added. The platforms were extended in 1888 to, then to in 1906, timber platform extensions were also added later, giving a platform length of at peak. In the 19th century there were also ticket platforms.
Goods traffic to Filey ceased in 1964, as part of the Beeching reforms.
In the 1960s one end of the hipped roof was removed along with the ventilated roof lantern, the other end in the 1970s. In 1985 the building was given listed building status. In 1988 BR sought planning permission to remove the roof entirely but was refused, instead the roof was reconstructed including the hipped ends, at an eventual cost of over £450,000 funded by BR, heritage bodies, and the town and borough councils.
The section of line northwards to Seamer was reduced to single track as an economy measure in 1983, but that south to is still double. The signal box at the north end was closed and removed in 2000, when the entire Bridlington to Seamer section was re-signalled and control of the signals and level crossing passed to the remaining box at the latter station. Automatic barriers replaced the old manual wooden crossing gates here as part of this work.