Greenfield railway station
Greenfield railway station serves the village of Greenfield, in Greater Manchester, England. It is a stop on the Huddersfield Line, north-east of. It is the final station in Greater Manchester before the boundary with West Yorkshire. It is managed by Northern Trains, although only TransPennine Express trains call at this station.
The station is located near to the reservoirs of Dovestone and Chew, as well as the whole of Chew Valley in the Peak District National Park.
History
The line through Greenfield was constructed by the Huddersfield and Manchester Railway, which was absorbed by the London and North Western Railway on 9 July 1847, before any of it was opened. The section between and was opened on 1 August 1849; the station at Greenfield was opened the same day.On 1 September 1851, the branch to opened, which left the main line at Delph Junction, about a mile to the north of Greenfield; this was the last station before the junction, until opened in 1912. A second branch, to Oldham, opened on 5 July 1856; it left the main line just to the south of Greenfield.
Passenger services on the Delph & Oldham branches were withdrawn in May 1955, with complete closure following in 1964. A former bay platform can still be seen at the Stalybridge end of the station, which was used by some trains from the Oldham direction. For many years, the station had a peak-only service.
The Beeching Report proposed closure of all stations between Stalybridge and Huddersfield. In 1968, the government closed only half of the stations, including Diggle and Saddleworth, leaving only Greenfield to serve the area.
From 1968, the station's services were reduced drastically to just a handful of journeys to Manchester and Huddersfield at peak times only, in line with the other local stations on the Huddersfield Line at the time. From 1991, however, a new improved hourly stopping service in each direction was introduced, with hourly trains between Manchester Victoria and Huddersfield.
Facilities
The ticket office is staffed on a part-time basis and there is also a ticket vending machine available. Step-free access is limited to the Manchester-bound platform only, as the Huddersfield-bound one can only bereached by footbridge.
Planning permission for the refurbishment of the station was granted in early 2008. This was to provide a new ticket office, refurbished waiting areas, toilets and a small shop; it was due to be completed in the winter of 2008. After some problems with planning regulations and the original building contractor going into administration, the new facilities were finally completed in spring 2009.
Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham has been campaigning for Greenfield station to have access to disability-friendly facilities, as it remains one of the only stations in Greater Manchester lacking them.