Kilwinning railway station


Kilwinning railway station is a railway station serving the town of Kilwinning, North Ayrshire, Scotland. The station is managed by ScotRail and is on the Ayrshire Coast Line south of Glasgow Central, as well as the Glasgow South Western Line north of Stranraer. British Transport Police maintain an office here.
The station has the most frequent service in Ayrshire, being served by all trains on both the Ayr main line and the branches to Ardrossan Harbour and Largs, with the sole exception of 1K49 17:47 Glasgow Central to Ayr which runs non-stop from Paisley to Irvine.

History

The station was opened on 23 March 1840 by the Glasgow, Paisley, Kilmarnock and Ayr Railway and was built as an interchange, seeing traffic coming from Glasgow, Ayr and Ardrossan.

Station facilities

The station is located on Byers Road about from the town centre. There is a staffed ticket office, a toilet, a kiosk, a waiting room and a ticket vending machine. Train running information is offered via digital CIS displays, automated announcements, timetable posters and customer help points on each platform. In 2012, a new 130-space car park opened. There is lifts to all platforms located on Platform 1, Platform 2/3 by the main entrance and Platform 4. For security reasons, The lifts are only in operation when the ticket office are open and are locked after 7pm and when no staff are on duty

Station usage

The station is popular with commuters travelling to Glasgow from Ayrshire and beyond. It is the last stop before the Ayrshire Coast line splits in two, so trains stop at this station more than any other in Ayrshire.

British Transport Police

The station houses a Neighbourhood Policing Team from the British Transport Police. Officers from Kilwinning cover all stations south of Kilwinning and north of Kilwinning until ; Police Scotland officers will cover if British Transport Police officers are not available.

Bus services

Most buses do not come into the station forecourt, but there is a bus stop north of the station.

Services

2023

  • 4 trains per hour to .
  • 2 trains per hour to.
  • 1 train per hour to.
  • 1 train per hour to.
The Sunday service is:
  • 3 trains per hour to
  • 2 trains per hour to
  • 1 train per hour to
  • 4 trains per day to

Rail and sea connections

Northern Ireland

Trains connect Ayr along the Glasgow South Western Line to Stranraer where a bus link runs: route 350 operated by Macleans Coaches to Cairnryan. for onward ferries to the Port of Belfast by Stena Line and Larne Harbour by P&O Ferries.

Isle of Arran

Trains also connect along the Ayrshire Coast Line to Ardrossan Harbour for the Caledonian MacBrayne service to Brodick.