Merthyr Tydfil railway station
Merthyr Tydfil railway station serves the town of Merthyr Tydfil in Wales. It is the northern terminus of the Merthyr branch of the Merthyr Line. Passenger services are provided by Transport for Wales. The station has one platform and is situated near to the Tesco supermarket in the town.
Since the spring 2009 timetable change, trains are able to arrive/depart from the station every half hour after the commissioning of a passing loop near Merthyr Vale.
History
The first station in Merthyr was opened by the Taff Vale Railway on 21 April 1841 in Plymouth Street. This was the second stage of the building of the main line from Navigation House. The station was closed on 1 August 1877, when all Taff Vale passenger traffic was diverted to the Great Western Railway station at Merthyr High Street.In 1853, Merthyr High Street railway station opened as the terminus of the Vale of Neath Railway on the site. Designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel, the two platform station encompassed broad gauge lines and was enclosed by an overall roof. The Vale of Neath also encompassed the Swansea and Neath Railway, enabling trains to run to Swansea docks; after amalgamation with the Great Western Railway on 1 February 1865, through trains ran to London Paddington.
Although other railways which ran into Merthyr had their own stations, after a third rail was added to the whole of the Vale of Neath system in 1863, the mixed gauge allowed them all to consolidate their services at Merthyr High Street:
- Great Western Railway: trains from Hereford through to Swansea over a connection at Middle Duffryn
- Taff Vale: to Cardiff
- Brecon & Merthyr: onwards to Brecon
- Rhymney Railway
- London & North Western: to the Midlands and Swansea
- Cambrian Railways: Cardiff/Treherbert service to Aberystwyth via the Brecon & Merthyr route
After the end of the steam era and the closure of all but the Taff Vale lines into the station between 1951 and 1964, the passenger facilities were rebuilt by British Rail on the south-west corner of the original site in 1974; it became a single island providing two platforms. A further rebuild in 1996 saw it reduced to its present single platform configuration, with a Tesco superstore and other retail outlets now occupying the rest of the old station site.