Tattenham Corner railway station
Tattenham Corner railway station is in Surrey, in England. The station and all trains serving it are operated by Southern, and it is the terminus of the Tattenham Corner Line. It is from.
It lies on the outskirts of Epsom and is the closest station for Epsom Downs Racecourse, where the Derby is held and the British monarch traditionally alights from the British Royal Train in those years when attending the Derby. The line serving it was opened in stages between 1897 and 1901, with the commissioning of the final section coinciding with the opening of the station on 4 June that year. The station closed in September 1914 and was used occasionally for race specials from 1920 until full public service restored on 25 March 1928. In its heyday, the station had seven platforms but today only three remain.
Epsom Downs station is nearby as the terminus of the Epsom Downs branch line from Sutton, also served by Southern services.
Accidents and incidents
On 1 December 1993, an approaching train failed to brake in time to stop in the platform and overran the buffer stops; the leading vehicle ended up mounting the concourse and becoming embedded in the wooden station booking office. No passengers were injured in the crash, though the train driver and a member of station staff were hospitalised. The driver was later found to be intoxicated on duty and jailed for nine months.Services
All services at Tattenham Corner are operated by Southern, using EMUs.The typical off-peak service is two trains per hour to, running non-stop from.
On Sundays, that is reduced to an hourly shuttle service to, where passengers for London Bridge have to change trains.
It was initially proposed that, from 2018, when the Thameslink Programme was completed, services on the line would be operated with larger 12-car trains, offering all-day direct services to via. However, in September 2016, those proposals were dropped and instead, services on the Tattenham Corner Line were to "remain as Southern South London Metro services with increased capacity as compared to today".