Tilehurst railway station
Tilehurst railway station serves the suburb and village of Tilehurst, west of Reading, Berkshire, England. The station is on the extreme northern edge of Tilehurst and at a much lower level than most of that suburb. The railway line and station occupy a strip of land between the A329 road and the River Thames, with the up relief platform on an embankment above the river bank.
The station is on the Great Western Main Line between to the east and to the west; it is served by local services operated by Great Western Railway. It is west of.
History
The station is on the original line of the Great Western Railway, which opened in 1841, and was itself opened to traffic in 1882.In 2013, the redundant goods shed was demolished to make way for a new footbridge; this was necessary to give clearance for the overhead line electrification of the line. The new footbridge was opened in early December 2013 and the old footbridge was demolished the following week.
Services
All services at Tilehurst are operated by Great Western Railway using EMUs.The typical off-peak is two trains per hour in each direction between and. On Sundays, the service is reduced to hourly in each direction.
Facilities
The station has four platforms, one on each of the fast and relief lines, although the platforms on the fast lines see little use except during track works on the line between Reading and Didcot. The platforms are linked to each other and the station entrance, on the down fast platform, by a footbridge that is accessed by stairs and does not have lifts. Toilets are available in the building on the central platform. The station car park has spaces for 118 cars.There is a waiting room on the middle platform. A small waiting room was built on the north platform but, although it looks old, it is of modern construction.
The main ticket office on the south side is usually staffed on weekday mornings, but tickets can also be purchased from an automatic machine using debit or credit cards only.