Northfield railway station


 * See also Northfield railway station, Adelaide

Northfield railway station serves the Northfield area of Birmingham, England. It is situated on the Cross-City Line. The station, and all trains serving it, are operated by London Midland.

History
The station was opened on 1 September 1870 by the Midland Railway. In 1892, the line through Northfield was quadrupled.

In 1913 it was the subject of an arson attack by suffragettes. Fortunately, the fire was extinguished before serious damage was done.

Services
Northfield is served by trains on the Cross-City Line, which operate every 10 minutes Monday-Saturday daytimes, every 10-20 minutes Monday-Saturday evenings, and every 30 minutes on Sundays. It has two platforms, with a disused island platform in the centre of the four-track lines. The station has a small car park provided free by Centro and a bus stop which is served by the number 19 operated by Diamond Bus. The number 27 bus stops close by, at the entrance to the station car park. The station is located between Station Road and Copse Close. The station is geographically on the outskirts of Northfield, being right on the border with West Heath.

Facilities
The station has a ticket office and Automated Ticket Machines. The station is also equipped with Real-Time Information boards and recorded announcements.

The station and line are on an embankment.

Disabled access
There is step-free access from the car park to the ticket office and to platform 1, for trains towards. Platform 4, for trains towards, was only accessible via steps and a subway. However, in 2013, lifts were built on both sides of the subway to allow access to both platforms.