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Banbury
Banbury
Location
PlaceBanbury
Local authorityCherwell
Grid referenceTemplate:Gbmapscaled
Operations
Station codeBAN
Managed byChiltern Railways
Platforms in use4[1][2]
Live arrivals/departures and station information
from National Rail
Annual rail passenger usage
2004/05 *increase 1.137 million
2005/06 *increase 1.174 million
2006/07 *increase 1.290 million
2007/08 *increase 1.470 million
2008/09 *increase 1.615 million
History
Opened 2 September 1850 (2 September 1850)
History
Original companyGreat Western Railway
Pre-groupingGWR
Post-groupingGWR
1850[3]Opened
1958[3]Rebuilt by BR
National Rail - UK railway stations
Template:Hide in print
* Annual passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Banbury from Office of Rail Regulation statistics.
Template:Portal frameless

Banbury railway station serves the town of Banbury in Oxfordshire, England. The station is currently operated by Chiltern Railways, lying on the Chiltern Main Line, and has four platforms in use.

History[]

File:Banbury, Blisworth, Cockley Brake, Fenny Compton, Northampton, Ravenstone Wood,Roade, Stratford on Avon, Towcester, & Woodford & Hinton RJD 2.jpg

A 1911 Railway Clearing House map of railways in the vicinity of Banbury.

Banbury Bridge Street station opened on 2 September 1850,[4] some four months after the Buckinghamshire Railway (L&NWR) opened its Banbury Merton Street terminus. When meadows and a by the recently discussed race-course at Grimsbury were sold to the Great Western Railway circa 1850, the owner also sold the other part of his land, north of the Middleton road to the Banbury Freehold Land Society, which was financially backed by Cobb's Bank, to build middle-class houses on, but development was slow at the time and some plots were never built upon [5]. The station was going to be part of the GWR's Oxford & Rugby railway, before the problems with changing gauges at Rugby put paid to that. The 24 mile single track extension from Oxford to Banbury did open, and at first Banbury was just a single platform through station (works were continuing to Birmingham) however the popularity of the line meant that the route was soon double tracked barely two years later, and the station was given an extra platform in an up and down configuration. In 1884 an extra up line was added, and by 1903 Banbury had the extra up line converted into up and down bays, along with an extra bay on the downside, and freight loops to cope with the traffic from the GCML joining at Banbury junction to the north. The inclusion of terminating bays and freight loops reflected Banbury's increasing strategic position in the national network. The Station was rebuilt into its present incarnation in 1958[6].

Banbury was once a junction for the line to Buckingham, however that closed in the 1960s. There was also another station very near by at Banbury Merton Street Station. Banbury Bridge Street station occupied one of the most strategic and important locations in the entire rail network in Britain. For example, the Aberdeen to Penzance Express used the Woodford Halse branch of the GCR through Banbury as part of its journey [7] and the "Ports to Ports Express" from the North-East (Newcastle, Middlesbrough etc.) to South Wales (Cardiff, Newport) used the GCR branch line and the Banbury and Cheltenham Direct Railway, and passed though Banbury [7] as well as Newcastle-Bournemouth, Newcastle-Southampton, York-Swindon Sleeper, Bournemouth-Birkenhead/Manchester etc., etc.[7]. Most Cross Country Services in Britain passed through Banbury, which helped the station become just as, if not more, important as the London Termini, which also helped fuel the growth of the town and its Cattle Market.

The station was renamed Banbury General after Nationalisation, to distinguish it from the nearby Banbury Merton Street station. The suffix was officially dropped by 1974,[8] but remained on tickets until the Edmondson type ticket machines were replaced in the early 1980s.[citation needed]

The railway station of today lies on the site of the Great Western Railway's line from Oxford to Banbury opened in 1850. The original station's overall roof survived until 1953, 5 years before a rebuild in 1958. The rebuilding of the station was delayed due to the Second World War[3], and could have been based on the GWR's new station at Leamington Spa, which was finished just before war commenced[9].

List of former services through Banbury[]

  • "Ports to Ports" Middlesbrough/Hull/Sunderland — Cardiff/Newport/Swansea/Barry Island/Barry
  • Bournemouth — Birkenhead
  • Birkenhead — Dover via Reading

The station today[]

Layout[]

Template:Railway lines which entered Banbury

File:Banburyplatforms.jpg

Map of the platforms at Banbury station.

Following the reconstruction of the station in 1956-58, there were six numbered platforms: these were formed into two islands, the western one having two through tracks and a single bay at its northern end, whilst the eastern island had a single through platform, but two bays, one at each end. The two islands were connected to each other, and to the station entrance hall, by a footbridge.

At that time, the three through platforms were numbered 1, 3 & 4 from west to east, whilst the three bays were 2, 5 & 6. All but one have been re-designated since — the present-day platform 2 was formerly platform 3, whilst the un-numbered bay at its northern end was originally platform 2;[10] and present-day platforms 3 & 4 were formerly 4 & 6 respectively.[11] Platform 5, at the northern end of the present platform 3, has lost both its track and its number.

The present station has four numbered platforms (one active bay not numbered), numbered 1 to 4 from west to east, and are split into two island platforms.

Platform 1 A through platform used as a bay platform by First Great Western's terminating local trains to Oxford and commuter trains beyond to Reading and Paddington, and by Chiltern Railways through and terminating services from the south — all terminating trains at this platform travel a short distance up the line before reversing back to the same platform and boarding outbound passengers, unless a train has since occupied the platform, which then means the train reverses to platform 3 to board passengers, It is also used as an emergency through platform if one of the others is out of use for any reason. Platforms 2 and 3 are through platforms: platform 2 is for Chiltern services north to Leamington Spa, CrossCountry services to Birmingham New Street, Manchester, The North West and Scotland; platform 3 is for Chiltern services to London via Bicester and Cross Country services to Oxford, Reading and the South Coast. There are also two terminal platforms: platform 4 is for terminating Chiltern services to and from London; An unnumbered bay platform (trains stopping here are classified as either or both Platforms 1 & 2, usually 1) is used by terminating Chiltern services to and from Birmingham and Stratford. Freight loops serve as main through lines for non-stopping freight trains. All passenger services passing Banbury stop at the station, and heritage trains stop here to fill up on water.

Many redundant loops and sidings surround the station: most of these were for goods services stopping at Banbury, which have all disappeared. Two goods loops survive to allow the stoppage of goods trains for the uninterrupted passage of passenger trains.

The station is also being considered for remodelling to improve 'operational flexibility' by Network Rail[12]

Two new lower-quadrant semaphore signals were installed in late 2010 to allow passenger trains in platforms 1 & 2 to depart in the up direction. Their numbers are BS27 and BS33, and are controlled from Banbury South signal box.[13]

Services[]

Chiltern Railways provide most trains to Banbury, with trains between London Marylebone and Birmingham Snow Hill, Stratford-upon-Avon and Kidderminster, as well as trains from London terminating there.

It is also the northern terminus of First Great Western's local services from London Paddington via Oxford and operates Mondays to Saturdays only.

Banbury is also served by CrossCountry services between Birmingham New Street and Reading.

2008 train fire[]

On 14 March 2008, a CrossCountry Voyager forming the 4.25pm service to Derby caught fire while standing on platform 2 at Banbury. Passengers in both trains at the station and the station itself were evacuated. Fire crews arrived and the fire was put out.[14]

Services and operators[]

Preceding station National Rail Following station

Template:Rail line one to three

Leamington Spa   CrossCountry
Manchester - Bournemouth
  Oxford
  CrossCountry
Newcastle - Reading
 
Leamington Spa   CrossCountry
Manchester-Didcot
Sundays Only
  Oxford
  CrossCountry
Edinburgh-Bournemouth
Sundays Only
 
Terminus   First Great Western
Cherwell Valley Line
  Kings Sutton
Historical railways
Cropredy
Line open, station closed
  Great Western Railway
Oxford and Rugby Railway
  Kings Sutton
Line and station open
Disused railways
Chalcombe Road Halt
Line and station closed
style="background:#Template:GCR colour; border-top:solid 1px gray; " |   British Railways
Great Central Main Line
style="background:#Template:GCR colour;border-top:solid 1px gray; " |   Terminus

Gallery[]

See also[]

  • History of Banbury, Oxfordshire

References[]

  1. Banbury Station Platform 4 - http://www.flickr.com/photos/johngreyturner/1518761466/
  2. Diagram 13B, Railway Track Diagrams: Book 3, 4th edition. ISBN 0-9549866-1-X
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 The Great Western archive — http://www.greatwestern.org.uk/stat_1.htm
  4. Butt, R.V.J. (1995). The Directory of Railway Stations. Yeovil: Patrick Stephens Ltd, 26. R508. ISBN 1 85260 508 1. 
  5. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=63789
  6. Great Western Railway publicity
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Cross-Country Routes
  8. "Notes and News: Western's last "General"" (July 1974). Railway Magazine 120 (879). London: IPC Transport Press Ltd. ISSN 0033-8923. 
  9. Leamington's New Station — http://www.warwickshirerailways.com/gwr/leamington_new_station.htm
  10. (February 2003) "fig. 107", Didcot to Banbury, Western Main Lines. Midhurst: Middleton Press. ISBN 1 904474 02 0. 
  11. Simpson, Bill (1997). A History of the Railways of Oxfordshire Part 1: The North. Banbury and Witney: Lamplight, 28. ISBN 1 899246 02 9. 
  12. http://www.networkrail.co.uk/browse%20documents/BusinessPlan2007/PDF/Route%2017%20West%20Midlands.pdf Page 35
  13. Template:Cite magazine
  14. Train Fire is out Oxford Mail 14th March 2008

External links[]

Template:Railway stations in Oxfordshire Coordinates: 52°03′36″N 1°19′41″W / 52.060°N 1.328°W / 52.060; -1.328


nl:Station Banbury

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