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词条 Coatbridge Central railway station
释义

  1. Architecture and history

  2. Facilities

  3. Passenger services

     2006-2014  2014 onwards 

  4. References

     Notes  Sources 

  5. External links

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2018}}{{Use British English|date=March 2018}}{{Infobox GB station
|symbol = rail
|name = Coatbridge Central
|other_name = {{lang-gd|Coatbridge Meadhain}}{{sfn|Brailsford|2017|loc=Gaelic/English Station Index}}
|image_name = CoatbridgeCentralRailwayStation1.JPG
|caption = Coatbridge Central railway station
|code = CBC
|manager = Abellio ScotRail
|locale = Coatbridge
|borough = North Lanarkshire
|coordinates = {{coord|55.8629|-4.0323|type:railwaystation_region:GB_scale:10000|display=inline,title}}
|platforms = 2
|pte = SPT
|original = Garnkirk and Glasgow Railway
|pregroup = Caledonian Railway
|postgroup = LMS


|lowusage1314 = {{decrease}} 56,316
|lowusage1415 = {{decrease}} 51,620
|lowusage1516 = {{increase}} 54,788
|lowusage1617 = {{increase}} 64,178
|lowusage1718 = {{decrease}} 59,902
|years = March 1842
|events = Opened as Coatbridge[1]
|years1 = 8 June 1953
|events1 = Renamed as Coatbridge Central[1]
|gridref = NS729651
}}

Coatbridge Central railway station is a station in Coatbridge, North Lanarkshire, Scotland. It is on the Motherwell to Cumbernauld Line. Train services are provided by Abellio ScotRail.

Architecture and history

The station was originally named Coatbridge and opened in 1842.[1] It was renamed Coatbridge Central in 1953 after the 1826 Monkland and Kirkintilloch Railway station named Coatbridge Central closed in 1951. It is on what was originally the Garnkirk and Glasgow Railway, which later became the Glasgow, Garnkirk and Coatbridge Railway. The connection southwards came courtesy of the Wishaw and Coltness Railway, with their first passenger train arriving from Morningside in May 1845. Both companies were taken over by the Caledonian Railway in 1849. A further route to the station, the Rutherglen and Coatbridge Railway from Glasgow via Rutherglen and {{rws|Carmyle}}, was opened in August 1866.[2]

The existing station layout is the result of a re-build by the Caledonian Railway in 1900, but the platform level buildings were demolished in the 1970s when the station was a likely candidate for closure due to dwindling patronage and services. Trains from Glasgow Buchanan Street over the original GG&CR route had ceased in November 1962, whilst those over the R&CR were withdrawn four years later due to the Beeching Axe, leaving only a skeleton service between {{rws|Motherwell}} and Stirling/Perth to call here. However, for much of the 1970s and early to mid 1980s this consisted of a pair of through long-distance expresses between London Euston and {{rws|Inverness}}—the daytime Clansman (via Birmingham New Street) and overnight Royal Highlander sleeper—along with a mid-morning {{rws|Perth}} to Motherwell passenger & parcels train and evening northbound return working that started back at {{rws|Carlisle}}.[3][4]

All of these workings had been either withdrawn or diverted by 1987, but by then Strathclyde PTE had introduced a regular local service from Motherwell as an extension of the Argyle Line's Hamilton Circle route (the line through here had been electrified by British Rail in 1981 to allow electrically hauled freight trains to access the nearby Gartsherrie container terminal). The link northwards to {{rws|Cumbernauld}} was re-established in 1996 when the Motherwell to Cumbernauld DMU service was inaugurated. That provided the main service from the station up until the May 2014 timetable change, as Argyle Line trains only called here at peak periods. Electrification was extended north to Cumbernauld in 2014 as part of the Edinburgh to Glasgow Improvement Programme upgrade scheme, and thereafter all passenger trains began to be worked by EMUs. Following a timetable recast in December 2014, Motherwell services once again run on through via the Hamilton Circle to the city's north west suburbs throughout the day.

Access to the station is now by a ramp from West Canal Street leading to the Down (Cumbernauld bound) platform with access to the Motherwell-bound island platform via the original underpass. Original access to both platforms of the station was via this underpass from the category C(S){{sfn|Historic Environment Scotland|LB49871|short=yes}} listed two-floor structure at the end of the station. The main building was disused for many years after the removal of staffing in the 1970s, but was renovated in the early 2000s and used initially as a public house and more recently as commercial premises for an office supplies company.[5]

With a container terminal just north of the station, and the location on link between the West Coast Main Line and the lines to Grangemouth, Stirling and points north, there are also freight trains passing through the station.

Facilities

Amenities here are somewhat basic: the station is unmanned, and no permanent buildings remain on the platforms apart from standard waiting shelters. There are timetable poster boards and customer help points on each platform. CCTV cameras and an automatic announcement system are also installed here.[6] Step-free access is only possible on platform 2, as the underpass to the opposite side has steps.[7]

Passenger services

2006-2014

An hourly train operates to Motherwell and Cumbernauld Mondays to Saturdays. This is operated as a {{Brc|156}} diagram.

There are a few peak time services on the Argyle Line which terminate at the station, operated by a mixture of {{Brc|318}}, {{Brc|334}} and {{Brc|320}} trains. These services call at {{Stnlnk|Whifflet}} before joining the "main" Argyle line at {{Stnlnk|Motherwell}}, operating to {{Stnlnk|Milngavie}} and {{Stnlnk|Dalmuir}}.

2014 onwards

With the electrification of the Cumbernauld Line, services now operate with electric traction. The hourly Motherwell-Cumbernauld service (since 14 December 2014) interworks with Argyle Line services all day, originating at Dalmuir and running via Clydebank and the Hamilton Circle. Some additional services run at peak times.

There is no Sunday service.[8]

{{rail start}}{{rail line|next={{Stnlnk|Whifflet}}|previous={{Stnlnk|Greenfaulds}}|route=Abellio ScotRail
Argyle Line |col={{ScotRail colour}} |lightcol={{National Rail colour|ScotRail|branch=Argyle Line}} }}{{Historical Rail Insert}}{{rail line|next={{Stnlnk|Whifflet}}|previous={{Stnlnk|Glenboig}}|route=Caledonian Railway
Main Line |col={{Caledonian colour}} }}{{s-end}}

References

Notes

1. ^Butt (1995), page 64
2. ^Railscot Chronology - Rutherglen and Coatbridge Railway www.railbrit.co.uk; Retrieved 2013-12-24
3. ^GB National Rail Timetable 1977 Edition, Table 65
4. ^Railscot - 10.18 Perth to Motherwell calling at the station in 1981 www.railbrit.co.uk; Retrieved 2013-12-24
5. ^Railscot - Coatbridge Central photo gallery
6. ^[https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2569827 Coatbridge Central station in 2011] Reid, Andrew Geograph.org.uk; Retrieved 15 February 2017
7. ^Coatbridge Central station facilitiesNational Rail Enquiries
8. ^{{NRtimes|December 2016|226}}

Sources

  • {{cite book |editor-last=Brailsford |editor-first=Martyn |title=Railway Track Diagrams 1: Scotland & Isle of Man |edition=6th |date=December 2017 |origyear=1987 |publisher=Trackmaps |location=Frome |isbn=978-0-9549866-9-8 |ref=harv }}
  • {{Butt-Stations}}
  • {{Historic Environment Scotland|num=LB49871 |desc=West Canal Street and Heritage Way, former Caledonian Railway Station, with Gatepiers and Railings |cat=C |access-date=22 March 2019}}
  • {{Jowett-Atlas}}

External links

  • RAILSCOT - Coatbridge Central
{{Coatbridge}}

7 : Railway stations in North Lanarkshire|Former Caledonian Railway stations|Railway stations opened in 1842|SPT railway stations|Railway stations served by Abellio ScotRail|1842 establishments in Scotland|Coatbridge

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