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Kilmarnock railway station is a railway station in Kilmarnock, East Ayrshire, Scotland. The station is managed by First ScotRail and is served by trains on the Glasgow South Western Line.
HistoryThe first station in Kilmarnock was opened by the Kilmarnock and Troon Railway on 6 July 1812,1 one of the earliest stations in Scotland. It was replaced by the Glasgow, Paisley, Kilmarnock and Ayr Railway on 4 April 1843.1 The third and current station was opened on 20 July 1846 by the Glasgow, Paisley, Kilmarnock and Ayr Railway.1 Current operations and station descriptionThe station is built well above street level and is accessed via either a subway and stairs or a more circuitous but step-free route along a narrow access road. The station has a total of 4 platforms; two north-facing bays for both terminating Glasgow services and trains on the Glasgow to Stranraer via Kilmarnock route, on which trains reverse out of the station towards the junction with the Troon line. Two through platforms serve Glasgow to Carlisle trains, as well as Stranraer to Newcastle services. The bay platforms (1 and 2) as well as platform 3 are covered by a partly glazed roof and directly accessible from the ticket office. Platform 4 is used infrequently, accessed via a subway and stairs, and afforded only a bus stop style shelter. SignallingThe present Kilmarnock signal box is located north of the station, in the vee of the junction. Opened on 12 April 1976, it is a plain brick building containing an NX (entrance-exit) panel on the upper storey. It replaced four mechanical signal boxes in a scheme that saw the track layout greatly simplified. Originally, the box worked Track Circuit Block to Hurlford signal box and Scottish Region Tokenless Block over the single lines to Barassie Junction and Lugton signal boxes. Kilmarnock signal box was severely damaged in a suspected arson attack on 25 December 2006 but was repaired and returned to full operation within weeks. The train service to Glasgow is limited by the single track northwards as far as Barrhead with only a static passing loop at Lugton. This limits the route's potential as a commuter service, and a dynamic passing loop is being considered to help rectify this.2 ServicesThe main service from the station is that towards Glasgow Central, which runs hourly throughout the day (with one or two extras in the business peaks). This normally calls at all stations as far as Barrhead, then runs non-stop from there to Glasgow. There are also nine daily services to Dumfries & Carlisle (three of which continue to Newcastle), seven to Ayr and four through trains to Stranraer. Sundays see an hourly service to Glasgow but only two trains to and from Carlisle. As of 2007, it takes some 40 minutes to reach Glasgow from Kilmarnock over First ScotRail.
2007 & 2008 galleryReferencesNotesSources
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