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Lewes railway station serves the town of Lewes in East Sussex, England. It has five platforms and is on the East Coastway Line. Train services are provided by Southern. The station has a café and a newsagent, and there is a taxi office on the main forecourt.
LayoutThe station platforms are arranged in a 'V' shape, with the main buildings in between. The typical arrangement for services is: ServicesThe typical off-peak service is:
HistoryThe station has a complex history, having begun as a terminus on the Brighton line. The original station became inconvenient after extra tracks were laid to Hastings, meeting the Brighton line at a junction just west of Lewes Station, necessitating reversals. Capacity increases also became desirable because of new direct links to London. This first station was soon replaced; however the structure with grand classical columns outside survived until the 1960s but was then demolished. The new station was itself extensively remodelled some time after a new through line was laid, effectively extending what had been the spur to the original station. Not all of these lines survived extensive cuts in the 20th century. There used to be a line heading north to Uckfield and on to London via Eridge — this line also had trains to Tunbridge Wells West. This line, the Wealden Line, has been closed and lifted between Lewes and Uckfield, although there are recurring campaigns to re-open it [1] . Branching off the Lewes to Uckfield section at Culver Farm was the lower portion of the Bluebell Railway, and a portion of this remains as a preserved railway. Evidence of the line closures remains in the form of filled-in trackbeds at former, now redundant platforms in the station. ReferencesExternal links
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