|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Nailsea and Backwell railway station is a station on the Bristol to Taunton Line. It is located in the village of Backwell and close to the town of Nailsea in North Somerset, England. The station is 8 miles (13 km) west of Bristol Temple Meads railway station.
HistoryThe station was opened by the Bristol and Exeter Railway on 14 June 1841 as 'Nailsea'1 and was the first station after leaving Bristol until Bedminster opened in 1871. When it was built it was surrounded by fields and served these rural communities, but both Nailsea and Backwell have expanded to accommodate commuters for Bristol and further afield since the 1970s. The main station buildings were provided on the Nailsea side of the station; Backwell has now spread right up to the railway line while the edge of Nailsea is still a little way distant to the north. Because of this, the station was renamed 'Nailsea and Backwell' on 1 May 1905. It reverted to plain Nailsea in 1974 but has been has since become 'Nailsea & Backwell' once again.2 Goods sidings were placed on the north side of the station, immediately west of the platforms3. A connection from these ran to the Nailsea Colliery, a long-closed outlying mine of the Somerset coalfield. Goods traffic ceased entirely from 1 June 1964. DescriptionThe station sits atop a bridge that spans the main road between Nailsea and Backwell. There is a car park on the Nailsea side of the station, and bus services from Nailsea to Backwell and Flax Bourton stop on the main road next to the car park. Access to the two platforms is by steps from the road on either side; there is also a ramp leading up to the platform for trains towards Bristol. A small ticket kiosk on this platform is no longer manned, instead a ticket machine was installed on each platform in 2007. There are waiting shelters on both platforms and even a footbridge between them, although few people use this as it is as easier to descend to road level and pass beneath the line. There are "next train" monitors and an automated public address system to announce the trains. ServicesThe station is managed and all trains are operated by First Great Western. The basic train service comprises two trains in each direction each hour. One train is the Bristol Parkway to Weston-super-Mare service that calls at all stations; the second is the faster Cardiff Central to Taunton service which runs non-stop between Bristol Temple Meads and Nailsea & Backwell. A similar stopping pattern is used by the peak period services to and from London Paddington. All trains call at Yatton, the next station westwards. The typical journey time to Bristol Temple Meads is 11 minutes, while to London takes about two hours. The High Speed Trains used on the London services are longer than the station, and so only the front carriages stop on the platform. A morning eastbound CrossCountry service also makes a stop at Nailsea and Backwell to serve as an extra peak commuter service to Bristol Temple Meads, but there is no southbound return. This is unusual for the CrossCountry stopping patterns.
References
See alsoWikimedia Commons has media related to:
External links
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| All Right Reserved © 2007, Designed by Stylish Blog. |