Stirling railway station is a railway station located in Stirling, Scotland.
History
Stirling was first connected to the Scottish Central Railway in 1848. Lines were operated by the Stirling and Dunfermline Railway and the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway. The current station buildings were opened in 1916, and have been refurbished several times, with minor layout changes, and most recently the installation of elevators to enable better access to the footbridge. In 2008 the Travel Centre has also been refurbished to improve disabled access, including power-assisted entrance doors, a wheelchair-accessible counter, and improved customer information systems.
Services - Past and present
From the station, trains operate north to Perth, Inverness and Aberdeen, south west to Glasgow, and east to Edinburgh. The service to Alloa and Dunfermine was stopped in 1968, but the reopening of the Stirling-Alloa-Kincardine rail link partially restored that service with an hourly service from Glasgow to Alloa as an extension of the Croy Line services. This utilises the existing trains, which previously spent considerable time in one of the bay platforms at Stirling with engines idling, but now, in this otherwise wasted time, proceed to Alloa and return.
Most services are operated by First ScotRail although there is one train a day operated by National Express East Coast to London Kings Cross and one in the opposite direction to Inverness Station. The station has nine platforms, though they are ordered 2 to 10 as the original Platform 1 was removed to make way for a new station car park several years ago, and it was not worthwhile changing all the platform numbers. The bay platforms at the north end of the station (Platforms 4 and 5) still exist but are not available to passenger trains.
References
Gallery
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Stirling station looking towards Larbert.
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Coordinates: 56°07′12″N 3°56′10″W / 56.12, -3.936
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