Taunton railway station

Taunton National Rail

The main entrance to the station
Location
Place Taunton
Local authority Borough of Taunton Deane
Coordinates 51°01′22″N 3°06′13″W / 51.0228°N 3.1035°W / 51.0228; -3.1035Coordinates: 51°01′22″N 3°06′13″W / 51.0228°N 3.1035°W / 51.0228; -3.1035
Grid reference ST227254
Operations
Station code TAU
Managed by Great Western Railway
Number of platforms 6
DfT category C1
Live arrivals/departures, station information and onward connections
from National Rail Enquiries
Annual rail passenger usage*
2010/11 Increase 1.238 million
2011/12 Increase 1.293 million
2012/13 Decrease 1.289 million
2013/14 Decrease 1.262 million
2014/15 Increase 1.315 million
History
Original company Bristol and Exeter Railway
Pre-grouping Great Western Railway
Post-grouping Great Western Railway
1842 Brunel station opened
1868 Rebuilt in conventional form
1932 Rebuilt with four tracks
National Rail – UK railway stations
* Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Taunton from Office of Rail and Road statistics. Methodology may vary year on year.
UK Railways portal

Taunton railway station is a junction station on the route from London to Penzance, 143 miles (230 km) west of London Paddington station.[1] It is situated in Taunton, Somerset, England and is operated by Great Western Railway. It is also served by CrossCountry trains and by the West Somerset Railway on special event days and by mainline steam excursions.

History

Originally opened on 1 July 1842 as part of the Bristol and Exeter Railway, Taunton was the terminus of the line until a new temporary terminus was opened on 1 May 1843 further west at Beambridge.[2]

Isambard Kingdom Brunel's original design was for a single-sided station with two platforms, each with their own buildings and train sheds, placed on the south side of the line. A hotel was built between them and the Grand Western Canal.[3] Having both platforms on the town side of the line was meant to help passengers but was found to be problematic as the railway became busier, with each train having to cross the line used by trains in the opposite direction. An engine shed was provided at the west end of the station.[4]

The local railway network

A series of branches opened in the area during the next thirty years. These were the Yeovil branch line (1 October 1853), the West Somerset Railway to Watchet (31 March 1862), the Chard Branch Line (11 September 1866), and the Devon and Somerset Railway (8 June 1871, extended to Barnstaple 1 November 1873).[2] While none of these branches had a junction in Taunton, the trains were generally run through to Taunton to provide connections.[5]

The station was unable to cope with all these extra trains and passengers, so a major rebuilding was completed on 17 August 1868.[3] The "up station" at the east end was demolished and replaced by a more conventional platform on the north side of the line; the "down station" was extended onto the site now vacated, and a new single 200 feet (61 m) train shed was provided covering the whole station. Goods traffic was moved away from the passenger platforms by the opening on 1 November 1896 of a pair of avoiding lines that skirted around the south side of the station behind the old hotel. A larger engine shed was opened in the same year.[6]

A westbound train in 1892 when part of the platform was covered by a roof

The platforms were extended again in 1895. Now covering the whole length of the original single-sided station, they were the longest platforms on the Great Western Railway (which had amalgamated with the Bristol and Exeter company on 1 January 1876). New bay platforms were added to handle the trains from the branch lines.[4]

In the 1930s the lines through Taunton from Cogload Junction to Norton Fitzwarren were widened from two to four tracks; those east of Taunton were brought into use on 13 December 1931 and those to the west on 14 February 1932.[7] This work forced another rebuilding of the station. The train shed was dismantled and new buildings constructed on the up (north) side along with a new island platform in the middle of the station.[6] This gave a platform face for each of the four through lines, which were brought into use on 7 February 1932. Work included a new subway that replaced the old footbridge, and a new booking office at road level on the north side of the station. The old goods shed was replaced by a two-storey goods warehouse next to the avoiding line, east of the station on 20 February 1932.[8]

The platforms were numbered:

  1. The down relief platform, principally used by expresses from Bristol
  2. A bay at the east end, used for arrivals from Chard, Yeovil, Castle Cary
  3. The inner bay at the west end, double sided around the single track, principally used for Barnstaple departures
  4. The outer bay at the west end, principally used for Minehead departures
  5. The down main platform, mainly used by expresses from London
  6. The up main platform, mainly used by expresses to London
  7. The up relief platform, mainly used by expresses to Bristol
  8. A bay at the west end, occasionally used for Minehead/Barnstaple arrivals
  9. A bay at the east end, used for stopping train departures to Bristol and Yeovil

Although some no longer have tracks, all the platform structures remain.

Outside the engine shed in 1949

Until 1970 the four tracks to the east of Taunton were not used as normal main and relief lines, but with the inner main lines for trains to London and the outer lines for trains to Bristol, to align with the way the tracks diverged at Cogload Junction, some miles to the east of the station. In 1970 under the Western Region of British Rail the central island platform was closed off and all trains stopping at Taunton used the outer platforms, except in an emergency when the central platform was pressed into use. London trains stopping at Taunton (which was most of them) now crossed over to the main lines at the London end of the station. The second pair of lines from Cogload were removed in 1986.[9]

The goods depot closed for general traffic in 1965, although bulk coal was handled until 1972. The engine shed closed on 1 January 1972, by which time it only served as a fueling point for local diesel shunting locomotives. The various branch lines closed during the 1960s and 1970s, so only one bay platform was retained for local trains starting towards Bristol. The island platform was taken out of regular use for a few years, although it could be opened up in an emergency (albeit with no platform numbers, nor a lift). This situation no longer applies as the platforms were reopened for normal services in 2000[9] and a new lift installed in 2007 to replace an electric "stair lift" which could carry one seated person at a time but no luggage.[10] A west-facing bay platform has also been reinstated for passeneger use, although there are no regular trains timetabled to use it.

Today the original "down station" building survives, along with the hotel and the extensions added in 1868. An examination of the brickwork on the south-side building reveals where the footbridge was removed in favour of the present subway. On the north side, the ticket office dates from 1983 but the remaining buildings generally date from the 1932 rebuilding and stand on foundations from 1868.[11] The goods warehouse is largely derelict and most of the engine shed has been razed to the ground except for an asbestos-clad repair shop built in 1932 and the ramp that used to serve an elevated coaling stage. The engine sidings are still used by engineers' plant machines; Freightliner locomotives are generally stabled at Fairwater Yard but occasionally use the old engine shed sidings for additional storage space. The avoiding line is truncated but serves as a headshunt for the long engineers trains using Fairwater Yard.[4]

The footbridge to the west of the station, known in the town as "Fortysteps", although Network Rail prefer to label it "40 Steps", a favoured location for generations of rail enthusiasts, was demolished at the end of 2013, due to construction of a new road alongside the railway.[12] This was however replaced by a more modern bridge with both steps and slopes making it more accessible.

Preceding station Historical railways Following station
Thornfalcon   Great Western Railway
Chard Branch Line
  Terminus
Creech St Michael   Great Western Railway
Yeovil Branch Line
  Terminus
Creech St Michael   Great Western Railway
Reading to Taunton Line
also from London via Bristol
  Norton Fitzwarren
Terminus   Great Western Railway
West Somerset Railway
  Norton Fitzwarren
Terminus   Great Western Railway
Devon and Somerset Railway
  Norton Fitzwarren

Description

Track layout in 2013
Seen from the "Forty steps" footbridge, which crosses the line (and many former sidings) at the west end. Platform 5 is on the left, while a CrossCountry train to Plymouth is at Platform 2.

The station is situated on an embankment and a bridge above road level. The ticket office is at ground level on the north side although the town centre lies to the south of the station, about 1 mile (1.6 km) away. There is a car park on both sides of the station and bus services to the town centre call at a bus stop in front of the ticket office; those from the town call at a stop on the main road that passes beneath the station. The south block is a Grade II listed building.[13]

The platform above the ticket office is Platform 5, which is the main platform used by trains towards London Paddington and also Bristol and the north. The station buffet is situated on this platform. An east-facing bay platform, Platform 6, is beyond this; it only sees occasional use nowadays, mainly being used for local trains towards Bristol.

In the centre of the station is an island platform. The face on the north side is Platform 4 which can be used by similar trains to Platform 5. The face on the south side is Platform 3, which is used as an extra platform for services towards Exeter but is mainly used for terminating services from the Bristol direction that can also start back from this platform.

The southerly platform is Platform 2 and is the main platform for services to Exeter and beyond. Trains can also start from this platform towards London and Bristol if required. At the north end is the bus shelter for rail-link buses to Minehead and Ilfracombe. It has level access from a second car park.

Taunton with a British Rail Class 50 'Hoover' and a BR Class 45 'Peak' in the background under British Rail.

At the west end of this platform is another bay platform, Platform 1. This is not signalled for use by passenger trains but is sometimes used for stabling. Behind this are some sidings used by the engineers department for stabling on-track plant and the headshunt for Fairwater Yard. This area also housed the station's engine shed but this closed many years ago, although the last remains were only demolished in 2012.

Terminating trains from Bristol that need to cross to Platform 2 or 3 have to run forward towards Fairwater and then return to the station once the driver has changed ends. To reach Platform 6 they have to make this move and then run right through the station, the driver change ends, and then reverse into Platform 6. First Great Western have proposed[14] that alterations be made to the layout at the east end of the station to allow terminating trains from Bristol to run straight into Platform 6. The shunting of trains across the layout at the west end of the station has long been a Taunton feature; in the days of trains to Minehead, Barnstaple, and local stations to Exeter, terminating trains were drawn back from the up side platforms via various sidings, and then returned to the down side departure platforms, and pilot locomotives were provided to assist in the days of hauled stock.

Services

CrossCountry and First Great Western trains to Penzance

Great Western Railway operates a typically hourly service through Taunton between London Paddington and destinations such as Exeter St Davids, Paignton, Plymouth and Penzance. There is also an overnight Night Riviera sleeper service on this route.[1] The same operator provides an hourly service to Bristol Temple Meads and Cardiff Central via Weston-super-Mare.[15]

CrossCountry operates a at least an hourly service during the daytime between Plymouth, Bristol Temple Meads, Birmingham New Street and the North.[16] Most trains run through to Edinburgh Waverley via Leeds, with some extensions through to either Glasgow Central or Dundee & Aberdeen. There is a steam-hauled service from Bristol Temple Meads to Kingswear on certain Sundays in the summer.

Preceding station National Rail Following station
Castle Cary or
Bristol Temple Meads
  Great Western Railway
Cornwall-London
  Tiverton Parkway
Bridgwater   Great Western Railway
Cardiff Central-Taunton
  Terminus
Reading   Great Western Railway
Night Riviera
  Exeter St Davids
Weston-super-Mare or
Bristol Temple Meads
  CrossCountry
Cornwall via England to Scotland
  Tiverton Parkway
  Heritage railways
Terminus   West Somerset Railway
Occasional through services
  Bishops Lydeard

Fairwater Yard

Class 66 locomotives operated by Freightliner UK in Fairwater Yard

A marshalling yard was opened to the west of the station on 30 July 1946. It was used for many years by the British Railways' Civil Engineer and was home to a Ruston and Hornsby 0-6-0 diesel shunter, PWM652. After the end of this permanent way work the sidings were little used, mainly being a place to store unwanted or damaged wagons.

During 2006 they were relaid and in January 2007 were returned to use. Fairwater is now the home for a High Output Track Renewal System. This is engaged on renewal of track on the Great Western Main Line west of Swindon, the Reading to Exeter Main Line and the Bristol to Taunton Line. The equipment based in the yard at that time was a Plasser and Theurer High Output Ballast Cleaner, a Matisa High Output Track Renewal Train, and smaller on-track plant.[17] The Matisa Track Renewal Train was removed from Fairwater Yard in April 2012 after it had completed its need for use in the South West.

Taunton Concrete Works

Taunton Concrete Works, situated to the north of the line east of the station, cast items for the railway such as bridge beams, platform components, cable troughs and fence posts. The facility was closed in 1994.[18]

See also

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to
Taunton railway station
.
  1. 1 2 "National Rail Timetable 135 (May 2016)" (PDF). Network Rail.
  2. 1 2 MacDermot, E T (1931). History of the Great Western Railway, volume II 1863–1921. London: Great Western Railway.
  3. 1 2 Broad Gauge Society (2001). Taunton in the 1880s. Broad Gauge Society.
  4. 1 2 3 "History". Taunton Trains. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  5. "The history of the Taunton-Yeovil train line". Chard and Ilminster News. 17 August 2014. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  6. 1 2 Maggs, Colin G (1991). Taunton Steam. Bath: Millstream Books. ISBN 0-948975-26-1.
  7. Cooke, RA (1979). Track Layout Diagrams of the GWR and BR WR, Section 16: West Somerset. Harwell: RA Cooke.
  8. "Goods depot, Taunton station". Somerset Historic Environment Record. Somerset County Council. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  9. 1 2 Oakley, Mike (2006). Somerset Railway Stations. Bristol: Redcliffe Press. ISBN 1-904537-54-5.
  10. "Access For All - A-Z of station improvements". Network Rail. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  11. "Taunton railway station". Somerset Historic Environment Record. Somerset County Council. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  12. "Taunton Castle at Forty Steps". Simon Bowditch. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  13. "Taunton Station (South block)". Images of England. English Heritage. Retrieved 28 February 2010.
  14. "Network Rail Business Plan 2007: Route 12" (PDF). Network Rail. Retrieved 2009-06-24.
  15. Table 134 National Rail timetable, May 2016
  16. Table 51 National Rail timetable, May 2016
  17. "Taunton: high output base". Modern Railways. Ian Allan Publishing. 64 (703): 20. April 2007. ISSN 0026-8356.
  18. Andrews, Julian (August 1997). "BR's Concrete Works at Taunton". Modelling Railways Illustrated. Model Media Publications. 4 (10): 462–464. ISSN 0969-7349.


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