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Bridgend railway station

Coordinates: 51°30′25″N 3°34′30″W / 51.50694°N 3.57500°W / 51.50694; -3.57500
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Bridgend
General information
Other namesTemplate:Lang-cy
LocationBridgend county borough
Managed byArriva Trains Wales
Platforms4
Other information
Station codeBGN
Key dates
19 June 1850Station opened
The station in 1962
View northward, towards Port Talbot in 1962

Bridgend railway station (Template:Lang-cy) is a mainline railway station, serving the town of Bridgend, South Wales. It is located approximately halfway between Cardiff Central and Swansea at the point where the Maesteg Line diverges from the South Wales Main Line, and is the western terminus of the Vale of Glamorgan Line from Cardiff via Barry and Llantwit Major. It is the fifth busiest station in Wales, after Cardiff Central, Cardiff Queen Street, Newport and Swansea.

History

The station was opened on 18 June 1850, and both the main platform building and the 1877 pedestrian bridge are Grade II listed.[1] The station was designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel.

Services on both branch lines from the station were withdrawn for a time in the 1960s & early 1970s (trains on the Vale of Glamorgan line fell victim to the Beeching Axe in June 1964, whilst Maesteg trains were withdrawn in July 1970), but because the lines remained in-situ due to coal traffic for the Aberthaw Power Station, each one has since been reopened to passenger services.

Facilities

The station is fully staffed throughout the week, with the ticket office on platform 1 open from early morning until mid-evening (Monday - Friday 05:45 - 19:00, Saturday 07:00 - 19:00, Sunday 07:40 - 19:15). A self-service ticket machine is also provided for use at other times and for the collection of pre-paid tickets. There is a waiting room and photo booth in the main building on platform 1, whist the amenities on platform 2 include toilets and a coffee shop. Train running details are offered via CIS displays, automatic announcements and timetable posters. Step-free access is available to all platforms via lifts in the accessible footbridge at the eastern end.[2]

Services

A First Great Western InterCity 125 service headed by 43004 departs Bridgend with a service to Swansea.

Passenger services are operated by Great Western Railway to and from London Paddington and Swansea, with some services extended to Carmarthen; and by Arriva Trains Wales to destinations across Wales.

To the west, Arriva Trains Wales trains run along the South Wales Main Line and West Wales Line to Swansea and then to Carmarthen, Pembroke Dock, Milford Haven or Fishguard Harbour.

Mainline services to Swansea and London run hourly (with extra services at peak hours), whilst the regional trains to Manchester Piccadilly via Shrewsbury and local trains to Maesteg and over the Vale of Glamorgan Line also run hourly; the Swanline local stopping trains to/from Swansea run every two hours.

Preceding station National Rail National Rail Following station
Pencoed   Arriva Trains Wales
Maesteg Line
  Wildmill
Llantwit Major   Arriva Trains Wales
Vale Line
  Terminus
Cardiff Central   Arriva Trains Wales
South Wales Main Line
  Pyle
Pencoed   Arriva Trains Wales
South Wales Main Line
  Port Talbot Parkway
Cardiff Central   Great Western Railway
London – Swansea
  Port Talbot Parkway

Platforms

Platforms 1 and 2 are full length platforms used for all long distance services on the South Wales Main Line.

Platform 1A was reopened in June 2005 by Andrew Davies to act as the terminus for the newly re-opened Vale of Glamorgan Line, whose trains now run through to/from either Aberdare or Merthyr Tydfil

Platform 3 has been re-commissioned as an overflow bay platform facing west (it was previously the through outer face of an island platform until removal in the mid-1970s), and is used for services from Maesteg.

Accidents and Incidents

  • In December 1965 a fatal collision occurred with a derailed Class 47, D1671, and D6983 travelling to Swansea, as the result of a landslip. The damage was so severe, D6983 was the first EE Type 3 to be withdrawn and as a result, the only locomotive in the entire class not to receive a TOPS number. The wreckage blocked the South Wales mainline and the Vale of Glamorgan line. Trains had to be diverted via the Vale of Neath line until unluckily a landslip blocked that route also. After the lines reopened, the remains of both locomotives were sold to local scrap merchants R.S. Hayes and cut up the following year.[7]
  • On 5 May 2012, a dead body was found on the railway, near the station. The death was treated as unexplained.[8]

References

  1. ^ Bridgend Monuments and Memorial Trail, p 18
  2. ^ Bridgend station facilities National Rail Enquiries
  3. ^ Table 130 National Rail timetable, May 2017
  4. ^ GB eNRT May 2017, Table 128
  5. ^ GB eNRT May 2017 Edition, Table 125
  6. ^ GB eNRT, Table 131
  7. ^ Morrison, Brian (1981). The Power of the 37s. Oxford: Oxford Publishing Co.
  8. ^ "Bridgend: rail death inquiry after man's body found". BBC News. BBC. 5 May 2012. Retrieved 5 May 2012.

51°30′25″N 3°34′30″W / 51.50694°N 3.57500°W / 51.50694; -3.57500