Wilmslow railway station

Wilmslow National Rail
Location
Place Wilmslow
Local authority Borough of Cheshire East
Coordinates 53°19′37″N 2°13′34″W / 53.327°N 2.226°W / 53.327; -2.226Coordinates: 53°19′37″N 2°13′34″W / 53.327°N 2.226°W / 53.327; -2.226
Grid reference SJ850811
Operations
Station code WML
Managed by Northern
Number of platforms 4
DfT category C2
Live arrivals/departures, station information and onward connections
from National Rail Enquiries
Annual rail passenger usage*
2012/13 Increase 1.141 million
2013/14 Increase 1.279 million
2014/15 Increase 1.329 million
2015/16 Increase 1.396 million
2016/17 Increase 1.531 million
History
1842 Opened
1959 Electrified
National Rail – UK railway stations
* Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Wilmslow from Office of Rail and Road statistics. Methodology may vary year on year.
UK Railways portal

Wilmslow railway station is in Wilmslow, Cheshire, England. The station is 12 miles (19 km) south of Manchester Piccadilly on the Crewe to Manchester Line.

This station is a junction on the Crewe to Manchester Line 6 miles (9.7 km) south of Stockport with the Styal Line from Wilmslow to Manchester Airport, with some trains then continuing to Manchester.

The station has four platforms with disabled access to each, two waiting rooms, public toilets and also has a double-manned booking office below the platforms.

History

Both the Main Line and the Styal Line were electrified in 1959 as part of the West Coast Main Line electrification and modernisation programme with the construction and installation of a state of the art signal box and control centre near the end of the Styal Line down platform at Wilmslow and serving virtually the entire railway from Crewe to Manchester via both routes. The complexity of that installation was not repeated for the remainder of the electrification scheme, which had its control and signalling systems renewed in ways that were less highly automated.

In March 1997, the Provisional IRA exploded two bombs in relay boxes near this signal box, causing disruption to rail and road services. The railway reopened the following day. In April 2006, as part of the total renewal of the railway from Crewe to Cheadle Hulme near Stockport, the large 1959 signal box was demolished.[1]

Large-scale resignalling of the line through Wilmslow was completed behind schedule in the Autumn of 2006.

Services

Monday to Saturday, there are five trains per hour northbound with Northern, Transport for Wales and Virgin Trains services stopping at Wilmslow en route to Manchester Piccadilly. One Northern service operates via the Airport (all stations via Heald Green), the remainder all run via Stockport.[2] Since May 2018, some Northern services run beyond Piccadilly to either Liverpool Lime Street via Earlestown or Bolton and Wigan North Western.

Southbound Monday to Saturdays there are four trains per hour to Crewe. These consist of two Northern trains per hour that terminate at Crewe (local stopping service), an hourly Transport for Wales] fast service that continues via Shrewsbury to Cardiff Central, Swansea and West Wales and an hourly London Euston bound Virgin Trains express service. There is also one local Northern train per hour that terminates at Alderley Edge.

Around once daily in each direction, a CrossCountry service stops at Wilmslow on the route between Manchester Piccadilly and Bournemouth.

On Sundays, there are hourly main line services to South Wales and London but the local routes run less frequently i.e. hourly to Piccadilly via Stockport and Alderley Edge, two hourly to the Airport and Crewe.

Preceding station   National Rail   Following station
Transport for Wales
Northern
Terminus
Northern
Styal Line
Terminus
Northern
Styal Line
Terminus
CrossCountry
Limited Service
Virgin Trains

Future high speed services

The economic case for High Speed 2 Phase 1 includes one train per hour each way stopping at Wilmslow, travelling between London Euston and Manchester Piccadilly.[3]

References

  1. "Network Rail reduces the station's 60s signal box to rubble". Macclesfield Express. 19 April 2006. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
  2. GB eNRT, May 2018 Edition, Tables 65, 84 & 131
  3. "The economic case For HS2" (PDF). Department for Transport. October 2013. pp. 39, 42. Retrieved 1 May 2016.

Further reading

  • Mitchell, Vic; Smith, Keith (2014). Crewe to Manchester. Middleton Press. figs. 38-42. ISBN 9781908174574. OCLC 892047119.
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