Greenock Central railway station

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Greenock Central
Looking east along the concourse which has lost its glazed roof, as passengers leave an eastbound train. Note the steel ramp down to platform 2.
Location
Place Greenock
Local authority Inverclyde
Operations
Managed by First ScotRail
Platforms in use 2
Annual Passenger Usage
2002/03 * 270,171
2004/05 ** 301,923
History
31 March 1841 Opened
National Rail - UK railway stations

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T
U V W X Y Z  

Annual passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Greenock Central (source)
Portal:Greenock Central railway station
UK Rail Portal

Greenock Central station is one of eight railway stations serving the town of Greenock in western Scotland, and is the nearest to the town centre. This station, which is staffed, is on the Inverclyde Line which runs from Glasgow Central to Gourock. It has 3 platforms, 2 of which are in use, with one disused bay platform. This disused platform is still connected to the main line.

It was originally the terminus before the railway was extended to Gourock and at that time was known as Greenock Cathcart station, as the access road to the station leads off the town's Cathcart Street.

Contents

[edit] History

The Clyde steamer Waverley at Custom House Quay.
The Clyde steamer Waverley at Custom House Quay.

The station was opened by the Glasgow, Paisley and Greenock Railway on 31 March 1841 as the terminus of its line from Bridge Street railway station, which had a shared section between Glasgow, and Paisley Gilmour Street being run by the Glasgow and Paisley Joint Railway. Greenock was already a major seaport and a branch near the station provided a goods service, but it was the passenger service which proved a major success. Clyde steamers took a couple of hours to get from Glasgow down the River Clyde as far as Greenock, and now for the first time a railway took only an hour to get to the coast. The terminus with its short driveway sloping down to Cathcart Street was around 300 yards (280 m) from Custom House Quay, Greenock, where steamers took wealthy commuters in summer to their villas around the shores of the Firth of Clyde as well as huge numbers of holidaymakers visiting resorts down the firth at "trades holidays", particularly the annual Glasgow Fair.[1][2]

When the railway merged with the Caledonian Railway on 9 July 1847 Greenock Cathcart was the main access to the coast. However in 1869 their dominance of this traffic ended when the Glasgow and South Western Railway opened its station on the waterfront at Princes Pier, Greenock. Greenock's growth had led to increasing overcrowding of tenement houses, and passengers were glad to avoid the walk through these streets. Attempts by the Caledonian to extend their railway to Gourock had met with difficulties in getting through a built up area, but now, spurred by competition, they gained Parliamentary approval in 1884. The route took the railway in a tunnel from the station under the town's Well Park (which provides a level area atop a high rocky crag}, then in further cuttings and tunnels westwards through the hillside clear of the expensive properties on the coast. After three years in construction the Gourock Extension Railway opened on 1 June 1889.[1]

In the 1923 grouping, the line became part of the LMS, then after coming under British Railways the line was electrified in 1967.

[edit] The station buildings

To the left of the new booking office the tunnel west goes under Terrace Road, which is reached by a steel staircase. Station Avenue goes through the stone archway down to Cathcart Street.
To the left of the new booking office the tunnel west goes under Terrace Road, which is reached by a steel staircase. Station Avenue goes through the stone archway down to Cathcart Street.

The tracks from Glasgow enter at the east end of the wide concourse which is flanked to the north and south by high stone walls, each capped at the east end by a castellated turret. A glazed roof between these walls sheltered the concourse until recently,[3] but it has been removed and small shelters introduced. The northernmost line stops as a bay platform and is not in use, and platform 1 serving eastbound trains opens directly to the top of Station Avenue which slopes down to Cathcart Street through stone archways marking the station entrance. The two tracks in use continue westwards through a tunnel which is capped by the parapet wall to Terrace Road, which leaves Cathcart Street further to the west and rises steeply towards the station before turning south over the tunnel entrance and continuing to rise to the level of the Well Park. Doorways in the parapet wall lead to staircases down to each platform, and to a steel ramp down to Platform 2 serving westbound trains. At one time the platforms were connected by a wooden footbridge, and the doorways to Terrace Road had wooden doors which were generally kept closed..[citation needed]

The original booking office was demolished around the early 1990s, being replaced for a time by a portakabin, and now that the glazed roof has been removed a small booking office with a hipped roof has been added, with the north side of the concourse being made into a car park.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b McCrorie, Ian (1989). To The Coast. Fairlie, Ayrshire: Fairlie Press. ISBN 1-871209-01-3. 
  2. ^ Glasgow Railways: a chronology
  3. ^ Glasgow, Paisley and Greenock Railway

[edit] External links


Preceding station National Rail Following station
Greenock West   First ScotRail

 Inverclyde Line 

  Cartsdyke
Historical Railways
Greenock West   Glasgow, Paisley and Greenock Railway    Cartsdyke