Bletchley railway station

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Bletchley
Location
Place Bletchley, Milton Keynes
Local authority Milton Keynes
Operations
Station code BLY
Managed by London Midland
Platforms in use 6 (normally 4)
Live departures and station information from National Rail
Annual Rail Passenger Usage
2004/05 * 0.677 million
2005/06 * 0.682 million
History
Key dates Opened 1846
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 Bletchley from Office of Rail Regulation statistics.
Portal:Bletchley railway station
UK Railways Portal
Southbound view of platforms.
Southbound view of platforms.

Bletchley railway station serves the southern part of Milton Keynes, especially the Bletchley area.

It includes a junction of the London-Scotland West Coast Main Line with the Bletchley-Bedford Marston Vale Line.

Contents

[edit] Services

The station is served by London Midland local services from Northampton to London on the West Coast Main Line and to Bedford on the Marston Vale Line. For inter-City services, change at Milton Keynes Central.

This station is one of the five stations serving Milton Keynes. The others are Wolverton, Milton Keynes Central, Fenny Stratford and Bow Brickhill.

  Preceding station     National Rail     Following station  
Milton Keynes Central   London Midland
West Coast Main Line
  Leighton Buzzard
Terminus   London Midland
Marston Vale Line
Mondays-Saturdays only
  Fenny Stratford

[edit] History

The London and Birmingham Railway, now the "West Coast Main Line", was officially opened from Euston to Denbigh Hall, approximately one mile north of Bletchley station, on April 9, 1838, where a temporary station was built. The line was fully opened in September 1838, and there seemed no apparent need for a station in the Bletchley area at all. It was not until 1847 that Bletchley station was built following the opening of the line from Bedford. Originally a major intercity station, that role passed to Milton Keynes Central in 1982 when the latter was built, long after the east/west route had been downgraded, taking Bletchley's importance as a junction with it. Today, no Virgin inter-city services stop at Bletchley.

The eastbound route (to Bedford) opened in 1846[1], when the first station at Bletchley was built. The westbound route (to Buckingham) opened in 1850. This east/west route subsequently became the Oxford to Cambridge "Varsity Line".

Preceding station Disused railways Following station
Swanbourne   British Rail
Varsity Line
  Terminus

[edit] Future

The Marston Vale Line is the passenger carrying remnant of the Varsity Line. The line beyond Bletchley through Winslow to Bicester is closed to passenger traffic at present, with goods traffic going only as far as Newton Longville sidings for the waste disposal site there. The high level crossing over the WCML at Bletchley remains in place and in occasional use. There is a campaign to re-open the line to passenger traffic at least as far as Bicester and ideally rebuild it from Oxford right through to Cambridge. In 2001, the Strategic Rail Authority considered but rejected the option to reopen the line between Bicester and Bletchley. The track has been lifted back to Swanbourne and from there to Claydon Junction the track is overgrown. The remaining section to Bicester remains open for traffic from Aylesbury to Oxford. (The future of this route is more fully described at the Varsity Line article).

[edit] Development plans to 2010

Apart from the aspirations above, in May 2006 the Department of Transport announced specific plans for Bletchley station [2].

  • Maintenance of the new Desiro trains moves to Northampton by the end of June 2006,
  • maintenance of all other Silverlink trains is moved there too, by the end of December 2006, and
  • the maintenance depot, Bletchley TMD, is to close.
  • "It is likely" that Bletchley area renewals and network simplification will take place by 2010, to include a high-level platform for the Bedford trains. "The network will be suitable for the later addition of any "East-West" link to and from Oxford and for the operation of through links from either Oxford or Bedford to and from Milton Keynes."
  • As part of the project to regenerate Bletchley as a whole, Milton Keynes Council proposes[3] a new station approach for pedestrians, crossing the tracks from Saxon Street and leading into Bletchley.

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Milton Keynes Heritage" (map), Milton Keynes Development Corporation, 1983.
  2. ^ West Coast Main Line: Progress Report - May 2006PDF
  3. ^ page 9PDF (1.12 MiB)

[edit] External links