Partick station

Partick National Rail
Scottish Gaelic: Partaig

The new façade of Partick station after a lengthy renovation
Location
Place Partick
Local authority City of Glasgow
Coordinates 55°52′11″N 4°18′33″W / 55.8698°N 4.3092°W / 55.8698; -4.3092Coordinates: 55°52′11″N 4°18′33″W / 55.8698°N 4.3092°W / 55.8698; -4.3092
Grid reference NS555664
Operations
Station code PTK
Managed by Abellio ScotRail
Number of platforms 2
Live arrivals/departures, station information and onward connections
from National Rail Enquiries
Annual rail passenger usage*
2002/03   1.104 million
2004/05 Increase 1.342 million
2005/06 Increase 1.584 million
2006/07 Increase 1.645 million
2007/08 Increase 1.709 million
2008/09 Increase 2.493 million
2009/10 Decrease 2.070 million
2010/11 Increase 2.290 million
2011/12 Increase 2.494 million
2012/13 Increase 2.591 million
2013/14 Increase 2.674 million
Passenger Transport Executive
PTE SPT
History
Original company British Railways
17 December 1979 Opened[1]
National Rail – UK railway stations
* Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Partick from Office of Rail and Road statistics. Methodology may vary year on year.
UK Railways portal
Passengers join a westbound service

Partick station is an interchange station in the Partick area of Glasgow, Scotland. It, along with an adjacent bus station, forms one of the main transport hubs in Glasgow. The station is served by Glasgow Subway and National Rail services and was one of the first to receive bilingual English and Gaelic signs, because there is a significant Gaelic-speaking population in the Partick area.[2]

History

The first station in the area was the North British Railway's Partickhill, opened in 1887 slightly to the north of the existing site on the opposite side of the Dumbarton Road. Soon after, the Glasgow Subway opened and its Merkland Street station, slightly to the south of the existing station site, opened in December 1896. Neither was independently known as "Partick station" as there were two other railway stations in Partick between the late 19th and mid-20th centuries: Partick Central (later renamed Kelvin Hall station) to the east with Partick West and Crow Road to the west.

Argyle Line opening

The Beeching Axe of the 1960s closed Partick West and Partick Central, both on the Lanarkshire and Dunbartonshire Railway link to the Stobcross Railway and Glasgow Central Railway, leaving just the two stations in Partick, with Partickhill station - which escaped closure owing to being on the newly electrified (1960) North Clyde line from Queen Street Low Level, served by the 'Blue Trains', with a major pre-electrification refurbishment in 1958. It stood a few hundred yards north of Merkland Street. The amalgamation of the two stations to a single site came in 1979, as a major refurbishment of the Glasgow Subway coincided with the Greater Glasgow Passenger Transport Executive's decision to reopen part of the Glasgow Central Railway, which had been axed by Beeching, as the Argyle Line and connecting it to the North Clyde system just east of Partick. Both stations were closed (Merkland Street had been since the Subway works began in May 1977, whilst Partickhill remained in service for several months after the Argyle Line opened, until replaced by the current Partick station) and replaced by British Rail with a new combined Partick station in the middle. The platforms at Partickhill are still visible from the North Clyde/Argyle Line, although access to Dumbarton Road is now blocked. The Merkland Street station buildings are no longer visible.

The station is one of the primary stations on the Argyle Line and North Clyde Line of the Glasgow suburban rail network. These lines primarily provide services to the east and west although the station itself is orientated north-south with two platforms. Statistically, it is the tenth busiest railway station in Scotland[3] and the fifth busiest passenger interchange when subway and bus journeys from the site are included.

National Rail

Partick station is on a busy section of the Strathclyde rail network, served by all services on the Argyle Line and North Clyde Line.

Eastbound Argyle Line trains serve Rutherglen and Cambuslang, before continuing to Motherwell, Lanark, Coatbridge Central via Bellshill or Hamilton Central, as well as Larkhall. Eastbound North Clyde Line trains operate to Edinburgh Waverley, Airdrie, Springburn eastbound, via Glasgow Queen Street. Westbound services operate to Balloch and Helensburgh Central via Dalmuir, and to Milngavie.

Many journeys that interchange between the Argyle and North Clyde lines require passengers to change at Partick, as it is the closest station to central Glasgow with direct services to both Glasgow Central and Glasgow Queen Street main line stations.

November 1979 (from opening of Argyle Line)

There were 15 trains per hour at opening of the Argyle Line in November 1979.

2010/11 (From 12 December 2010)

There are a total of 14 trains per hour, off-peak, in each direction.

Preceding station National Rail Following station
Exhibition Centre   Abellio ScotRail
Argyle Line
  Hyndland
Charing Cross   Abellio ScotRail
North Clyde Line
 

Glasgow Subway

Partick

Platform for Outer Circle service at the subway station
Location Partick, Glasgow
Scotland
Operated by SPT
Platforms 2
Construction
Structure type underground
Other information
Fare zone G
History
Opened 16 April 1980[1]
Previous names Merkland Street
Traffic
Passengers 1.022 million annually enter/exit

Partick subway station is one of the largest stations on the Glasgow Subway network, and has around 1.01 million boardings per year. This is due in part to its situation within the city and also the National Rail network. Partick is a relatively large population centre of Glasgow housing around 100,000 people, a significant number of whom use the subway to commute to the city centre.

Furthermore, Partick station is an interchange for two lines on the National Rail network. People commuting from outside Glasgow to one of the areas covered by the underground network may choose to continue their journey from Partick to allow for ease of transfer between the services and to avoid a lengthy walk between (for example) Glasgow Central and St. Enoch.

It is one of only three with a dual side platform layout (the others being Govan and St Enoch). The rest have either a single central platform covering both circles or two platforms with a track running at the same side of each. The new Partick station replaced Merkland Street, which was located to the south, after modernisation. It should not be confused with the old Partick Cross subway station which is now known as Kelvinhall and is the station directly preceding or following Partick, depending upon the direction of travel.

It is the only station on the Subway that interchanges directly with a railway station, although Buchanan Street station is linked to Queen Street by a length of moving walkway. St. Enoch once shared this distinction, before its parent St Enoch railway station was closed and demolished in the 1960s.

Partick is one of three subway stations on the SPT Subway line to benefit from mobile telephone service nodes, the others being Buchanan Street and Hillhead. These nodes allow users of the O2 cellular network to use their mobile telephones while waiting on a subway train. The idea was to trial the technology at the busiest stations and, if successful, to put similar devices at each station eventually extending service across the entire network. As yet, the trial is incomplete.


Preceding station   Strathclyde Partnership for Transport   Following station
Govan   Glasgow Subway   Kelvinhall

Modernisation

2005-2009 project

Inside the eastbound waiting room

Strathclyde Passenger Transport began planning an extensive modernisation of the Partick station site - which had remained largely unchanged since its opening in 1979 - as early as 1998. Work began in late 2005 and was originally scheduled for completion in January 2007. However, delays to the project resulted in this date being put back on a number of occasions. The demolition and construction work was carried out while the site remained open to avoid any disruption in rail and underground services, arguably one of the most ambitious attributes of the project.[4]

The total cost of the project was estimated to be around £12.3 million with professional fees and third-party costs accounting for £2.6 million of this. However, due to delays in the progression of the works and unforeseen difficulties - such as ground conditions on the land the station occupies, only discovered after the commencement of work - the company in charge of the development, C Spencer Construction, made a claim for a further £6.3 million.[5]

In early 2009, the project finally reached its conclusion and on 31 March, the new station was officially opened to the public. The work done includes the construction of a completely new and modern station building which incorporates a brand new ticket office (which has been in use since 2008). The station concourse has been completely renovated and new signs have been posted similar to those seen in Glasgow Central and Queen Street stations. Both railway platforms have been refurbished and now have their own indoor waiting rooms. Lifts linking the concourse to the National Rail platforms were installed.[6]

2012-2013 project

The Subway platforms were renovated between summer 2012 and spring 2013 at a cost of £1.2 million. All floor, wall, and ceiling finishes were replaced with new contemporary designs. Improved lighting, signage, and facilities for disabled people were introduced.[7]

Lifts linking the concourse to the Subway platforms were be installed as part of this project because the necessary land is not owned by SPT. The future provision of lifts has, however, been safeguarded.[8]

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 Butt (1995), page 181
  2. The Gaels In Glasgow
  3. The usage information (Station Entries and Station Exits) is based on ticket sales in the financial year 2002/03 and covers all National Rail stations. Continued usage notes, and Excel format table for all stations available.
  4. Clyde Waterfront
  5. Evening Times Online, Cost of Partick station revamp soars by £6.3m, published 12 May 2008
  6. Partick Interchange Rebuilding SPT microsite (preserved at archive.org)
  7. http://www.spt.co.uk/2012/06/partick-subway-station-to-get-1-2-million-upgrade/
  8. http://www.spt.co.uk/documents/rtp300312_agenda12.pdf

Sources

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