Showing posts with label Guildford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guildford. Show all posts

Friday, 1 May 2015

Baynards in 1977






Back in 1987 and armed with a motorbike and a light-leaking Zenith E camera I managed to visit a lot of closed lines around southern England.

Baynards was a strange little place on the useful Horsham to Guildford line, which closed in 1965. I did actually see this line being lifted, at Slinfold, a year or so later. By 1977 of course the track had been lifted for around ten years. The station was well preserved, with even the concrete nameboards still in place. There was no access to the station itself, but it was easy to get pictures.

These shots are now 38 years old  but recent shots of the station show it to be pretty much the same. Like many stations serving tiny places the building itself was substantial, and many have been converted to homes. Perhaps that's how many of these stations would have ended up, had not the energy crisis come knocking on all our doors!

This was a useful line, linking a number of smaller places, plus the larger town of Cranleigh, to both Guildford and Horsham. It was a commuter line and with hindsight an unbelievable closure taking this into account. Cranleigh is one of the larger towns still off the network and calls for reconnection have been uttered almost from the day the line closed. It is daft that even now in 2015 a town like Cranleigh should lack modern and sustainable transport. A recent ATOC report had Cranleigh as one of its top ten targets for quick reconnection - yet still there is procrastination. There are the beginnings of a revival group but with so many lines up for reopening it is still slow going. If you live in the area why not join the Facebook group and get a feel for what's happening. It would be great to see trains calling at Baynards again!

Thursday, 1 August 2013

NSE emerges






 
Although I've visited Guildford many times I've only had an hour or two at the station once! Back in 1986 (these were all taken on 20.8.1986) there was a good variety of trains (but nothing loco hauled during my visit). Western Region DMUs were working the Reading to Tonbridge services, which was a fascinating route back then, and still something of a backwater. Slam door stock were the order of the day there, but the real reason this day was memorable was that during my stay I saw the NSE red, white and blue livery for the first time. It wasn't as classy as the Jaffa Cake livery but looked good on 7349 which looked like it had just been outshopped!


Friday, 13 April 2012

Guildford, 20.8.1986




Cars always date exteriors well!






Western DMUs were working the Reading-Tonbridge line in 1986.



I think this was the first ever train I saw in Network South East colours.

Guildford was an interesting station back in 1986 with a good variety of trains, mainly electric but also diesels on the Tonbridge-Reading line. Sadly the valuable line to Cranleigh and Horsham is currently closed but otherwise Guildford escaped the stupid Beeching closures.

More info (from Wikipedia)

Guildford railway station is at one of three main railway junctions on the Portsmouth Direct Line and serves the town of Guildford in SurreyEngland. It is 30.3 miles (48 km) from London Waterloo.
It provides an interchange station for three other railway lines: the North Downs Line northwards towards Reading, and with connection to Aldershot; the same line eastwards to Redhill; the New Guildford Line, the alternative route to Waterloo, via Cobham or Epsom.
Guildford station is larger, more frequently and more diversely served of the two stations in Guildford town centre, the other being London Road (Guildford), on the New Guildford Line however its London services operator is the same.

History



A 1912 Railway Clearing House map of lines around Guildford railway station

The
 Reading, Guildford and Reigate Railway opened its services on 4 July 1849, and was operated by the South Eastern Railway. LSWR services to Farnham via Tongham began on 8 October 1849 and the New Guildford Line to Leatherhead and Epsom Downs on 2 February 1885. On the latter line is the other Guildford station: London Road: the line to it describes a curve around the town on an embankment, crossing the River Wey by a high bridge.The station was opened by the London and South Western Railway (LSWR) on 5 May 1845, but was substantially enlarged and rebuilt in 1880.
Guildford station was also the northern terminus of the (currently closed) Cranleigh Line of the London Brighton and South Coast Railway, which opened 2 October 1865 and closed almost one hundred years later on 12 June 1965. This line ran to Horsham by way of CranleighRudgwick and Christ's Hospital.

Accidents and incidents

  • On 8 November 1952, an electric multiple unit suffered a brake malfunction approaching the station. It overran signals and collided with a stationary steam locomotive. Two people were killed and 37 were injured.
  • On 28 July 1971, a parcels train was derailed at the station.

Platform layout


Looking towards the west from platform 2.

Platforms 6 and 7 serve the same single line.

Guildford Locomotive Depot 1965

An ex-Southern Region EMU operated by South West Trains at Guilford station in 2000.
The main station buildings are on the Down side. At the end of the Down side platform is a bay for the New Guildford Line. There are now three islands with seven platform faces plus the bay linked by both a long footbridge and a subway. Platforms 6 and 7 are opposite sides of the same line: these were used for unloading mail and parcels until the mid-1990s. The station was completely rebuilt (except for the platforms) by British Rail in the late 1980s.
  • Platform 1 – Stopping services to London Waterloo via Epsom and peak time trains to London Bridge via Forest Hill, and London Victoria on the Sutton & Mole Valley Lines
  • Platform 2 – Stopping services to London Waterloo via Cobham
  • Platform 3 – Stopping services to London Waterloo via Woking [Small number of weekday services. Otherwise Sundays only]
  • Platform 4 – Fast and stopping services towards Portsmouth; semi-fast services to Gatwick Airport
  • Platform 5 – Fast services to London Waterloo
  • Platform 6 – Stopping services to Redhill and Intercity services to Newcastle, Services to Ascot via Aldershot depart from either this platform or platform 8
  • Platform 8 – Services to Reading. Services to Ascot via Aldershot depart from either this platform or platform 6
Platforms 6 and 7 are on opposite sides of the same single line. Automatic train doors only open on the platform 6 side. Today doors are not opened on platform 7 due to the live rail being on that side, hence rendering that platform disused. Platform 6 is signalled for bi-directional working – trains may approach from either direction.

Motive Power Depot

Guildford station was the site of an important motive power depot opened by the LSWR in 1845. The original building was demolished in 1887 to make room for the enlargement of the station, and was replaced by a semi-roundhouse which was substantially enlarged in 1897. This was closed and demolished in 1967. Farnham Road multi-storey car park was built on the site in the 1990s.

Airtrack

Guildford station was to have been the southern terminus for the proposed Heathrow Airtrack rail service. The project, promoted by BAA, envisaged the construction of a spur from the Waterloo to Reading Line to Heathrow Airport, creating direct rail links from the airport to Guildford, WaterlooWoking and Reading. Airtrack was planned to open in 2015, subject to government approval. In April 2011, BAA announced that it was abandoning the project, citing the unavailability of government subsidy and other priorities for Heathrow, such as linking to Crossrail and HS2.

Services


Class 206 3R unit, on a North Downs Line service, showing the pre-rebuild station. (June 1979)
The station is served by services operated by Great Western Railway from Reading to Gatwick Airport and South West Trains from London Waterloo to Portsmouth Harbour, Waterloo to Guildford via Cobham or Epsom and Ascot to Guildford via Aldershot. Occasional CrossCountry trains to Newcastle and Southernservices on the Sutton and Mole Valley route towards West Croydon & London Bridge also calls.

Southern Region steam in 1965 in Guildford.

4Cig in 1980 in Guildford.

South West Trains

Great Western Railway

Southern (peak hours only)

CrossCountry

Annual rail passenger usage*
2004/05 6.543 million
2005/06Increase 6.699 million
2006/07Increase 7.186 million
2007/08Increase 7.983 million
2008/09Increase 8.115 million
2009/10Decrease 7.762 million
2010/11Increase 7.809 million
2011/12Increase 7.982 million
2012/13Decrease 7.957 million