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Train station

A train station, railroad station, or railroad depot (mainly North American terminology) and railway station (mainly UK and other Anglophone countries) is a railway facility where trains stop to load or unload passengers, freight, or both. It generally consists of at least one platform, one track, and a station building providing such ancillary services as ticket sales, waiting rooms, and baggage/freight service. If a station is on a single-track line, it often has a passing loop to facilitate traffic movements.[1]

Hamburg Hauptbahnhof, Germany, one of the busiest train stations in Europe

Locations at which passengers only occasionally board or leave a train, sometimes consisting of a short platform and a waiting area but sometimes indicated by no more than a sign, are variously referred to as "stops", "flag stops", "halts", or "provisional stopping places". The stations themselves may be at ground level, underground, or elevated. Connections may be available to intersecting rail lines or other transport modes such as buses, trams, or other rapid transit systems.

Terminology edit

Train station is the terminology typically used in the U.S.[2] In Europe, the terms train station and railway station are both commonly used, with railroad being obsolete.[3][4][5] In British Commonwealth nations usage, where railway station is the traditional term, the word station is commonly understood to mean a railway station unless otherwise specified.[6]

In the United States, the term depot is sometimes used as an alternative name for station, along with the compound forms train depot, railway depot, and railroad depot—it is used for both passenger and freight facilities.[7] The term depot is not used in reference to vehicle maintenance facilities in the U.S., whereas it is used as such in Canada and the United Kingdom.

History edit

 
Broad Green station, Liverpool, England, shown in 1962, opened in 1830, is the oldest station site in the world still in use as a passenger station.
 
Baker Street station, London, opened in 1863, was the world's first station to be completely underground. Its original part, seen here, is just below the surface and was constructed by cut-and-cover tunnelling.
 
Liverpool Lime Street station's frontage resembles a château and is the world's oldest used terminus.
 
Gare du Nord is one of the six large terminus stations of the SNCF mainline network for Paris. It is the busiest railroad station outside Japan, serving 206.7 million commuter rail, French Intercités and high-speed TGV, and international (Eurostar, Thalys) rail passengers a year as of 2016.[8][9][10]
 
Penn Station in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, is an important railway terminal and transfer hub as well as the busiest railroad station in the Western Hemisphere, serving more than 430,000 commuter rail and Amtrak passengers a day as of 2018.[11]

The world's first recorded railway station was The Mount on the Oystermouth Railway (later to be known as the Swansea and Mumbles) in Swansea, Wales,[12] which began passenger service in 1807, although the trains were horsedrawn rather than by locomotives.[13] The two-storey Mount Clare station in Baltimore, Maryland, United States, which survives as a museum, first saw passenger service as the terminus of the horse-drawn Baltimore and Ohio Railroad on 22 May 1830.[14]

 
Station with train and coal depot by Gustave Le Gray (about 1850–1860s)

The oldest terminal station in the world was Crown Street railway station in Liverpool, England, built in 1830, on the locomotive-hauled Liverpool to Manchester line. The station was slightly older than the still extant Liverpool Road railway station terminal in Manchester. The station was the first to incorporate a train shed. Crown Street station was demolished in 1836, as the Liverpool terminal station moved to Lime Street railway station. Crown Street station was converted to a goods station terminal.

The first stations had little in the way of buildings or amenities. The first stations in the modern sense were on the Liverpool and Manchester Railway, opened in 1830.[15] Manchester's Liverpool Road Station, the second oldest terminal station in the world, is preserved as part of the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester. It resembles a row of Georgian houses.

Early stations were sometimes built with both passenger and freight facilities, though some railway lines were goods-only or passenger-only, and if a line was dual-purpose there would often be a freight depot apart from the passenger station.[16] This type of dual-purpose station can sometimes still be found today, though in many cases goods facilities are restricted to major stations.

Many stations date from the 19th century and reflect the grandiose architecture of the time, lending prestige to the city as well as to railway operations.[17] Countries where railways arrived later may still have such architecture, as later stations often imitated 19th-century styles. Various forms of architecture have been used in the construction of stations, from those boasting grand, intricate, Baroque- or Gothic-style edifices, to plainer utilitarian or modernist styles. Stations in Europe tended to follow British designs and were in some countries, like Italy, financed by British railway companies.[18]

Train stations built more recently often have a similar feel to airports, with a simple, abstract style. Examples of modern stations include those on newer high-speed rail networks, such as the Shinkansen in Japan, THSR in Taiwan, TGV lines in France, and ICE lines in Germany.

Facilities edit

 
A Presto contactless smart card reader and self-serve ticket machine at a suburban train station in Toronto, Canada
 
Ticket counters at the Nyugati Railway Station in Budapest, Hungary

Stations normally have staffed ticket sales offices, automated ticket machines, or both, although on some lines tickets are sold on board the trains. Many stations include a shop or convenience store. Larger stations usually have fast-food or restaurant facilities. In some countries, stations may also have a bar or pub. Other station facilities may include: toilets, left-luggage, lost-and-found, departures and arrivals schedules, luggage carts, waiting rooms, taxi ranks, bus bays and even car parks. Larger or staffed stations tend to have a greater range of facilities including also a station security office. These are usually open for travellers when there is sufficient traffic over a long enough period of time to warrant the cost. In large cities this may mean facilities available around the clock. A basic station might only have platforms, though it may still be distinguished from a halt, a stopping or halting place that may not even have platforms.

Many stations, either larger or smaller, offer interchange with local transportation; this can vary from a simple bus stop across the street to underground rapid-transit urban rail stations.

In many African, South American, and Asian countries, stations are also used as a place for public markets and other informal businesses. This is especially true on tourist routes or stations near tourist destinations.

As well as providing services for passengers and loading facilities for goods, stations can sometimes have locomotive and rolling stock depots (usually with facilities for storing and refuelling rolling stock and carrying out minor repair jobs).

Configurations edit

The basic configuration of a station and various other features set certain types apart. The first is the level of the tracks. Stations are often sited where a road crosses the railway: unless the crossing is a level crossing, the road and railway will be at different levels. The platforms will often be raised or lowered relative to the station entrance: the station buildings may be on either level, or both. The other arrangement, where the station entrance and platforms are on the same level, is also common, but is perhaps rarer in urban areas, except when the station is a terminus. Stations located at level crossings can be problematic if the train blocks the roadway while it stops, causing road traffic to wait for an extended period of time. Stations also exist where the station buildings are above the tracks.[19] An example of this is Arbroath.

Occasionally, a station serves two or more railway lines at differing levels. This may be due to the station's position at a point where two lines cross (example: Berlin Hauptbahnhof), or may be to provide separate station capacity for two types of service, such as intercity and suburban (examples: Paris-Gare de Lyon and Philadelphia's 30th Street Station), or for two different destinations.

Stations may also be classified according to the layout of the platforms. Apart from single-track lines, the most basic arrangement is a pair of tracks for the two directions; there is then a basic choice of an island platform between, two separate platforms outside the tracks (side platforms), or a combination of the two. With more tracks, the possibilities expand.

Some stations have unusual platform layouts due to space constraints of the station location, or the alignment of the tracks. Examples include staggered platforms, such as at Tutbury and Hatton railway station on the Crewe–Derby line, and curved platforms, such as Cheadle Hulme railway station on the Macclesfield to Manchester Line. Stations at junctions can also have unusual shapes – a Keilbahnhof (or "wedge-shaped" station) is sited where two lines split. Triangular stations also exist where two lines form a three-way junction and platforms are built on all three sides, for example Shipley and Earlestown stations.

Tracks edit

In a station, there are different types of tracks to serve different purposes. A station may also have a passing loop with a loop line that comes off the straight main line and merge back to the main line on the other end by railroad switches to allow trains to pass.[20]

A track with a spot at the station to board and disembark trains is called station track or house track[21] regardless of whether it is a main line or loop line. If such track is served by a platform, the track may be called platform track. A loop line without a platform which is used to allow a train to clear the main line at the station only, it is called passing track.[20] A track at the station without a platform which is used for trains to pass the station without stopping is called through track.[21]

There may be other sidings at the station which are lower speed tracks for other purposes. A maintenance track or a maintenance siding, usually connected to a passing track, is used for parking maintenance equipment, trains not in service, autoracks or sleepers. A refuge track is a dead-end siding that is connected to a station track as a temporary storage of a disabled train.[20]

Terminus edit

 
Opened in 1830 and reached through a tunnel, Liverpool's Crown Street railway station was the first ever railway terminus. The station was demolished after only six years, being replaced by Lime Street station in the city centre. The tunnel still exists.
 
Opened in 1830, Liverpool Road station in Manchester is the oldest surviving railway terminus building in the world.
 
Opened in 1836, Spa Road railway station in London was the city's first terminus and also the world's first elevated station and terminus.

A "terminus" or "terminal" is a station at the end of a railway line. Trains arriving there have to end their journeys (terminate) or reverse out of the station. Depending on the layout of the station, this usually permits travellers to reach all the platforms without the need to cross any tracks – the public entrance to the station and the main reception facilities being at the far end of the platforms.

Sometimes the track continues for a short distance beyond the station, and terminating trains continue forward after depositing their passengers, before either proceeding to sidings or reversing to the station to pick up departing passengers. Bondi Junction, Australia and Kristiansand Station, Norway are examples.

A terminus is frequently, but not always, the final destination of trains arriving at the station. Especially in continental Europe, a city may have a terminus as its main railway station, and all main lines converge on it. In such cases all trains arriving at the terminus must leave in the reverse direction from that of their arrival. There are several ways in which this can be accomplished:

  • arranging for the service to be provided by a multiple-unit or push–pull train, both of which are capable of operating in either direction; the driver simply walks to the other end of the train and takes control from the other cab; this is increasingly the normal method in Europe; and is very common in North America;
  • by detaching the locomotive which brought the train into the station and then either
    • using another track to "run it around" to the other end of the train, to which it then re-attaches;
    • attaching a second locomotive to the outbound end of the train; or
  • by the use of a "wye", a roughly triangular arrangement of track and switches (points) where a train can reverse direction and back into the terminal;
  • historically, turntables were used to reverse steam engines.

There may also be a bypass line, used by freight trains that do not need to stop at the terminus.

Some termini have a newer set of through platforms underneath (or above, or alongside) the terminal platforms on the main level. They are used by a cross-city extension of the main line, often for commuter trains, while the terminal platforms may serve long-distance services. Examples of underground through lines include the Thameslink platforms at St Pancras in London, the Argyle and North Clyde lines of Glasgow's suburban rail network, in Antwerp in Belgium, the RER at the Gare du Nord in Paris, the Milan suburban railway service's Passante railway, and many of the numerous S-Bahn lines at terminal stations in Germany, Austria and Switzerland, such as at Zürich Hauptbahnhof.[22] Due to the disadvantages of terminus stations there have been multiple cases in which one or several terminus stations were replaced with a new through-station, including the cases of Berlin Hauptbahnhof, Vienna Hauptbahnhof and numerous examples throughout the first century of railroading. Stuttgart 21 is a controversial project involving the replacement of a terminus station by a through-station.

An American example of a terminal with this feature is Union Station in Washington, DC, where there are bay platforms on the main concourse level to serve terminating trains and standard island platforms one level below to serve trains continuing southward. The lower tracks run in a tunnel beneath the concourse and emerge a few blocks away to cross the Potomac River into Virginia.

Terminus stations in large cities are by far the biggest stations, with the largest being Grand Central Terminal in New York City.[23] Other major cities, such as London, Boston, Paris, Istanbul, Tokyo, and Milan have more than one terminus, rather than routes straight through the city. Train journeys through such cities often require alternative transport (metro, bus, taxi or ferry) from one terminus to the other. For instance, in Istanbul transfers from the Sirkeci Terminal (the European terminus) and the Haydarpaşa Terminal (the Asian terminus) historically required crossing the Bosphorus via alternative means, before the Marmaray railway tunnel linking Europe and Asia was completed. Some cities, including New York, have both termini and through lines.

Terminals that have competing rail lines using the station frequently set up a jointly owned terminal railroad to own and operate the station and its associated tracks and switching operations.

Stop edit

During a journey, the term station stop may be used in announcements, to differentiate a halt during which passengers may alight for another reason, such as a locomotive change.

While a junction or interlocking usually divides two or more lines or routes, and thus has remotely or locally operated signals, a station stop does not. A station stop usually does not have any tracks other than the main tracks, and may or may not have switches (points, crossovers).

Intermediate station edit

An intermediate station does not have any other connecting route,[24][25] unlike branch-off stations, connecting stations, transfer stations and railway junctions. In a broader sense, an intermediate station is generally any station on the route between its two terminal stations.[24][25][26]

The majority of stations are, in practice, intermediate stations. They are mostly designed as through stations; there are only a few intermediate stations that take the form of a stub-end station, for example at some zigzags. If there is a station building, it is usually located to the side of the tracks. In the case of intermediate stations used for both passenger and freight traffic, there is a distinction between those where the station building and goods facilities are on the same side of the tracks and those in which the goods facilities are on the opposite side of the tracks from the station building.[24]

Intermediate stations also occur on some funicular and cable car routes.

Halt edit

A halt, in railway parlance in the Commonwealth of Nations, Ireland and Portugal, is a small station, usually unstaffed or with very few staff, and with few or no facilities. In some cases, trains stop only on request, when passengers on the platform indicate that they wish to board, or passengers on the train inform the crew that they wish to alight.

 
The Wishing Well halt at St Keyne, Cornwall, one of only two stopping places bearing the name "halt" in the UK

United Kingdom edit

The Great Western Railway in Great Britain began opening haltes on 12 October 1903; from 1905, the French spelling was Anglicised to "halt". These GWR halts had the most basic facilities, with platforms long enough for just one or two carriages; some had no raised platform at all, necessitating the provision of steps on the carriages. Halts were normally unstaffed, tickets being sold on the train. On 1 September 1904, a larger version, known on the GWR as a "platform" instead of a "halt", was introduced; these had longer platforms, and were usually staffed by a senior grade porter, who sold tickets and sometimes booked parcels or milk consignments.[27][28]

From 1903 to 1947 the GWR built 379 halts and inherited a further 40 from other companies at the Grouping of 1923. Peak building periods were before the First World War (145 built) and 1928–1939 (198 built).[29] Ten more were opened by British Rail on ex-GWR lines. The GWR also built 34 "platforms".[30]

 
Staff halt at Durnsford Road, Wimbledon

Many such stops remain on the national railway networks in the United Kingdom, such as Penmaenmawr in North Wales, Yorton in Shropshire, and The Lakes in Warwickshire, where passengers are requested to inform a member of on-board train staff if they wish to alight, or, if catching a train from the station, to make themselves clearly visible to the driver and use a hand signal as the train approaches.[31] Most have had "Halt" removed from their names. Two publicly advertised and publicly accessible National Rail stations retain it: Coombe Junction Halt and St Keyne Wishing Well Halt.[32][33]

A number of other halts are still open and operational on privately owned, heritage, and preserved railways throughout the British Isles. The word is often used informally to describe national rail network stations with limited service and low usage, such as the Oxfordshire Halts on the Cotswold Line. It has also sometimes been used for stations served by public services but accessible only by persons travelling to/from an associated factory (for example IBM near Greenock and British Steel Redcar– although neither of these is any longer served by trains), or military base (such as Lympstone Commando) or railway yard. The only two such "private" stopping places on the national system, where the "halt" designation is still officially used, seem to be Staff Halt (at Durnsford Road, Wimbledon) and Battersea Pier Sidings Staff Halt, both of which are solely for railway staff.[33]

Other countries edit

In Portugal, railway stops are called halts (Portuguese: apeadeiro).[34]

In Ireland, a few small railway stations are designated as "halts" (Irish: stadanna, sing. stad).[35]

In some Commonwealth countries the term "halt" is used.

In Australia, with its sparse rural populations, such stopping places were common on lines that were still open for passenger traffic. In the state of Victoria, for example, a location on a railway line where a small diesel railcar or railmotor could stop on request, allowing passengers to board or alight, was called a "rail motor stopping place" (RMSP). Usually situated near a level crossing, it was often designated solely by a sign beside the railway.[36] The passenger could hail the driver to stop, and could buy a ticket from the train guard or conductor.[37] In South Australia, such facilities were called "provisional stopping places".[38] They were often placed on routes on which "school trains" (services conveying children from rural localities to and from school) operated.[39]

In West Malaysia, halts are commonplace along the less developed KTM East Coast railway line to serve rural 'kampongs' (villages), that require train services to stay connected to important nodes, but do not have a need for staff. People boarding at halts who have not bought tickets online can buy it through staff on board.

In rural and remote communities across Canada and the United States, passengers wanting to board the train at such places had to flag the train down to stop it, hence the name "flag stops" or "flag stations".[40]

Accessibility edit

Accessibility for disabled people is mandated by law in some countries. Considerations include:

  • Elevators or ramps to every platform are necessary for people in wheelchairs who cannot use stairs, and also allow those with prams, bicycles, and luggage to reach the platform more easily and safely
  • Minimising the platform gap in both height and width. This also requires rolling stock with appropriate dimensions. At some stations, a railway worker can install a temporary ramp to allow people in wheelchairs to board. Relying on temporary ramps can lead to people in wheelchairs becoming stranded on a train or platform if a staff member fails to show up to deploy the ramp.[41]
  • Station facilities such as accessible toilets, payphones, and audible announcements
  • Tactile paving to warn visually impaired people that they are approaching a platform edge.[42] Platform screen doors also physically prevent people from falling from the platform edge.

In the United Kingdom, rail operators will arrange alternative transport (typically a taxi) at no extra cost to the ticket holder if the station they intend to travel to or from is inaccessible.[43]

Goods stations edit

 
Reached by a 1.24-mile (2 km) long tunnel, the 1830 Park Lane Goods Terminus at Liverpool's docks was the world's first station built entirely for freight.

Goods or freight stations deal exclusively or predominantly with the loading and unloading of goods and may well have marshalling yards (classification yards) for the sorting of wagons. The world's first goods terminal was the 1830 Park Lane Goods Station at the South End Liverpool Docks. Built in 1830, the terminal was reached by a 1.24-mile (2 km) tunnel.

As goods are increasingly moved by road, many former goods stations, as well as the goods sheds at passenger stations, have closed. Many are used purely for the cross-loading of freight and may be known as transshipment stations, where they primarily handle containers. They are also known as container stations or terminals.

Records edit

 
Grand Central Terminal in New York City is the largest station by number of platforms, with 44 on two levels.
 
Clapham Junction in London is the busiest station in terms of rail traffic with an average of one train every 20 seconds at peak times.

Worldwide edit

Europe edit

Busiest

  • Gare du Nord, in Paris, is by the number of travellers, at around 214 million per year, the busiest railway station in Europe, the 24th busiest in the world and the busiest outside Japan.[10]
  • Clapham Junction, in London, is Europe's busiest station by daily rail traffic with 100 to 180 trains per hour passing through.[10][unreliable source?]
  • Zürich HB is the busiest terminus in Europe by the volume of rail traffic.[10]

Largest

  • Leipzig Hbf is the biggest railway station in Europe in terms of floor area (83,460 square metres (898,400 sq ft)).[10]
  • München Hbf and Rome Termini are the largest railway station by number of platforms (32).[10]

Highest

North America edit

See also edit

Bibliography edit

  • Coleford, I. C. (October 2010). Smith, Martin (ed.). "By GWR to Blaenau Ffestiniog (Part One)". Railway Bylines. Radstock: Irwell Press Limited. 15 (11).
  • Reade, Lewis (1983). Branch Line Memories Vol 1. Redruth, Cornwall: Atlantic Transport & Historical Publishers. ISBN 978-0-90-689906-9.

References edit

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External links edit

  • from Railway Technical Web Pages

train, station, other, uses, disambiguation, train, depot, disambiguation, gare, disambiguation, train, station, railroad, station, railroad, depot, mainly, north, american, terminology, railway, station, mainly, other, anglophone, countries, railway, facility. For other uses see Train station disambiguation Train depot disambiguation and Gare disambiguation A train station railroad station or railroad depot mainly North American terminology and railway station mainly UK and other Anglophone countries is a railway facility where trains stop to load or unload passengers freight or both It generally consists of at least one platform one track and a station building providing such ancillary services as ticket sales waiting rooms and baggage freight service If a station is on a single track line it often has a passing loop to facilitate traffic movements 1 Hamburg Hauptbahnhof Germany one of the busiest train stations in EuropeLocations at which passengers only occasionally board or leave a train sometimes consisting of a short platform and a waiting area but sometimes indicated by no more than a sign are variously referred to as stops flag stops halts or provisional stopping places The stations themselves may be at ground level underground or elevated Connections may be available to intersecting rail lines or other transport modes such as buses trams or other rapid transit systems Contents 1 Terminology 2 History 3 Facilities 4 Configurations 4 1 Tracks 4 2 Terminus 5 Stop 5 1 Intermediate station 5 2 Halt 5 2 1 United Kingdom 5 2 2 Other countries 6 Accessibility 7 Goods stations 8 Records 8 1 Worldwide 8 2 Europe 8 3 North America 9 See also 10 Bibliography 11 References 12 External linksTerminology editTrain station is the terminology typically used in the U S 2 In Europe the terms train station and railway station are both commonly used with railroad being obsolete 3 4 5 In British Commonwealth nations usage where railway station is the traditional term the word station is commonly understood to mean a railway station unless otherwise specified 6 In the United States the term depot is sometimes used as an alternative name for station along with the compound forms train depot railway depot and railroad depot it is used for both passenger and freight facilities 7 The term depot is not used in reference to vehicle maintenance facilities in the U S whereas it is used as such in Canada and the United Kingdom History edit nbsp Broad Green station Liverpool England shown in 1962 opened in 1830 is the oldest station site in the world still in use as a passenger station nbsp Baker Street station London opened in 1863 was the world s first station to be completely underground Its original part seen here is just below the surface and was constructed by cut and cover tunnelling nbsp Liverpool Lime Street station s frontage resembles a chateau and is the world s oldest used terminus nbsp Gare du Nord is one of the six large terminus stations of the SNCF mainline network for Paris It is the busiest railroad station outside Japan serving 206 7 million commuter rail French Intercites and high speed TGV and international Eurostar Thalys rail passengers a year as of 2016 update 8 9 10 nbsp Penn Station in Midtown Manhattan New York City is an important railway terminal and transfer hub as well as the busiest railroad station in the Western Hemisphere serving more than 430 000 commuter rail and Amtrak passengers a day as of 2018 update 11 The world s first recorded railway station was The Mount on the Oystermouth Railway later to be known as the Swansea and Mumbles in Swansea Wales 12 which began passenger service in 1807 although the trains were horsedrawn rather than by locomotives 13 The two storey Mount Clare station in Baltimore Maryland United States which survives as a museum first saw passenger service as the terminus of the horse drawn Baltimore and Ohio Railroad on 22 May 1830 14 nbsp Station with train and coal depot by Gustave Le Gray about 1850 1860s The oldest terminal station in the world was Crown Street railway station in Liverpool England built in 1830 on the locomotive hauled Liverpool to Manchester line The station was slightly older than the still extant Liverpool Road railway station terminal in Manchester The station was the first to incorporate a train shed Crown Street station was demolished in 1836 as the Liverpool terminal station moved to Lime Street railway station Crown Street station was converted to a goods station terminal The first stations had little in the way of buildings or amenities The first stations in the modern sense were on the Liverpool and Manchester Railway opened in 1830 15 Manchester s Liverpool Road Station the second oldest terminal station in the world is preserved as part of the Museum of Science and Industry in Manchester It resembles a row of Georgian houses Early stations were sometimes built with both passenger and freight facilities though some railway lines were goods only or passenger only and if a line was dual purpose there would often be a freight depot apart from the passenger station 16 This type of dual purpose station can sometimes still be found today though in many cases goods facilities are restricted to major stations Many stations date from the 19th century and reflect the grandiose architecture of the time lending prestige to the city as well as to railway operations 17 Countries where railways arrived later may still have such architecture as later stations often imitated 19th century styles Various forms of architecture have been used in the construction of stations from those boasting grand intricate Baroque or Gothic style edifices to plainer utilitarian or modernist styles Stations in Europe tended to follow British designs and were in some countries like Italy financed by British railway companies 18 Train stations built more recently often have a similar feel to airports with a simple abstract style Examples of modern stations include those on newer high speed rail networks such as the Shinkansen in Japan THSR in Taiwan TGV lines in France and ICE lines in Germany Facilities edit nbsp A Presto contactless smart card reader and self serve ticket machine at a suburban train station in Toronto Canada nbsp Ticket counters at the Nyugati Railway Station in Budapest HungaryStations normally have staffed ticket sales offices automated ticket machines or both although on some lines tickets are sold on board the trains Many stations include a shop or convenience store Larger stations usually have fast food or restaurant facilities In some countries stations may also have a bar or pub Other station facilities may include toilets left luggage lost and found departures and arrivals schedules luggage carts waiting rooms taxi ranks bus bays and even car parks Larger or staffed stations tend to have a greater range of facilities including also a station security office These are usually open for travellers when there is sufficient traffic over a long enough period of time to warrant the cost In large cities this may mean facilities available around the clock A basic station might only have platforms though it may still be distinguished from a halt a stopping or halting place that may not even have platforms Many stations either larger or smaller offer interchange with local transportation this can vary from a simple bus stop across the street to underground rapid transit urban rail stations In many African South American and Asian countries stations are also used as a place for public markets and other informal businesses This is especially true on tourist routes or stations near tourist destinations As well as providing services for passengers and loading facilities for goods stations can sometimes have locomotive and rolling stock depots usually with facilities for storing and refuelling rolling stock and carrying out minor repair jobs Configurations editThe basic configuration of a station and various other features set certain types apart The first is the level of the tracks Stations are often sited where a road crosses the railway unless the crossing is a level crossing the road and railway will be at different levels The platforms will often be raised or lowered relative to the station entrance the station buildings may be on either level or both The other arrangement where the station entrance and platforms are on the same level is also common but is perhaps rarer in urban areas except when the station is a terminus Stations located at level crossings can be problematic if the train blocks the roadway while it stops causing road traffic to wait for an extended period of time Stations also exist where the station buildings are above the tracks 19 An example of this is Arbroath Occasionally a station serves two or more railway lines at differing levels This may be due to the station s position at a point where two lines cross example Berlin Hauptbahnhof or may be to provide separate station capacity for two types of service such as intercity and suburban examples Paris Gare de Lyon and Philadelphia s 30th Street Station or for two different destinations Stations may also be classified according to the layout of the platforms Apart from single track lines the most basic arrangement is a pair of tracks for the two directions there is then a basic choice of an island platform between two separate platforms outside the tracks side platforms or a combination of the two With more tracks the possibilities expand Some stations have unusual platform layouts due to space constraints of the station location or the alignment of the tracks Examples include staggered platforms such as at Tutbury and Hatton railway station on the Crewe Derby line and curved platforms such as Cheadle Hulme railway station on the Macclesfield to Manchester Line Stations at junctions can also have unusual shapes a Keilbahnhof or wedge shaped station is sited where two lines split Triangular stations also exist where two lines form a three way junction and platforms are built on all three sides for example Shipley and Earlestown stations Tracks edit In a station there are different types of tracks to serve different purposes A station may also have a passing loop with a loop line that comes off the straight main line and merge back to the main line on the other end by railroad switches to allow trains to pass 20 A track with a spot at the station to board and disembark trains is called station track or house track 21 regardless of whether it is a main line or loop line If such track is served by a platform the track may be called platform track A loop line without a platform which is used to allow a train to clear the main line at the station only it is called passing track 20 A track at the station without a platform which is used for trains to pass the station without stopping is called through track 21 There may be other sidings at the station which are lower speed tracks for other purposes A maintenance track or a maintenance siding usually connected to a passing track is used for parking maintenance equipment trains not in service autoracks or sleepers A refuge track is a dead end siding that is connected to a station track as a temporary storage of a disabled train 20 Terminus edit Terminal station redirects here For other uses see Terminal Station disambiguation Turnback redirects here For turnback siding see Pocket track For the commuter rail station in Turkey see Terminal railway station nbsp Opened in 1830 and reached through a tunnel Liverpool s Crown Street railway station was the first ever railway terminus The station was demolished after only six years being replaced by Lime Street station in the city centre The tunnel still exists nbsp Opened in 1830 Liverpool Road station in Manchester is the oldest surviving railway terminus building in the world nbsp Opened in 1836 Spa Road railway station in London was the city s first terminus and also the world s first elevated station and terminus A terminus or terminal is a station at the end of a railway line Trains arriving there have to end their journeys terminate or reverse out of the station Depending on the layout of the station this usually permits travellers to reach all the platforms without the need to cross any tracks the public entrance to the station and the main reception facilities being at the far end of the platforms Sometimes the track continues for a short distance beyond the station and terminating trains continue forward after depositing their passengers before either proceeding to sidings or reversing to the station to pick up departing passengers Bondi Junction Australia and Kristiansand Station Norway are examples A terminus is frequently but not always the final destination of trains arriving at the station Especially in continental Europe a city may have a terminus as its main railway station and all main lines converge on it In such cases all trains arriving at the terminus must leave in the reverse direction from that of their arrival There are several ways in which this can be accomplished arranging for the service to be provided by a multiple unit or push pull train both of which are capable of operating in either direction the driver simply walks to the other end of the train and takes control from the other cab this is increasingly the normal method in Europe and is very common in North America by detaching the locomotive which brought the train into the station and then either using another track to run it around to the other end of the train to which it then re attaches attaching a second locomotive to the outbound end of the train or by the use of a wye a roughly triangular arrangement of track and switches points where a train can reverse direction and back into the terminal historically turntables were used to reverse steam engines There may also be a bypass line used by freight trains that do not need to stop at the terminus Some termini have a newer set of through platforms underneath or above or alongside the terminal platforms on the main level They are used by a cross city extension of the main line often for commuter trains while the terminal platforms may serve long distance services Examples of underground through lines include the Thameslink platforms at St Pancras in London the Argyle and North Clyde lines of Glasgow s suburban rail network in Antwerp in Belgium the RER at the Gare du Nord in Paris the Milan suburban railway service s Passante railway and many of the numerous S Bahn lines at terminal stations in Germany Austria and Switzerland such as at Zurich Hauptbahnhof 22 Due to the disadvantages of terminus stations there have been multiple cases in which one or several terminus stations were replaced with a new through station including the cases of Berlin Hauptbahnhof Vienna Hauptbahnhof and numerous examples throughout the first century of railroading Stuttgart 21 is a controversial project involving the replacement of a terminus station by a through station An American example of a terminal with this feature is Union Station in Washington DC where there are bay platforms on the main concourse level to serve terminating trains and standard island platforms one level below to serve trains continuing southward The lower tracks run in a tunnel beneath the concourse and emerge a few blocks away to cross the Potomac River into Virginia Terminus stations in large cities are by far the biggest stations with the largest being Grand Central Terminal in New York City 23 Other major cities such as London Boston Paris Istanbul Tokyo and Milan have more than one terminus rather than routes straight through the city Train journeys through such cities often require alternative transport metro bus taxi or ferry from one terminus to the other For instance in Istanbul transfers from the Sirkeci Terminal the European terminus and the Haydarpasa Terminal the Asian terminus historically required crossing the Bosphorus via alternative means before the Marmaray railway tunnel linking Europe and Asia was completed Some cities including New York have both termini and through lines Terminals that have competing rail lines using the station frequently set up a jointly owned terminal railroad to own and operate the station and its associated tracks and switching operations Stop editDuring a journey the term station stop may be used in announcements to differentiate a halt during which passengers may alight for another reason such as a locomotive change While a junction or interlocking usually divides two or more lines or routes and thus has remotely or locally operated signals a station stop does not A station stop usually does not have any tracks other than the main tracks and may or may not have switches points crossovers Intermediate station edit An intermediate station does not have any other connecting route 24 25 unlike branch off stations connecting stations transfer stations and railway junctions In a broader sense an intermediate station is generally any station on the route between its two terminal stations 24 25 26 The majority of stations are in practice intermediate stations They are mostly designed as through stations there are only a few intermediate stations that take the form of a stub end station for example at some zigzags If there is a station building it is usually located to the side of the tracks In the case of intermediate stations used for both passenger and freight traffic there is a distinction between those where the station building and goods facilities are on the same side of the tracks and those in which the goods facilities are on the opposite side of the tracks from the station building 24 Intermediate stations also occur on some funicular and cable car routes Halt edit A halt in railway parlance in the Commonwealth of Nations Ireland and Portugal is a small station usually unstaffed or with very few staff and with few or no facilities In some cases trains stop only on request when passengers on the platform indicate that they wish to board or passengers on the train inform the crew that they wish to alight nbsp The Wishing Well halt at St Keyne Cornwall one of only two stopping places bearing the name halt in the UKUnited Kingdom edit The Great Western Railway in Great Britain began opening haltes on 12 October 1903 from 1905 the French spelling was Anglicised to halt These GWR halts had the most basic facilities with platforms long enough for just one or two carriages some had no raised platform at all necessitating the provision of steps on the carriages Halts were normally unstaffed tickets being sold on the train On 1 September 1904 a larger version known on the GWR as a platform instead of a halt was introduced these had longer platforms and were usually staffed by a senior grade porter who sold tickets and sometimes booked parcels or milk consignments 27 28 From 1903 to 1947 the GWR built 379 halts and inherited a further 40 from other companies at the Grouping of 1923 Peak building periods were before the First World War 145 built and 1928 1939 198 built 29 Ten more were opened by British Rail on ex GWR lines The GWR also built 34 platforms 30 nbsp Staff halt at Durnsford Road WimbledonMany such stops remain on the national railway networks in the United Kingdom such as Penmaenmawr in North Wales Yorton in Shropshire and The Lakes in Warwickshire where passengers are requested to inform a member of on board train staff if they wish to alight or if catching a train from the station to make themselves clearly visible to the driver and use a hand signal as the train approaches 31 Most have had Halt removed from their names Two publicly advertised and publicly accessible National Rail stations retain it Coombe Junction Halt and St Keyne Wishing Well Halt 32 33 A number of other halts are still open and operational on privately owned heritage and preserved railways throughout the British Isles The word is often used informally to describe national rail network stations with limited service and low usage such as the Oxfordshire Halts on the Cotswold Line It has also sometimes been used for stations served by public services but accessible only by persons travelling to from an associated factory for example IBM near Greenock and British Steel Redcar although neither of these is any longer served by trains or military base such as Lympstone Commando or railway yard The only two such private stopping places on the national system where the halt designation is still officially used seem to be Staff Halt at Durnsford Road Wimbledon and Battersea Pier Sidings Staff Halt both of which are solely for railway staff 33 Other countries edit In Portugal railway stops are called halts Portuguese apeadeiro 34 In Ireland a few small railway stations are designated as halts Irish stadanna sing stad 35 In some Commonwealth countries the term halt is used In Australia with its sparse rural populations such stopping places were common on lines that were still open for passenger traffic In the state of Victoria for example a location on a railway line where a small diesel railcar or railmotor could stop on request allowing passengers to board or alight was called a rail motor stopping place RMSP Usually situated near a level crossing it was often designated solely by a sign beside the railway 36 The passenger could hail the driver to stop and could buy a ticket from the train guard or conductor 37 In South Australia such facilities were called provisional stopping places 38 They were often placed on routes on which school trains services conveying children from rural localities to and from school operated 39 In West Malaysia halts are commonplace along the less developed KTM East Coast railway line to serve rural kampongs villages that require train services to stay connected to important nodes but do not have a need for staff People boarding at halts who have not bought tickets online can buy it through staff on board In rural and remote communities across Canada and the United States passengers wanting to board the train at such places had to flag the train down to stop it hence the name flag stops or flag stations 40 Accessibility editAccessibility for disabled people is mandated by law in some countries Considerations include Elevators or ramps to every platform are necessary for people in wheelchairs who cannot use stairs and also allow those with prams bicycles and luggage to reach the platform more easily and safely Minimising the platform gap in both height and width This also requires rolling stock with appropriate dimensions At some stations a railway worker can install a temporary ramp to allow people in wheelchairs to board Relying on temporary ramps can lead to people in wheelchairs becoming stranded on a train or platform if a staff member fails to show up to deploy the ramp 41 Station facilities such as accessible toilets payphones and audible announcements Tactile paving to warn visually impaired people that they are approaching a platform edge 42 Platform screen doors also physically prevent people from falling from the platform edge In the United Kingdom rail operators will arrange alternative transport typically a taxi at no extra cost to the ticket holder if the station they intend to travel to or from is inaccessible 43 Goods stations edit nbsp Reached by a 1 24 mile 2 km long tunnel the 1830 Park Lane Goods Terminus at Liverpool s docks was the world s first station built entirely for freight Main article Goods station Goods or freight stations deal exclusively or predominantly with the loading and unloading of goods and may well have marshalling yards classification yards for the sorting of wagons The world s first goods terminal was the 1830 Park Lane Goods Station at the South End Liverpool Docks Built in 1830 the terminal was reached by a 1 24 mile 2 km tunnel As goods are increasingly moved by road many former goods stations as well as the goods sheds at passenger stations have closed Many are used purely for the cross loading of freight and may be known as transshipment stations where they primarily handle containers They are also known as container stations or terminals Records edit nbsp Grand Central Terminal in New York City is the largest station by number of platforms with 44 on two levels nbsp Clapham Junction in London is the busiest station in terms of rail traffic with an average of one train every 20 seconds at peak times Worldwide edit See also List of highest railways The world s busiest passenger station with a passenger throughput of 3 5 million passengers per day 1 27 billion per year is Shinjuku Station in Tokyo 44 The world s station with most platforms is Grand Central Terminal in New York City with 44 platforms 45 The world s station with the longest platform is Hubli Junction railway station with a platform length of 1 505 metres 4 938 ft and is located in Karnataka India 46 The world s highest station above ground level not above sea level is Hualongqiao station in Chongqing with Line 9 trains stopping 48 meters above the surface 47 48 Coney Island Stillwell Avenue in New York City is the world s largest elevated terminal with 8 tracks and 4 island platforms 49 Shanghai South railway station opened in June 2006 has the world s largest circular transparent roof 50 Europe edit See also List of busiest railway stations in Europe and List of highest railway stations in Europe Busiest Gare du Nord in Paris is by the number of travellers at around 214 million per year the busiest railway station in Europe the 24th busiest in the world and the busiest outside Japan 10 Clapham Junction in London is Europe s busiest station by daily rail traffic with 100 to 180 trains per hour passing through 10 unreliable source Zurich HB is the busiest terminus in Europe by the volume of rail traffic 10 Largest Leipzig Hbf is the biggest railway station in Europe in terms of floor area 83 460 square metres 898 400 sq ft 10 Munchen Hbf and Rome Termini are the largest railway station by number of platforms 32 10 Highest Jungfraujoch railway station is the highest railway station in the European continent 3 453 metres 11 329 ft 10 North America edit New York Penn Station is the busiest station in the Western Hemisphere 51 Toronto s Union Station is the busiest station in Canada 52 See also editBus station Bus terminus Freight station List of IATA indexed railway stations List of railway stations Metro station Running in board Station buildingBibliography editColeford I C October 2010 Smith Martin ed By GWR to Blaenau Ffestiniog Part One Railway Bylines Radstock Irwell Press Limited 15 11 Reade Lewis 1983 Branch Line Memories Vol 1 Redruth Cornwall Atlantic Transport amp Historical Publishers ISBN 978 0 90 689906 9 References edit Gerhardt H J Kruger O 1998 Wind and train driven air movements in train stations Journal of Wind Engineering and Industrial Aerodynamics 74 76 589 597 doi 10 1016 S0167 6105 98 00053 1 Google Books Ngram Viewer American English Corpus Retrieved 10 February 2023 Ian Jolly 1 August 2014 Steamed up about train stations Academy blog London BBC Retrieved 28 August 2015 Morana Lukac 12 November 2014 Railway station or train station Bridging the Unbridgeable A project on English usage guides blog Leiden The Netherlands Leiden University Centre for Linguistics Retrieved 28 August 2015 Google Books Ngram Viewer British English Corpus Retrieved 28 August 2015 station noun Oxford Advanced Learner s Dictionary Oxford University Press Retrieved 28 August 2015 Definition of depot by Merriam Webster merriam webster com Retrieved 13 July 2017 The 51 busiest train stations in the world All but 6 located in Japan Japan Today 6 February 2013 Retrieved 26 November 2018 SNCF Open Data Frequentation en gares en 2016 Paris France SNCF Retrieved 19 March 2018 via ressources data sncf com SNCF OPEN DATA a b c d e f g Oishimaya Sen Nag 23 October 2017 Europe s Record Holding Railway Stations WorldAtlas com Quebec Canada Retrieved 15 September 2018 Devin Leonard 10 January 2018 The Most Awful Transit Center in America Could Get Unimaginably Worse Bloomberg L P Retrieved 14 November 2018 Hughes Stephen 1990 The Archaeology of an Early Railway System The Brecon Forest Tramroads Royal Commission on Ancient and Historical Monuments in Wales p 333 ISBN 978 1871184051 retrieved 9 February 2014 Mumbles Railway BBC 25 March 2007 Retrieved 1 May 2015 B amp O Transportation Museum amp Mount Clare Station National Historic Landmarks in Maryland Maryland Historical Trust Retrieved 9 February 2014 Moss John 5 March 2007 Manchester Railway Stations Manchester UK Papillon Archived from the original on 23 March 2008 Retrieved 13 March 2008 The Inception of the English Railway Station Architectural History SAHGB Publications Limited 4 63 76 1961 doi 10 2307 1568245 JSTOR 1568245 S2CID 246043093 Miserez Marc Andre 2 June 2004 Stations were gateways to the world SwissInfo Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 13 March 2008 Italian Railroad Stations History of Railroad Stations Retrieved 13 March 2008 4 交通結節点の整備 www mlit go jp Retrieved 1 June 2021 a b c Technical Memorandum Typical Cross Section for 15 Design TM 1 1 21 PDF California High Speed Rail Program Retrieved 18 March 2014 a b Station Track Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 18 March 2014 Zurich HB Vom Kopf zum Durchgangsbahnhof 12 September 2006 Grand Central Terminal Fodor s New York City a b c keyword Zwischenbahnhof intermediate station in Lexikon der Eisenbahn Transpress Motorbuch Verlag Stuttgart 1990 ISBN 3 344 00160 4 p 928 a b Bahnhofe at Zeno org Article by Viktor von Roll ed Enzyklopadie des Eisenbahnwesens Encyclopaedia of the Railway 2nd edition 1912 1923 Vol 1 p 383 ff Jorn Pachl Systemtechnik des Eisenbahnverkehrs Glossary digital version in the Glossar der Systemtechnik des Eisenbahnverkehrs retrieved 16 February 2014 MacDermot E T 1931 Chapter XI The Great Awakening History of the Great Western Railway Vol II 1st ed Paddington Great Western Railway p 428 ISBN 978 0 7110 0411 5 Booker Frank 1985 1977 The Great Western Railway A New History 2nd ed Newton Abbot David amp Charles pp 112 113 ISBN 978 0 946537 16 7 Coleford 2010 p 509 Reade 1983 Section In praise of halts National Rail Enquiries Retrieved 30 July 2018 GB Rail Timetable Winter Edition 8 December 2013 a b Rail Chronology Halts and Platforms S A Priberam Informatica apeadeiro Dicionario Priberam in Brazilian Portuguese Retrieved 15 September 2023 English Irish Dictionary de Bhaldraithe halt www teanglann ie Public Records Office Victoria Archived from the original on 23 January 2019 Retrieved 5 July 2017 Museum Victoria Railmotors South Australian Railways working timetable 1964 Table 35 Lewis Bill 2002 The Copper Coast Proceedings of the Modelling the Railways of South Australia Convention 2002 Modelling the Railways of South Australia Convention Adelaide pp 1 244 Stations of the Gatineau Railway Historical Society of the Gatineau Archived from the original on 16 December 2005 Retrieved 11 May 2006 When rail travel for disabled people goes wrong BBC News 4 April 2014 Retrieved 6 February 2021 Southworth Phoebe Roberts Lizzie 17 April 2020 Blind man who walked off train platform prompts government investigation The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 6 February 2021 Rights of disabled passengers on transport GOV UK Retrieved 6 February 2021 Machines amp Engineering Building the Biggest Discovery Channel 2008 Retrieved 13 March 2008 Largest railway station no of platforms Guinness World Records Retrieved 6 December 2019 Huralimath Arunkumar 21 March 2021 World s longest railway platform in Hubballi in its final stage of construction The New Indian Express Retrieved 31 March 2021 关于轨道交通9号线一期 你想知道的 都在这儿啦 重庆市人民政府网 www cq gov cn Retrieved 15 March 2023 重庆9号线一期开通 化龙桥站再现 轨道穿楼 中国科技网 www stdaily com Retrieved 15 March 2023 And Now for the Good News From the Subway System New Terminal in Coney Island Rivals the Great Train Sheds of Europe The New York Times 28 May 2005 The railway station with world s largest transparent roof People s Daily Beijing 26 June 2006 Retrieved 13 March 2008 Symonds Alexandria Lucas Jake Syckle Katie Van McGinley Terence Niemann Christoph 31 December 2019 79 of Our Favorite Facts of 2019 The New York Times About Union Station GO Transit Archived from the original on 7 May 2016 Retrieved 6 May 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Railway station category A comprehensive technical article about stations from Railway Technical Web Pages Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Train station amp oldid 1202556942, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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