Cambridge railway station

Cambridge National Rail

Cambridge railway station, front entrance
Location
Place Cambridge
Local authority City of Cambridge
Coordinates 52°11′38″N 0°08′17″E / 52.194°N 0.138°E / 52.194; 0.138Coordinates: 52°11′38″N 0°08′17″E / 52.194°N 0.138°E / 52.194; 0.138
Grid reference TL462572
Operations
Station code CBG
Managed by Abellio Greater Anglia
Number of platforms 8
DfT category B
Live arrivals/departures, station information and onward connections
from National Rail Enquiries
Annual rail passenger usage*
2004/05 Increase 6.060 million
2005/06 Increase 6.137 million
2006/07 Increase 6.522 million
2007/08 Increase 6.998 million
2008/09 Increase 7.572 million
2009/10 Increase 7.660 million
2010/11 Increase 8.245 million
2011/12 Increase 8.823 million
- Interchange 0.732 million
2012/13 Increase 9.168 million
- Interchange 0.528 million
2013/14 Increase 9.825 million
- Interchange 0.503 million
2014/15 Increase 10.420 million
- Interchange 0.558 million
History
Key dates Opened 1845 (1845)
National Rail – UK railway stations
* Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Cambridge from Office of Rail and Road statistics. Methodology may vary year on year.
UK Railways portal

Cambridge railway station serves the city of Cambridge in eastern England. It stands at the end of Station Road, off Hills Road, 1 mile (1.6 km) south-east of the city centre. It is the busiest railway station in the East of England, used by over 10 million passengers for the first time in 2014/15.

Several routes start at the station including the West Anglia Main Line to London Liverpool Street, the Fen Line to King's Lynn, the Breckland Line to Norwich, services to Ipswich on the Ipswich to Ely Line, and the Cambridge Line, heading southwards and following an alternate route, to London King's Cross, via Hitchin. These routes are electrified at 25 kV AC overhead, except for the Ipswich to Ely and Cambridge to Norwich lines, which are diesel-operated. The station has the third-longest platform in England on the national rail network. Ticket barriers are in operation.

History

Up to 1923

In 1822 the first survey for a railway line in the Cambridge area was made and, in the 1820s and 1830s a number of other surveys were undertaken none of which came to fruition although the Northern and Eastern Railway had opened up a line as far as Bishop's Stortford by May 1842.[1] The financial climate in the early 1840s ensured that no further scheme got off the ground, but by 1843, Parliament had passed an act enabling the Northern and Eastern Railway to extend the line to Newport (Essex). The following year, a further act was passed, extending the rights to build a railway through to Cambridge itself. In 1844, the Northern and Eastern Railway was leased by the Eastern Counties Railway, which built the extension.[2]

The 1844 act also covered an extension of the line north of Cambridge to Brandon in Norfolk forming an end on connection to the line through to Norwich. Robert Stephenson was appointed engineer and on 29 July 1845, the station opened with services operating from Bishopsgate station in London via Stratford and Bishops Stortford.[3]

In the years following the opening of the main line from Cambridge through to Norwich in 1845, other railways were built to Cambridge. Initially, some of these planned to have separate stations but opposition from the university saw them all eventually using the same station. The first line to arrive was the St Ives to Huntingdon line which opened in 1847 and was built by the East Anglian Railway. Services to Peterborough also commenced that year, with the opening of the line from Ely via March to Peterborough,which also became the main route for coal traffic into East Anglia which was built by the Eastern Counties Railway.[4]

The following year, the Eastern Counties Railway opened a line between St Ives and March which saw some passenger services although the coal traffic (mentioned above) was then diverted onto this route.

In 1851, a branch line from Newmarket to Cambridge (Coldham Lane Junction) was opened which partly used the alignment of the Newmarket and Chesterford Railway which subsequently closed. In 1854, the Newmarket line was extended eastwards to meet the Eastern Union Railway line at Bury St Edmunds, allowing through running to Ipswich.[4]

A parliamentary act in 1848 was granted to the Royston and Hitchin Railway to extend their line from Royston. Although Cambridge was its goal, Parliament sanctioned only an extension as far as Shepreth (as the Eastern Counties Railway had opposed the extension to Cambridge). The line was completed in 1851 and initially the GNR, who had leased the Royston and Hitchin Railway in the interim, ran a connecting horse-drawn omnibus service. This proved unsuccessful so in April 1852, the line was extended to join the ECR main line south of Cambridge and was leased to the Eastern Counties Railway for 14 years with a connection to enable the ECR to run trains from Cambridge to Hitchin.[5]

In 1862, the Bedford and Cambridge Railway opened. Originally a local undertaking, itwas soon acquired by the London & North Western Railway (LNWR) and saw services between Oxford and Cambridge introduced.

By the 1860s, the railways in East Anglia were in financial trouble, and most were leased to the ECR; they wished to amalgamate formally, but could not obtain government agreement for this until 1862, when the Great Eastern Railway was formed by amalgamation. Thus Cambridge became a GER station in 1862.[6]

The University of Cambridge helped block later 19th-century attempts to create a central station.[7]

The GER opened the cross-country line from Marks Tey via Sudbury and Haverhill to Shelford in 1865 which enabled the introduction of direct services to Colchester.[4]

The Midland Railway built a line from Kettering to Huntingdon which opened in 1866 and services ran to Cambridge using running powers over the Huntingdon to St Ives line. In 1866 the Great Northern Railway(GNR) again applied to run services from Kings Cross as the lease on the line to Hitchin was ending. Initially the GER opposed this but eventually agreement was reached and from 1 April 1866 services started operating between Cambridge and Kings Cross from a dedicated platform at Cambridge station.

In 1882 the Great Northern and Great Eastern Joint Railway was opened. As well as becoming the major route for coal traffic from the north east to East Anglia it saw the introduction of direct services between London, Cambridge and York. Goods trains generally passed Cambridge on dedicated goods lines to the east of the station. Between these and the station a number of carriage sidings existed.

The next line to open was in 1884 when the Fordham line opened joining the main line towards Ely at Barnwell Junction. The following year the branch to Mildenhall railway station opened and services operated direct from there to Cambridge.[4]

A 1914 Railway Clearing House map showing (right) railways in the vicinity of Cambridge

Each of the four companies also had its own goods facilities in the station area, and, except for the M.R., its own motive power depot. The G.E.R. maintained a special locomotive for the Royal Train here for workings between London and Sandringham.

LNER 1923-1947

In the 1923 Grouping, the GER amalgamated with other railways to form the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) and Cambridge became a LNER station. The Midland and LNWR similarly amalgamated with other railways to form the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS).

In around 1928 the London and North Eastern Railway re-signalled the station replacing its five signal boxes with two electrically controlled boxes, with the work carried out by the British Power Railway Signal Company.[8]

British Railways 1948-1996

Following nationalization of the UK's railways Cambridge station was operated by the Eastern Region of British Railways.

East Anglia was one of the first areas in the UK where British Railways wanted to phase out steam operation in favour of diesel traction. From 1959 diesels started to take over operation of services with Cambridge engine shed closing to steam in 1962. Diesel shunters and DMUs were allocated to another shed on the opposite side of the line known as Coldham Lane.

The 1960s saw a series of closures and a number of the lines serving Cambridge were closed at this time.

First to go was the lightly used line to Mildenhall, closed to passengers on 18 June 1962.

The Stour Valley Railway route to Colchester via Haverhill and Sudbury closed on 6 March 1967 although the Sudbury-Marks Tey section remains operational as a branch line. The Varsity Line to Bedford also saw passenger services withdrawn during this year (on 30 December 1967) as did the line from March to St Ives.

Passenger services along the Cambridge & St. Ives Branch managed to survive the Beeching Axe, but with British Rail citing heavy losses the final passenger service ran between St Ives and Cambridge on 5 October 1970. Despite campaigns to reopen the service during the 1970s, the only subsequent rail traffic on the line was a freight service to Chivers in Histon which ran until 1983 and a contract to ferry sand from ARC at Fen Drayton which continued until May 1992.[9]

The line from Bishop's Stortford to Cambridge was electrified by British Rail in 1987, enabling electric trains to operate between Liverpool Street and Cambridge.

When the link to Stansted Airport from London Liverpool Street opened in 1991 the Hitchin-Cambridge Line became more important; all non-stop trains now take this route to London Kings Cross, reducing congestion on the very busy stretch of the West Anglia Main Line between London Liverpool Street and Bishop's Stortford.

The privatization era 1994 - present

Operations

The 1993 railways act came into force on 1 April 1994. Train Operating Units initially operated the services whilst the franchises were let.

A number of different train operating companies (TOCs) have operated services at Cambridge station since privatization. West Anglia Great Northern[10] which was initially owned by Prism Rail but then bought by National Express, operated the West Anglia Great Northern franchise from January 1997 until March 2004. This covered services to both London Liverpool and Kings Cross stations as well as King's Lynn. In April 2004 the Liverpool Street route became part of National Express East Anglia (NXEA) franchise whilst the Great Northern route to Kings Cross remained part of WAGN until March 2006 when it became part of the First Capital Connect franchise.

Services to Ipswich and Norwich were initially operated by Anglia Railways from January 1997 and these routes later became part of the NXEA franchise.

Services to and from the Midlands were operated by Central Trains from March 1997.

In November 2007 the Central Trains franchise was split up with services through Cambridge becoming part of the Arriva Cross Country network.

The First Capital Connect franchise passed to Go-Via Thameslink Railway in September 2014.

Infrastructure

On 1 April 1994 Railtrack became responsible for the maintenance of the national rail infrastructure.

Railtrack was succeeded by Network Rail in 2002 following financial difficulties.

The "CB1" area in front of the station buildings had been due for redevelopment by Ashwell Property Group. In December 2009 the developers went bankrupt and reformed under the name Brookgate. Part of the redevelopment scheme had included a £1 million contribution towards the Cambridgeshire Guided Busway scheme passing through the area.[11]

A new island platform was brought into operational use in December 2011.[12]

In 2012 the station infrastructure was under scrutiny as it emerged passengers were forced to queue for over 40 minutes to purchase tickets.[13]

2015 Improvements

In 2014, the station operator Abellio Greater Anglia released plans to improve the station building at Cambridge as part of the CB1 project in the area.

The works include a bigger concourse, more ticket gates and machines and a bigger ticket office.[14]

The improvements are scheduled to be completed by March 2016.

Building and Platforms

The station building, with its long classical façade and porte-cochère (infilled during the 20th century), has been attributed to both Sancton Wood and Francis Thompson[15] and is listed Grade II. The long platform (platforms 1 and 4) is typical of its period but was unusual in that (apart from a brief period in the mid-19th century) it was not supplemented by another through platform until platforms 7 and 8 were added in 2011. There were major platform lengthenings and remodellings of the main building in 1863 and 1908. The station layout was altered in 1896 by deviating the Newmarket line approaches.

At 514 yards (470 m), Cambridge has the third-longest railway platform in the UK on the main railway network, after Colchester and Gloucester. This platform is divided into Platforms 1 and 4 with a scissors crossover in the middle to divide it in two, which allows trains from either direction to pass those already stopped there. Bay platforms exist at both ends of the station: Platforms 2 and 3 at the southern end of the station and Platforms 5 and 6 at the northern end. Platforms 7 and 8 are located on an island platform on the eastern side of the station. These came into use in December 2011.[12]

Platform 1 is a 12-car bi-directional through platform generally used for northbound services to Ely, King's Lynn and Birmingham New Street. It is also used for some early morning southbound services to London King's Cross and London Liverpool Street and for some late evening terminating services.

Platforms 2 (10-car) and 3 (8-car) are south-facing bay platforms generally used for services to and from London King's Cross or London Liverpool Street (with some Sunday services to Stratford).

Platform 4 is a bi-directional 10-car through platform generally used for northbound services to Ely, King's Lynn and Birmingham New Street. It is also used for some early morning southbound services to London King's Cross and London Liverpool Street and for some terminating late evening services.

Platform 5 is a 6-car north-facing bay platform generally used for services to and from Norwich (and occasional services to and from Birmingham New Street).

Platform 6 is a 6-car north-facing bay platform used for services to and from Ipswich (with occasional services to and from Harwich International).

Platforms 7 and 8 are bi-directional 12-car through platforms generally used for southbound services to London King's Cross, London Liverpool Street and Stansted Airport. These platforms are also used for longer terminating trains from London Liverpool Street and London King's Cross.[16]

Services

Services up to 1923

Services 2015

Railways around Cambridge

Legend
Fen Line
Cambridge North (under construction)
Cambridge & St. Ives Branch
River Cam
Cambridge & Mildenhall Line
Ipswich to Ely Line (via Dullingham)
Cambridge
LNWR goods
Varsity Line
Cambridgeshire Guided Busway
Hitchin to Cambridge Line
Shelford
Stour Valley Railway
West Anglia Main Line

Cambridge is served by several operators.

Preceding station National Rail Following station
Ely   CrossCountry
Birmingham - Stansted Airport
  Audley End
Terminus   Dutchflyer
Cambridge - Amsterdam
  Dullingham
London King's Cross   Great Northern
Cambridge Cruiser
  Waterbeach
or Terminus
Royston   Great Northern
Great Northern Semi fast
  Waterbeach
or Terminus
Foxton   Great Northern
Great Northern stopping
 
Terminus   Abellio Greater Anglia
Breckland Line
  Ely
  Abellio Greater Anglia
Ipswich to Ely Line
  Dullingham
Whittlesford Parkway   Abellio Greater Anglia
West Anglia Main Line Semi Fast and
Bishops Stortford/Stansted Airport-Cambridge
  Terminus
Shelford   Abellio Greater Anglia
West Anglia Main Line stopping
 
Whittlesford Parkway   Abellio Greater Anglia
Liverpool Street-Ely/Kings Lynn (peak hours only)
  Waterbeach
Disused railways
Lord's Bridge
Line and station closed
  British Railways
Varsity Line
  Terminus
Histon
Line and station closed
  Great Eastern Railway
Cambridge to Huntingdon
  Terminus
Historical railways
Harston
Line open, station closed
  British Railways
Cambridge Line
  Terminus
Barnwell Junction
Line open, station closed
  Great Eastern Railway
Cambridge to Mildenhall
  Terminus
Terminus   Newmarket and Chesterford Railway   Cherryhinton
Line open, station closed

Future services

Chesterton Interchange railway station

A new railway station is being built a few miles to the north in the Cambridge suburb of Chesterton, close to Cambridge Science Park.[19] According to the official proposal from Cambridgeshire County Council, which has the backing of the rail industry, the station will be located at Chesterton Sidings on the Fen Line. The station will connect to the Cambridgeshire Guided Busway and provide an interchange with Park & Ride and local Stagecoach bus services. Construction commenced in July 2014 and the station is due to be operational by December 2016.[20]

Thameslink Programme

Main article: Thameslink Programme

New services are anticipated for 2018, to destinations south of central London.[21] In May 2014, a proposed timetable was released; the planned services are:

East West Rail Link

The East West Rail Link will see a link restored between Cambridge and Bedford. In July 2015 Network Rail revealed two possible routes - via Hitchin or Sandy were being assessed. Services are expected to begin in 2019 at the earliest. [22]

The website of East-West rail can be found here:http://www.eastwestrail.org.uk/

Transport links

Several bus services stop outside the main station building, linking the railway with the city centre and other parts of Cambridge, including Addenbrooke's Hospital. Buses also travel from the station out of the city to Sawston, Saffron Walden and Imperial War Museum Duxford to the south and Histon and Impington and Cottenham to the north. A taxi rank and a large area for bicycle parking are also located outside the station, although only a small number of free spaces are available for cycles.

Accidents

On 30 May 2015 the 09:14 GTR Great Northern service from London Kings Cross hit another train shortly after 10:00 BST. Three passengers were injured.[23]

Motive Power Depots

Main Shed

Cambridge Locomotive Depot 2 October 1960

The Eastern Counties Railway opened a small motive power depot at the station in 1845. This was replaced by a larger depot on the west side of the line at the north end of the station, in 1847 and this shed became a Great Eastern Railway shed in 1862. The shed was enlarged in 1913.

Cambridge was the principal shed of a main GE district and during World War 1 was recorded as having 101 drivers, 89 firemen under an inspector named G Dorrington. Repairs fell under a foreman fitter who had a staff of 70 men although responsibility for boiler repairs fell to the foreman boilermaker. There was also a wagon repair facility at the depot at this time led by a leading carpenter. Finally another foreman was charged with the day-to-day running of the depot as well as being responsible for the outstations such as King's Lynn, Ely, Mildenhall and seven others. A number of clerks would also have been employed at the depot.[24]

At the end of 1922 the shed at Cambridge had an allocation of 178 locomotives being the second biggest shed on the Great Eastern after Stratford shed. The allocation consisted of:[25]

Class (LNER classification) Wheel Arrangement Number allocated
B12 4-6-0 12
D13 4-4-0 13
D14 4-4-0 3
D15 4-4-0 16
E4 2-4-0 18
F3 2-4-2T 3
F4 2-4-2T 1
F7 2-4-2T 4
J15 0-6-0 48
J16 0-6-0 14
J17 0-6-0 6
J18 0-6-0 2
J19 0-6-0 7
J20 0-6-0 11
J65 0-6-0T 2
J66 0-6-0T 4
J67 0-6-0T 8
J68 0-6-0T 1
J69 0-6-0T 4
J70 0-6-0T Tram 1

Further enlargement and improvement of facilities took place in 1932. Most significantly a mechanical coaling plant was bought into use as well as the construction of a new lifting shop and modern sand dispensers.[26]

Cambridge shed had two locomotives allocated for royal train workings at this time - Class D15 4-4-0s numbers 8783 and 8787 (known as the Royal Clauds) which were kept in pristine condition.[27]

Following nationalization in 1948 the shed was operated by British Railways Eastern Region. It was allocated shed code 31A at this time.

In the 1950s there was a dedicated pool of four drivers (known as the Royal Link) based at Cambridge who operated the two royal engines which were cleaned regularly. The locomotives were Class B2 4-6-0s numbers 61671 ‘Royal Sovereign’ and 61617 ‘Ford Castle’. The link system - which was operated throughout British Railways at this time was a career progression and at Cambridge these included Pilot Links (shunting), Branch Goods, Mainline Goods, Branch Passenger and Express links as well as route specific links to Bletchley, the GN (Hitchin) and Kettering routes.[28]

Cambridge shed received its first allocation of diesels in 1958.[29] The following year the last 2-4-0 locomotive in traffic on British Railways (Class E4 2-4-0 number 62785) was withdrawn from traffic and has been preserved in its GER guise of no 490 as part of the national collection. In 2015 it was on loan to Bressingham steam museum near Diss.

The shed closed 18 June 1962 and the demolition of Cambridge’s loco shed building, repair shops and loco hoists leaving the shed offices and stores buildings took place in 1965. Some of the trackage in the former loco yard was kept for stabling diesels the rest being made into a car park. [30]

Other sheds

The Great Eastern Railway opened a small motive power depot on the east side of the line at the south end of the station for its own and Great Northern Railway locomotives in 1879. This was closed by the London and North Eastern Railway in 1924, and used as a wagon works until it was demolished in 1985. The Bedfordshire and Cambridge Railway opened a small motive power depot on the west side of the line at the south end of the station in 1862. This was closed by the London Midland and Scottish Railway on 2 December 1935, but remained in use, unofficially until 1951. The building was demolished in 1964.[30]

References

  1. Fellowes, Reginald B (1948). Railways to Cambridge - actual and proposed) (1976 reprint ed.). Cambridge,UK: Oleander Press. p. 1. ISBN 0 902675 62 1.
  2. Fellowes, Reginald B (1948). Railways to Cambridge - actual and proposed) (1976 reprint ed.). Cambridge,UK: Oleander Press. pp. 9, 10. ISBN 0 902675 62 1.
  3. Fellowes, Reginald B (1948). Railways to Cambridge - actual and proposed) (1976 reprint ed.). Cambridge,UK: Oleander Press. p. 10. ISBN 0 902675 62 1.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Fellowes, Reginald B (1948). Railways to Cambridge - actual and proposed) (1976 reprint ed.). Cambridge,UK: Oleander Press. p. 24. ISBN 0 902675 62 1.
  5. Fellowes, Reginald B (1948). Railways to Cambridge - actual and proposed) (1976 reprint ed.). Cambridge,UK: Oleander Press. pp. 21, 23. ISBN 0 902675 62 1.
  6. Vaughan, Adrian (1997). Railwaymen, Politics and Money. London: John Murray. pp. 134, 135. ISBN 0 7195 5150 1.
  7. Gray, Adrian (1976). "Cambridge’s quest for a central station". Journal of the Railway and Canal Historical Society 22: 22–4.
  8. "The Re-signalling of Cambridge Station" (PDF). The Engineer: 642–3. 10 December 1926.
  9. "Cambridge-St Ives-March". East Anglian Railway Archive.
  10. Companies House extract company no 3007944 West Anglia Great Northern Railway Limited
  11. Havergal, Chris (11 December 2009). "Developer goes bust - but station plan still on track". Cambridge News. Retrieved 12 December 2009.
  12. 1 2 "New platform opens". Rail Professional. 19 December 2011. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  13. "Anger over huge queues at Cambridge railway station". Cambridge News. 16 October 2012. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  14. https://www.abelliogreateranglia.co.uk/improvements-map. Retrieved 8 November 2015. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  15. Biddle, Gordon; Nock, O. S. (1983). The Railway Heritage of Britain. London: Michael Joseph. ISBN 978-0-7181-2355-0.
  16. "Enhancements programme: statement of scope, outputs and milestones" (PDF). Network Rail. 31 March 2009. Retrieved 20 August 2009.
  17. "Birmingham-Leicester-Cambridge-Stansted" (PDF). CrossCountry. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 11, 2012. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  18. "Timetables". First Capital Connect. Archived from the original on August 4, 2014. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
  19. "Cambridge's new railway station 'to open in 2015'". Cambridge News. 21 February 2012. Retrieved 21 February 2012.
  20. "Cambridge Science Park station delayed again". Cambridge News. 15 February 2015. Retrieved 1 April 2015.
  21. Proposed Thameslink service pattern
  22. Steve, Broadbent. "Study identifies two most viable sections for East-West rail central section". East-West Rail. East West Consortium. Retrieved 23 August 2015.
  23. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cambridgeshire-32942889
  24. Hawkins, Chris; Reeve, George (1987). Great Eastern Engine Sheds part 2. Didcot, UK: Wild Swan. p. 312. ISBN 0 906867 48 7.
  25. W B Yeadon "LNER Locomotive Allocations 1st January 1923" ISBN 1 899624 19 8(Challenger Publications 1996)
  26. Hawkins, Chris; Reeve, George (1987). Great Eastern Engine Sheds part 2. Didcot, UK: Wild Swan. pp. 318–323. ISBN 0 906867 48 7.
  27. Hawkins, Chris; Reeve, George (1987). Great Eastern Engine Sheds part 2. Didcot, UK: Wild Swan. p. 335. ISBN 0 906867 48 7.
  28. Smith, John (December 2009). "Working through the links at Cambridge" (PDF). Circle Line 101: 6. Retrieved 23 August 2015.
  29. Page, Mike (May 2011). "Cambridge scene from Nationalisation to Dieselisation, Part 3: 1958-1965" (PDF). Circle Line 105: 10. Retrieved 23 August 2015.
  30. 1 2 Griffiths, Roger; Smith, Paul (1999). Directory of British Engine Sheds and Principal Locomotive Servicing Points. 1: Southern England, the Midlands, East Anglia and Wales. OPC Railprint. p. 141. ISBN 0-86093-542-6.

Bibliography

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