Porthmadog Harbour railway station

52°55′26″N 4°07′37″W / 52.9239°N 4.1270°W / 52.9239; -4.1270Grid referenceSH571384Owned byFestiniog Railway CompanyManaged byFfestiniog RailwayPlatforms2Key dates6 January 1865Station opened1923Welsh Highland Railway services commence1936Welsh Highland Railway services cease15 September 1939Closed for passengers23 July 1955Reopened for passengers19 February 2011Reopened to Welsh Highland Railway services
The front face of the station
A Ffestiniog Railway train at Porthmadog Harbour railway station
Construction of the WHR's Cross Town Rail Link (CTRL) outside the station, 2011

Porthmadog Harbour railway station (formerly known as Portmadoc Harbour railway station) in Porthmadog (formerly Portmadoc), Gwynedd (formerly Merioneth), North Wales. It is the passenger terminus of two narrow gauge railways: the Ffestiniog Railway, which was opened in 1836 to carry dressed slate from the Quarries around Blaenau Ffestiniog to the sea port of Porthmadog, for export by sea; and the Welsh Highland Railway, incorporated in 1923, which ran to Dinas. After rebuilding in 1997-2011, the other terminus is at Caernarfon, in sight of the Castle.

History

The station is built at the western end of the Cob, the great embankment across the Traeth Mawr, on a peninsula from Ynys Madoc constructed in 1842 to form a slate wharf and a harbour wall. It was opened for passenger service on 6 January 1865. Welsh Highland Railway trains served the station from 1923, with a short period when all passenger traffic was diverted to Portmadog New station near the crossing with the Cambrian railway, that building being long since demolished. The ill-funded WHR closed in 1936. Harbour Station was closed to passengers on 15 September 1939, although slate trains continued operating through the Second World War until 1946. The buildings continued to be in use as the principal offices of the Festiniog Railway Company and the home of Manager (Mr Robert Evans) including throughout the years of almost total closure from 1 August 1946 to 24 September 1954. The station reopened for passengers on 23 July 1955.

Welsh Highland Railway

Since 2011, following completion of the Cross Town Rail Link (CTRL), the station is also the terminus of the Welsh Highland Railway, which is owned by the Festiniog Railway Company. This line runs trains, via the cross town link through Porthmadog, to Beddgelert, Rhyd Ddu, Waunfawr, Dinas and Caernarfon. The WHR was closed to all traffic in 1936 and the track lifted during the War, but has been entirely rebuilt and even extended. Starting from Caernarfon in 1997, the final section (from Pont Croesor) was connected in 2009, with regular passenger services resuming in 2011.

Buildings

The present stone buildings date from 1878/79, replacing earlier wooden buildings dismantled and reused elsewhere on the railway. The goods shed was added in 1880. The buildings were linked by a major extension in 1975. Passenger facilities include a booking and enquiry office, a large tourist and hobby shop, and a restaurant with licensed bar. The erection of the platform awning was completed in 1988.

Harbour Station is the head office and operational headquarters of the Festiniog Railway Company, marketed as Ffestiniog and Welsh Highland Railways.

Operations

With the resumption of services in 1955, all traffic on the line has been controlled from an office in Harbour station, known simply as "Control". With the exception of some early morning and late night movements by works trains, this office is staffed constantly when passenger-carrying services are in operation. Its remit was expanded in 1997 with the commencement of public services on the Welsh Highland Railway between Caernarfon and Dinas and its subsequent expansion south towards Porthmadog. Additionally, for 2007 and 2008, when a connection was in use with the WHR(P), there was a requirement to coordinate with its operations on the new main line.

From 2011, with the WHR now connected to the station via the CTRL, a new short platform and point work was added to the eastward side of the existing platform structure/Spooners Bar. This being too short to hold the longer WHR trains, WHR trains were pulled onto the Cob; then a pilot locomotive was attached to the rear to drag the complete WHR train into the station. This operation was reversed on departure, and because of the need for both lines to use the Cob and the single platform, only one train could be in the station at any time. This was always a temporary solution, until funds could be found to rebuild the station.

Having foreseen this problem, the FR proposed a £1.3M rebuild of Harbour Station, to provide two separate and individually controllable platforms, each with their own run-round loops. The project took three years to complete, requiring extension of the Cob structure into the Irish Sea, compacting, extension of the platform, and finally a shift westwards of the alignment of the existing single platform and FR storage loops and sidings. A helpful grant from the Terminal Stations Improvement Scheme was arranged by the Welsh Government. Completed in March 2014 within the projected cost,[1] the project delivered, as well as two platforms, a new electronically controlled signal box with a distinct FR heritage appearance. The signalling work won the Signalling Award at the 2014 National Railway Heritage Awards.[2]

Services

Preceding station Heritage Railways  Heritage railways Following station
Terminus   Ffestiniog Railway
Porthmadog - Blaenau Ffestiniog
  Boston Lodge Halt
Pen-y-Mount Jcn (special events only)
Pont Croesor
  Welsh Highland Railway
Porthmadog - Caernarfon
  Terminus
Connection with Porthmadog (WHHR) on the Welsh Highland Heritage Railway
National Rail National Rail
Interchange with Porthmadog on the Cambrian Line

See also

Sources

  • Boyd, James I.C. (1975) [1959]. The Festiniog Railway 1800 - 1974; Vol. 1 - History and Route. The British Narrow Gauge Railway. Blandford: The Oakwood Press. ISBN 978-0-85361-167-7. OCLC 2074549. B1A.
  • Boyd, James I.C. (1975) [1959]. The Festiniog Railway 1800 - 1974; Vol. 2 - Locomotives and Rolling Stock; Quarries and Branches: Rebirth 1954-74. The British Narrow Gauge Railway. Blandford: The Oakwood Press. ISBN 978-0-85361-168-4. OCLC 874117875. B1B.
  1. ^ "Porthmadog Harbour railway station reopens after £1.3m rebuild". BBC News. 23 March 2014. Retrieved 4 October 2021.
  2. ^ "Sir Peter Hendy, Commissioner, Transport for London, presents the 2014 Awards". December 2014. Retrieved 11 January 2015.

Further reading

  • Mitchell, Vic; Smith, Keith; Gray, Adrian; Seymour, Michael (1993). Branch Lines around Portmadoc 1923-46. West Sussex: Middleton Press. figs. 64-71. ISBN 9781873793138. OCLC 30306827.
  • Mitchell, Vic; Smith, Keith (1994). Branch Lines around Porthmadog 1954-94. West Sussex: Middleton Press. figs. 5-24. ISBN 9781873793312. OCLC 32132010.
  • Mitchell, Vic; Smith, Keith (1995). Porthmadog to Blaenau. West Sussex: Middleton Press. figs. 12-17. ISBN 9781873793503. OCLC 877269886.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Porthmadog Harbour railway station.
  • The Festiniog Railway Company (Ffestiniog and Welsh Highland Railways) website
  • Ffestiniog Railway Timetables Archived 21 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  • Welsh Highland Railway Timetables Archived 22 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  • Multimap Map of Porthmadog Harbour station
  • v
  • t
  • e
Festiniog and associated railways
Current operatorsRolling stockStations and haltsSupport groups
  • Ffestiniog Railway Society
  • Festiniog Railway Heritage Group
  • Welsh Highland Railway Society
  • Welsh Highland Railway Heritage Group
Other articles
  • icon Trains
  • flag Wales
  • v
  • t
  • e
Stations
Other Locations
Quarries
People
Rolling stock
Related railways
  • icon Trains portal
  • flag Wales portal
  • v
  • t
  • e
Railway stations in Gwynedd
Mainline
Cambrian Coast Line
Conwy Valley line
North Wales Coast Line
  • Bangor
Heritage
Bala Lake Railway
Corris Railway
Fairbourne Railway
Ffestiniog Railway
Llanberis Lake Railway
Snowdon Mountain Railway
Talyllyn Railway
Welsh Highland Railway
Welsh Highland Heritage Railway
  • icon Trains portal
  • flag Wales portal
  • Transport
  • Commons