Kings Heath railway station

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LocationKings Heath, Birmingham
England
Coordinates52°26′21″N 1°53′35″W / 52.4392°N 1.8930°W / 52.4392; -1.8930
Kings Heath
National Rail
Kings Heath pictured in 2026
General information
LocationKings Heath, Birmingham
England
Coordinates52°26′21″N 1°53′35″W / 52.4392°N 1.8930°W / 52.4392; -1.8930
Grid referenceSP073823
Managed byWest Midlands Railway
Transit authorityTransport for West Midlands
LineCamp Hill line
Platforms2
Other information
StatusOpen
Station codeKIH
History
Original companyBirmingham and Gloucester Railway
Pre-groupingMidland Railway
Post-groupingLondon, Midland and Scottish Railway
Key dates
1840Opened as Moseley
1 November 1867Renamed Kings Heath
27 January 1941Closed to passengers
by 1970Closed (goods station)
7 April 2026Reopened
Location

Kings Heath railway station is a railway station in Kings Heath, Birmingham. It was originally opened in 1840 before being closed to passengers in 1941. It reopened on 7 April 2026.[1]

Kings Heath station buildings in 1956; site of the current station can be seen in the far left of the image

The station was built on the Birmingham and Gloucester Railway's mainline (now the Camp Hill line) on the border of Kings Heath and Moseley, adjacent to Highbury Park. Upon opening it was called Moseley station, however in 1867 the opening of a new upline station of the same name closer to the centre of Moseley caused the station to be renamed 'Kings Heath'.[2]

The station finally closed to passengers on 27 January 1941[3] due to the Second World War,[4] although it was used as a goods station and coal yard into the late 1960s.[5] It was demolished at some point thereafter.[6] The site of the goods facilities is now a small industrial estate and retail park.

Reopening

Since the late 2000s, proposals have been made to re-open the station, along with others on the Camp Hill line, for passenger use.[7][8]

In 2019, the project to re-open the stations at Moseley, Kings Heath, and Hazelwell received £15 million in Government funding, with construction due to start in 2020 and aimed for completion in time for the 2022 Commonwealth Games,[9] though this was delayed by the coronavirus pandemic. In March 2021 it was announced that funding had been found for the project, with an opening date expected in 2023.[10]

Construction work on the three new stations started in late 2022.[11][12] Construction finished on the station in December 2025,[13][14] and the station was handed to Transport for West Midlands (TfWM). There was then a period of driver training, testing and signalling work to ensure the stations are ready to open to passengers.[15] All three stations reopened on 7 April 2026.[16]

Services

References

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