Midleton railway station

Railway station in County Cork, Ireland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Midleton railway station is a railway station situated in Midleton, a town in south-eastern County Cork, in Ireland.

LocationMidleton, County Cork
Ireland
Coordinates51°55′16″N 8°10′33″W
Operated byIarnród Éireann
Quick facts MidletonMainistir na Corann, General information ...
Midleton

Mainistir na Corann
A train for Cork stands in Midleton Station
General information
LocationMidleton, County Cork
Ireland
Coordinates51°55′16″N 8°10′33″W
Owned byIarnród Éireann
Operated byIarnród Éireann
Platforms2
Tracks2
Construction
Structure typeAt-grade
ParkingYes
AccessibleYes
Other information
Station codeMDLTN (68)
History
Opened10 November 1859
Original companyCork and Youghal Railway
Pre-groupingGreat Southern and Western Railway
Post-groupingGreat Southern Railways
Key dates
1963Partially closed to passengers
1988Fully closed
30 July 2009Reopened
Services
Preceding station Iarnród Éireann Following station
Carrigtwohill
towards Cork Kent
Commuter Terminus
Former services
Preceding station Disused railways Following station
Carrigtwohill   Great Southern and Western Railway
Cork-Youghal
  Mogeely
Location
Close

It is the terminus station on the Cork to Midleton commuter service. Passengers can travel to Glounthaune station to transfer to Cobh.[1]

It has been rebuilt and reopened as a terminus station of the Cork Suburban Railway Line.[2][3] The station currently has 2 platforms. There is a train operating by the hour from the station.

History

The station originally opened on 10 November 1859 and closed to all traffic in 1988. In 1963 the line was taken out of regular passenger service, from then the line carried daily goods trains, summer excursions and the beet in season. Goods were withdrawn in 1978, however the beet and excursions continued up until 1982. After 1982 the line was infrequently used for railtours, pilgrimages, company days out and finally a GAA special from Midleton in 1988.[4]

In November 2005 the government announced plans for reopening under the Transport 21 initiative. In what was seen as an "election publicity stunt",[5] the station was reopened on 26 May 2009 when Iarnród Éireann brought a special train to the station for a press conference held by a government minister. The press conference was held on board the train, but the train remained stationary. According to an Iarnród Éireann spokesman, "the train wasn't certified to carry passengers."[6]

The line reopened for passenger traffic on 30 July 2009 with new Park and Ride facilities for commuters to Cork City.[6]

See also

References

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