Rhiw Valley Light Railway

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LocalePowys
Coordinates52°36′59″N 3°16′04″W / 52.6165°N 3.2679°W / 52.6165; -3.2679
NameRhiw Valley Light Railway
Built byJack Woodroffe[1]
Rhiw Valley Light Railway
Powys arriving at the station
LocalePowys
Coordinates52°36′59″N 3°16′04″W / 52.6165°N 3.2679°W / 52.6165; -3.2679
Commercial operations
NameRhiw Valley Light Railway
Built byJack Woodroffe[1]
Original gauge15 in (381 mm)
Preserved operations
Stations1
Length1,265 m (1,383 yd)
Preserved gauge15 in (381 mm)
Commercial history
Opened1970
Closed2 October 2022

The Rhiw Valley Light Railway was a 15 in (381 mm) gauge railway located near to the village of Berriew in Powys, Wales. It closed on 2 October 2022.[2]

The railway is constructed to 15 in (381 mm) gauge, in an 'out and back' return loop of 1,265 metres (1,383 yd). As an 'out and back' loop, trains return to the central station facing in the opposite direction from that in which they departed.[3] The railway was privately built and operated, and its original owner is now deceased. The railway is now owned by his widow, who initially opened the line to the public just one day per year, in mid-summer. The railway is now open once a month from May to October.[4] The very attractive route runs through fields and along hedgerows, and being largely unfenced there is considerable interaction with livestock from rabbits to sheep. However the railway announced that it would stop operating after the 2022 season.

Rolling Stock

There are two resident steam locomotives. 'Powys' is a powerful 0-6-2T engine, built in 1973 by Severn Lamb.[5] 'Jack' is a large 0-4-0 tender engine, constructed by TMA Engineering of Birmingham and Jack Woodroffe of Welshpool in 2003. An assortment of wooden passenger carriages (both bogie carriages and four-wheel vehicles) and wagons is available on the line.

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI