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St Albans City railway station, also known simply as St Albans, is one of two railway stations serving the city of St Albans in Hertfordshire, England (the other being St Albans Abbey). The 'City' station is the larger of the two, as it is on the better-connected Midland Main Line 19 miles 71 chains (32.0 km) from London St Pancras , being ...
St Albans railway station is a commuter railway station on the Sunbury line, which is part of the Melbourne railway network. It serves the western suburb of St Albans, in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. St Albans station is a below ground premium station, featuring two side platforms.
St Albans Abbey station in June 1977. St Albans Abbey was the first railway station in St Albans, built by the London and North Western Railway in 1858. It was, as it is now, a terminus; the company's plans to extend northwards to Luton and Dunstable never materialised.
St Albans railway station (Hatfield and St Albans Railway), a former station in St Albans, Hertfordshire, England St Albans railway station, Melbourne , Victoria, Australia St. Albans station (LIRR) , Queens, New York City, USA
2 February 2025: The contactless-only area is expanded to all stations on the c2c network, London Northwestern Railway from Watford Junction to Bletchley and St Albans Abbey, South Western Railway from Feltham to Virginia Water, Shepperton and Windsor & Eton Riverside, and Southeastern from Swanley and Orpington to Sevenoaks. [29] [30]
St. Albans station is an Amtrak train station in St. Albans, Vermont, United States.It is the northern terminus of the daily Vermonter service.. Service to St. Albans on the Vermont Central Railroad began in 1851.
The Hatfield & St Albans Railway was a branch of the Great Northern Railway which connected St Albans to Hatfield in Hertfordshire, England.It opened in 1865 with the principal aim of allowing St Albans traffic to access the Great Northern's main line to London at Hatfield, but soon came into difficulties when the Midland Railway inaugurated a direct route to London through St Albans.
The station was opened by the Hatfield and St Albans Railway on 16 October 1865, [1] and passenger services ceased on 1 October 1951. [1]The station building has been restored, and the trackbed now forms part of the Alban Way, a six and a half-mile-long cycle track from St Albans to Hatfield.