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Morningside railway station is a station on the Western Line of the Auckland Railway Network. It has an island platform and is accessed via a level crossing on Morningside Drive and by a subway from New North Road .
Morningside Road railway station is a former railway station in the Morningside area of Edinburgh, Scotland. Originally named Morningside Station, it was opened by the Edinburgh Suburban and Southside Junction Railway (ESSJR) in 1884 and closed to passengers in 1962. The station buildings still remain, and the railway track is still in use.
Morningside railway station may refer to: Morningside railway station, Auckland , in New Zealand Morningside railway station (Caledonian) , a disused station on the Wishaw and Coltness Railway in North Lanarkshire, Scotland
After Craiglockhart station, another cutting was entered; this one required a pumping station to prevent flooding. The cuttings now became shallower as far as the summit near Morningside (Road) station, a hundred feet above the level of Haymarket. Now the line fell at 1 in 85 through a series of curves, then steepening to 1 in 75 as far as ...
Morningside station opened in 1888 as Bulimba, being renamed Morningside shortly afterwards. [1] [2] On 26 May 1996, the timber station building was burnt out and later demolished. [3] On 15 July 1996, the Fisherman Islands line to the Port of Brisbane opened to the north of the station. [4] [5]
Line and station closed 55°46′31″N 3°51′45″W / 55.7752°N 3.8625°W / 55.7752; - This article about a railway station in the North Lanarkshire council area of Scotland is a stub .
The Wilsontown, Morningside and Coltness Railway was a railway opened in 1845, primarily for mineral traffic, although a passenger service was run sporadically. The line ran from a junction with the Wishaw and Coltness Railway at Chapel, to Longridge, in South Central Scotland, and it was extended to Bathgate in 1850 after takeover by the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway.
The station opened in October 1844 by the Wishaw and Coltness Railway.To the west were two sidings and a turntable. To the southeast was the signal box. Behind the platform was Allanton Brick and Tile Works, which one of the sidings may have been used for.