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The station was situated beside Great Victoria Street and shared a site with the Europa Buscentre, Belfast's former main bus station. The railway and bus stations were replaced by the adjacent Belfast Grand Central station with the official opening on 13 October 2024. [12]
Belfast Great Victoria Street railway station closed station in Belfast, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom; Lanyon Place railway station in Belfast, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom. (formerly known as "Belfast Central") Queen's Quay railway station on the former Belfast and County Down Railway in Belfast, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom
The first railway station in Ulster was opened on the site of the former Great Victoria Street station in 1839 on the Ulster Railway. It became the northern terminus of the GNR 's non-stop Dublin –Belfast express in 1947, and in 1962, platform 5 was removed to allow construction of a bus station providing a truly integrated bus-rail station ...
Queen's Quay station was opened in 1848 as Belfast [1] and was the terminus of the Belfast, Hollywood & Bangor Railway. The Belfast and County Down Railway opened an adjacent station two years later, both stations merging after a further two years.
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An often forgotten corner of Belfast city centre is due to be transformed with the opening of the new Grand Central Station. The £200 million transport hub, set to be the largest on the island of ...
The Belfast Central Railway (BCR) was a railway company operating in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The company was incorporated by the Belfast Central Railway Act 1872 ( 35 & 36 Vict. c. clxxi) and acquired by the Great Northern Railway (Ireland) in 1885.
The station was later part of the once extensive Great Northern Railway (Ireland) system that connected to Scarva, Lisburn and Newcastle. The Great Northern Railway Board closed the Scarva and Newcastle branches on 2 May 1955 and then the remaining line to Lisburn on 30 April 1956, almost a year later.