Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Cambridge railway station is the principal station serving the city of Cambridge in the east of England. It stands at the end of Station Road , 1 mile (1.6 km) south-east of the city centre. It is the northern terminus of the West Anglia Main Line , 55 miles 52 chains (89.6 km) down the line from London Liverpool Street , the southern terminus.
The front of Cambridge Railway Station. Cambridge currently has two railway stations. Cambridge railway station was built in 1845 with a platform designed to take two full-length trains, the third longest in the country. Cambridge North railway station is located in the suburb of Chesterton, close to Cambridge Science Park, and
Cambridge South railway station is a railway station under construction in southern Cambridge, England. [1] It is planned to serve the Cambridge Biomedical Campus and the adjacent suburb of Trumpington. The station will be on the Cambridge line and the West Anglia Main Line, and is scheduled to open in late 2025. [2]
Chesterton railway station was a brief predecessor to Cambridge North, opening on 19 January 1850 [5] and closing just ten months later in October 1850. [6] Located 200 meters south of the current station, it served as a junction on the Eastern Counties Railway, but was ultimately unsuccessful due to its remote location at the time. [7]
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap. ... Pages in category "Railway stations in Cambridgeshire" ... Cambridge North railway station; D.
Plans for a line between Hitchin and Royston were placed before Parliament in 1846 by the Royston and Hitchin Railway. [4] The line was initially planned to be a single track spur from Hitchin, but during debate in the Lords it was recommended that the line be two track in the view of its possible later use as part of a route from Cambridge to Bedford although this was later superseded by the ...
A pair of split level platforms in Harvard station of the Boston-Cambridge MBTA Red Line service. The upper (outbound) platform at left is empty, while the lower (inbound) platform is relatively crowded. A split platform or separate platform is a station that has a platform for each track, split onto two or more levels. This configuration ...
Some of the stations on the Breckland line see just one stopping train in each direction per day, mostly in the Norwich direction in the morning and in the Cambridge direction in the afternoon or evening. Three stations on the line are request stops only: Spooner Row, Lakenheath and Shippea Hill.