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The other main station in Glasgow is Glasgow Queen Street, which primarily serves regional and intercity services to the north of Glasgow. With just under 21 million passengers in 2022–2023, Glasgow Central is the seventeenth-busiest railway station in Britain and the busiest in Scotland. [5]
The Glasgow Central Railway was a railway line built in Glasgow, Scotland by the Caledonian Railway, running in tunnel east to west through the city centre.It was opened in stages from 1894 and opened up new journey opportunities for passengers and enabled the Caledonian Railway to access docks and industrial locations on the north bank of the River Clyde.
Glasgow Central Railway. St Enoch: River Clyde . parts of former station: reused as carriage sidings . ... This is a route-map template for a Scottish city railway ...
Module:Location map/data/Scotland Glasgow Central is a location map definition used to overlay markers and labels on an equirectangular projection map of Central Glasgow. The markers are placed by latitude and longitude coordinates on the default map or a similar map image.
Pages in category "Railway stations in Glasgow" The following 59 pages are in this category, out of 59 total. ... Gilshochill railway station; Glasgow Central railway ...
The Glasgow Central Railway (GCR) under central Glasgow opened in 1886, connecting the Lanarkshire and Dunbartonshire Railway at Maryhill Central and Stobcross Railway at Stobcross to the Lanarkshire and Ayrshire Railway near Kirkhill, Rutherglen and Coatbridge Railway at Carmyle, Clydesdale Junction Railway and Polloc and Govan Railway at Rutherglen, and Clydesdale Junction Railway at Newton.
The lines were built by the Cathcart District Railway (Cathcart Circle) and the Lanarkshire and Ayrshire Railway (Newton and Neilston lines). The first part opened on 1 March 1886 [1] as a double line from Glasgow Central to Mount Florida then single to Cathcart, doubled on 26 May 1886. [2]
The line closed in 1964, but it was reopened by British Rail in 1979 [2] and operated by the Scottish Region of British Railways by arrangement with the Greater Glasgow PTE. Although the Central Low Level station was reopened, Glasgow Cross was not reopened; instead the new Argyle Street station was constructed, midway between Glasgow Cross and ...