Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Limerick railway station also known as Colbert Station (Irish: Stáisiún Uí Cholbáird) or Limerick Colbert serves the city of Limerick in County Limerick, Ireland. It is on Parnell Street and is the main station on the Limerick Suburban Rail network. It has approximately 2,500 rail passengers a day travelling on four rail routes.
The station opened on 3 July 1848 as the latest extension of the GS&WR line from Dublin to Cork, connecting to the Waterford and Limerick Railway (W&LR) at the same time which had opened to Tipperary from Limerick some two months previously. [11] The station was owned by the GS&WR, the W&LR paying rent for use. [10]
The station is located on Martyrs Road, Tyone, Nenagh. It opened on the 5th of October 1863 [1] and is on the Limerick-Ballybrophy railway line, located between Birdhill railway station and Cloughjordan railway station. Passengers can connect at Ballybrophy to trains heading northeast to Dublin or southwest to Cork or Tralee. Train at Nenagh ...
Limerick Colbert railway station This page was last edited on 8 May 2018, at 05:40 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
Ennis railway station serves the town of Ennis in County Clare, Ireland. Ennis is the terminus station of the Limerick to Ennis Commuter service (intermediate stop Sixmilebridge ) and a station on the Limerick to Galway intercity service.
Limerick Colbert railway station, the main station on the Limerick Suburban Rail network. Limerick Suburban Rail (Irish: Iarnród Fo-uirbeach Luimnigh) are a group of Iarnród Éireann commuter train services from Limerick Colbert to various other destinations on three different lines. Limerick – Ennis, calling at Sixmilebridge; Limerick ...
Ballybrophy is a railway station in the village of Ballybrophy, County Laois, Ireland, halfway between Borris-in-Ossory and Rathdowney in the Barony of Clandonagh. The station is an exchange point for passengers on Dublin to Cork services to connect to Limerick via Nenagh services. [1]
The Western Railway Corridor is a term, used since c. 2003, for a partly disused railway line running through the west of Ireland.Currently two sections of the line, from Limerick via Ennis to Athenry and from Collooney to Sligo, see regular services, with other sections either closed or only technically classed as open.