Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Map of Edinburgh's Haymarket mainline railway station and the Haymarket stop on the Edinburgh Trams line. This map was created from OpenStreetMap project data, collected by the community. This map may be incomplete, and may contain errors.
Brunstane is a railway station on the Borders Railway, which runs between Edinburgh Waverley and Tweedbank. The station, situated 3 miles 72 chains (6 km) south-east of Edinburgh Waverley, serves the suburbs of Brunstane and Portobello in Edinburgh, Scotland. It is owned by Network Rail and managed by ScotRail.
The station concourse, June 2024. Several train operating companies serve the station. The typical off-peak service in trains per hour (tph) and trains per day (tpd) as of the December 2022 timetable change is as follows: London North Eastern Railway [19] 1 tph to London King's Cross (fast) via Newcastle and York
Edinburgh Park railway station is a railway station in the west of Edinburgh, Scotland, serving the Edinburgh Park business park and the Hermiston Gait shopping centre. The new station building was designed by IDP Architects, [2] and it opened on 4 December 2003. [3] It is the first intermediate station between Haymarket and Linlithgow since ...
Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. move to sidebar hide. Edinburgh railway station may refer to: Edinburgh Gateway station ...
Buses on Princes Street, one of the main thoroughfares in Edinburgh. Map of tram and commuter rail services in Edinburgh. Edinburgh is a major transport hub in east central Scotland and is at the centre of a multi-modal transport network with road, rail and air communications connecting the city with the rest of Scotland and internationally.
The Edinburgh portion would then reverse back into the opposite platform to join the back of the Glasgow section and the fully joined up train would then head south. After WCML electrification the Edinburgh portions were typically hauled by a Haymarket locomotive fitted with Electric Train Heating, either a Class 47 or Class 40.
During 1842, Haymarket railway station was opened as the original terminus of the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway.The station represented the launch of a new age of travelling opportunities to the Scottish capital, being the first intercity route to be built and offering a previously unheard of journey time of two and a half hours between Scotland's two largest cities. [5]