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Stirling railway station is a railway station located in Stirling, Scotland.It is located on the former Caledonian Railway main line between Glasgow and Perth.It is the junction for the branch line to Alloa and is also served by trains on the Edinburgh to Dunblane Line and long-distance services to Dundee and Aberdeen and to Inverness via the Highland Main Line.
Work on this station was done in mid-2004. [10] In August 2014, the passengers and staff at Stirling station worked together to free a man who became trapped between the platform and the train by pushing the carriage to tilt. [11] [12] On 12 December 2020, the WA Government announced a $90 million upgrade to the Stirling Bus Interchange. [13]
Vancouver Island, British Columbia: Dates of operation: Esquimalt & Nanaimo Railway 1884–1905 Canadian Pacific Railway 1905–2018 RailAmerica 2006–2018 Southern Railway of Vancouver Island (under contract with the Island Corridor Foundation) 2006–present– Technical; Track gauge: 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 + 1 ⁄ 2 in) standard gauge: Length ...
Stirling railway station may refer to: Stirling station (NJ Transit), in New Jersey, United States; Stirling railway station (Scotland) in Stirling, Scotland;
This page was last edited on 24 November 2019, at 11:02 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The Island Corridor Foundation (ICF) is a Canadian non-profit that owns former Canadian Pacific, RailAmerica, and Esquimalt & Nanaimo Railway (E&N) track on Vancouver Island in British Columbia. The foundation was created in 2003 and gained the first of track in 2006 when Canadian Pacific [ 1 ] donated its portion of the line to the ICF.
The Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) built the Vancouver–Steveston line under the Vancouver & Lulu Island Railway (V&LI) charter. On the north side of the North Arm, the CP station, which opened in 1902, was called Eburne [1] but was later renamed Marpole. In 1905, the British Columbia Electric Railway (BCER) leased
It was named after the nearby Kinsol Station which, in turn, took its name from a nearby mining venture grandiosely named "King Solomon Mines", a very small mining venture that produced 18 t (19.8 short tons; 17.7 long tons) or 18,000 kg or 39,683 lb of copper and 6,300 g (203 ozt) of silver (from 254 t or 280 short tons or 250 long tons of ore ...