Sunday Service Trains at Rugby, WCML | 20/05/18
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- Опубликовано: 9 фев 2025
- A busy and sunny afternoon at Rugby situated on the West Coast Mainline during a warm and clear afternoon of Sunday 20th May 2018. Various Trains are included in this video such as the painted 350, 221 and the white painted 390's (one with the fully painted black windows)
Rugby info:
Rugby railway station serves the town of Rugby in Warwickshire, England. It opened during the Victorian era, in 1885, replacing earlier stations situated a little further west. Since the closure of the former Rugby Central station on the now-abandoned Great Central Railway route through the town, it is Rugby's only station. Between 1950 and 1970 the station was known as Rugby Midland before reverting to its original title. The station underwent an extensive upgrade during 2006-2008, with extra platforms added, and a new ticket office and entrance building constructed, however the original Victorian part of the station was retained in the upgrade.
Rugby station is at the centre of two important junctions of the West Coast Main Line (WCML) connecting London to Birmingham and North West England and Scotland. The junction of the Trent Valley Line to the North West, and the Rugby-Birmingham-Stafford Line to Birmingham is a short distance west of the station. East of the station, the Northampton Loop Line diverges at a junction from the direct line to London. Until the 1960s it also had routes to Leicester, Peterborough East and Leamington Spa (Avenue) but these have all since been closed.
The present station, managed by Virgin Trains, is located roughly half a mile north of Rugby town centre. On the WCML as a whole, it is located 82 miles (132 km) north of London Euston, and 319 miles (513 km) south of Glasgow Central.
Current services:
Inter-city train services are operated by Virgin Trains, with off peak services to London and Birmingham New Street and morning peak and evening peak services to/from Glasgow, Manchester, Chester, Liverpool, Blackpool, Preston, Carlisle, Wolverhampton, Crewe and Lancaster
West Midlands Trains operate frequent regional services under the London Northwestern branding between London Euston or Northampton to Birmingham New Street and they operate services between London Euston to Stafford, Stoke-on-Trent and Crewe (via the Trent Valley Line).
Off peak weekday service in trains per hour (tph) is:
London Northwestern Railway:
3tph to Birmingham New Street
4tph to London Euston, three semi-fast via Northampton and one is an express service.
1tph to Crewe via Stafford and Stoke-on-Trent.
Virgin Trains:
1tph to London Euston.
1tph to Birmingham New Street
History:
The first railway station to be built in Rugby was a wooden temporary structure located around half a mile to the west of the present station. It opened on 9 April 1838 when the London and Birmingham Railway was constructed. The original station was located on the western side of where the railway crossed Newbold Road (the Rugby to Leicester tollpike road now the A426) because at the time this was the only road north from Rugby.
The first station lasted only a few years. When a junction was made with the Midland Counties Railway in 1840, a new station was built at the site of the junction, which opened on 4 July 1840; it was 990 yards (905 m) to the east of the original station, and 150 yards (140 m) to the west of the present station. A new road, Railway Terrace had to be built to link it to the town centre, because at the time it was located in open countryside.[7][6]
This second station was effectively managed by two companies - the London and North Western Railway and the Midland Railway - and for this reason grew up in a haphazard fashion. It was at first no more than a temporary wooden structure, but was gradually rebuilt into a more permanent structure over the following decade. This station consisted of platforms at each side of the track with one bay platform. The platforms were rather low and passengers complained of having to perform an "acrobatic feat" to board trains.
The station was at the centre of a busy junction and often saw chaotic scenes. It featured, only lightly disguised, in Charles Dickens's story Mugby Junction.
The second station lasted until the 1880s, when a new line from Rugby to Northampton (the Northampton loop) was built, the old station was deemed by the LNWR to be no-longer satisfactory, and in 1882, £70,000 was allocated to replace it with the current station which opened on 5 July 1885. Another £30,000 was allocated to build a hotel, although this was never built. The Midland Railway retained the part of the older station which it had managed. No trace of this now remains, however, as it was demolished in the 1960s to make way for the postal sorting office.
Connections:
Bus route 4, operated by Stagecoach Midlands, connects the railway station with Rugby town centre and the suburbs of Brownsover and Bilton
Looks a cool station...great video..cheers
The station notices over the tannoy are given out as a train goes through the station so you can't hear it!
What was the super sonic bang at 22:27 as 390050 went past? Haha
Super vid. Rugby is awesome for pendolinos passing at 125mph
Darren Axford One good thing about here you can get a full view of what pendolinos look like when they are tilting around the corner head northwards
Nice video I subscribed
12:34 this train is actually 221115 because it has the bombardier livery. 221142 only has the name
Cpr1234 Theres this one video on RUclips that says that 221142 is the bombardier voyager
Also whats that funny high ptched noise the green and silver trains make?
was 390 042 meant to be voyagers from blackpool on that preston service at the start or was it a preston train??
Ages ago