Station code MMO DfT category E Opened 1846 | Grid reference SK752187 Managed by East Midlands Trains 2011/12 0.234 million Number of platforms 2 | |
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Address Melton Mowbray LE13 0BG, United Kingdom Similar Oakham railway station, Sileby railway station, Narborough railway station, Melton Carnegie Museum, Hinckley railway station |
Melton mowbray railway station
Melton Mowbray railway station serves the town of Melton Mowbray in Leicestershire, England. It is owned by Network Rail and operated by East Midlands Trains (EMT) train operating company (TOC).
Contents
- Melton mowbray railway station
- Melton mowbray railway station top 7 facts
- Services
- Former services
- Trivia
- Awards
- References
The station is on the (as built) Syston and Peterborough Railway, the line is now part of the much bigger Birmingham to Peterborough Line. CrossCountry operate the majority of services as part of their Birmingham to Stansted Airport route. The station lies between Leicester and Peterborough stations.
The station was formerly known as Melton Mowbray Town to distinguish it from the now closed Melton Mowbray North on the Great Northern and London and North Western Joint Railway, which closed to regular traffic in 1953.
The station has a ticket office which is staffed part-time, a car park and help points for times where there are no staff present. It was refurbished in 2011 with new glass in the platform canopies, resurfaced platforms, passenger information screens, improved disabled access to the 'barrow crossing', a full repaint and a new footbridge to replace the original which was life-expired. The refurbishment of the platforms retained their original size and means that previous plans to extend these by up to 14 yards (13 m) by no later than 2012 will not go ahead in the original timescale.
Melton mowbray railway station top 7 facts
Services
From Melton Mowbray there is an hourly service off-peak in both directions operated by CrossCountry. Westbound, trains run to Birmingham via Leicester, Nuneaton and Coleshill. Eastbound, trains run to Stansted Airport via Peterborough, Ely and Cambridge. Additional trains run at peak times, with some terminating at Cambridge.
Although the next station westbound is Syston, there are no direct services between the two stations.
Despite managing the station, East Midlands Trains (EMT) only operates a limited number of services to the station. A single daily return service to London St Pancras commenced on 27 April 2009 running via Corby and is notable for being the first regular passenger service to cross the spectacular and historic Welland Viaduct on the Oakham to Kettering line since 1966. The company introduced a further return service from Derby via East Midlands Parkway (for East Midlands Airport) from May 2010. Further services may be introduced in the future. There are two daily services to/from London with one calling at Oakham, Corby, Kettering, Wellingborough, Bedford, and Luton. Whilst the other train calls at Oakham, Corby, Kettering, Wellingborough, Bedford, Luton and Luton Airport Parkway.
In addition, a handful of local services operate at either end of the day (mainly for train crew route knowledge retention purposes). An A.M. service runs from Nottingham to Norwich and an evening service operates from Spalding to Nottingham via Peterborough.
Former services
According to the Official Handbook of Stations the following classes of traffic were being handled at this station in 1956: G, P, F, L, H, C and there was a 7-ton crane.
Just outside Melton Mowbray station the main line is joined by the Old Dalby Test Track. This runs towards Nottingham via Old Dalby, but stops short of Nottingham railway station at the edge of the suburb of West Bridgford. This is electrified with overheads, has its own control centre and dates from when the British Rail Research Division developed it as a test track for the Advanced Passenger Train, having been taken out of use some years before. It has, more recently, been used for testing Virgin Trains' Pendolino units and is currently being used for the testing of new stock for London underground built by Bombardier in Derby.
Trivia
Railway station lavatories have never been noted for the luxury of their appointments, but the toilet of the former first class waiting room had a hot-water pipe coursing through the seat.
Awards
Melton Mowbray station won "highly commended" award at the National Rail Awards 2014 for Small station of the year.