Platforms in use 2 | Area Rhondda Cynon Taf 14 May 1928 re-sited | |
1 September 1904 opens as Rhydyfelin Halt 1922 renamed Rhydyfelin (High Level) Halt Original company |
Rhydyfelin (High Level) Halt railway station once served the village of Rhydyfelin in South Wales.
Contents
History
The station opened in 1904 on the Pontypridd, Caerphilly and Newport Railway to cater to the new railmotor service on the line. As opened, it consisted of a single ground-level wooden platform made of old sleepers and a level crossing, also at ground-level. In 1922, the station was renamed to avoid confusion with the similarly-named halt on the former Cardiff Railway, which subsequently became Rhydyfelin (Low Level) Halt. In 1928, the original halt was closed and a new one was built at 51.5886°N 3.3107°W / 51.5886; -3.3107 (Rhydyfelin (High Level) Halt, post-1928). This had two wooden platforms and a corrugated tin shelter.
Closure
The halt closed in 1953 and no trace of it remains. The trackbed is now part of the Treforest-Nantgarw cycleway.