Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Tilehurst railway station

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Place
  
Tilehurst

Station code
  
TLH

2011/12
  
0.506 million

Address
  
Reading RG31 6TH, UK

Managed by
  
Great Western Railway

Local authority
  
Reading

Grid reference
  
SU674752

DfT category
  
E

2012/13
  
0.501 million

Opened
  
1882

Number of platforms
  
4

Tilehurst railway station

Similar
  
Pangbourne railway station, Goring & Streatley railway st, Twyford railway station, Theale railway station, Cholsey railway station

Trains at tilehurst railway station


Tilehurst railway station is a railway station in the suburb and former village of Tilehurst, west of Reading in England. The station is served by local services operated by First Great Western.

Contents

History

The station is on the original line of the Great Western Railway, which opened in 1841, and was itself opened to traffic in 1882.

Description

Tilehurst station is on the extreme northern edge of the suburb of Tilehurst, and at a much lower level than most of that suburb. The railway line and station occupy a strip of land between the A329 road and the River Thames, with the up relief platform on an embankment above the river bank.

The station has four platforms, one on each of the fast and relief (slow) lines, although the platforms on the fast lines see little use except during track works on the line between Reading and Didcot. The platforms are linked to each other and the station entrance, on the down fast platform, by a footbridge.

There is a waiting room in the middle platform which contains separate Ladies and Gents toilets. A small waiting room was built on the north platform, but although it looks old, it is of modern construction.

The Main Ticket Office on the south side is manned usually on weekday mornings but tickets can also be purchased from an automatic machine using Debit or Credit Cards only.

In 2013 the redundant Goods Shed was demolished to make way for a new footbridge. The line from Paddington to Wales has been scheduled to be electrified and the old footbridge does not have enough clearance for the electric wires to be hung underneath.

The new Footbridge was opened in early December 2013 and the old footbridge demolished the following week. The footbridge does not have lifts so disabled people still have to climb the stairs to the platforms in normal use.

Services

Tilehurst station is served by stopping services run by Great Western Railway between Reading and Oxford (or in a few cases onward to Banbury). Most of these services start or continue as semi-fast services between Reading and London Paddington, and run twice per hour throughout most of the day, but only hourly on Sundays. Typical journey times are about 5 minutes to Reading, 35 minutes to Oxford, and just under one hour to Paddington.

In literature

The railway at Tilehurst was mentioned in less than glowing terms by Jerome K. Jerome in chapter 16 of Three Men in a Boat: "The river becomes very lovely from a little above Reading. The railway rather spoils it near Tilehurst, but from Mapledurham up to Streatley it is glorious."

References

Tilehurst railway station Wikipedia