Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Wrexham Central railway station

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Place
  
Wrexham

Grid reference
  
SJ333502

Managed by
  
Arriva Trains Wales

Opened
  
1887

Pre-grouping
  
Great Central Railway

2 November 1895
  
Route to Ellesmere opened

Local authority
  
Wrexham

Station code
  
WXC

DfT category
  
F1

Number of platforms
  
1

1 November 1887
  
Original station opened

Wrexham Central railway station

Address
  
Wrexham LL13 7LW, United Kingdom

Post-grouping
  
London and North Eastern Railway

Similar
  
Wrexham General railway st, Bidston railway station, Shotton railway station, Gwersyllt railway station, Hawarden Bridge railway st

Wrexham Central railway station is the smaller of two railway stations serving the central area of Wrexham in Wales, the other being Wrexham General. The platform can accommodate a three car diesel train, but has room for platform extension. It is the southern terminus of the Borderlands Line, also known as the Wrexham-Bidston line, which links north-east Wales to Merseyside.

Contents

The current station was constructed in 1998 inside a large shopping centre in Wrexham town centre known as Island Green. It replaced the first Central station, opened on 1 November 1887, which was a large station located 270 yards (250 metres) to the east. This station closed on 23 November 1998 and has been replaced by another large shopping centre.

The original station

The Wrexham, Mold and Connah's Quay Railway (WMCQ) had opened between Wrexham Exchange and Buckley (old station) on 1 May 1866. A southern extension to a station better situated for the centre of Wrexham was authorised on 18 August 1882; work did not begin until January 1887, and it was opened on 1 November the same year. Wrexham Central was a large station, with a marshalling yard and goods depot accompanying it. The station clock was provided and maintained free of charge by a local watchmaker named Pierce. It was a terminus for several years until the Wrexham and Ellesmere Railway (W&ER) was opened on 2 November 1895. The W&ER was built with financial assistance of the WMCQ and the Cambrian Railways, and operated by the latter, which it joined at Ellesmere.

The line of the former W&ER was closed to passengers on 10 September 1962, and Wrexham Central almost met a similar fate (it was listed for closure in the Beeching Report of 1963). As Wrexham was undergoing population growth at the time and protests against the proposal were widespread, it was decided to retain it due to being conveniently close to the town centre. The station became unstaffed from 7 February 1972 and it was reduced to a single track station in August 1973, with a small concrete shelter and an adjacent stabling siding. Part of the old W&ER remained in use for freight as far as Avenbury Sidings until final closure in May 1981.

Freight and goods

The goods depot and marshalling yard were used until 7 December 1964, after which they were reduced to a large car park and railway club. The station and goods yard had a 56-lever signal box, which was used until 19 August 1973.

The present station

In 1998, a large shopping centre was to be built on the entire area, and the station was moved west by 400 yards (370 metres). The local rail users group tried to prevent this, but failed. They did however get a large station building constructed, compared to the prefabricated open concrete shelter it replaced, and the new station was opened on 23 November 1998. The line today sees Class 150 Sprinters with Class 153 Sprinters occasionally substituting. The line used to see Pacer 142 units, but these were stopped due to their ride quality on jointed track. One of the conditions the Rail Users group gave on the relocation was that if needed, space be left for future doubling of the track and a second platform, which was complied with.

There are possibilities that Wrexham Central may become electrified, as part of electrification of the entire Borderlands line. Network Rail mentioned this as a possible future development for the route in its 2007 Business Plan for the area, but further progress is dependent on a favourable business case being put forward and funding secured.

The station is unstaffed, however a self-service ticket machine is available on the platform, alongside a public payphone and self-help point in the waiting room. A PA system is installed, but is currently not in use. The station adjoins a pay-and-display car park within the Island Green shopping centre, however three free spaces are provided for railway passengers.

At privatisation, the station became managed by North Western Trains, later known as First North Western. A review in 2003 led to the station being briefly operated by Wales & Borders, before finally Arriva Trains Wales from late 2003 to present.

Services

The station has an hourly service to Shotton and Bidston on Monday to Saturday daytimes, dropping to two-hourly in the evenings and on bank holidays. Connections for Birkenhead North, Hamilton Square and Liverpool Lime Street are available at Bidston.

There is a limited service (five trains in total) on Sundays.

References

Wrexham Central railway station Wikipedia