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Edinburgh Waverley railway station

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Image:EdinburghWav.gif Edinburgh Waverley
Edinburgh Waverley railway station viewed from the Scott Monument
Location
Place Edinburgh
Local authority City of Edinburgh
Operations
Managed by Network Rail
Platforms in use 14
Annual entry/exit 14.219 million *
History
Key dates Opened 1868
National Rail - UK railway stations

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T
U V W X Y Z  

* based on sales of tickets in 2004/05 financial year which end or originate at Edinburgh Waverley. Disclaimer (PDF)

Waverley Station is the main railway station in the Scottish capital Edinburgh. Covering an area of over 25 acres (101,000 m²) in the centre of the city, it is the second largest mainline railway station in the United Kingdom—the largest being Waterloo station in London. It is the northern terminus of the East Coast Main Line.

The station is located in a steep, narrow valley between the city's mediaeval Old Town and the 19th century New Town. Princes Street, the city's premier shopping street, runs along one side of the station. The valley is bridged by the 1897 North Bridge (a three-span iron and steel bridge, which passes high above the station's eastern section) and Waverley Bridge (which, by means of ramps, affords one of the main entrances to the station). This valley was formerly filled by a freshwater loch, the Nor Loch, but this was drained in the early 19th century. James Scott drew pictures of it in his free time.

Trains leave Waverley in two directions:

Contents

[edit] History

With the growth of the city, and the construction of the "scientifically designed" New Town to the north, the Nor'Loch became a fetid open sewer, something at odds with the city's modern Scottish Enlightenment aspirations. Works were undertaken to drain the loch and properly direct the city's sewerage, and by 1820 the loch was largely dry and the land was available for development. Much was used to build Princes Street Gardens, an extensive landscaped park. With the explosion of railway travel in Britain underway, three railway companies each built stations near one another in the valley, opening over the course of the 1840s. The collective name "Waverley", after the Waverley novels by Sir Walter Scott, was used for the three from around 1854. The Scott Monument stands in Princes Street Gardens near to the entrance to Waverley Station. In 1868 the North British Railway company acquired the stations of its rivals, demolished all three, and built the present Victorian station. Waverley has been in continual use since, under the auspices of the North British, later LNER, British Rail, Railtrack and latterly Network Rail. Waverley is now the principal mainline station in Edinburgh, following the closure of Princes Street Station in 1965.

[edit] Current and future uses of the station

The elaborate ceiling of the ticket hall, extensively restored in 2003

As at other large railway stations of the Victorian and Edwardian eras, the railway company constructed a grand station hotel beside their station. The North British Hotel, situated adjacent to the station on Princes Street, opened in 1902. In 1983 British Rail sold it to the Forte hotel group. In 1988 Forte closed the hotel for a year to extensively remodel and update what had become something of a faded jewel. When it reopened it was rechristened The Balmoral Hotel (in what has proved to be an astute marketing move, despite the hotel being 115 miles from Balmoral Castle). It enjoys commanding views over central Edinburgh, and is one of the most luxurious (and expensive) hotels in the UK.

The station's large size and the unusual topography of its surroundings mean that it contains a large amount of valuable, centrally located land. The station's successive owners, British Rail, Railtrack and its current owner Network Rail have been criticised for underutilising the valuable city-centre spaces available within. Princes Mall (formerly the Waverley Shopping Centre), which occupies a column of space nestling between Waverley Station, Waverley Bridge, and Princes Street, opened in 1985.

Plans have been drawn up for the latest, long-awaited redevelopment of the station. This will improve facilities and provide more through platforms for trains passing from the East Coast Main Line to the rest of the Scottish network.

[edit] External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

[edit] Services

West Coast Main Line
Principal stations
(from south to north)

London Euston
Watford Junction
Milton Keynes Central
Rugby (for Birmingham Loop)
Nuneaton
Tamworth
Lichfield Trent Valley
Stafford
Crewe then

Manchester Piccadilly or
Liverpool Lime Street

Warrington Bank Quay
Wigan North Western
Preston
Lancaster
Oxenholme Lake District
Penrith North Lakes
Carlisle
Lockerbie
Carstairs Junction then
Motherwell and
Glasgow Central or
Haymarketand
Edinburgh Waverley (for East Coast Main Line)

East Coast Main Line
Principal stations (from south to north)

London King's Cross
Stevenage
Peterborough
Grantham
Newark North Gate
Retford
Doncaster
>Wakefield Westgate
>Leeds
York
Northallerton
Darlington
Durham
Newcastle upon Tyne
Morpeth
Alnmouth
Berwick-upon-Tweed
Dunbar
Edinburgh Waverley

Preceding station National Rail Following station
Dunbar   GNER
East Coast Main Line
  Haymarket
Dunbar   Virgin Trains
Virgin Cross Country
  Haymarket
Terminus   Virgin Trains
West Coast Main Line
  Haymarket
Terminus   First ScotRail
Glasgow-Edinburgh via Falkirk line
  Haymarket
Terminus   First ScotRail

 Edinburgh-Bathgate line 

  Haymarket
Brunstane   First ScotRail
<p style="background:#FC9338"> Edinburgh Crossrail 
  Haymarket
Terminus   First ScotRail
<p style="background:#F491A8"> Edinburgh–Dunblane Line 
  Haymarket
Terminus   First ScotRail
<p style="background:#5A95E4"> Fife Circle Line 
  Haymarket
Terminus   First ScotRail
<p style="background:#ffe02b"> Shotts Line 
  Haymarket
Musselburgh   First ScotRail
<p style="background:#4EAB77"> North Berwick Line 
  Terminus
Carstairs   First ScotRail
West Coast Main Line
Lowland Caledonian Sleeper
  Terminus
Preston   First ScotRail
West Coast Main Line
Highland Caledonian Sleeper
(Aberdeen)
  Inverkeithing
  First ScotRail
West Coast Main Line
Highland Caledonian Sleeper
(Inverness)
  Falkirk Grahamston
  First ScotRail
West Coast Main Line
Highland Caledonian Sleeper
(The Deerstalker)
  Westerton
Railway stations in Edinburgh
Commuter lines:  Bathgate Crossrail Dunblane Fife Circle North Berwick Shotts

Stations: BrunstaneCurriehillDalmenyEdinburgh ParkHaymarketKingsknoweNewcraighallSlatefordSouth GyleWaverleyWester Hailes

Transport in Edinburgh
UK railway stations: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
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Major UK railway stations
Managed by Network Rail: Birmingham New StreetEdinburgh WaverleyGatwick AirportGlasgow CentralLeeds CityLiverpool Lime StreetManchester Piccadilly
Managed by train operator: AberdeenBelfast CentralBirmingham Snow HillBrightonBristol Temple MeadsCardiff CentralCrewe  DerbyDoncasterGlasgow Queen StreetHullManchester VictoriaNewcastle CentralNottinghamReadingSheffieldYork
Railway stations of London: Central area | Greater London
Managed by Network Rail: Cannon StreetCharing CrossEustonFenchurch StreetKing's CrossLiverpool StreetLondon BridgePaddingtonVictoriaWaterloo
Managed by train operator: BlackfriarsMaryleboneMoorgateSt Pancras
Buildings and Structures in Edinburgh Image:Edinburgh-coa.png
Public Buildings: Bute House | Edinburgh Royal Infirmary | Edinburgh Waverley Railway Station | New College | Old College | Parliament House | Scottish Parliament Building | St Andrew's House

Churches and Cathedrals: Duddingston Kirk | Greyfriars Kirk | Kirk of the Canongate | St Andrew's and St George's Church | St Mary's Cathedral | St Giles' Cathedral | Tron Kirk

Visitor Attractions: Balmoral Hotel | City Observatory, Edinburgh | Dean Gallery | Dugald Stewart Monument | Edinburgh Castle | Edinburgh International Conference Centre | Edinburgh Vaults | Edinburgh Zoo | Greyfriars Bobby | John Knox House | Museum of Scotland | National Gallery of Scotland | National Library of Scotland | National Monument | Ocean Terminal | Our Dynamic Earth | Palace of Holyroodhouse | Royal Museum | Royal Observatory | Royal Scottish Academy Building | Scott Monument | Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art | Scottish National Portrait Gallery |

Sports: Murrayfield Ice Rink | Murrayfield Stadium | Tynecastle Stadium | Easter Road

Performing arts: Edinburgh Festival Theatre | The Hub | Usher Hall

de:Bahnhof Edinburgh Waverley

pl:Edynburg Waverley

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