52°24′53″N 1°47′20″W / 52.41472°N 1.78889°W
This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2017) |
General information | |||||
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Location | Solihull, Metropolitan Borough of Solihull England | ||||
Grid reference | SP144796 | ||||
Managed by | Chiltern Railways | ||||
Transit authority | Transport for West Midlands | ||||
Platforms | 2 | ||||
Other information | |||||
Station code | SOL | ||||
Fare zone | 4 | ||||
Classification | DfT category D | ||||
History | |||||
Opened | 1852 | ||||
Passengers | |||||
2019/20 | 2.033 million | ||||
2020/21 | 0.408 million | ||||
2021/22 | 1.038 million | ||||
2022/23 | 1.341 million | ||||
2023/24 | 1.581 million | ||||
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Solihull railway station serves the market town of Solihull in the West Midlands of England. The station is served by West Midlands Trains and Chiltern Railways.
The station booking office is located in a ground level building at the front of the station, from here there is a subway where footsteps and a lift lead up to the island platform. Services are operated by Chiltern Railways to London Marylebone via High Wycombe, West Midlands Trains to Dorridge, with some services extending to Leamington Spa in the evening peak. The vast majority of Chiltern Railways services terminate at Birmingham Snow Hill or Birmingham Moor Street, with extensions to Stourbridge Junction at peak times. West Midlands Trains operate services to Stourbridge Junction on a 30-minute frequency.
History
editThe original Solihull station was opened in 1852, by the Great Western Railway on their London Paddington to Birmingham and Birkenhead main line. In the early 1930s, the line between Olton and Lapworth was quadrupled, and the station was rebuilt slightly south of the original. The rebuilt station had two island platforms.[1]
The line and station underwent significant rationalisation in the 1960s and 70s. One island platform was taken out of use when the line was reduced back to double track, the overgrown remains of the disused platform can still be seen. The station also lost its original canopies, and platform buildings, being reduced to a single platform building. Platform canopies were constructed once again in 2007-08, but not to the former GWR scale.
Until 1967 the former GWR London Paddington - Birkenhead Woodside train services passed through the station but few stopped there; these services ceased with the electrification of the former LMS line from London Euston to Birmingham New Street.
Recent investment by Chiltern Railways has seen rail times into London reduced to under 90 minutes - trains now travel along the line at 100 miles per hour (160 km/h).[2] Some recent renovations under the auspices of Chiltern Railways has seen the replacement of the station signage with gilt signage inspired by that used by the Great Western Railway.
Facilities
editThe ticket office is staffed throughout the day, seven days per week whilst a self-service ticket machine is also provided on the concourse (this can be used to collect pre-paid tickets). A coffee shop, waiting room and toilets are located at platform level, with the platform and subway connected by stairs and lift (the station is therefore fully accessible for disabled passengers). Train running information is offered via a help point, CIS screens, automated announcements and timetable posters.[3]
Most bus services to Solihull town centre terminate or call at stops outside the station building.
Services
editWest Midlands Trains run local services every 30 minutes as part of the Snow Hill lines:[4][5]
The off-peak service pattern Mondays to Saturdays is as follows:
- 2 trains per hour westbound to Birmingham Snow Hill, continuing to Worcester Foregate Street and/or Worcester Shrub Hill via Smethwick Galton Bridge, Stourbridge Junction, Kidderminster and Droitwich Spa
- 2 trains per hour eastbound to Dorridge via Widney Manor, one of which continues to Stratford-upon-Avon. Two evening services extend to Leamington Spa via Warwick.
On Sundays, there is an hourly service between Dorridge & Stourbridge Junction.
Chiltern run half-hourly services between Birmingham and London on the Chiltern Main Line. Service patterns Mondays to Saturdays off-peak are as follows:
- 2 trains per hour to either Birmingham Moor Street or Birmingham Snow Hill. 2 or 3 trains in the evening peak extend to Stourbridge Junction. The peak hour extensions ran to/from Kidderminster from September 2002 to May 2023.[7][8][9][10]
- 2 trains per hour to London Marylebone via Leamington Spa and Banbury
- A two-hourly service to Leamington Spa via Lapworth and Warwick operates on weekdays only
Sunday Chiltern services are hourly off-peak running between Moor Street and Marylebone, with additional services to London in the morning peak and two additional services in the evening terminating at Stourbridge Junction.
References
edit- ^ "Warwickshire Railways - Solihull station"
- ^ "Chiltern Railways bosses expect to poach customers for Birmingham to London route". Birmingham Mail. 2 March 2011. Retrieved 11 May 2016.
- ^ Solihull station facilities National Rail Enquiries
- ^ "Train timetables and schedules | Solihull". West Midlands Railway.
- ^ "Train times | Snow Hill Lines - Worcester to Birmingham Snow Hill, Solihull and Stratford upon Avon | 21 May until 9 December 2023". West Midlands Railway.
- ^ "Timetable - 21 May 2023 - December 2023: London to High Wycombe, Bicester, Oxford, Banbury, Leamington Spa, Stratford-upon-Avon and Birmingham". Chiltern Railways.
- ^ MP at launch of London train Worcester News 30 September 2002
- ^ Passengers advised new train timetables imminent BBC News 5 May 2023
- ^ Balancing enhancements with efficiency Modern Railways issue 896 May 2023 page 63
- ^ Chiltern re-times trains to retain extra midweek peak capacity Rail issue 983 17 May 2023 page 10
External links
edit- Train times and station information for Solihull railway station from National Rail
- Rail Around Birmingham and the West Midlands: Solihull station
- Warwickshire Railways: Solihull station - Old photographs.