Botanic railway station
General information | |
---|---|
Location | Belfast Northern Ireland |
Coordinates | 54°35′18″N 5°55′58″W / 54.5884°N 5.9328°W |
Owned by | NI Railways |
Operated by | NI Railways |
Platforms | 2 |
Tracks | 2 |
Construction | |
Structure type | At-grade |
Key dates | |
1976 | Opened |
2008 | Refurbished |
Botanic railway station serves the Botanic area in south Belfast, Northern Ireland and students for Queen's University Belfast; it is also near Shaftesbury Square which is along Botanic Avenue. It is named after the nearby Belfast Botanic Gardens. It is one of the four stations located in the city centre, the others being City Hospital, Great Victoria Street, and Lanyon Place.
The station opened on 26 April 1976 and is very close to City Hospital Station[1]
Passengers can alight here for the Ulster Museum, which is situated on the edge of Botanic Gardens.
Service
On Mondays to Saturdays, there is a half-hourly service towards Lanyon Place and Bangor, or Great Victoria Street and Portadown on Bangor/Portadown Line services, with extra trains at peak times.
There is also a half-hourly Larne Line service to Great Victoria Street in one direction, or Whitehead and Larne Harbour in the other, with extra services to Carrickfergus at peak times.
Londonderry Line services call hourly at Botanic, operating to Great Victoria Street in one direction, and Londonderry Waterside or Coleraine in the other.
On Sundays, the Bangor, Portadown and Larne Line services all reduce to hourly operation. Derry Line services reduce to two-hourly operation.
The timetable allows 3 minutes for the trains to travel between Lanyon Place and Botanic.
At one point, the cross border Enterprise service to Dublin Connolly served Botanic, but no longer stops at the station.
Template:Rail line four routesBotanic Gardens
The Botanic Gardens are a short walk away from the station.
References
- ^ Northern Ireland Railways Public Timetable effective April 26, 1976
External links
- Media related to Botanic railway station at Wikimedia Commons