Cork Suburban Rail
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The Cork Suburban Rail (Template:Lang-ga) network serves areas in and around Cork city in Ireland.
There has been a suburban rail system in Cork since the middle of the 19th century; however, it was subject to line closures in the 20th century. The city also had a tram network - a short-lived horse-tram service in the 1870s and an electric tram system between 1898 and 1931.
The Cork Suburban Rail network operates on three lines, and is served by 10 stations.
In 2018, there were 3.46 million passenger journeys on the Cork to Dublin line (up 10% from 2017), 908,000 on the Cork to Cobh line, and 437,000 on the Cork-Midleton line (up 5.8%).[1]
Routes
Cork to Mallow
Three services run from Cork Kent to Mallow.
Dedicated commuter services using 2600 class railcars supplement stops at Mallow and Cork by 22000 class railcar operated services from Cork to Tralee and Mark 4 locomotive hauled coach and 22000 class railcar services from Cork to Dublin Heuston.[citation needed]
Mallow is served by seven commuter trains, three intercity trains from Cork to Tralee, and 14 intercity trains from Cork to Heuston per day.[citation needed] A single weekday service, the 06:15 Cork-Heuston express, does not stop at Mallow.
Cork to Cobh
Services run from Cork Kent to Little Island, Glounthaune, Fota, Carrigaloe, Rushbrooke, Cobh. The Cork-Cobh journey takes 24 minutes, stopping at all stations. Following an upgrade in July 2022, trains run every 30 minutes.[2]
The service is normally provided by two-coach 2600 Class diesel railcar sets, although trains of two sets are often used when to service the arrival of international cruise liners in Cobh. Fota station is especially busy during summer months, as the station serves visitors to Fota Wildlife Park.
Cork to Midleton
Services run from Cork Kent to Little Island, Glounthaune, Carrigtwohill and Midleton. The journey time between Cork and Midleton is 23 minutes. Following an upgrade in July 2022, trains run every 30 minutes. In combination with services to Cobh, trains call at Little Island and Glounthaune every 15 minutes.[2]
This project was funded under the Irish Government's Transport 21 investment programme and opened on 31 July 2009. It involved the provision of a 10 km (6.25 miles) single track railway to Midleton with a passing loop at Carrigtwohill, new bridges to replace level crossings, improving existing bridges, new signalling systems and the reopening of Carrigtwohill and Midleton stations.
The former Cork-Youghal rail line east of Glounthaune was closed to scheduled rail traffic in the mid 1970s. The line to Youghal railway station had irregular freight and "special" passenger train traffic up until 1988 when it was fully closed and became derelict. After calls and political pressure for its re-opening, it was proposed under Transport 21 to renew the line as far as Midleton. After numerous delays, construction finally began in early 2008, and it opened in July 2009.[3] The section from Midleton to Youghal is to become a public greenway.[citation needed]
Proposals
The "Cork Metropolitan Area Transport Strategy 2040", published in 2019, proposed the electrification of the suburban rail and the addition of new stations on the Cork-Cobh line at Tivoli, Dunkettle, Ballynoe, Carrigtwohill West and Water Rock, and at Blarney, Monard, and Blackpool on the Mallow line.[4] A proposal to reopen the Tivoli station (prompted by the relocation of the Port of Cork from Tivoli to Ringaskiddy) was also included in a planned 2019 urban regeneration scheme.[5]
See also
- Cork City Railways
- Belfast Suburban Rail
- Dublin Suburban Rail
- Limerick Suburban Rail
- Galway Suburban Rail
- Rail transport in Ireland
References
- ^ Bermingham, Mary (4 February 2019). "Cork-Dublin Train Passenger Journeys Highest on record in 2018". thecork.ie. Retrieved 5 August 2020.
- ^ a b McAuley, Eimer (17 July 2022). "East Cork railway lines to reopen with twice as many weekday trains". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 12 September 2022.
- ^ O'Brien, Ciara (30 July 2009). "Cork-Midleton rail line to open". Irish Times. Archived from the original on 3 September 2012.
- ^ McCárthaigh, Seán (13 May 2019). "Light rail system part of €3.5bn Cork transport plan". irishexaminer.com. Irish Examiner. Retrieved 5 August 2020.
- ^ Burke, Roisín (22 April 2019). "Updated designs for Tivoli's redevelopment are considered in City Hall". echolive.ie. The Echo. Retrieved 5 August 2020.