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Ardgay railway station

Coordinates: 57°52′54″N 4°21′44″W / 57.8816°N 4.3622°W / 57.8816; -4.3622
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Ardgay
General information
Other namesScottish Gaelic: Àird Ghaoithe[1]
LocationHighland
Coordinates57°52′54″N 4°21′44″W / 57.8816°N 4.3622°W / 57.8816; -4.3622
Managed byAbellio ScotRail
Platforms2
Other information
Station codeARD
History
Original companyInverness and Ross-shire Railway / Sutherland Railway
Pre-groupingHighland Railway
Post-groupingLMSR
Key dates
1 October 1864Opened as Bonar Bridge
2 May 1977Renamed as Ardgay

Ardgay railway station is a railway station serving the village of Ardgay and its neighbour Bonar Bridge in the Highland council area of Scotland. The station is on the Far North Line, 57 miles 70 chains (93.1 km) from Inverness, near Bonar Bridge, and has a passing loop 32 chains (640 m) long, flanked by two platforms. Platform 1 on the up (southbound) line can accommodate trains having ten coaches, but platform 2 on the down (northbound) line can only hold five.[3]

History

Opened on 1 October 1864 as Bonar Bridge by the Inverness and Aberdeen Junction Railway and designed by Joseph Mitchell,[4][2] it became the meeting point of the Sutherland Railway and the Inverness and Ross-shire Railway. The station joined the Highland Railway, later becoming part of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway during the Grouping of 1923; it then passed on to the Scottish Region of British Railways on nationalisation in 1948. It was renamed Ardgay on 2 May 1977.

When sectorisation was introduced by British Rail in the 1980s, the station was served by ScotRail until the privatisation of British Rail.

Today Ardgay is the termination point for some commuter services from Inverness. The southbound platform is twice the length of the northbound platform.

Services

Timetable changes in December 2008 increased the number of trains through Ardgay. On Mondays to Saturdays, there are seven trains a day southbound to Inverness and five a day northbound, four of which continue on to Wick (the other terminates here). On Sundays, there is one train in each direction.[5]

Preceding station National Rail National Rail Following station
Tain   Abellio ScotRail
Far North Line
  Culrain or Lairg
  Historical railways  
Mid Fearn Halt
Line open; Station closed
  Highland Railway
Left arrow Inverness and Ross-shire Railway
Sutherland Railway Right arrow
  Culrain
Line and Station open

References

  1. ^ Brailsford 2017, Gaelic/English Station Index.
  2. ^ a b "ARDGAY RAILWAY STATION AND FOOTBRIDGE". Historic Scotland. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
  3. ^ Brailsford 2017, map 20A.
  4. ^ "Inverness and Aberdeen Junction". London Evening Standard. England. 6 October 1864. Retrieved 20 July 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  5. ^ Table 239 National Rail timetable, May 2016

Sources