Argyle Street railway station

This article is about a railway station in Scotland. For Argyle station in Chicago, see Argyle (CTA).
Argyle Street National Rail

Argyle Street railway station exterior, on Argyle Street
Location
Place Glasgow
Local authority Glasgow
Coordinates 55°51′25″N 4°15′04″W / 55.857°N 4.251°W / 55.857; -4.251Coordinates: 55°51′25″N 4°15′04″W / 55.857°N 4.251°W / 55.857; -4.251
Grid reference NS592649
Operations
Station code AGS
Managed by Abellio ScotRail
Owned by Network Rail
Number of platforms 2
Live arrivals/departures, station information and onward connections
from National Rail Enquiries
Annual rail passenger usage*
2010/11 Increase 0.784 million
2011/12 Increase 1.196 million
2012/13 Increase 1.337 million
2013/14 Increase 1.370 million
2014/15 Increase 1.438 million
Passenger Transport Executive
PTE SPT
History
Original company British Rail
5 November 1979 Opened[1]
National Rail – UK railway stations
* Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Argyle Street from Office of Rail and Road statistics. Methodology may vary year on year.
UK Railways portal

Argyle Street railway station is a station in the City Centre of Glasgow, Scotland, on the Argyle Line, which connects the North Clyde lines at Partick with Rutherglen in the south-east of the city. The station is located below the thoroughfare whose name it bears. It has a narrow and often crowded island platform. It serves the Argyle Street shopping precinct as well as the St Enoch Centre. Along with Dalmarnock and Anderston, No services call at this station on a Sunday before 10am or after 6pm

History

The Glasgow Central Railway was formed in 1888 to link the Clydesdale Junction Railway and Lanarkshire and Ayrshire Railway with the Lanarkshire and Dunbartonshire Railway. By the time it was opened between 1894 and 1897, the GCR had been taken over by the Caledonian Railway. Although there were three stations under Argyle Street - Anderston, Glasgow Central and Glasgow Cross, there was no station on the site of the current station.

The line closed in 1964, but it was re-opened by British Rail in 1979[1] and operated by the Scottish Region of British Railways by arrangement with the Greater Glasgow PTE. Although the Central Low Level station was re-opened, Glasgow Cross was not re-opened; instead the new Argyle Street station was constructed, midway between Glasgow Cross and Glasgow Central.

Station access

When the 1979 re-opening took place, a simple island platform was required, but footings of adjacent buildings and other physical constraints limited the available tunnel width for the new station. Moreover, the roadway above had not yet been pedestrianised, and street access and station building construction was not acceptable within the road limits. Accordingly, station building premises were constructed within the ordinary building line on the south side of the street; access to the platforms is via Argyle Street and Osborne Street into the ticket hall, then down an escalator into the station lower level, below track level. A passageway then leads under the westbound track and a second escalator leads up to the island platform which is located directly under Argyle street.

Lift access was not considered on the grounds of expense and the physical limits of the platform space.

During the 2006/7 escalator renewal work the only passenger access to the lower level (under platform) of the station was via the steep emergency exit steps.

Ticket barriers came into operation on 17 June 2011.

Disabled access

This station does not have any disabled access due to the narrowness of the island platform; this is the source of many complaints. Installation of lift access would require platform widening, which would in turn require widening of the tunnel, requiring massive alteration to the buildings adjacent.

Services

From 1979

Mondays to Saturdays

2014

On Monday to Saturdays, trains leave approximately every ten minutes, destined for Dalmuir, Milngavie, Partick, Yoker, Singer, Lanark, Larkhall, Hamilton Central, Whifflet and Motherwell. During peak hours, services to Cumbernauld via Coatbridge and Carstairs are also available.

On Sundays, no services call here before 10am or after 6pm so services on Sundays are Balloch-Motherwell, Milngavie-Motherwell or Lanark, and Partick-Larkhall.

2015

The basic service still runs every 10 minutes each way, but southbound trains now run onto the Whifflet Line rather than to Lanark following a major timetable recast. Likewise on Sundays the frequency remains the same but Balloch trains run either to Motherwell via Whifflet or to Larkhall (hourly to each).

Preceding station National Rail Following station
Bridgeton   Abellio ScotRail
Argyle Line
  Glasgow Central Low Level

Gallery

References

  1. 1 2 Butt (1995)

Sources

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