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Not What You Meant?  There are 18 definitions for Piccadilly.  Also try: Piccadilly station.

Manchester Piccadilly station

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Manchester Piccadilly
The very modern approach to Manchester Piccadilly station
Location
Place Manchester City Centre
Local authority City of Manchester
Coordinates53°28′37″N 2°13′48″W / 53.477, -2.230Coordinates: 53°28′37″N 2°13′48″W / 53.477, -2.230
Operations
Station code MAN
Managed by Network Rail
Platforms in use 14
Live departures and station information from National Rail
Annual Passenger Usage
2004/05 * 18.958 million
2005/06 * 21.230 million
Passenger Transport Executive
PTE Greater Manchester
Zone City (D)
History
Key dates Opened 1842
National Rail - UK railway stations

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z  

* Annual passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Manchester Piccadilly from Office of Rail Regulation statistics.
Portal:Manchester Piccadilly station
UK Railways Portal
Interior shot of the station with the Victorian trainshed.
Interior shot of the station with the Victorian trainshed.
The station concourse; platforms at this terminus station are behind a glass screen.
The station concourse; platforms at this terminus station are behind a glass screen.
The station side-wall showing the elevation of the platforms, which are on a level with the brown brickwork
The station side-wall showing the elevation of the platforms, which are on a level with the brown brickwork
Railways in Manchester
leer leer leer LUECKE leer
Lines to Southport and Preston
leer leer LUECKE STR leer
Manchester to Liverpool Line
leer leer STR BHF leer
Salford Crescent
leer leer ABZrg ABZrf leer
leer leer STR BHF leer
Salford Central
leer STRrg xABZdf ABZlg leer
leer STR exKBFe STR leer
Liverpool Road
leer eABZlf exBHFl STR leer
Central
LUECKE STR leer STR leer
Manchester to Liverpool Line
ABZlg STR leer STR leer
Mid-Cheshire Line
STRlf ABZlg leer STR leer
leer HST leer STR leer
Deansgate
leer STR leer eBHF leer
Exchange
leer BHF leer STR leer
Oxford Road
leer STR leer BHF leer
Victoria
leer CPICl CPICra STR leer
Piccadilly
exKBFa ABZrg STRrf STR leer
Mayfield
exSTRlf eABZlg leer ABZlf STRlg
STRrg ABZrf STRrg ABZrf STR
STR HST STR ABZrg STRrf
Ardwick
LUECKE ABZrg ABZrd STR leer
WCML and lines
LUECKE STR STR STR leer
To Crewe and Stafford
leer HST STR STR leer
Ashburys
STRrg ABZrf STR LUECKE leer
Caldervale Line and Oldham Loop
LUECKE STR STR leer leer
Hope Valley Line
leer STR LUECKE leer leer
Huddersfield Line
leer LUECKE leer leer leer
Huddersfield Line and Glossop Line
A Virgin Trains Pendolino awaiting departure to London
A Virgin Trains Pendolino awaiting departure to London

Manchester Piccadilly station, known locally as just Piccadilly, is the principal railway station of Manchester in England, and lies on the Manchester loop of the West Coast Main Line. It serves intercity routes to London Euston, Birmingham New Street, Cardiff Central and the south, Glasgow Central, and routes throughout the north of England. Operated by Network Rail, it is the largest and busiest of the five city centre railway stations in Central Manchester/Salford, the others being Manchester Victoria, Salford Central, Deansgate and Manchester Oxford Road. It is the fourth busiest major station in the United Kingdom outside London for footfall (visitor numbers),[1] and the busiest in England outside London for passenger usage (Glasgow Central, Scotland is busier).[2] It is one of 17 British railway stations managed by Network Rail. Manchester Piccadilly has the highest customer satisfaction level of any other UK station with 92% of passengers satisfied with the station (national average was 60%).[3]

Contents

History

The station was originally opened on 8 May 1842 and was initially known as Store Street station and as Bank Top station. It was the terminus of the Manchester and Birmingham Railway, who shared it from August 1844 with the Sheffield, Ashton-under-Lyne and Manchester Railway. It was renamed London Road station in 1847, around the time the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway was formed (later to become the Great Central Railway). The Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway (MSJAR) opened its line from Manchester Oxford Road station to London Road on 1 August 1849 and built its own platforms adjacent to the main part of the station. These platforms were from then on referred to as the MSJAR or South Junction platforms. During the early 1880s the whole of the station was enlarged. The MSJAR platforms and the bridge over Fairfield Street were demolished and the new island platform, on new girder bridges, was opened on 16 May 1882. During the first two decades of the 20th century, London Road station was served by the London & North Western Railway, the Great Central Railway and through running powers, the North Staffordshire Railway. Following the 1923 railway grouping, the station was served by the London, Midland and Scottish Railway and the London and North Eastern Railway. Even after nationalisation in 1948, London Road station was operated as two independent sides, separated by formidable iron railings. On one side was the London Midland Region of British Railways; on the other was the Eastern Region. In 1910 a second nearby terminus, Mayfield station, was opened to cope with the huge volume of passengers. It was closed generally to passenger trains by 1952 but remained in use until 1960 chiefly for one specific passenger train, the Pines Express from Bournemouth to Manchester. It reopened as a parcels depot in 1970 but closed again. The long-disused building is visible across Fairfield Street from platforms 13 and 14. London Road station was renamed to its present name of Manchester Piccadilly when it was rebuilt and reopened on 12 September 1960 for the new London Midland Region electric train services to London. The MSJAR platforms and the bridges over Fairfield Street were replaced again at this time. The island platforms were built on top of a new pre-stressed concrete slab bridge with cantilevered sides for the tracks. The MSJAR platforms were further rebuilt and lengthened in 1988 in connection with the opening of the Windsor Link. The glass roof over the terminal platforms was completely replaced in the late 1990s. The train shed is a Grade II listed building. In 2001-2002, as part of preparations for the 2002 Commonwealth Games the remainder of the station was rebuilt, to designs by BDP, greatly increasing the size of the station concourse and improving access for road traffic. The station undercroft (two levels below the main rail platforms) has been converted to provide two platforms for the Manchester Metrolink tram system, which opened in 1992.

Description

National Rail station

The terminal part of the station comprises twelve platforms, while the busiest part of the station comprises platforms 13 and 14, the former MSJAR platforms, which are now used by through services via Manchester Oxford Road to Llandudno, Liverpool, North-Western England, Glasgow and Edinburgh, including through services from Manchester Airport.

Facilities

At basement level is the Fairfield Street entrance, serving the car park and taxi rank, and the Manchester Metrolink station. Above this, at track level, is a large modern concourse into which the main entrance from Piccadilly Approach feeds, including ticket offices, information points, seating, modern timetables, public toilets, shops (including, but not limited to, Sainsbury's, WH Smiths, HMV and Thorntons) and food/drink outlets (including, but not limited to, Millies Cookies, The Upper Crust, Burger King and Starbucks) above this is a second level of food outlets (including KFC) and bars. as well as the Virgin Trains First Class Lounge. On the main concourse, glass doors within a large glass wall lead to platforms 1 to 12 in the main trainshed. A travelator leads to the upper concourse linked by footbridge, steps and lift to platforms 13 and 14. This island lounge contains a WH Smiths and Costa Coffee bar, as well as customer toilets and a 'departure lounge' with seating. There are also vending machines and two waiting areas/snack bars on platforms 13/14. Manchester Piccadilly is fully accessible for disabled people, including (as well as static stairs), escalators and lifts to all levels, wide access doors and gates, Braille, and hearing loops throughout, as well as disabled toilet facilities. Manchester Piccadilly handles approximately 1,000 train movements daily.

Manchester Metrolink station

Manchester Piccadilly station is currently the terminus for Manchester Metrolink services to Bury, Altrincham, and Eccles. The Metrolink station, situated underneath the mainline station, is one of eight serving Manchester City Centre, within the system's City Zone. The station is the busiest on the Metrolink network. As currently (2007) structured, one platform is used to handle all arrivals before the tram travels empty into the tunnel below the mainline station and then reverses direction to arrive at the departure platform; in earlier years one platform was used to handle all arrivals from Altrincham/departures to Bury, and the other platform was used for arrivals from Bury/departures to Altrincham and all services to/from Eccles, with a crossover built just outside the station to allow access to and from either platform.

Services

Manchester Piccadilly is currently served by six train operating companies. Arriva Trains Wales provide hourly services to both North and South Wales. North Wales services run via Chester and the North Wales Coast Line to destinations such as Llandudno and twice a day to Holyhead. South Wales services run via Shrewsbury and the Welsh Marches Line to Cardiff Central, most of which continue onto Carmarthen or Milford Haven. Class 175 Coradia units operate almost all services out of Manchester to North and South Wales, with Class 158 units occasionally substituting. CrossCountry provide a half hourly service to Birmingham New Street. An hourly service continues beyond Birmingham to Reading, which is extended further to several locations

There is also a 2 hourly service to Plymouth, with two services continuing onto Penzance, and a summer service beyond Plymouth to Newquay, usually on a hired High Speed Train. East Midlands Trains provide an hourly service from Liverpool Lime Street via Piccadilly to Sheffield and Nottingham, with most trains continuing to Norwich. Class 170 Turbostar units and Class 158 Express units are used for these services. First Transpennine Express operate services on three routes. The North TransPennine route sees a quarter-hourly service to Leeds via Huddersfield, with one train per hour continuing to each of Hull, Newcastle, Middlesbrough and Scarborough. In the opposite direction, there is one train per hour to each of Liverpool Lime Street and Manchester Airport. There is also a two-hourly service to Leeds and York operating after midnight, providing a service 24 hours a day. The South TransPennine route runs from Manchester Airport via Piccadilly to Sheffield and Cleethorpes, operating every hour. Finally, the TransPennine North West services run from Manchester Airport via Piccadilly to Preston via Bolton and Chorley every half hour, with trains continuing to Blackpool North every hour, and each of Barrow-in-Furness and Windermere every two hours, as well as continuing to Edinburgh Waverley and Glasgow Central, some of which are combined with services to Windermere, Blackpool North and Barrow-in-Furness. Class 185 Desiro units now work the majority of services, replacing the class 158s on the North and South services, and the class 175s on the North West services. Most of the Manchester-Hull services are operated by Class 170 Turbostar units. Northern Rail provide the majority of local train services to stations in the Manchester area, primarily to destinations to the south and east of the city. These include

Services are also operated to the north and west of the city. These include

Virgin Trains run a half hourly service to London Euston via Stoke-on-Trent, as part of their West Coast franchise. These services are operated using Pendolino trains.

Pendolino and Voyager, Virgin Trains
Pendolino and Voyager, Virgin Trains

Virgin also operate 1 service northwards to Glasgow, an early morning departure to Glasgow, and a late evening return from Glasgow, both of which call at Carstairs.

  Preceding station     Manchester Metrolink     Following station  
toward Bury
Bury-Altrincham line Terminus
Terminus Bury-Altrincham line
toward Altrincham
Eccles line
toward Eccles
National Rail
Stockport   Arriva Trains Wales
Welsh Marches Line
  Terminus
Terminus   Arriva Trains Wales
Chester to Manchester Line
  Manchester
Oxford Road
Stockport   CrossCountry
Cross-Country Route
  Terminus
Stockport   East Midlands Trains
Liverpool-Norwich
  Manchester
Oxford Road
Heald Green   First TransPennine Express
TransPennine North West
  Manchester
Oxford Road
Manchester
Oxford Road
or
Manchester Airport
  First TransPennine Express
North TransPennine
  Stalybridge
Stockport   Northern Rail
Mid-Cheshire Line
Mondays-Saturdays only
  Terminus
Levenshulme   Northern Rail
Stafford to Manchester Line
  Manchester
Oxford Road
Levenshulme   Northern Rail
Crewe to Manchester Line
  Terminus
Levenshulme   Northern Rail
Buxton Line
  Terminus
Terminus   Northern Rail
Liverpool-Manchester Line
  Manchester
Oxford Road
Manchester Airport   Northern Rail
Liverpool-Manchester Airport Line
 
Terminus   Northern Rail
Manchester-Preston Line
  Manchester
Oxford Road
  Northern Rail
Styal Line and to Manchester Airport
  Mauldeth Road
Ardwick or
Stockport
  Northern Rail
Hope Valley Line
  Terminus
Ardwick   Northern Rail
Manchester-Glossop Line
 
Stockport   Virgin Trains
London - Manchester
  Terminus
Terminus   Virgin Trains
Manchester - Edinburgh
  Bolton

References

  1. ^ Managed Stations Footfall. Network Rail (2004/05). Retrieved on 2007-07-15.
  2. ^ Station Usage 2005-2006 (xls). Office of Rail Regulation station usage statistics. Retrieved on 2007-05-22.
  3. ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/manchester/6927406.stm

Unofficial Train timetable for Manchester Piccadilly

External links


Buildings and Structures in Manchester, England

Highrise (In height order): Piccadilly Tower^ | Beetham Tower | Albany Crown Tower^ | CIS Tower | City Tower | Manchester Arndale Tower | Manchester Town Hall | Manchester Civil Justice Centre | North Tower | Portland Tower | Great Northern Tower | Palace Hotel | B of the Bang Notable lowrise: Affleck's Palace | Urbis | Spinningfield Business District | The Green Building | Palace Theatre | London Road Fire Station | Manchester Central Library | Manchester Central Station | Deansgate railway station | Manchester Opera House |