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Bangor railway station is a railway station in Bangor, Gwynedd. The station, which is east of Holyhead, is the last mainland station on the North Wales Coast line between to . It is the busiest in terms of passenger numbers in North Wales.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://orr.gov.uk/__data/assets/excel_doc/0003/10785/Station-Usage-2012-13_Final_xls.xls )〕 ==History== The station, which cost £6,960 to build (about £21million in 2015), was opened on 1 May 1848 by the Chester and Holyhead Railway. Lying between two tunnels, the station was progressively expanded into a junction station as a number of branch lines were opened: *From to (Bangor and Carnarvon Railway) (1848) *From to (Anglesey Central Railway) (1866) *From to Red Wharf Bay and (Red Wharf Bay branch line) (1909) *To Bethesda (Bethesda Branch) (1884) The station was renamed twice under British Railways: originally ''Bangor'', it became ''Bangor (Caerns)''; then ''Bangor (Gwynedd)''. In some timetables it was shown as ''Bangor for Beaumaris''.〔 The present building on platform 1 was the main building, with a forecourt on the site of the present car park. Between 1924 and 1927 an additional loop line and platform were constructed on the site of the forecourt with a new frontage facing Deiniol Road. Ultimately there were four platforms and a small bay platform to serve the main line and branch lines. By the 1950s there were an extensive goods yard, a five-road engine shed (on the site of the steel mill), a turntable, three-road goods shed, two signal boxes, an extra footbridge and a subway connecting platforms. There were a total of nine separate through routes from one tunnel to the other. With the closure of the branch lines in the 1960s and 1970s, the station was reduced to just two operational platforms, with the track and platform on the pre-1920s forecourt converted back to something like its original use. The station presently uses two large island platforms. The up line and a down line both have double tracks. Two further lines are reserved for goods traffic, particularly the carriage of nuclear fuel flasks to and from Wylfa nuclear power station on Anglesey. In November 2009 the Welsh Assembly Government asked Network Rail to conduct a feasibility study on reopening the line between Llangefni on Anglesey and Bangor for passenger services. Network Rail was asked to assess the track bed before publishing its report in 2010. Work to clear away 21 years of vegetation began in April 2012. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Bangor (Gwynedd) railway station」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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