Fareham railway station
Fareham railway station is on the West Coastway Line situated about 0.62 miles (1 km) from the town of Fareham in Hampshire, England. It is 84 miles 21 chains (135.6 km) down the line from London Waterloo. It is 5.36 miles from Botley Station, 3.18 miles from Portchester and 3.7 miles from Swanwick.
Fareham | |
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Fareham station platforms 2 and 3 | |
Location | |
Place | Fareham |
Local authority | Fareham (district) |
Grid reference | SU569063 |
Operations | |
Station code | FRM |
Managed by | South Western Railway |
Number of platforms | 3 |
DfT category | C2 |
Live arrivals/departures, station information and onward connections from National Rail Enquiries | |
Annual rail passenger usage* | |
2014/15 | |
– Interchange | |
2015/16 | |
– Interchange | |
2016/17 | |
– Interchange | |
2017/18 | |
– Interchange | |
2018/19 | |
– Interchange | |
History | |
Key dates | Opened 29 November 1841 |
Original company | London and South Western Railway |
Pre-grouping | London and South Western Railway |
Post-grouping | Southern Railway |
National Rail – UK railway stations | |
* Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Fareham from Office of Rail and Road statistics. Methodology may vary year on year. |
History
Fareham station was first opened by the London and South Western Railway (LSWR) in 1841 on the line from Eastleigh to Gosport. Later additions in 1848 connected Fareham station with Southampton, Portsmouth and along the coast towards Brighton. These later lines are now the most valuable, but as a consequence of the later construction there is a sharp curve upon exiting the station to Portsmouth, and a lesser one towards Southampton. A 20 mph speed limit protects the area surrounding Fareham station, mainly due to the sharp curve on the Portsmouth side. The original line, now singled through Fareham Tunnel, to Eastleigh and London, is dead straight, as is the former Gosport route, which closed to passengers in 1953. Track remains overgrown in places on the Gosport route, although most of it has now been cleared for a bus express route from Fareham to Gosport ferry operated by First Bus. The line formerly saw freight services to a Royal Navy ordnance factory at Bedenham into the 1990s but after closure the track was removed.
There was also a line to Alton via the Meon Valley (opening in 1903), branching from the Eastleigh route at Knowle, north of the tunnel. It was built initially as a fast route to the Isle of Wight - to express standards though only a single line on double track earthworks - at a time when Stokes Bay, not Portsmouth Harbour, was the primary rail-connected ferry terminus for the Island. That route closed to passengers in 1955.
In the early 21st century a new footbridge and lifts were erected to the north of the station buildings and canopies. The lifts allows the station to comply with the Equality Act 2010, providing wheelchair access to all platforms. Related work has included fitting tactile strips to all three platforms. Work commenced in October 2008 and was undertaken by Osborne Rail Division. The ticket office was reopened with a new entrance to the platform at the south end of the corridor. Ticket barriers were also installed and a new station shop constructed at the end of the station building on Platform 3.
Description
Fareham station is located on the West Coastway Line which runs between Brighton and Southampton Central. It is now served by South Western Railway, Southern and Great Western Railway.
The station has three platforms:[1]
Platform 1 is the main up platform and serves Southampton Central, Cardiff Central and London Waterloo via Winchester and Basingstoke.
Platform 2 is a bay platform and has very little planned use, however it is periodically used when late running Great Western and Southern services are terminated short of destination or during engineering works. It was formerly the main up platform, before the stone arched bridge over the A27 immediately south of the station was replaced, and the opportunity taken to ease the radius of the curve from Portsmouth by aligning the route into the current platform 1.
Platform 3 is the down platform for services towards Portsmouth Harbour, Brighton and London Victoria. The bay platform for services to Alton via the closed Meon Valley Line was on the opposite (car park) side of this platform, a short siding is all that remains at the north end of platform 3.
Services
Fareham station has regular services to London Waterloo, London Victoria (via Gatwick Airport), Brighton, Portsmouth Harbour, and Southampton Central. There are also long-distance services to Cardiff Central via Bristol Temple Meads.
The typical off-peak service is:
- South Western Railway
- 1tph (train per hour) to London Waterloo via Eastleigh
- 1tph to Southampton Central
- 2tph to Portsmouth & Southsea with 1 tph continuing to Portsmouth Harbour
South Western Railway offer a roughly half hourly service to Portchester, Cosham, Hilsea, Fratton & Portsmouth and Southsea throughout the day from approximately 06:00 till 23:30.
- Southern
- 1tph to London Victoria
- 1tph to Brighton
- 2tph to Southampton Central
- Great Western Railway
- 1tph to Portsmouth Harbour
- 1tph to Cardiff Central
Preceding station | Following station | |||
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Portchester or Terminus | South Western Railway Portsmouth Harbour-Southampton Central |
Swanwick | ||
South Western Railway Portsmouth Harbour-London Waterloo (via Basingstoke) |
Botley | |||
Portchester or Cosham | Southern Brighton-Southampton Central |
Swanwick or Eastleigh | ||
Southern London Victoria-Southampton (via Horsham) |
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Cosham or Fratton in the late evening | Great Western Railway Portsmouth Harbour - Cardiff Central |
Southampton Central or Botley in the late evening | ||
Great Western Railway Brighton - Great Malvern |
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Disused railways | ||||
Fort Brockhurst | Meon Valley Line and Fareham to Gosport Line LSWR |
Knowle Halt |