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Galway railway station
Railway station in Ireland
Railway station in Ireland
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| name | Galway Ceannt | |
| name_lang | en | |
| native_name | Stáisiún Cheannt | |
| native_name_lang | ga | |
| symbol | rail | |
| symbol_location | ie | |
| style | Iarnród Éireann | |
| type | Regional | |
| image | Galway IÉ-22355 22133.JPG | |
| alt | 2 IE 22000 Class ICR sets at Galway Ceannt station. | |
| caption | 2 ICR sets at Galway Ceannt station. | |
| address | Station Road | |
| borough | Galway | |
| country | Ireland | |
| coordinates | ||
| elevation | 10 m | |
| owned | Iarnród Éireann | |
| operator | Iarnród Éireann | |
| line | {{Plainlist | |
| platforms | 2 | |
| bus_operators | ||
| connections | ||
| structure | At-grade | |
| parking | Yes | |
| bicycle | Yes | |
| accessible | Yes | |
| code | GALWY | |
| zone | P | |
| website | ||
| opened | ||
| closed | ||
| mapframe | yes |
- Dublin-Westport/Galway
- Limerick-Galway | mapframe-custom = Galway railway station (Ceannt Station, ) is a railway station which serves the city of Galway in County Galway. The station itself is located in the centre of the city in Eyre Square.
It is the terminus station for the Dublin to Galway intercity service and the Limerick to Galway and Athenry to Galway commuter services.
Description
There are two platforms at Galway Ceannt; Platform 1 and Platform 2. Platform 2 can only be reached via Platform 1. Platform 1 is used for terminating/departing trains to Dublin Heuston while Platform 2 (a much shorter platform) is used for departing Limerick services.
The services which are provided at the station include ticket machines, a booking office, heated waiting rooms, toilets, a café (Starbucks), vending machines, and a telephone box.
The station also serves as the Bus Éireann depot for Galway City.
History
The station opened on 1 August 1851. This made Galway the western terminus of the Midland Great Western Railway giving the city a direct main line to its Broadstone Station terminus in Dublin.
As the 19th century progressed the rail network in Connacht was expanded, making Galway an important railhead. The nearby town of Athenry became a railway junction, giving Galway links to Ennis, Limerick and the south in 1869 and Sligo and the north in 1894. In 1895 the MGW opened an extension between Galway and Clifden.
The 20th century brought increasing road competition, and this led the Great Southern Railways to close the Clifden branch in 1935. In the 1970s the state railway authority Córas Iompair Éireann closed the Sligo-Athenry-Ennis line to passenger services. It later closed to freight as well.
It was given the name Ceannt on 10 April 1966 in commemoration of Éamonn Ceannt, one of the executed leaders of the Easter Rising of 1916.
Developments
In 2007, CIÉ proposed a series of updates to the station as part of a projected new urban quarter development in the area. This proposed development, referred to as the "Ceannt Station Quarter", was projected to cost €1 billion and include the development of offices and a hotel as well as "four rail platforms, 24 bus bays, 500 car spaces, dedicated taxi drop off and collect facilities, and 300 cycle spaces" at the station. This CIÉ project had been "abandoned" by 2012.
In 2013, 1 million euros was reportedly allocated on a "bus/rail/taxi interchange at the station, with widened footpaths, 'properly designed' bus bays, and revised taxi arrangements". In addition, approximately €100,000 was allocated for design work on an "interchange area for bus and rail passengers [..] a seated waiting area, retail units, vending area and a new office for bus inspectors". By 2014, an additional €600,000 was allocated for further work on the interchange area, and a related planning application was submitted to Galway City Council.
In early 2020, it was reported that a planning application, overlapping somewhat with the earlier "Ceannt Station Quarter" proposal, was due to be lodged with the city council. This proposed development, titled "Augustine Hill", would cover an eight-acre site around Ceannt Station "if planning permission is granted". While planning was conditionally approved, in 2021 the developer appealed the removal of several buildings (and the reduction in height of others) from a "scaled-back version" of the Augustine Hill proposal. In mid-2023, while approving permission for much of the project, An Bord Pleanála upheld the decision that "some residential aspects of the design [..] are not suitable and cannot be built".
References
References
- Rail, Irish. "Train Timetables by Route".
- Duffy, Rónán. (30 April 2016). "The 15 Irish railway stations named after the executed 1916 leaders".
- (July 2007). "Galway Station Redevelopment". CIÉ.
- (15 April 2010). "Councillors raise concerns over Ceannt Station Quarter proposals". Galway Advertiser.
- (24 October 2018). "'New heart for old city': Galway's massive regeneration scheme". Irish Times.
- (22 September 2017). "New 'Ceannt Station Quarter' plan back on the cards". Connacht Tribune.
- (29 December 2018). "Major investment in Galway transport".
- (18 February 2014). "3 million euro for Galway sustainable transport » Galway Bay FM". Galway Bay FM.
- (10 February 2014). "Plans submitted for major redevelopment at Ceannt station » Galway Bay FM". Galway Bay FM.
- (19 February 2020). "Plans for new €320 million urban quarter in Galway unveiled". Irish Examiner.
- (9 July 2021). "Developer's bid to retain scale of urban quarter". Connacht Tribune.
- (6 July 2023). "An Bord Pleanala clears way for €300m Augustine Hill project behind Ceannt Station".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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