Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/railway-stations-in-surrey

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Walton-on-Thames railway station

Railway station in Surrey, England

Walton-on-Thames railway station

Summary

Railway station in Surrey, England

FieldValue
nameWalton-on-Thames
symbol_locationgb
symbolrail
imageWalton on Thames stn main building.JPG
boroughWalton-on-Thames, Elmbridge
countryEngland
coordinates
grid_nameGrid reference
grid_position
managerSouth Western Railway
platforms4
codeWAL
classificationDfT category C2
opened21 May 1838
mpassengers
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2019/20passengers= 2.723 million}} --
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2020/21passengers= 0.540 million}}
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2021/22passengers= 1.542 million}}
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2022/23passengers= 2.035 million}}
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2023/24passengers= 2.264 million}}
{{Rail pass boxpass_year2024/25passengers= 2.426 million}}
footnotesPassenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road

-- Walton-on-Thames railway station is at the southern edge of the town of Walton-on-Thames in Surrey, England and borders Burwood Park, Hersham. It is 17 mi from and is situated between and .

The station's main entrance borders the Ashley Park area of the largely residential town and features a taxi rank and pick-up apron. The station opened as Walton for Hersham in 1838 and today has rush hour services two stops from central London.

Only the two outer platforms on the slow lines are currently used. The central island platform is disused.

Services

Services from Walton-on-Thames are split into rush hour (Monday - Friday, early mornings and evenings), off peak (Monday - Friday, Saturday) and Sunday.

Rush hour

  • 4 trains per hour (tph) to London Waterloo, stopping to Surbiton then, non stop to London Waterloo.
  • 2tph to Woking
  • 2tph to Basingstoke

Rush hour services to London Waterloo only operate in the morning, and services to Woking and Guildford operate in the evening rush hour with one service running semi fast to Basingstoke.

Off peak

  • 2tph to London Waterloo, stopping service
  • 2tph to London Waterloo, semi fast
  • 2tph to Woking, stopping service
  • 2tph to Basingstoke, semi fast to Woking then stopping to Basingstoke

There are also three direct trains to Portsmouth Harbour two via Basingstoke one via Guildford per day, Mon - Sat, and one direct train to Branksome in the early morning. In the evening there are two services from Portsmouth Harbour via Basingstoke and one from Weymouth to Walton on Thames.

Sundays

  • 2tph to London Waterloo, stopping service
  • 1tph to London Waterloo, semi fast
  • 2tph to Guildford, stopping service
  • 1tph to Woking semi fast where the train divides to either Basingstoke or Alton

History

The station first operated in 1838, and was one of the first stations on the South West Main Line, between Ditton Marsh (now Esher) and Weybridge. The first services ran from Nine Elms to Woking Common (now Woking).

The middle platforms were abandoned when slower services only used the outer tracks, leaving the inside tracks for non stop services to Woking.

[[Abellio Surrey]] bus outside the station

Ticket gates and accessibility

Walton-on-Thames railway station was one of the first stations selected by South West Trains to have automatic ticket gates installed at all of the exits to the station. These were installed and in operation on 25 June 2009. There were also smartcard validators installed, intended (in the future) for use when the barriers are unattended and open. As of June 2018, there was a digital barcode scanner installed for mobile ticketing on Platform 1.

Ramps were installed on 31 October 2009, making both platforms accessible to all from street level. Access from the Ashley Park / ticket office side of the station to the Burwood Park side requires use of the railway-owned subway which is via a short flight of steps or a detour of more than 600 m by road.

This station has a taxi rank and bus stops. Bus routes 458 and 555 serve the station, both connecting passengers to the town centre.

In 2016, a petition was started by a local resident calling for London fare zone 6 to be extended to include this station, as well as and stations. In December 2022, Elmbridge Borough Council reaffirmed its commitment to lobby for Walton-on-Thames to be included in Zone 6.

A £6M station improvement programme, funded by the Department for Transport under the "Access for All" scheme, began in October 2022. Part of the project included the installation of a new footbridge connecting the two in-use platforms. The work was completed in August 2024.

Immediate surroundings

The station is just north of the approximate midpoint of the medieval parish boundaries of Walton. Today it is on the southern boundary of Walton and the northern boundary of Hersham, and more particularly between two large-plot, neighbourhoods of detached homes, Burwood Park and Ashley Park. These are predominantly low rise and have avenues and greens; they are not a conservation area with no buildings which pre-date 1750 but the former has one or two listed buildings for architecture. The commercial centre of Walton is 0.6 mi north.

Notes

References

References

  1. "Basingstoke and Alton to Woking and London Waterloo (Surburban Services)". South West Trains.
  2. Butt, R.V.J.. (1995). "The Directory of Railway Stations". Patrick Stephens Ltd.
  3. "New ticket gates across the network". South West Trains.
  4. Surrey County Council. (2017-09-02). "Map: Walton-on-Thames, Molesey and Esher". FWT.
  5. Tobitt, Charlotte. (2016-07-15). "Hundreds back campaign to include Walton, Hersham and Esher in Zone 6".
  6. Coady-Stemp, Emily. (9 December 2022). "Expand London Zone 6 beyond Hampton Court station to areas like Esher and Cobham, councillors say". Surrey Live.
  7. Smith, Roger. (11 September 2023). "Surrey railway station becoming fully accessible for first time". Rail Advent.
  8. Crampton, Rosie. (2024-08-30). "New lifts and bridge make Walton-on-Thames station accessible".
  9. (1911). "A History of the County of Surrey". Victoria County History.
  10. "Hersham village boundaries".
  11. "OS Map with Listed Buildings and Parks marked".
Wikipedia Source

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.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Walton-on-Thames railway station — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report