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Birmingham Snow Hill Station

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A Midland Metro tram at Snow Hill
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A Midland Metro tram at Snow Hill

Snow Hill is presently the terminus of the Midland Metro tram system from Wolverhampton (via Wednesbury and West Bromwich).

Birmingham Snow Hill station is a railway station located in the centre of Birmingham, England. Though only a shadow of its former self, it is still the second most important railway station in Birmingham after New Street station.

The reopened Snow Hill station has three platforms used for main line trains. It used to have four, however one was converted to be used by Midland Metro trams.

Services

Snow Hill is the terminus of the Chiltern Main Line which links Birmingham with London (Marylebone). Express services from London are operated by Chiltern Railways, some Chiltern services continue onwards to Kidderminster.

Snow Hill serves as the hub for a number of local train services which are operated by Central Trains, including;

Leamington Spa to Worcester is actually operated as a single through service, with Snow Hill roughly at the centre of the route.

History

The station was opened in 1852 on the Great Western Railway (GWR) line from London (Paddington) to Wolverhampton Low Level Station. It originally bore the name Livery Street Station. It was renamed Snow Hill in 1858; and the Great Western Hotel added in 1863. Snow Hill station was rebuilt in 1871 to accommodate longer trains. It was never intended to be the main station but political gaming between the railway companies prevented the railway reaching its original intended end at Birmingham Curzon Street.

Trains arriving from the south first passed through Snow Hill Tunnel, built by the cut-and-cover method, and then a cutting from Temple Row to Snow Hill. The cutting was roofed over in 1872 and the Great Western Arcade built on top.

By 1859 it was possible to travel from Snow Hill to London in just under three hours.

In 1906 Snow Hill was rebuilt. The new station building was intended to compete with New Street, which at the time was a much grander building than it is today.

Closure

An original entrance in Livery Street
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An original entrance in Livery Street

As part of the Beeching axe closure programme in the 1960s, it was decided that Snow Hill station was unnecessary. Snow Hill was recommended for closure, and all the services were switched to the former LMS New Street Station. Express services were diverted via New Street from 1967. Local services north from Snow Hill to Wolverhampton, and a largely unpublicised four trains per day Class 122 bubble car service to Langley Green, via Smethwick West railway station, were the last to run and ended in March 1972.

Despite a huge public outcry the architecture was not preserved. The Great Western Hotel was demolished in 1969 and the station was largely demolished in 1977. A few items including the original gates and booking hall sign were saved and used in the Birmingham Moor Street railway station restoration. The site was for many years used as a car park.

Rebirth

The entrance to Snow Hill station
Enlarge
The entrance to Snow Hill station

In the mid 1980s British Rail decided to re-open Snow Hill station as part of the cross-city transport plan for Birmingham.

In 1987 the newly rebuilt Snow Hill station opened for services to the south only, with some of the remaining parts of the original station lost (e.g. the old parcels office; plus platforms and the mosaic floor from former waiting rooms) and others incorporated (notably the now-sealed entrance, with GWR crest, in Livery Street). Services to London Marylebone were restarted, along with many local services. Moor Street, at the southern end of Snow Hill tunnel was relocated from its former terminus location, which then closed, to become a through station adjacent to the tunnel mouth.

The new Snow Hill station, with a multistorey car park above, has been widely criticised as draughty, unwelcoming and architecturally unimaginative.

In 1995, services north to Smethwick and onwards to Worcester were resumed.

In 1999 the line to Wolverhampton was re-opened as a light-rail (tram) line, the Midland Metro.

See also

Bibliography

External links



{| class="toccolours" border="1" cellpadding="2" style="margin: 0 auto; border-collapse: collapse; text-align: center;" |- style="background:#F0F0F0;" | Preceding station | colspan="3" | Midland Metro Lines | Following station |- style="text-align: center;" | Terminus | style="background:#003399;" |   | Line 1 | style="background:#003399;" |   | St Paul's |- ! colspan="5" | National Rail

|- style="text-align: center;" | rowspan="2" | Birmingham Moor Street | style="background:#000080;" |   | Chiltern Railways
London-Birmingham | style="background:#000080;" |   | Terminus |- style="text-align: center;" | style="background:#000080;" |   | Chiltern Railways
London-Kidderminster
Peak hours only | style="background:#000080;" |   | Jewellery Quarter

Railway stations in the West Midlands
Birmingham New Street - Birmingham Moor Street - Birmingham Snow Hill
Acocks Green - Adderley Park - Aston - Berkswell - Bescot Stadium - Birmingham International - Blake Street - Bloxwich - Bloxwich North - Bordesley - Bournville - Butlers Lane - Canley - Chester Road - Coseley - Coventry - Cradley Heath - Dorridge - Duddeston - Dudley Port - Earlswood - Erdington - Five Ways - Four Oaks - Gravelly Hill - Hall Green - Hampton-in-Arden - Hamstead - Jewellery Quarter - Kings Norton - Langley Green - Lea Hall - Longbridge - Lye - Marston Green - Northfield - Old Hill - Olton - Perry Barr - Rowley Regis - Sandwell and Dudley - Selly Oak - Shirley - Small Heath - Smethwick Galton Bridge - Smethwick Rolfe Street - Solihull - Spring Road - Stechford - Stourbridge Junction - Stourbridge Town - Sutton Coldfield - Tame Bridge Parkway - The Hawthorns - Tile Hill - Tipton - Tyseley - University - Walsall - Whitlocks End - Widney Manor - Witton - Wolverhampton - Wylde Green - Wythall - Yardley Wood
 - Centro

 


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