Audley End railway station

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Audley End National Rail
265px
Audley End railway station in July 2012
Location
Place Wendens Ambo
Local authority District of Uttlesford
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Grid reference TL516363
Operations
Station code AUD
Managed by Abellio Greater Anglia
Number of platforms 2
DfT category D
Live arrivals/departures, station information and onward connections
from National Rail Enquiries
Annual rail passenger usage*
2004/05  0.751 million
2005/06 Decrease 0.721 million
2006/07 Increase 0.729 million
2007/08 Increase 0.774 million
2008/09 Decrease 0.766 million
2009/10 Decrease 0.723 million
2010/11 Increase 0.747 million
2011/12 Increase 0.751 million
- Interchange  5,392
2012/13 Increase 0.811 million
- Interchange Decrease 4,986
2013/14 Increase 0.839 million
- Interchange Increase 5,243
2014/15 Increase 0.879 million
- Interchange Increase 6,887
History
30 July 1845 Station opens as Wenden
1 November 1848 Name changed to Audley End
National RailUK railway stations

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

* Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Audley End from Office of Rail and Road statistics. Methodology may vary year on year.
UK Railways portal

Audley End railway station serves the village of Wendens Ambo and the town of Saffron Walden. The station is named after the manor of Audley End in Essex, England. There was a platform at the east end of the station (Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.) for the branch line to Saffron Walden that was closed in 1964.

History

The station was opened by the Eastern Counties Railway, which was absorbed into the Great Eastern Railway, and became part of the London and North Eastern Railway during the grouping of 1923. The station passed on to the Eastern Region of British Railways on nationalisation in 1948.

The station was served by Network SouthEast when BR sectorisation was introduced in the 1980s, until it was privatised.

Audley End station's name was changed on signs to Audley End for Saffron Walden in 2012. Sir Alan Haselhurst, MP for Saffron Walden unveiled the re-branded signs on Friday 25 May.[1]

Services

The station has an off-peak service of two trains per hour southbound to London Liverpool Street and northbound to Cambridge. One of these is a stopping train calling at most intermediate stations in either direction (London-bound trains run fast south of Cheshunt calling only at Tottenham Hale before terminating at Liverpool Street), whilst the other is a semi-fast service calling only at Bishops Stortford, Harlow Town, Broxbourne, Cheshunt and Tottenham Hale southbound and Whittlesford Parkway northbound.[2] Additional services call at peak times. The hourly CrossCountry service between Stansted Airport and Birmingham New Street via Peterborough and Leicester stops here and is supplemented by a roughly hourly Greater Anglia service running between Cambridge and Stansted Airport.

On Sundays there are two trains each hour to Cambridge (one express and one all stations) plus the hourly through service to Birmingham northbound and two trains each hour to Liverpool Street (one semi-fast and one stopping) and one train per hour to Stansted Airport (express).

Preceding station National Rail National Rail Following station
Newport   Abellio Greater Anglia
West Anglia Main Line
Slow
  Great Chesterford
Bishops Stortford or
Tottenham Hale
  Abellio Greater Anglia
West Anglia Main Line
Liverpool Street-King's Lynn/Ely (peak hours only) & Semi-Fast
  Whittlesford Parkway
Stansted Airport   Abellio Greater Anglia
Stansted Airport/Bishops Stortford-Cambridge
  Whittlesford Parkway or
Cambridge
Stansted Airport   CrossCountry
Birmingham - Stansted Airport
  Cambridge
Disused railways
Saffron Walden   Great Eastern Railway
Saffron Walden Railway
  Terminus

References

  1. http://www.railway-centre.com/latest-news-may-2012.html
  2. GB National Rail Timetable December 2013 to May 2014, Table 22


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