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Train times and station information for Birmingham New Street railway station from National Rail; New Street - New Start; Birmingham New Street, on Warwickshire Railways Photographs and information on the Victorian Station. 1890 Ordnance Survey map of the station; Rail Around Birmingham and the West Midlands: Birmingham New Street station
Birmingham 2 West Midlands Trains 24,180 10,038 9,088 Bournville: 1876 [22] Birmingham 3 West Midlands Trains 1.319 million 0.511 million 0.702 million Butlers Lane: 1957 [23] Birmingham 5 West Midlands Trains 0.246 million 0.116 million 0.142 million Canley: 1940 [24] Coventry: 5 West Midlands Trains 0.370 million 0.258 million 0.364 million ...
Today's Moor Street station is a combination of the original station, opened in 1909 by the Great Western Railway as a terminus for local trains, and a newer Moor Street station with through platforms, a short distance from the original, which opened in 1987, replacing the original. The two were combined into one station in 2002, when the ...
Site clearance underway in January 2020. Construction is due to be completed in 2028 [11]. At the start of 2019, the site was cleared. As at all HS2 sites, site clearance was followed by an extensive archaeological programme, in this case involving 70 archaeologists, which unearthed what is thought to be the world's oldest railway roundhouse adjacent to the old Curzon Street station.
The station was designed by the architect Ray Moorcroft and opened on 26 January 1976; [1] it has regular train services to many parts of the country. It was named Birmingham International after the adjacent airport, which had at the time that name but is today called simply Birmingham Airport. A large space under the overbridge next to the ...
Birmingham Moor Street is the city's second busiest station [4] and is currently served by local trains for the lines through Shirley and Henley-in-Arden to Stratford-upon-Avon and to Leamington via Solihull, and Chiltern Clubman services to London Marylebone.
A large number of railway lines meet at Birmingham New Street railway station, which is a hub of the UK rail network and is the calling point for most intercity services to and from Birmingham. [5] Trains to London Marylebone operated by Chiltern Railways stop at Moor Street station, and most continue to Snow Hill station. [6]