
Birchwood railway station is a
railway station
Rail transport (also known as train transport) is a means of transport using wheeled vehicles running in railway track, tracks, which usually consist of two parallel steel railway track, rails. Rail transport is one of the two primary means of ...
serving the town of
Birchwood, Cheshire,
England
England is a Countries of the United Kingdom, country that is part of the United Kingdom. It is located on the island of Great Britain, of which it covers about 62%, and List of islands of England, more than 100 smaller adjacent islands. It ...
. The station is east of and west of on the
Liverpool-Manchester line.
The station is operated by
Northern Trains
Northern Trains, Trade name, trading as Northern, is a British train operating company that operates Commuter rail, commuter and Inter-city rail, medium-distance intercity services in the North of England. It is owned by DfT Operator for the Dep ...
and is on the southern route of the
Liverpool–Manchester Line. It is staffed full-time (between 06:10 and 23:45 Mondays–Saturdays and 08:25 and 23:20 on Sundays).
Facilities
There is sheltered seating on both platforms, with a ticket office with seating on the Manchester-bound platform. A footbridge connects the two platforms. Outside the station there is a bus stop and the station is close to the Birchwood shopping mall.
The ticket office is open until 22:00, though it does occasionally close during the day whilst staff carry out other duties. During the daytime there are three staff members on the station (station clerk, kiosk and a cleaner), and two of an evening (station clerk and a security guard). When the ticket office is closed there are two ticket machines in the station building on platform 1 and one in the waiting room on platform 2. Train running information is provided by automated announcements, digital information screens and timetable posters. Step-free access is available via lifts on both platforms (commissioned in the autumn of 2014).
Services
The station sees a general frequency of three to four trains per hour in each direction. As of December 2022, services are provided by
Northern Trains
Northern Trains, Trade name, trading as Northern, is a British train operating company that operates Commuter rail, commuter and Inter-city rail, medium-distance intercity services in the North of England. It is owned by DfT Operator for the Dep ...
and
TransPennine Express
TransPennine Trains Limited, trading as TransPennine Express (TPE), is a British train operating company that has operated passenger services in the TransPennine Express franchise area since May 2023. It runs regional and inter-city rail ser ...
, with limited
East Midlands Railway
East Midlands Railway (EMR; legally Transport UK East Midlands Limited) is a British train operating company owned by Transport UK Group, and is the current operator of the East Midlands franchise.
Originally owned by Abellio (transport compan ...
calls at certain points of the day.
Northern
* One train per hour to via (serving most local stations)
* One train per hour to via (stopping only at some local stations en route)
Most stopping trains originating from Liverpool Lime Street now terminate at Warrington Central.
TransPennine Express
* One train per hour to via , and .
* One fast train per hour to , stopping only at and
Liverpool South Parkway
Liverpool South Parkway station is a railway station and bus interchange in the Garston, Liverpool, Garston district of Liverpool, England. It serves, via a bus link, Liverpool John Lennon Airport in the neighbouring suburb of Speke, as well as ...
, with limited calls at
Warrington West railway station.
East Midlands Railway
* Two morning peak trains to
* One train per day to Liverpool Lime Street
The TPE service replaces the former Northern Connect one to , which was withdrawn in December 2022 as part of plans to alleviate congestion in the "Castlefield Corridor" section of route through the centre of Manchester. This has also seen the number of Northern local trains to Manchester Oxford Road cut from two per hour to one (though there is still a half-hourly service at peak times).
History
The station was officially opened by
British Rail
British Railways (BR), which from 1965 traded as British Rail, was a state-owned company that operated most rail transport in Great Britain from 1948 to 1997. Originally a trading brand of the Railway Executive of the British Transport Comm ...
Chairman
Sir Peter Parker on 31 July 1981.
Constructed at a cost of £750,000, it was the result of cooperation between British Rail, Warrington New Town Development Corporation, Warrington Borough Council and local bus companies.
Bus interchange facilities were provided at the station, which served a developing residential and commercial area.
The initial service provision was fifty trains per day.
References
External links
{{Railway stations served by TransPennine Express
Railway stations in Warrington
DfT Category D stations
Railway stations opened by British Rail
Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1981
Railway stations served by East Midlands Railway
Railway stations served by Northern
Railway stations served by TransPennine Express