Royston Railway Station
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Royston railway station serves the town of Royston, in
Hertfordshire Hertfordshire ( or ; often abbreviated Herts) is a ceremonial county in the East of England and one of the home counties. It borders Bedfordshire to the north-west, Cambridgeshire to the north-east, Essex to the east, Greater London to the ...
, England. The station is from London Kings Cross on the Cambridge Line. Trains serving the station are operated by
Thameslink Thameslink is a mainline route on the British railway network, running from , , , , , and via central London to , , , Rainham, , , and . The network opened as a through service in 1988, with severe overcrowding by 1998, carrying more than ...
and Great Northern. The station is an important stop on the commuter line between King's Cross and Cambridge as the majority of semi-fast services between London and Cambridge stop at Royston; one exception is the ''Cambridge Cruiser'' fast services from London. It is also the last station before Cambridge with platforms capable of handling 12-car trains. Therefore, it is used by many commuters, not only from Royston but also from smaller stations north of Royston, who transfer from stopping services to faster trains at the station. Royston station is still labelled as ''Royston (Herts)'' on tickets and information displays, even though the station with the same name in
South Yorkshire South Yorkshire is a Ceremonial counties of England, ceremonial county in the Yorkshire and the Humber region of England. It borders North Yorkshire and West Yorkshire to the north, the East Riding of Yorkshire to the north-east, Lincolnshire ...
closed in 1968.


History

The station was opened by the Royston and Hitchin Railway in October 1850 as its initial eastern terminus. The line was subsequently extended as far as the following year and through to Cambridge by the
Eastern Counties Railway The Eastern Counties Railway (ECR) was an English railway company incorporated in 1836 intended to link London with Ipswich via Colchester, and then extend to Norwich and Yarmouth. Construction began in 1837 on the first at the London end. Co ...
in 1852. The latter company took out a lease on the Royston company from then until 1866 and ran trains between Cambridge and the Great Northern Railway's main line junction at Hitchin until its lease expired. Thereafter, the GNR took over and began running through trains from Cambridge to Kings Cross from 1 April 1866.


Electrification

The railway from London King's Cross to Royston was electrified in 1978. Class 312
electric multiple units An electric multiple unit or EMU is a multiple-unit train consisting of self-propelled carriages using electricity as the motive power. An EMU requires no separate locomotive, as electric traction motors are incorporated within one or a number ...
from King's Cross terminated at Royston; passengers wishing to travel to Cambridge had to change to a connecting diesel multiple unit. From 1988 the whole line from London to Cambridge was electrified, ending the need to change trains at Royston. Full services commenced on 2 May 1988.
Network SouthEast Network SouthEast (NSE) was one of the three passenger sectors of British Rail created in 1982. NSE mainly operated commuter rail trains within Greater London and inter-urban services in densely populated South East England, although the networ ...
commissioned the electrification from Royston to Cambridge as a fill-in scheme to link the wired routes either side; the ex-ECR main line electrification north of had been inaugurated the previous year.


Infrastructure

Both ''up'' and ''down'' lines through Royston station are signalled bi-directionally, meaning that Royston is the only place on the Cambridge Line where a train can overtake one ahead of it. The signalling is controlled by Kings Cross power
signal box A signal is both the process and the result of transmission of data over some media accomplished by embedding some variation. Signals are important in multiple subject fields including signal processing, information theory and biology. In ...
. The station is located on a long sweeping curve, reducing the line speed in the ''up'' direction to 50 mph, and a differential speed of 50/65 mph in the ''down'' direction.


Services

Services at Royston are operated by
Thameslink Thameslink is a mainline route on the British railway network, running from , , , , , and via central London to , , , Rainham, , , and . The network opened as a through service in 1988, with severe overcrowding by 1998, carrying more than ...
and Great Northern using and electric multiple units. The typical off-peak service in trains per hour is: * 1 tph to (stopping) * 2 tph to via and (semi-fast) * 3 tph to (two of these run non-stop and one calls at all stations) During peak hours, the service to London King's Cross and the ''all stations'' service to Cambridge are increased to 2 tph; the station is served by an additional half-hourly service between London King's Cross and , via , which runs non-stop between London King's Cross and . On Sundays, the service between Brighton and Cambridge is reduced to hourly.


References


External links

{{coord, 52.053, N, 0.027, W, type:railwaystation_region:GB, display=title Railway stations in Hertfordshire DfT Category D stations Former Great Northern Railway stations Railway stations served by Govia Thameslink Railway Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1850 Royston, Hertfordshire Cambridge line