Rose Hill Marple railway station

Rose Hill Marple National Rail

View looking toward the buffer stop. Prior to 1970, the line continued south towards Macclesfield.
Location
Place Marple
Local authority Stockport
Coordinates 53°23′46″N 2°04′34″W / 53.396°N 2.076°W / 53.396; -2.076Coordinates: 53°23′46″N 2°04′34″W / 53.396°N 2.076°W / 53.396; -2.076
Grid reference SJ950887
Operations
Station code RSH
Managed by Northern
Number of platforms 1
DfT category E
Live arrivals/departures, station information and onward connections
from National Rail Enquiries
Annual rail passenger usage*
2010/11 Increase 114,700
2011/12 Increase 118,522
2012/13 Increase 136,116
2013/14 Increase 158,066
2014/15 Decrease 155,184
Passenger Transport Executive
PTE Transport for Greater Manchester
History
Original company Macclesfield, Bollington and Marple Railway
Pre-grouping Macclesfield Committee
Post-grouping Macclesfield Committee
2 August 1869 Opened as Marple (Rose Hill)
? Renamed Rose Hill (Marple)
? Renamed Rose Hill Marple
National Rail – UK railway stations
* Annual estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Rose Hill Marple from Office of Rail and Road statistics. Methodology may vary year on year.
UK Railways portal

Rose Hill Marple railway station is one of two stations serving Marple, in the Metropolitan Borough of Stockport, England, the other being Marple railway station.

It is the terminus of a spur of the Hope Valley Line, with services to Manchester Piccadilly calling at Romiley and then taking one of two routes to the regional centre: either via Woodley, Hyde Central, Hyde North, Guide Bridge and Fairfield, or via Bredbury, Brinnington, Reddish North, Ryder Brow and Belle Vue, followed by Ashburys.

The station is one of the three which provide access to the Middlewood Way.

History

The station opened on 2 August 1869. Originally named Marple (Rose Hill), it was later renamed Rose Hill (Marple), before the current form Rose Hill Marple was adopted.[1]

A 1909 Railway Clearing House Junction Diagram showing (right) railways in the vicinity of Rose Hill (lower right)

It was built on the Macclesfield, Bollington and Marple Railway, with dual tracks and thus two platforms. The second southbound platform (now removed, as the line is operated as a single track 'long siding') had simply a waiting shelter. The remaining station building previously provided an indoor waiting area and was only recently brought back into use in 2007 with a new ticket window operating weekday mornings.

In January 1970, the route south to Bollington and Macclesfield was closed to all traffic, the majority of travellers between Macclesfield and the City of Manchester preferring to use the faster West Coast Main Line route via Stockport instead. Though it had also been listed for closure in the 1963 Beeching Report, Rose Hill itself avoided a similar fate due to its high levels of commuter traffic toward Manchester Piccadilly.[2]

Subsequent diesel services to and from Manchester Piccadilly originally alternated between the two available routes - one train running via Bredbury, followed by a train travelling via Hyde and Guide Bridge. In the late 1990s, the services to the two railway stations in Marple were streamlined, with most Rose Hill services now running via Hyde and most Marple services running via the more direct Bredbury line.

From 13 December 2010, Rose Hill Marple gained an extra second service per hour off-peak due to the diversion of a service which previously turned back at Marple railway station.

Current services

Monday to Saturday daytimes there is a half-hourly service to Manchester Piccadilly via Hyde, with some peak period additional trains via Bredbury. The evening service from the station is limited (just two departures after 19.15)[3] and there is no Sunday service. Most services are operated with British Rail Class 142 'Pacer' Diesel Multiple Units.

Return tickets to and from Rose Hill and Marple railway stations are priced identically and allowed to be interchangeable by train operating company Northern, allowing, for example, a passenger with a return ticket to Manchester Piccadilly from Rose Hill Marple to return instead to the nearby Marple station.

Current facilities

Rose Hill is officially designated as a 'Park & Ride' station[4] and, upon a resurfacing and small extension of its car parking facilities, was advertised as such through flyers in the local area in 2005 in a bid to attract more travellers who might otherwise have driven to their destination or used the more frequent services from nearby Marple station.

Since 2007 the station building has a staffed ticket window on weekday mornings until 12:30pm for the first time in over 10 years, with payment possible via cash or debit/credit card. The covered area provides a shelter from bad weather with a three-seater standard-issue Northern Rail bench and a single Metro newspaper distributor. The original waiting room was recently refurbished and can be accessed during ticket office opening hours.

Though toilets are not provided at the station, Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council used to provide public conveniences a few yards along Railway Road (closed in 2011), the station's access road, at the entrance to Middlewood Way, a "linear park" and trail for walkers, cyclists and horse-riders, which follows the line's previous route to Macclesfield. The initial section of this route was tarmacked and given street lighting in 2006 to encourage its use by residents of local residential developments in reaching the station and Stockport Road.

In addition to exposed railings around the station area, three secure bicycle lockers are provided at the North end of the platform, which require a 'BLUC' key for use.[5]

Service enhancement

From December 2010, the service to/from Rose Hill was increased from 1 to 2 trains per hour. This was achieved by diverting the xx23 Manchester Piccadilly to Marple fast service and the xx52 return working.

Future

As part of Manchester's Transport Innovation Fund (TIF) bid, which would have seen a weekday peak time congestion charge introduced on roads into the city centre, Rose Hill was among the stations listed to receive station improvements and improved services from the proposed £3bn injection into the region's public transport. This scheme was dropped after the plans were rejected substantially in a public referendum in December 2008.

Rose Hill has been touted as a suitable terminus for a new Metrolink tram service to the area, with possible routes being either a simple conversion of the existing line to Manchester or a new link into Stockport town centre via Bredbury and Portwood. The latter would provide an Eastern extension from the proposed Western link into Stockport town centre from Didsbury, linking together many towns in the borough along the Goyt and Mersey rivers.[6] Despite heavy road traffic from private cars and buses, the local centres of Marple, Romiley and Bredbury have not been linked to their borough centre of Stockport by a direct rail route since 1982.

References

  1. Butt, R.V.J. (1995). The Directory of Railway Stations. Yeovil: Patrick Stephens Ltd. pp. 155, 199. ISBN 1-85260-508-1. R508.
  2. Marshall, John (1981). Forgotten Railways: North West England. David & Charles. p. 30. ISBN 978-0715380031.
  3. Northern Rail Timetable 22: Manchester to Rose Hill and New Mils Central, 19 May to 7 December 2013 www.northernrail.org; Retrieved 2013-08-20
  4. http://www.nationalrail.co.uk/stations/rsh/details.html
  5. "BLUC - Bike Locker Users Club". Stockport Council. Retrieved 2011-02-19.
  6. "Regeneration". Archived from the original on May 2, 2008.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rose Hill Marple railway station.
Preceding station   National Rail   Following station
TerminusNorthern
Hope Valley Line
Mondays-Saturdays only
Disused railways
Terminus   Great Central Railway & North Staffordshire Railway
Macclesfield, Bollington and Marple Railway
  High Lane
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.