A parkway railway station is a railway station that primarily serves a park and ride interchange rather than a town or city centre. The name parkway originally referred to Bristol Parkway being built next to the M32 motorway, which was built through parkland and thus known as the "Bristol Parkway".[1] The term has come to mean equally a park and ride bus and/or other motor car interchange with the UK light, regular or international railway network.[citation needed] One example refers to such an interchange with the tram network.
East and West Midlands
edit- Alfreton railway station[citation needed] (formerly Alfreton and Mansfield Parkway)
- Birmingham International railway station[citation needed]
- Coleshill Parkway railway station
- East Midlands Parkway railway station
- Stratford-upon-Avon Parkway railway station
- Sutton Parkway railway station (named after Sutton-in-Ashfield)
- Tame Bridge Parkway railway station
- Warwick Parkway railway station
- Wednesbury Parkway tram stop
- Worcestershire Parkway railway station
South, South East and East
edit- Aylesbury Vale Parkway railway station
- Cambridge North railway station
- Didcot Parkway railway station
- Ebbsfleet International railway station[citation needed]
- Haddenham & Thame Parkway railway station
- Luton Airport Parkway railway station
- Oxford Parkway railway station
- Southampton Airport Parkway railway station
- Swanley Parkway railway station (served by the Swanley New Barn Railway, a narrow gauge line taking passengers into Swanley Park)
- Thanet Parkway railway station
- Whittlesford Parkway railway station (serving equally Duxford)
North-East and Yorkshire
editNorth-West
editScotland
editSouth-West
editWales
editProposals and withdrawn proposals
editSee also
edit- Parkway
- Connecting Communities: Expanding Access to the Rail Network, a 2009 report from the Association of Train Operating Companies detailing seven new commercially viable parkway station locations in England
References
edit- ^ "M32 'like dagger thrust' into city". BBC News. BBC. 9 December 2008. Retrieved 22 September 2013.
- ^ Scott, Jim (21 August 2019). ""Fantastic news": Park and ride railway station proposed on Teesside". The Northern Echo. Retrieved 21 August 2019.