- Pontypridd railway station
Infobox UK station
name=Pontypridd
code=PPD
manager=Arriva Trains Wales
locale=Pontypridd
borough=Rhondda Cynon Taff
platforms=2
years=1840
1891
events=Opened as "Newbridge"
Renamed "Pontypridd"
usage0405 = 0.680
usage0506 = 0.704
usage0607 = 0.778Pontypridd railway station serves the town of
Pontypridd inRhondda Cynon Taff ,Wales . It is located on the Merthyr and Rhondda lines and is the main line station for the town.There are two platforms which are still in use. Platform 1 is the
Cardiff bound platform and is one side of a largeisland platform accessible via the subway. The platform on the other side of this is no longer in action. There are toilets located on Platform 1. Platform 2 is the valleys bound platform and accessible across the footbridge linking Platforms 1 and 2.Until the 1930s, Pontypridd had another station, just behind the modern day station, known as Pontypridd Graig station.
The station was built by the
Taff Vale Railway in 1840 and was known as Newbridge Station until 1891 when it was renamed Pontypridd. [cite web| url=http://www.pontytown.co.uk/history2.html| title=Ponty Today| date=2007| accessdate=2007-11-30| ] It was progressively remodelled during the 19th century but its present appearance derives largely from reconstruction carried out between 1907 and 1914. This reconstruction gave it the then longest platform in the world, capable of accommodating two full-length trains on each side of theisland platform as well as additional trains in bay platforms.Modernisation was carried out byBritish Rail about 1974 and in 1990-1991 [cite book| author=Hutton, John| title=The Taff Vale Railway, vol. 1| publisher=Silver Link| year=2006| isbn=978-1-85794-249-1| ] .On
27 August 2007 , the station (along with all stations further up the valleys) was closed to enable work can be carried out to enable longer trains to be accommodated, starting with the northbound platform. This closure continued until9 September and currently a reduced service is offered.Fact|date=April 20081911 accident
Also known as the Hopkinstown rail disaster.
On Monday 23 January 1911 a collision between a passenger train and coal train on the Taff Vale Railway line at
Hopkinstown , outside Pontypridd, resulted in the loss of eleven ["The Welsh Academy Encyclopaedia of Wales". John Davies,Nigel Jenkins , Menna Baines and Peredur Lynch (2008) pg730 ISBN 9780708319536] lives. The accident occurred at 9:48am, when the Pontypridd bound passenger train, carrying roughly 100 people on board, rounded the bend at Gyfeillion Lower signal box with a clear signal ahead. The train collided with a stationary coal train that was using the same line. The impact caused the underframe of the lead carriage to rise up and pierce through the carriage directly behind it. [ [http://webapps.rhondda-cynon-taff.gov.uk/heritagetrail/taff/hopkinstown/hopkinstown.htm Hopkinstown rail disaster] Rhondda Cynon Taf, library service]On 14 January a preliminary hearing was conducted at the New Inn Hotel in Pontypridd, where interviews and witness statements were taken. On the following Thursday a coroner's inquest was opened at Pontypridd Police Court. The inquest heard conflicting reports from signalman Hutchings of the Gyfeillion Lower and signalman Quick of the Rhondda Cuttings, the other signal box in control of the stretch of line where the accident took place. Due to lack of definite evidence an open verdict was returned; though the fireman of the coal truck was censured for not alerting the signal box of the stationary train's position as he was required under rule 55.
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