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Author Topic: Pilning Station - where are we, and looking at future options (May 2025)  (Read 212 times)
grahame
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« on: Yesterday at 09:01:14 »

Plenty of trains race through Pilning Station, and just twice a week one calls there. On 3rd May, the Bristol Rail Campaign walked from Severn Beach to Pilning to join the train at 15:32 headed for Bristol, Exeter, Plymouth and Penzance and around ten of us joined the 5 carriage electric train when it arrived through the Severn Tunnel from South Wales.

Why is the service so thin? Does anyone use it?  Could it be better?

The history

Pilning Station is about a mile from Pilning Village.  It's located where it is because it was an operational centre where the line that descends to the Severn Tunnel forked off from the line to New Passage where the ferry used to run.  Until the opening of the first Severn Bridge in 1966, you could put your car on a train here and have it taken through the tunnel to Severn Tunnel Junction, but that service ceased when the bridge opened.

Train services at this remote station decayed over the years to two trains per day in the 1970s and then to 2 trains per week in 2006. The service ran into Bristol called on a Saturday morning, and one train retuned on that afternoon.

Faced with the cost of raising and improving the footbridge on electrification in 2016, Network Rail and their contractors simply removed the bridge, and now both weekly trains call as they emerge from the Severn Tunnel on their way to Bristol, and there's no way back by train unless you double back through the tunnel.

The present

Pretty little spot for a trip?  Sorry - it isn't. There's a scrapyard of site, a high spiked fence that makes it look more like a secure prison than a railway station, and I would not risk parking a car there. There is an unlocked pedestrian gate that lets your through to walk up the ramp and through another gate onto a platform with a shuttered old building and trains rushing by every few minutes. Across the track you see the platform that trains used to call at in the other direction, now covered in weeds and electrical poles.

Why is a train service still provided?  Because the legal procedures to close a station are complex, expensive, and subject to a lot of consultation. That makes sense because it would be so easy to stop calling there, but so difficult in the future to re-establish services - in fact the current situation is perverse because the "powers that be" have reduced the service to a near-useless level - as far as they can without all this extra expense of closure.

The future

Could the station do better with more welcoming facilities and a better service? Undoubtedly it could, but whether that would be socially and financially justified has never been (to my knowledge) seriously, officially, and publicly tested, and it would certainly need investment to bring back a viable 2 way service.

Is Pilning really "in the middle of nowhere"?  It certainly felt like it when a group of about a dozen of us walked there last Saturday to catch the train. A country lane from Pilning Village isn't signposted to the station, and there's no footpath for much of the way.  We lunched at the Plough which does survive about 100 yards from the station, quiet on a Saturday lunchtime but a clue in the large car park and adverts for entertainment in the evenings that this is an out-of-town venue where noise can be made without disturbing anyone.  Ironically, the railway does run from the station down past the village itself - a re-located station would be much more logical to serve the residents of the current villages of Pilning and Redwick which it runs into.  It's also noted that the road access to Pilning village itself is much better than to the current station, and that it's only a few hundred yards across the fields to the major Severnside employment and warehousing area, with its own Motorway junction too.

I can offer you multiple scenarios

1. Put an accessible footbridge back in at the current site, improve the service, and offer a village station for the future.

2. Our country is building new homes and they require transport - not only for cars but much more for buses and trains, and where better that around new or underutilised train stations?  Pilning is attractive - people want to live within a sensible distance of Bristol, the railway line is there as are the services going where they want to go, and it's not on a flood plain nor in an area of outstanding natural beauty.

3. Relocate Pilning Station near the bridge over the B4055. It's then at the village, within 300 metres of the employment area, and with platforms on the outer tracks accessed by slopes off the road eliminates the problem of how to access an island platform at a sensible price that we have at the current site.

4. Close the current station and have the main line railway run through the area but not serve it

5. Leave it as it is until someone comes up with a solution / decision and implements it.

Option 3 is covered in more detail at https://www.passenger.chat/mirror/leaflet.pdf - it started on 1st April 2018 with a suggestion that it was - err - distinctly tongue in cheek but yet all the elements to add up to suggest that it could make sense. Other studies have confirmed this.  However, there seems to be no consensus over future direction.

Illustrtations:

Pilning Station is certainly not welcoming ...


Pilning's current station is set in the countryside - this between the village and the station


Map showing current station (entrance - red dot) and possible alternative (cyan dot)


Bristol Rail Campaign await the train


The twice-weekly train calls. Noted that only members of the Bristol Rail Campaign party got on, and no passengers left the train.
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« Reply #1 on: Yesterday at 14:54:48 »

3. Relocate Pilning Station near the bridge over the B4055. It's then at the village, within 300 metres of the employment area, and with platforms on the outer tracks accessed by slopes off the road eliminates the problem of how to access an island platform at a sensible price that we have at the current site.

From my visit last September - view from that bridge

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« Reply #2 on: Today at 09:59:57 »

 I'm hearing that tentative moves are being considered by Gloucestershire County Cricket club to remove themselves eventually from playing matches at Neville Road the County ground in Bristol.
 They are In the process of investigating, the purchase of and obtaining planning permission for a site adjacent to the wave .
If this comes to fruition the flow of traffic to matches and other events at the New County Ground, it would I feel be more than enough to overwhelm the roads in the village and create congestion at the nearby junction of the M5 which being the feeder for the retail park at Cribs is consistently busy it also feeds traffic from the north of the city and those from the new development at the former Filton airfield and of course the New Arenal.

Pilning,as much as I'm fond of the old place,these days is simply not fit for purpose ,and has been allowed to become a dumping ground for all sorts of muck and rubbish,the constant fly tipping on the approach to the station,has required heavy duty gates to be installed,which means that it is only able to be accessed by foot passengers,and those passengers who are less able are faced by a long struggle up a not inconsiderable slope,and then have to deal with crossing the severely deteriorated surface of the yard,which laughably is meant to be the Station Car Park.

Over the last few years a number of people,including myself to a certain extent, have spent a good deal of time and effort supporting the usage of the station,and have had a disappointingly small amount of support from the local area ,it would seem that the residents Of Pilning and its environs really don't have the need of a station !

Having said that ,you can bet your bottom dollar,that when GBR (Great British Railways),and new network rail decides time has come to close the doors for good,as I have no doubt they will,the usual suspects will be up in arms,to no avail.

Now the time is ripe to revisit the award winning idea of moving the station closer to the village,and taking full advantage of The greatly improved road access that would come from the relocation and press for the building of a park and ride station to serve the local area Pilning Parkway for the win perhaps.
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grahame
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« Reply #3 on: Today at 17:23:11 »

Over the last few years a number of people,including myself to a certain extent, have spent a good deal of time and effort supporting the usage of the station, and have had a disappointingly small amount of support from the local area ,it would seem that the residents Of Pilning and its environs really don't have the need of a station !

You are 100% correct in saying "it would seem that the residents Of Pilning and its environs really don't have the need of a station".  They don't. There has been no viable train service there for 20 years, and the people and the businesses have a lifestyle which has no connection to it.  The railway line passing through their village/town is irrelevant to their way of life.  The idea of a nice little village station has an attraction, but ... the fright of the idea of hordes of people racing through their streets to get to the station in time in their cars, parking in their Closes to save the cost of parking, and littering as they go ... the fright of uncouth warehouse workers wandering the streets as they wait for their trains ... the fright of the seedier side of life in houses around the rail hub ... the fright of people walking to and from the village pub and shop in an inebriated state ... has brought about something of a negative attitude and fanning the flames of those fears is those seeking public office, looking to promise they'll protect the status quo.

I recognise the frights, but on experience of other development they are much exadurated if there's any substantive negative effect at all.  And few people have stuck their heads above the parapet to say "a useable train service would raise the value of our house / give our son who still live at home a chance to get a job in Bristol / will help the local shops, pubs and businesses".  And many of these are likely to be amongst the real gains of having a decent train service - in fact there would be so many gains for those slightly wider after than just in the village to make the case for a station and hourly (minimum) stop an economic one.
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« Reply #4 on: Today at 18:37:43 »

Quote
GCCC signs non-binding Heads of Terms to explore land for potential development

28 April 2025

Gloucestershire County Cricket Club has today announced the signing of a non-binding Heads of Terms agreement which will enable it to explore an area of land for potential development of a new home for the Club.

The Club first announced its intention to explore alternative sites for a possible relocation in December 2023. Today’s announcement does not tie the Club into a legal arrangement but maintains momentum on productive conversations that have taken place over a number of months.

The site in question – Swanmoor Stoke – is situated near landmarks such as The Wave, Bristol Golf Club and Wild Place Project in South Gloucestershire and is less than a mile from both Junction 17 of the M5 and the proposed new junction off the M49. It is also less than a mile from Pilning railway station (which would require updating). The wider area has undergone material residential development of late and more is planned.

As the crow flies, the site is under five miles from GCCC’s Seat Unique Stadium.

Whilst the Club will continue its discussions with the owners of other possible sites its primary focus for the coming months will be in developing opportunities at Swanmoor Stoke.

Whatever the outcome of those discussions, the Seat Unique Stadium at Nevil Road will continue to serve as the County’s home for the foreseeable future, with the Club having secured international match-hosting rights each year in Bristol from the ECB until 2032. The Club is finalising plans to upgrade areas of the ground over the coming seasons to ensure compliance with ECB major match host requirements and that the Member and customer experience is prioritised.

Club Chair, Peter Matthews, said:

“We know that the subject of a prospective ground move is important to our Members, local residents and stakeholders, and we are committed to communicate any developments with all concerned at the earliest possible opportunity.

“Whilst today’s announcement shows continued momentum in our search for a possible new home, it doesn’t materially change the status quo. We are not tied into any legal deal and whilst the Board-appointed team will continue to work up the Club’s options in line with the non-binding Heads of Terms, the entirety of our executive team will remain focused on running the Club and making the Seat Unique Stadium a welcoming and enjoyable year-round destination for matches and events.

“It is important to stress that there is much detailed work to do before we can put specific proposals to the Board for its consideration. So, whilst this looks like a tremendous opportunity, the project is still at concept stage. We will be hosting a number of Member and resident-focussed events in the weeks and months to come and we will be happy to answer questions that may arise at those sessions.”

Source: Gloucestershire County Cricket Club
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