Summit (SMR) railway station

Summit
Location
Place Llanberis
Area Gwynedd
Coordinates 53°04′05″N 4°04′42″W / 53.0680°N 4.0783°W / 53.0680; -4.0783Coordinates: 53°04′05″N 4°04′42″W / 53.0680°N 4.0783°W / 53.0680; -4.0783
Grid reference SH 609 543
Operations
Original company Snowdon Mountain Railway
Platforms 2
History
6 April 1896 Opened and closed following an accident
9 April 1897 Opened
2005 Closed for rebuilding
12 June 2009 Reopened[1]
Stations on heritage railways in the United Kingdom
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Snowdon Mountain Railway

Legend
Up arrow to Caernarfon
Up arrow to Penllyn (LLR)
Llanberis

Llanberis (LLR)

Engine shed

Llanberis (SMR)
Waterfall
Hebron
Halfway
Rocky Valley Halt
Clogwyn
Summit

Summit is the southern, upper terminus of the Snowdon Mountain Railway, located within yards of the summit of Snowdon.

The line starts in the valley bottom at Llanberis at an altitude of 353 ft (108 m). Summit station stands at 3,493 feet (1,065 m), 68 feet (21 metres) below the summit of the mountain, to which it is connected by a short stepped path.

The station opened with the railway on 6 April 1896, but both closed the same day following an accident. They reopened a year later, on 9 April 1897.

During the 1930s, many complaints were received about the state of the facilities at the summit and in 1934/5 a new station and building were erected in two phases. It was designed by Sir Clough Williams-Ellis and included rooms for visitors and a café. The other operators were bought out and the ramshackle collection of buildings on the summit was cleared.

The station operated until 2005 except during wartime. In 2006 the station and associated buildings were demolished for complete rebuilding, passenger services terminating at Clogwyn until the new visitor centre of Hafod Eryri and station were opened by Welsh First Minister Rhodri Morgan on 12 June 2009.

The station has two platforms.

Preceding station   Heritage railways Following station
Clogwyn   Snowdon Mountain Railway   Terminus

References

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.