Rhyd Ddu railway station

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Rhyd Ddu
Garratt No.138 arrives in the Down Platform at the newly extended Rhyd Ddu station on 16 April 2006, during the period when the Up Platform was not available for use by carriages. Image: Barrie W.Hughes
Location
Place Rhyd Ddu
Local authority Gwynedd
Operations
Managed by Ffestiniog Railway
Platforms in use 1
(down platform not currently used by passenger trains
History
18 August 2003 Re-opened
(using shortened down platform)
8 April 2006 Rebuilt
(following extension of island platform)
National Rail - UK railway stations

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Portal:Rhyd Ddu railway station
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Rhyd Ddu is a station on the narrow gauge Welsh Highland Railway, which was built in 1881 as the North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways Moel Tryfan Undertaking to carry dressed slate to Dinas Junction on the LNWR. The railway was extended southwards to Beddgelert and Porthmadog in 1923, and in its lifetime the station was variously also named "South Snowdon" and "Snowdon". Passenger services ceased to the old station site on 26 September 1936, and the station was reopened to passengers on 18 August 2003 on a new site slightly to the east (the car park occupies the original site) following the complete reconstruction of the railway from Waunfawr to Rhyd Ddu. The train services are operated by the Ffestiniog Railway Company.

Contents

Rhyd Ddu station is the starting point of the 'Rhyd Ddu' footpath to the Summit of Snowdon.

There are public toilets and a car park adjoining the station. The Snowdonia Sherpa bus service to Beddgelert and Porthmadog or Pen-y-Pass calls at the station.

Following reconstruction, the Section from Waunfawr to Rhyd Ddu was formally reopened by HRH the Prince of Wales on 30 July 2003. Prince Charles travelled from Waunfawr to Snowdon Ranger in the replica of a North Wales Narrow Gauge Railways coach and from there to Rhyd Ddu on the footplate of the Ffestiniog Railway Locomotive "Prince", built in 1863, which hauled the special train. Public passenger services commenced on 18 August 2003 and an honoured guest that day was Mr Richard Williams of Beddgelert who had travelled on the first train in 1923.

Work on the reconstruction of Phase 4, the long final section of the Welsh Highland Railway from Rhyd Ddu to Beddgelert and Porthmadog, started at Rhyd Ddu in 2005.

In February and March, 2006, the station underwent large modifications to allow through running trains to Porthmadog, these include two water towers for trains running in both directions, a "Rhyd Ddu Yard" with two sidings, one capable of stabling a train, and building a new southerly extension to the platform that extends it to the 200m standard length platform of this route. There is also a waiting shelter and occasional ticket office. Trackwork modifications were completed to permit right-hand running (normal WHR and FR practice) into and through the station. Unfortunately for the 2006 reopening of the station on 8 April, the trackwork for the Up loop had not been consolidated, sufficiently to allow carriages to use the Porthmadog bound platform, due to a mechanical failure of the tamper. For the period between the reopening and 1 June 2006, when right hand running commenced, temporary operating instructions were in place whilst trains continued to run into the left hand line.

  1. J.I.C.Boyd; Narrow Gauge Railways in South Caernarfonshire, 1972, revised edition in two volumes 1988/1999.

Preceding station Heritage Railways  Heritage railways Following station
Snowdon Ranger   Welsh Highland Railway   Meillionen
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