Barry Tourist Railway

Barry Tourist Railway (formerly Barry Island Railway)
Barry Tourist Railway
LocaleBarry, Vale of Glamorgan, South Wales
TerminusBarry Island Railway Station
Commercial operations
NameBarry Island Branch
Built byBarry Railway Company
Original gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Preserved operations
Operated by1997–2008 – Vale of Glamorgan Railway Company
2009–present – Cambrian Transport
Stations5
Length2.4 kilometres (1.5 mi) + 0.8 kilometres (0.50 mi) branch
Preserved gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Commercial history
Opened1885
ClosedPier station 5 July 1976
Preservation history
1994Vale of Glamorgan Railway Company (VGR) formed
1996Butetown Historic Railway Society officially becomes the VGR
June 1997New base opened at Plymouth Road
April 1998First operations commenced
2002First operations across the Causeway
2005New high level line to Woodham Halt opened
Sep 2005Marketing name changed to Barry Island Railway
Aug 2007Extension to Gladstone Bridge complete
Mar 2008First passenger train to Gladstone Bridge
Nov 2008VoGC ceases VoGRC lease, chooses new operator (Cambrian Transport) by sealed bid process
Jan 2009December 2009 Cambrian Transport lease starts
August 2015Railway Gets 1st Owned Operational Steam Locomotive, Susan
2022Railway Ceases Operating Trains and Transport for Wales takes over land
Website
barrytouristrailway.co.uk Edit this at Wikidata
GWR steam rail motor at Barry Tourist Railway
Barry Tourist Railway
Barry National Rail
(
149 yd
136 m
) Barry Island Viaduct
Barry Shed
Paget Road Bridge
Waterfront
National Rail Barry Island
connection to
Network Rail
Woodham Halt
Plymouth Road
Gladstone Bridge
Plymouth Road Shed
possible extension
possible extension
Barry Docks National Rail
(
180 yd
165 m
) Barry Island Tunnel
Barry Pier

The Barry Tourist Railway (formerly the Barry Island Railway) is a railway developed to attract visitors to Barry in the Vale of Glamorgan, South Wales. It is a key element of the Barry Rail Centre which also includes engineering and training facilities.

An unusual aspect of the railway is that for several hundred yards across the Causeway from Barry to Barry Island, the trackbed used is directly alongside the Network Rail track which uses the original up line, with the Barry Tourist Railway using the down line. This continues from Barry to cross the Causeway and 149-yard (136 m) Barry Island viaduct after which the two lines diverge into separate platforms at Barry Island. The Railway does not consider itself a line but more of a network as it has two different routes. This is demonstrated in the map below, with Network Rail shown in red.

In November 2008, the landowner the Vale of Glamorgan Council, undertook a commercial tender exercise, which terminated the lease of previous operator the Vale of Glamorgan Railway in favour of a private operator, Cambrian Transport, under a 20-year-long lease.[1] Operations commenced in December 2009 and a full year's programme of services operated during 2010. Details are shown on the Council website.[2] Services have been operated by IRIS II DMU (Class 101 twin-set), Class 26 No. 26 038, Class 73s 73 118 & 73 133 with a former Gatwick Express coaching stock set in push-pull mode, Class 20 20 228, Class 08 08 503, 0-6-0 Pannier Tank locomotive No. 9466, Great Western Steam Rail Motor No.93, Metropolitan Tank No.1, Hunslet 0-6-0T Jessie and an 8F tender loco.

  1. ^ "Barry Heritage Railway Project". Vale of Glamorgan Council. 5 November 2008. Archived from the original on 19 February 2012.
  2. ^ Barry Tourist Railway (Glamorgan Council Website) Archived 1 August 2010 at the Wayback Machine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia · View on Wikipedia

Developed by Nelliwinne