'Felixstowe railway station' is a
railway station serving the town of
Felixstowe in
Suffolk,
England. The station is the terminus of the
Felixstowe Branch Line 25 km (15¾ miles) east of
Ipswich.
The station is served by
'one'. All services are operated by
diesel multiple units of Classes
153,
156 and occasionally
170.
When Felixstowe was a frequented destination for day trippers, this was a thriving railway station. In the
1940s up to 25,000 people might be seen passing through the station, and trains ran straight through from
London Liverpool Street. When day tripping declined, the motor car took over and Felixstowe Docks expanded, the passenger trains competing for use of the lines with Freightliners, and the station was turned mostly into a car park.
The current station is the other side of the car park from the original station, originally called 'Felixstowe Town' and now 'Great Eastern Square', a shopping centre. This had multiple platforms, where passengers from Ipswich could change for a train to
Felixstowe Beach Station and '''Felixstowe Pier'''. The station building was built by the
Great Eastern Railway's architect W.N. Ashbee in the domestic revival style in
1898, and is a Grade II
listed building.
[1]
Service
There is an hourly service daily from Felixstowe to Ipswich, westbound. From Ipswich, passengers can connect to London Liverpool Street.
Reference
1. Britain's Historic Railway Buildings, Biddle, Gordon, , , Oxford University Press, 2003,
External links