Station
Inverness (1855-)
Opened on the Inverness and Ross-shire Railway.
Opened on the Inverness and Nairn Railway.
Open on the Far North Line.
Open on the Kyle Line.
Open on the Aberdeen to Inverness.
Open on the Highland Main Line.
This is a seven platform terminus for services to and from locations to the south such as Glasgow Queen Street High Level, Edinburgh Waverley and London, and locations north and west such as Kyle of Lochalsh, Thurso and Wick.
The original fine frontage onto Union Street, and a small station square, was replaced in 1968 with a plain modern structure. The Highland Railway's offices were on the north side of the square and Station Hotel on the south side. In the square is a memorial statue to those soldiers of the Queen's Own Highlanders killed in the Anglo-Egyptian War of 1882 (erected 1893).
The station is essentially two terminus alongside each other, one for locations to the south and east (platforms 1 to 5) and the other for locations north (platforms 5 to 7). Lines curve out to the east and to the north west connected by a non passenger line to form a triangle.
The buffer ends of the platforms are covered by glazed trainsheds.
There was an Inverness Station signal box, this was located in the 'V' of the junction at platform 5. It opened in 1898 and closed in 1917 when replaced with a ground frame. The cabin itself was relocated to Murthly to become its south box. A (then) new small cabin was erected over the ground frame, since removed.
Nearby the station are:
- Inverness Signalling Centre, in the 'V' of the junction at platform 5
- Lochgorm Works, now the locomotive depot, enclosed by the station lines and its bypass
- Inverness Goods, to the south of the station and approached from the east, now closed and the site cleared
- Inverness Shed, to the south of the station approach from the east and now closed and cleared
- Rose Street Junction, the junction between the northbound station platforms and station bypass
- Needlefield Carriage Sidings, to the north of the station bypass, approached from the east, the original carriage sheds now demolished
- Millburn Yard, marshalling sidings and the present goods sidings laid out north of the carriage sidings, approached from the east
- Inverness Harbour, to the north west of the station and near the River Ness quayside
- Welsh's Bridge Junction, junction between the eastern station approach, southern station approach, Inverness station, Lochgorm Works, bypass line, Needlefield Carriage Sidings
- Ness Viaduct, a bridge over the River Ness carrying the Far North Line
- Millburn Junction, a wartime built connection, now removed, on the Aberdeen line to give access to Millburn Yard
The Station Hotel was Highland Railway owned and ultimately became a British Transport Hotel, who sold it in 1983.
Royal Highland Hotel
Nearby stations Clachnaharry Bunchrew Allanfearn Munlochy Lentran Castle Stuart Platform Allangrange Daviot Culloden Moor Redcastle Avoch Dalcross Clunes Fortrose Moy | Other railway and industry locations Inverness Goods Inverness Signalling Centre Inverness MPD Rose Street Junction Inverness Shed Needlefield Carriage Sidings Inverness Harbour Millburn Yard Welsh^s Bridge Platform Ness Viaduct Welsh^s Bridge Junction Tourist/other Inverness Bus Station Inverness Castle Inverness Cathedral Cromwell^s Fort [Inverness] |
Location names in dark blue are on the same original line. |
09/09/1863 | Inverness and Perth Junction Railway Line opened from Pitlochry to Aviemore, thus throughout from Inverness to Perth. |
/ /1883 | Glasgow and North Western Railway Glasgow and North Western Railway proposed by North British Railway. The route was to have been Glasgow to Inverness via Fort William. It was not built. |
07/02/1989 | [Inverness and Ross-shire Railway] Ness Viaduct, Inverness, collapses, separating the Thurso, Wick and Kyle of Lochalsh lines from the rest of the network. Dingwall becomes a terminus, Muir of Ord becomes a train maintenance depot and buses operate between Inverness and Dingwall while a new bridge is built. |