Riding Mill railway station


Riding Mill railway station is a railway station which serves the village of Riding Mill in Northumberland, England. It is located on the Tyne Valley Line, which runs from Newcastle upon Tyne to Carlisle, from.
The station is owned by Network Rail and managed by Northern, which provides all passenger train services. The Newcastle to Carlisle railway runs through the village and its station, which was opened in 1835 and is one of the oldest railway stations in the world.

Facilities

The station has been unstaffed since 1967 and has no ticket machine, so all tickets must be purchased prior to travel or on board the train. There are basic shelters provided on each platform, along with timetable poster boards and a telephone on platform 2 to offer train running information. The main buildings still survive here and are in private residential use. The platforms are linked by a pre-grouping metal footbridge similar to ones seen elsewhere on the line - this is the only means of accessing the westbound platform from the station entrance. As such, step-free access is only possible on the eastbound side.

Services

The station has an hourly service to both Newcastle and on weekdays and Saturdays, with some evening trains continuing on to Carlisle. Many daytime eastbound trains continue to Sunderland and. There is also an hourly service each way on Sundays, with all trains running through to Carlisle.
A landslip west of the station in early January 2016 led to the temporary suspension of services whilst repairs to the track and adjacent cutting were carried out. A replacement bus service ran between Hexham and until the work was completed. The line reopened on 8 February 2016, following the removal of over 35 000 tonnes of earth from the site.