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Airedale Line

Airedale line
Crossflatts station p1.jpg
A train at Crossflatts station in 2006
Overview
Type Commuter rail
Status Open
Locale West Yorkshire
Yorkshire and the Humber
Termini Leeds
Bradford Forster Square
Skipton (some services continue to Carlisle or Lancaster)
Stations 11
Operation
Opened 1846
Owner Network Rail
Operator(s) Northern
Rolling stock British Rail Class 333 (majority of services)
Technical
Number of tracks 2
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Electrification Overhead catenary
Route map
Calder Valley line
Leeds
Hallam Line & Pontefract line
Calder Valley line, Huddersfield line,
Leeds-Bradford lines & Wakefield line
Harrogate line
Kirkstall Forge
Wharfedale line
Apperley Bridge
Wharfedale line
Bradford Forster Square
Frizinghall
Shipley
Saltaire
Bingley
Crossflatts
Keighley & Worth Valley Railway
Keighley Keighley and Worth Valley Railway
Steeton & Silsden
Cononley
Skipton to Ilkley Line
Yorkshire Dales Railway (freight)
Skipton
Leeds to Morecambe line

The Airedale line is one of the rail services in the West Yorkshire Metro area centred on West Yorkshire in northern England. The service is operated by Northern, on the route connecting Leeds and Bradford with Skipton. Some services along the line continue to Morecambe or Carlisle. The route covered by the service was historically part of the Midland Railway.

According to SELRAP, the Airedale line is the most heavily utilised passenger route outside the South East of England.

The first section, between Leeds and Bradford (Forster Square station), was opened by the Leeds and Bradford Railway on 1 July 1846. A number of the intermediate stations were closed in March 1965 (as a result of the Beeching Axe), however the line and its major stations remained open. Some of the closed stations, such as Saltaire, were re-opened during the 1980s.

In 1994 under Regional Railways, the line was electrified at 25 kV AC overhead between Leeds and Skipton, and new British Rail Class 333 trains were introduced in the early 2000s. Investment in the line has seen passenger numbers grow, and now overcrowding on trains is a problem. New stock and longer trains are to be introduced by the new Northern Rail franchisee Arriva Rail North by December 2018 to tackle this issue.

The route is described below. The line originally included a number of stations which are now closed:


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Wikipedia

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