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Economic Development

Work on first new Bristol train station in 95 years gets under way

Much of the work will be carried out overnight, but the Severn Beach line will be closed temporarily for part of February

A GWR train arrives at a signalling station.(Image: Stephen William Robinson/Shutterstock)

Construction work is under way on a new £4.2m train station being built in Bristol.

The station will link Portway Park and Ride in Shirehampton with the Severn Beach railway line. It is the first station to be built in Bristol since Parson Street in 1927 and is expected to open in the summer.

Bristol City Council and Network Rail are working together on the project, which forms part of a wider plan by the West of England Combined Authority (Weca) to enhance the local rail network through the MetroWest programme.

Network Rail completed the preparation work for the new station in December, ready for the first stage of construction. This will include replacing the safety fencing along the railway line; installing a ramp down to the tracks; and excavating the area of the platform before the foundations are laid.

Much of the work will be carried out overnight, according to the council, but the Severn Beach line will be closed temporarily from February 19 to 27 while Network Rail engineers make changes to the signalling and build the concrete foundations in preparation for the new platform. Improvements to drainage along the railway line will also be made.

During this time trains will not call at stations between Bristol Temple Meads and Filton Abbey Wood, or between Severn Beach and Stapleton Road. A rail replacement bus service will be in operation and the Portway Park and Ride facility will remain open throughout the work with park and ride buses operating as usual.

When it opens, the station will be served by half-hourly services between Bristol Temple Meads and Severn Beach.

Councillor Don Alexander, Bristol City Council’s cabinet member for transport, said the new station would help "ease congestion" on the roads and reduce air pollution.