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| General information | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Location | Poole,Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole England | ||||
| Grid reference | SZ012911 | ||||
| Managed by | South Western Railway | ||||
| Platforms | 2 | ||||
| Other information | |||||
| Station code | POO | ||||
| Classification | DfT category C1 | ||||
| History | |||||
| Opened | 2 December 1872 | ||||
| Pre-grouping | London and South Western Railway | ||||
| Post-grouping | Southern Railway | ||||
| Passengers | |||||
| 2019/20 | |||||
| Interchange | | ||||
| 2020/21 | |||||
| Interchange | | ||||
| 2021/22 | |||||
| Interchange | | ||||
| 2022/23 | |||||
| Interchange | | ||||
| 2023/24 | |||||
| Interchange | | ||||
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Poole railway station is a stop on theSouth West Main Line in England, serving the town ofPoole in Dorset. It is situated near the town centre, next toHoles Bay. It is one of four stations in the Borough of Poole and is 113 miles 62 chains (183.1 km) down the main line fromLondon Waterloo.[note 1]
The station is operated bySouth Western Railway, which provides express and semi-fast services between London Waterloo andWeymouth. It is also the terminus for the London to Poole stopping service.Virgin CrossCountry used to operate services from Poole to theNorth West and Scotland but, since 2007, these now start/terminate atBournemouth.[1]

The first Poole station was sited on the western side of Holes Bay, at the location that ultimately became Hamworthy Goods. There was a branch to the west of Holes Bay from Poole Junction (now Hamworthy) to the station calledPoole, situated to the west of the bridge over the inlet. This was thePoole station thatSomerset & Dorset trains reached originally overLondon and South Western Railway (L&SWR) tracks, after reversing at Wimborne.
This was inconvenient for access to the town centre and so the L&SWR interest built a railway to reach Poole itself from a new junction at what is now Broadstone, opening on 2 December 1872.
The new station was calledNew Poole and the junction station at what is now Broadstone was calledNew Poole Junction. When this caused confusion, the New Poole Junction station was renamedBroadstone, naming it after the nearby Broadstone Farm.
The original New Poole station buildings were built on the London-bound platform, close to the site of Towngate Bridge which replaced a level crossing in 1971. Following the opening of the Bournemouth Direct Railway line viaSway in 1888, the platforms' direction of travel was reversed. The Victorian buildings were replaced by aBritish Rail prefabricated structure on the other side of the line in the 1970s. This was later replaced by the current station building built in the late 1980s. In 2019, a proposal was made to relocate the station as part of plans to revive the town centre.[2]
Until 1967, trains through Poole were normally steam hauled. Between 1967 and 1988, passenger services on the London Waterloo-Weymouth line were normally provided byClass 33/1diesel locomotives withClass 438 coaching stock (also known as4-TC units). The line through Poole was electrified in 1988, using the standard British RailSouthern Region direct current third rail at 750 volts.Class 442electric multiple units (EMUs) were used initially following electrification, until they were displaced by newClass 444 in 2007. Nowadays, a mix of Classes 444 and450 EMUs are used.

The station has two platforms, capable of handling trains of 12 coaches; platform 1 is bi-directional. Trains from London terminating at the station regularly use platform 1 before moving to the empty stock sidings further west and reversing for the return service. There was a goods line to Poole Quay, which joined the main line at the Hamworthy end of the station. It ran along part of what is now the Holes Bay relief road and West Quay Road. It closed in May 1960 and was removed in 1961.
Poole station is 113 miles 62 chains (183.1 km) from London Waterloo. TheEngineers line reference code for the line is BML2.[3]
Under the station name signs on the platforms are additional boards informing passengers that Poole is the home ofBournemouth University, the main campus of which is located in theTalbot Village area of the borough. The signs replaced most of the ones displaying theCondor Ferries logo with information on alighting at the station for services to theChannel Islands, though some remain on the station building. The Condor signs, the original version of which were installed in 1997, were in place due to the Condor Ferries Rail/Sea through ticketing scheme which includes ataxi to the Harbour ferry port from Poole station.
There is no passenger service along the railway line linking Poole station with Poole Harbour ferry terminal; however, it is only a 15-minute walk and there is a regular bus service provided byMorebus to a stop close to the port (Routes 8/9).

The station's facilities include:[4]
Train running information is provided via digital information displays, timetable poster boards, customer help points and automated announcements. Step-free access is available to both platforms via a ramped underpass.


The station is served bySouth Western Railway, which provides the following typical off-peak stopping pattern, in trains per hour:[5]
On Sundays, the service to London Waterloo is reduced to 2 tph and the service to Weymouth is reduced to hourly.
| Preceding station | Following station | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parkstone orBournemouth | South Western Railway South West Main Line | Hamworthy | ||
| Disused railways | ||||
| Parkstone | Somerset & Dorset Joint Railway LSWR andMidland Railways | Creekmoor Halt | ||
| Terminus (Poole Harbour) | Brittany Ferries Ferry | Cherbourg Maritime | ||
| Terminus (Poole Harbour) | Brittany Ferries high-speed catamaran | St Peter Port | ||
| Saint-Malo | ||||
| Terminus (Poole Harbour) | DFDS Seaways high-speed catamaran | St Helier | ||
| This station offers access to theSouth West Coast Path | |
|---|---|
| Distance to path | 4 miles (plus ferry) |
| Next station clockwise | Swanage 12 miles total |