Culham | |
Symbol Location: | gb |
Symbol: | rail |
Borough: | Culham, South Oxfordshire |
Country: | England |
Grid Name: | Grid reference |
Manager: | Great Western Railway |
Platforms: | 2 |
Code: | CUM |
Classification: | DfT category F1 |
Original: | Great Western Railway |
Pregroup: | GWR |
Postgroup: | GWR |
Opened: | 1844 |
Footnotes: | Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road |
Culham railway station serves the village of Culham in Oxfordshire, England. It is on the Cherwell Valley Line between and, 56chain17chain from . It is served by local train services provided by Great Western Railway.
The station is just off the A415 road, between the villages of Culham and Clifton Hampden.
It is close to Culham Science Centre, an 80ha scientific research site housing two nuclear fusion experiments: JET and MAST. The Science Centre was built on the site of RNAS Culham (HMS Hornbill), a World War II airfield.
The Great Western Railway opened the station on the – line as Abingdon Road on 12 June 1844. Its name was changed by the GWR to Culham, on 2 June 1856, on the opening of the branch from to Abingdon.
The original station building (no longer in railway use) is in the Tudor Revival architecture of Isambard Kingdom Brunel[1] and is a Grade II* listed building.
The name Abingdon Road was later re-used for an entirely different station about 5.5miles to the north,, opened in 1908.
In some recent years passenger numbers using Culham have changed rapidly. The total increased 67% in the three years 2006–09, but then decreased slightly in 2010.[2]
All services at Culham are operated by Great Western Railway.
The typical off-peak service is one train per hour in each direction between and, with alternate trains continuing beyond Oxford to and from every two hours. Additional services call at the station during the peak hours.
No services call at the station on Sundays.