Haywards Heath railway station is on the Brighton Main Line in England, serving the town of Haywards Heath, West Sussex. It is 37 miles 59 chains (60.7 km) down the line from London Bridge via Redhill and is situated between Balcombe and Wivelsfield. It is managed by Southern.
Haywards Heath | |
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General information | |
Location | Haywards Heath, District of Mid Sussex England |
Grid reference | TQ330245 |
Managed by | Southern |
Platforms | 4 |
Other information | |
Station code | HHE |
Classification | DfT category B |
Key dates | |
12 July 1841 | Opened (terminus) |
21 September 1841 | Opened (through) |
1883[1] | Ardingly branch opened |
1933 | Electrification and Rebuilt |
28 October 1963[1] | Ardingly branch closed |
Passengers | |
2016/17 | 4.203 million |
2017/18 | 4.393 million |
Interchange | 0.562 million |
2018/19 | 4.382 million |
Interchange | 0.673 million |
2019/20 | 4.487 million |
Interchange | 0.607 million |
2020/21 | 0.955 million |
Interchange | 0.102 million |
Notes | |
Passenger statistics from the Office of Rail and Road |
Trains calling at Haywards Heath are operated by Southern, Thameslink and Gatwick Express. Until 2008 a small number of CrossCountry services also stopped here.[2]
The London and Brighton Railway opened its main line from a junction with the London and Croydon Railway at Norwood as far as Haywards Heath on 12 July 1841, with a coach service to take passengers on the remainder of their journey towards Brighton. This was the result of a roof fall during the construction of Haywards Heath Tunnel just south of the station on 2 January 1841, which killed three men.[3] The remainder of the line to Brighton opened shortly after on 21 September of the same year.
The original station was designed by the architect David Mocatta and included a central passing line, and an awning over the platform.[4] The station retained its importance as a junction following the construction of the line to Lewes from Keymer 3 miles (4.8 km) to the south. From 1846 the railway became the London Brighton and South Coast Railway.
On 3 September 1883 the Lewes and East Grinstead Railway opened a branch line from Copyhold Junction, just north of the station, to Horsted Keynes railway station on their existing line between those towns.[5] There was an intermediate station at Ardingly.[1] As a result, Haywards Heath station was enlarged by the provision of two bay platforms. As soon as the line was opened, the Lewes and East Grinstead Railway merged with the London Brighton and South Coast Railway, but until 1912, there was no physical connection between the tracks of the branch line and those of the main line; they ran parallel all the way to Haywards Heath station.[6] Once the connection was made, it provided a relief route for the congested Brighton Main Line from Croydon to Brighton via Oxted, East Grinstead and Haywards Heath. This double-track branch line was closed to passengers on 28 October 1963, but a single-track section remains to serve a freight and aggregates terminal at Ardingly.[1]
Haywards Heath station was the site of the first use of the practice of "slipping" coaches from the rear of express trains, at intermediate junctions, for onward transmission to smaller stations. The earliest recorded example was in February 1858, when coaches for Hastings were slipped from a London Bridge to Brighton express.[7] This practice was a regular feature at the station until the electrification of the line during 1932/3. The station and surrounding structures such as bridges were also totally rebuilt at this time. A single signal box, alongside platform 4 (the westernmost platform face), replaced the former north and south boxes.
In 2014, work began on a new "Station Quarter", which would include construction of a new multi-storey car park and footbridge to service the platforms, a new Waitrose supermarket on site and a regeneration of the existing station buildings.[8] The multi-storey car park was opened in late 2016 along with the new footbridge, while the new Waitrose supermarket was opened in March 2017.[9]
In 2021, a tactile map was installed, in collaboration with the Royal National Institute of Blind People, to help blind and partially sighted passengers navigate the station.[10]
The station lies on a quadruple-track[lower-alpha 1] passing loop (the line either side of the station is double-track), which allows fast services to overtake stopping services. As such, it has a total of four platforms, one per track, numbered 1 to 4.[11]
Unusually, the platforms have been numbered "right-to-left" (when facing London), instead of "left-to-right" which is the usual numbering scheme on the Brighton Main Line.
Platforms 1 and 4 are signalled bidirectionally, which allows trains to reverse here or run "the wrong way" through the station at times of disruption. Platforms 2 and 3 are partially signalled in both directions, allowing trains running to/from the south to reverse here.[12][13]
A short distance north of the station lies a single-track unelectrified freight-only line, which runs to an aggregates terminal at Ardingly; this branch can only be accessed via platform 1.[1][14]
There are three entrances/exits at the station. The main one is just off Commercial Square; access to platforms is in the form of a subway under the railway line. The other two entrances and exits use the new footbridge on the southern end of the platforms; one end of the footbridge leads onto Market Place and the other end connects with the station car park at Clair Road. All routes in and out of the station offer step-free access via lifts from footbridge or ground level to the platforms.
Off-peak, services at Haywards Heath are operated by Southern and Thameslink using Class 377 and 700 EMUs.
The typical off-peak service in trains per hour is:[15]
During the peak hours and on Saturdays, the service between London Victoria and Littlehampton is increased to 2 tph and an additional hourly service between London Victoria and Eastbourne also calls at the station. There are also a number of peak hour Thameslink services to Littlehampton.
In addition, the station is served by a number of peak hour Gatwick Express services which usually pass through Haywards Heath. These services run non-stop from Gatwick Airport to London Victoria and are operated using Class 387 EMUs.
Preceding station | National Rail | Following station | ||
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Balcombe or Three Bridges | Thameslink Brighton Main Line |
Wivelsfield or Burgess Hill | ||
Southern East Coastway Line | ||||
Southern West Coastway Line | ||||
Gatwick Express Gatwick Express Peak Hours Only | ||||
Disused railways | ||||
Ardingly Line and station closed |
London, Brighton and South Coast Railway Lewes and East Grinstead Railway |
Terminus |
The freight sidings at Haywards Heath were constructed during the First World War when the railway received a rapid growth in its freight traffic as a result of munitions trains travelling to Newhaven. They were intended to enable passenger trains to overtake slower freight traffic.
Today a sidings track does remain from Old Wickham Lane Bridge, 700 meters north of the station to Folly Hill Tunnel entrance. This line is not often used anymore, however it is protected for future extension to the Bluebell Railway. An area imminently east of platform 1 is also protected for the potential terminus platform / station for the Bluebell if it does reach Haywards Heath.[16] The new terminus would have a maximum of 1 platform, but would not be numbered platform 0.
Railway stations in West Sussex | |||
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London to Brighton Brighton Main Line | |||
Three Bridges to Ford via Horsham Arun Valley line | |||
London to Horsham via Dorking | |||
Southampton & Portsmouth to Brighton Coastway West | |||
Bognor Regis branch | |||
Littlehampton branch | |||
London to East Grinstead | |||
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Bluebell Railway |
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