Carnarvon (Pant) railway station
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Carnarvon_(Pant)_railway_station an entity of type: Thing
Carnarvon (Pant) was the temporary northern terminus of the Carnarvonshire Railway, located on the southern fringe of Caernarfon, Gwynedd, Wales. The line from Afon Wen to Caernarfon was built from the country end, as were the other standard gauge routes to the town, resulting in there being three temporary termini on the edges of Caernarfon. This was eventually resolved by building the "Caernarfon Town Line" through a tunnel under the historic centre to join the various routes. When this was completed Pant station was closed.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Carnarvon (Pant) railway station
rdf:langString
Carnarvon (Pant)
rdf:langString
Carnarvon
xsd:float
53.12649917602539
xsd:float
-4.273099899291992
xsd:integer
51193476
xsd:integer
1098535501
rdf:langString
Opened
rdf:langString
Closed, replaced by
rdf:langString
Wales
rdf:langString
(Line and Station closed)
xsd:integer
1
rdf:langString
Disused
xsd:gMonthDay
--08-01
--09-02
xsd:string
53.1265 -4.2731
rdf:langString
Carnarvon (Pant) was the temporary northern terminus of the Carnarvonshire Railway, located on the southern fringe of Caernarfon, Gwynedd, Wales. The line from Afon Wen to Caernarfon was built from the country end, as were the other standard gauge routes to the town, resulting in there being three temporary termini on the edges of Caernarfon. This was eventually resolved by building the "Caernarfon Town Line" through a tunnel under the historic centre to join the various routes. When this was completed Pant station was closed. The station appears to have been built on rented land, as in November 1868 a Mr Rice Thomas threatened to eject the railway from the station for non-payment of rent. The facilities included a platform and a turntable, both still traceable on the land in the 1940s and a siding which acted as an open air engine shed. Freight and passenger trains passed through the edge of the station site until 7 December 1964, when all services were withdrawn. The line was lifted in 1969. In 1997 the Welsh Highland Railway began running through the edge of the station site, having used part of the trackbed for their narrow gauge line to Porthmadog. Sources cited in this article differ on the station's location, research continues.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
5971
<Geometry>
POINT(-4.273099899292 53.126499176025)