Pill railway station

Pill
The site of the former Pill railway station in 2009, looking west towards Portishead.
General information
LocationPill, North Somerset
England
Coordinates51°28′51″N 2°41′12″W / 51.4809°N 2.6866°W / 51.4809; -2.6866
Grid referenceST524760
Platforms2
Other information
StatusDisused
History
Original companyBristol and Portishead Pier and Railway
Pre-groupingGreat Western Railway
Post-groupingGreat Western Railway
Key dates
18 April 1867Opened
10 June 1963Closed to goods traffic
7 September 1964Closed to passengers
2023Due to be reopened

Pill railway station was a railway station on the Portishead Branch Line, 7.8 miles (12.6 km) west of Bristol Temple Meads, serving the village of Pill in North Somerset, England. The station was opened by the Bristol and Portishead Pier and Railway Company on 18 April 1867. It had two platforms, on either side of a passing loop, with a goods yard and signal box later additions. Services increased until the 1930s, at which point a half-hourly service operated. However the Portishead Branch was recommended for closure by the Beeching report, and the station was closed on 7 September 1964, although the line saw freight traffic until 1981. Regular freight trains through the station began to run again in 2002 when Royal Portbury Dock was connected to the rail network.

The station is due to be reopened to passenger traffic as part of MetroWest, a scheme to increase rail services in the Bristol area. The new station will have a single platform, an accessible footbridge and a car park, with trains running between Portishead and Bristol.