It is located near the Jordanhill Campus of the University of Strathclyde and sits atop Crow Road, an important western thoroughfare in Glasgow and the main route to the Clyde Tunnel.[a] The station is five stops and eleven minutes' journey time from Glasgow Central on the Argyle Line. It has received international recognition for being the subject of the millionth article on the English Wikipedia.
History
Early history
The station opened on 1 August 1887 as part of the Glasgow, Yoker and Clydebank Railway.[3] Construction of the station structure was not completed until 1895, with modular-design wooden buildings, commonly seen on the new suburban railway lines, being built on both platforms. This is an important part of the station's history.[4] The station is located on part of the former site of brick and tile works; Jordanhill being an area of artisans and miners until the close of the nineteenth century.[5] The railway station arrived just as much of the local industry was declining, giving residents, who previously had to walk to Hillhead or Partick to find transport into Glasgow, proper access to the city centre.[6]
The station's opening effectively filled a gap in provision, as lines in the area had already been constructed; the Whiteinch and Stobcross Railways both opened in 1874, but no station was constructed on these lines at Jordanhill.[citation needed] A new link allowed services to Whiteinch Victoria Park to begin in 1897, but they ceased in 1951 and the link was closed to freight in 1967.[citation needed] The route of the link has been converted into a nature walk from Victoria Park to Jordanhill station, running alongside the existing line for approximately half its length.
On 15 January 1898, J. Johnstone, a member of the Whiteinch Harriers running club, was killed while attempting to run across the line west of the station. A small lead memorial stood on the spot for many years.[7] The freight line saw near-disaster on 28 December 1932, when seventeen wagons laden with coal ran away on a slight incline on the sidings operated by the Great Western Steam Laundry; they ran into other wagons, derailing nine and spilling coal over the line, seriously disrupting passenger traffic.[8]
A serious accident occurred on 28 April 1980, when a three-coach train carrying 80 passengers from Dalmuir to Motherwell derailed at Hyndland West Junction, just after leaving Jordanhill. All the bogies on the leading coach left the rails, causing fifteen people (nine women and six men) to be injured seriously enough for them to be taken to the Western Infirmary.[9]
Plans for rebuilding
This section needs to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(August 2021)
In 1998, Strathclyde Passenger Transport Authority (SPTA) undertook a study into the possible relocation of the station west to Westbrae Drive.[10] By 2004, SPT had identified this station as one of their top three priorities, and Glasgow City Council had identified it as a "main priority".[11]
An alternative proposal would keep the existing station open but with many services calling only at a new Westbrae Drive station. This proposal was backed in August 2001 by Charlie Gordon, then leader of Glasgow City Council, who said that having a second station in Jordanhill would assist students at the nearby Jordanhill campus of the University of Strathclyde.[12] The proposed new station would have been only roughly 500 yd (460 m) away.
The station at Jordanhill is to be rebuilt, one of six new stations in the west of Scotland, according to an announcement made on 19 May 2006 by SPT chief executive Ron Culley.[13]
Jordanhill Station will be rebuilt for the 2014 Commonwealth Games,[needs update] one of a number of stations that will be rebuilt for the Commonwealth Games through a £300 million transport legacy plan.[14]
In SRA's 2002/2003 financial year, 85,861 people boarded trains at Jordanhill station, and 94,613 disembarked, making it the 1,029th busiest station in the United Kingdom, and twenty-fifth busiest on the Argyle Line in 2003.[b]
In 2016, the Queen Street High Level tunnel closure saw restricted services for part of the year, with frequencies dropping to half-hourly from here.[16]
The station has a very small car park (eleven spaces) and is not permanently staffed,[17] but it contains a ticket machine, one of an initial batch of ten installed by SPT in late 2003 and early 2004 as part of a drive to curb fare dodging, which was estimated to be costing the company £2 million a year.[18] Both platforms are elevated and each has a wheelchair ramp. There is a connecting footbridge between the two platforms.
Wikipedia coverage
On 1 March 2006 an English Wikipedia article about the station was created by Ewan Macdonald, a Wikipedian known on the site as Nach0King. This article had the distinction of being the millionth article created on the site.[19][20] Macdonald said that he was "delighted" to be the one who made the millionth article.[20] Wikipedia's founder, Jimmy Wales, said in a press release that he is "thrilled" that the station was the topic of the site's millionth article, saying "This is not something that would appear in a traditional encyclopedia, and it shows how Wikipedia reflects the needs and interests of people everywhere, and not just the dictates of what academics and cultural mavens claim is worthy of an encyclopedia."[19]
^The usage information (Station Entries and Station Exits) is based on ticket sales in the financial year 2002/2003 and covers all National Rail stations. It does not include those stations that are owned by TfL. The calculation of station usage levels uses sales recorded in the railway ticketing system prior to their allocation to individual operators. It does not take into account any changes of train during the course of a journey. The ticketing system does not record certain journeys made using TfL bought travelcards, TfL Freedom Passes, staff travel passes and certain other PTE specific products. Continued usage notesArchived 4 March 2006 at the Wayback Machine and Excel format table for all stationsArchived 13 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine available.
References
^Brailsford, Martyn, ed. (December 2017) [1987]. "Gaelic/English Station Index". Railway Track Diagrams 1: Scotland & Isle of Man (6th ed.). Frome: Trackmaps. ISBN978-0-9549866-9-8.