GWR pagoda platform shelter

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The archetypal Pagoda Platform Shelter was a distinctively-shaped corrugated iron structure used by passengers waiting at railway stations in Wales and southern England.

Pagoda shelter at Doniford Halt.
Inside the preserved example at Doniford Halt

Origins

In Britain Pagoda shelters are associated with the Great Western Railway (GWR) who introduced them in 1907 and erected a patchwork of them across their network. They were manufactured by an outside supplier and delivered in kit form.[1] They could therefore be assembled offsite, delivered on standard well wagons and craned into position,[2][3] or assembled onsite, according to circumstances.

The GWR opened its first "Haltes" on 12 October 1903, anglicising the name to "Halt" in 1905. They were prime candidates for Pagoda shelters, but the market was crowded: finance, tradition, knowledge, skills and materials to hand meant that some lines had pagodas aplenty, some one or two and others none at all. The Bala to Ffestiniog Line in upland Wales, for example, had six halts erected at remote, virgin sites between the World Wars, Teigl Halt and Llafar Halt had pagoda shelters, but Trawsfynydd Lake Halt, Bryn-Celynog Halt, Tyddyn Bridge Halt and Capel Celyn Halt had shelters with other designs.

Opening halts and standardising cheap to install and cheap to buy infrastructure in the face of competition firstly from trams, then buses and ultimately cars overlapped with other initiatives such as the railmotor.[4]

Spread

Pagoda shelters were generally associated with branch lines, but many were erected next to regional arteries and some were erected next to main lines; Challow being an example on what was and remains a high speed route out of Paddington.[5]

Specifications

Although they were renowned for their shape, their greatest virtues were their cost, simplicity and durability, coupled with the fact that the GWR "took them seriously". They were built to precise working drawings with materials to exact engineering specifications. The example installed at the remote Teigl Halt, for example, had a roof made of "No. 18 SWG Galvanised 3 inch Corrugated Sheeting [...] with a floor of specially prepared timber."[6][7][8][9]

Suitability

Many small halts used wooden platforms on a timber frame, rather than masonry or earth. The pagoda shelter could be used for these because of its light weight.[10][11]

Platform configurations

A pagoda shelter was typically provided for each platform, as, for example, at Truthall Halt.[12] As the halts where they were used were mostly on single-track lines, there was only one shelter, though Bilson Halt had only one platform with two pagoda shelters.[13] Stations such as Radipole and Ruislip Gardens with two platforms, had two, one on each platform,[14][15] as did Appleford.[16] Harlech[17][18][19][20] and Loudwater[21] had two platforms but a pagoda shelter opposite the masonry station building only. Perivale Halt had several on each platform.[22] Defiance Halt (later Defiance Platform) had one on each platform initially, but two more were added to the Up platform during the station's life.[23] Bala Junction had three platform faces with a pagoda shelter only on the most southerly.[24][25]

Variations

Most pagoda shelters were simple structures with one doorway leading into one room. At Kelmscott and Langford, however, the station building was a "Pagoda Building", with three doors and four windows facing the platform and rooms inside for different purposes.[26] Penhelig still has a pagoda shelter which used to incorporate a "lean-to" staff cabin at the Aberdyfi end.[27][28] The lean-to appears to have been incorporated into the overall building since it was de-staffed. The shelter differs from most pagodas in that it is either built of or clad with timber.[29]

Although the standard pagoda shelter measured 20 feet (6.1 m) by 8 feet (2.4 m),[30] they could be erected to different dimensions, occasionally at the same location, such as Dawlish Warren.[31]

Uses

The shelters were mainly used by passengers waiting for trains, but at least two - at Legacy[32] and Tetbury[33] - were "Pagoda lamp huts", whilst one at Witney was a shed.[34] Fairford[35][36] and Twyford each had a "Pagoda bike shed". Pagoda huts existed next to Weymouth Junction signalbox,[37] and in Hagley station goods yard,[38] neither was for passenger use. A Pagoda shelter was erected at right angles to the track next to the down platform at Festiniog, unsigned and painted black;[39][40] research continues into its purpose. It was still there in 1989, 28 years after the station closed and long after all other buildings had been demolished.[41][42][43]

Other railways' pagoda shelters

The GWR did not have a complete monopoly of pagoda shelters; Grogley Halt, Nanstallon Halt and Dunmere Halt[44] on the former LSWR branch near Bodmin in Cornwall had one each,[45] and the Highland Railway had at least one, at the remote Borrobol on its main line to Wick.[46] In the USA Pagoda shelters were adopted on a grand scale by at least one railroad.[47]

The present

By 2015

  • a few, such as Denham Golf Club, survived in ordinary use
  • some survived on preserved railways
  • some have been erected as new builds on such lines[48][49]
  • at least one has been rescued from a derelict site and installed on a preserved railway[50] and
  • the shelter and other platform furniture at Llanerch-Ayron Halt have been preserved, but not the railway.

Most, however, have been demolished

Fairford, 1950
Bowbridge Crossing Halt railway station in 1961
  • "Alvescot". The Fairford Branch.
  • "Backney Halt". Landscape Origins of the Wye Valley. Archived from the original on 11 September 2011. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  • "Borrobol". ambaile.
  • "Boxford". Disused Stations.
  • "Bromley Halt". Rail Around Birmingham.
  • "Brymbo (GWR)". Disused Stations.
  • "Buckfastleigh". South Devon Railway.
  • "Calne (free login needed to zoom)". Britain from above.
  • "Cheltenham High Street Halt". Archive Images.
  • "Chudleigh Knighton Halt". Disused Stations.
  • "Cleobury Mortimer". Google Images.
  • "Coryates Halt". Disused Stations.
  • "Coryton". Urban75.
  • "Cove Halt". Cornwall Railway Society.
  • "Deeside Halt". Llangollen Railway. Archived from the original on 21 January 2021. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  • "Drybrook Halt". Forest of Dean Family History.
  • "Drybrook Halt". SunGreen.
  • "Dunmere Halt". Cornwall Railway Society.
  • "East Garston". Disused Stations.
  • "Goonbell Station". NRM. Archived from the original on 25 December 2016. Retrieved 24 December 2016.
  • "Goonhavern Halt". Goonhavern Cornwall.
  • "Gornal Halt". Rail Around Birmingham.
  • "Great Shefford". Disused Stations.
  • "Grimes Hill & Wythall Platform". Warwickshire Railways.
  • "Ham Green Halt". Bristol Railway Archives.
  • "Kidderminster, ex-Allscott Sidings". Friends of Kidderminster Town. Archived from the original on 19 July 2012. Retrieved 3 August 2016.
  • "Lechlade". The Fairford Branch.
  • "Luxulyan". NRM. Archived from the original on 6 October 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  • "Mount Hawke Halt". NRM. Archived from the original on 6 October 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  • "Newbury West Fields Halt". Disused Stations.
  • "Old Oak Lane Halt". David Heys Collection.
  • "Pencarrow Bridge". RMweb.
  • "Pentrecourt Platform". Pentrecourt Platform.
  • "Rhiwbina Halt". Urban75.
  • "Shaugh Bridge Platform". Urban75.
  • "Speen". Disused Stations.
  • "Spring Road Halt". Rail Around Birmingham.
  • "Stanley Bridge Halt". Disused Stations.
  • "Stockcross & Bagnor". Disused Stations.
  • "Towersey Halt". Towersey Village. Archived from the original on 5 October 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  • "Trumper's Crossing Halt". Disused Stations.
  • "Truthall Halt". NRM. Archived from the original on 6 October 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2016.
  • "Welford Park". Disused Stations.
  • "Willersey Halt". Willersey.
  • "Wootton Wawen Platform". Warwickshire Railways.

References

Sources

Further material