Howardh
Established Member
- Joined
- 17 May 2011
- Messages
- 9,191
Stumbled across this; it appears Manchester's Exchange and Victoria stations "shared" a very long platform (did any trains stop at one end ie. Victoria and then stop at the other Exchange??) which made me wonder if that was unique in the UK, or whether in the past (or even today) two distinctly different stations share a platform? Or, more likely, anything close to this?
On 1 January 1922 the LYR was absored into the LNWR and a year later the LNWR became part of the London Midland & Scottish Railway. In 1929 the LMS combined platform 3 at Manchester Exchange with platform 11 at Manchester Victoria to make a continuous platform of 2235 ft: this was the longest platform in Europe. Its benefit was to offer the LMS operational flexibility so that it could route the most appropriate trains into the more appropriate station.