tbtc
Veteran Member
Station revenue figures wouldn't have been much use for incoming holiday/day trip traffic
So?
Let's say a lot of people from Sheffield take a trip to (e.g.) Cleethorpes each summer - Sheffield station has lots of revenue from the tickets - but passenger numbers aren't enough to keep Cleethorpes open - so the Sheffield passengers board trains to (e.g.) Blackpool instead - Sheffield station has broadly the same revenue, the same number of passengers, it's just that they head to a different seaside now - the railway gets the same £££ that it had before though
Whereas, if you allocate that money to Cleethorpes instead, it stays open because it's pulling it's weight, but Sheffield is no longer viable and closes. Those Sheffield passengers now no longer have the option to take a train to the seaside, so all that money is lost
Plus, re @coppercapped 's fascinating figures above, the cost of having sufficient "supply" to met the "demand" of a few summer weekends was pretty expensive (in the way that it's currently quite expensive nowadays to provide trains that are only used for one peak service a day) - so if the seaside town was only getting it's passenger numbers because they were heavily subsidised by keeping thousands of carriages in warm storage for fortysomething weeks of the year just so that they could be used for a handful of journeys each summer - so stations with very lopsided passenger volumes were always going to be tricky to solve (see also branches like Whitby where the annual passenger numbers are nothing special, but every weekend in the summer seems to have full and standing loads according to Forum experience, so that's a lot of pretty empty trains in the winter months)