Skip to content
Bedford's life-supporters: (l to r) Tom Moran, Managing Director for Thameslink and Great Northern, Bernie Lee, Bedford Station Manager, Sarah Broughton, Project Manager at the Bedford Foodbank, and Bedford's MP Mohammad Yasin
Bedford's life-supporters: (l to r) Tom Moran, Managing Director for Thameslink and Great Northern, Bernie Lee, Bedford Station Manager, Sarah Broughton, Project Manager at the Bedford Foodbank, and Bedford's MP Mohammad Yasin

Press release -

​Bedford makes shortlist in public vote to find Britain’s favourite railway station

  • This week the British public will vote for their favourite railway station in the World Cup of Stations 2020
  • Bedford has made the shortlist of 48 stations which will compete head to head in the online poll
  • Stations and staff have been playing a key role supporting Britain’s recovery from COVID-19
  • Bedford will face competition from East region rivals Kempston Hardwick

The people of Bedford are being urged to get behind their biggest station this week as it competes in an online poll to be crowned winner of the 2020 World Cup of Stations.

With sports fans having been denied their usual fix during much of the Covid-19 pandemic, the World Cup of Stations, returning for its second year, will give people a chance to cheer on their local station as it competes in the top-flight of social media polling.

The competition will see 48 stations, large and small, representing each region of the country competing in a series of online polls starting today [Monday 12 October]. Regional and national heats are sure to stoke rivalries. By Friday, the competition will have been whittled down to a final four with one of Britain’s 2,579 railway stations named the nation’s favourite on Friday evening.

A Cinderella story unfolded last year when Huddersfield saw off competition from some of the country’s biggest and busiest stations, including nearby juggernaut Leeds. Bedford will be looking to ensure no such upset happens this year when they make their first outing in the regional group stages against local minnows Kempston Hardwick.

Bernie Lee, Thameslink’s Station Manager at Bedford said: “We have to respect Kempston Hardwick for getting this far but we know that we’ll create enough chances to come out on top. And our close relationship with our fans, who are part of what make us a great station, means we can go a long way in this cup.”

The competition comes as stations up and down the country welcome more people back to the railway, supporting communities and local businesses as Britain continues to learn to live with Covid-19. Station staff are working hard to ensure stations can play their full role supporting Britain’s recovery from Covid, keeping people connected and boosting regional economies.

Robert Nisbet, Director of Nations and Regions for the Rail Delivery Group, which is organising the competition said: “The World Cup of Stations is about celebrating the thousands of stations across the country, many of which have been at the heart of their communities for more than a century. It’s also about recognising the friendly local faces who have kept key workers moving throughout the pandemic. As Britain gets moving again, their role in supporting local businesses and spreading opportunity is more important than ever.”

Bernie’s Bedford squad and back-room staff at Midland Road are all focussed on ensuring fans can travel with confidence during the Covid-19 pandemic, with an intensive cleaning regime, encouraging face-covering, and social distance surgeries (in collaboration with Sustrans and the British Transport Police) that build confidence as passengers return to public transport. The team has also been supporting the wider local community during these difficult times, setting up a highly successful collection point for foodbanks, decorating the station with schoolchildren’s lockdown artwork, and completing a 50-kilometre cycle and walking challenge that raised £1,600 for Autism Bedfordshire.

The squad is further increasing its strength in depth this season with new cycle security measures, toilet improvements and another platform shelter, all part of Govia Thameslink Railway’s multimillion-pound 'Improving Your Station' programme. Many of the 1,000-plus projects, at over 250 stations, were suggested by local passengers and communities.

Post-match analysis will take place at the end of each day of voting, led by a bevy of railway experts and station enthusiasts.

Historian and presenter of UKTV’s ‘The Architecture The Railways Built’ Tim Dunn said: “Station-fans, assemble: it’s time to do battle. Pick your station but pick it well – ‘cause this is a game of 48 sides and 200+ platforms, yet only one can return triumphant and take home that much-coveted trophy. Your local station squad needs you – so don’t stand silent in the sidings, get out of that waiting room and cheer loud on social media platforms. My tip for chuffing to the top of the championships is old-timer Glasgow Queen Street - back on the pitch with a new spring in its step for 2020."

ENDS

Notes

  • Twitter polls will be hosted on the twitter page of the Rail Delivery Group - @RailDeliveryGrp
  • The Rail Delivery Group represents the rail industry including train operating companies and Network Rail.
  • The structure of the competition is explained in the diagram attached.

The full list of stations competing in World Cup of Stations 2020 is as follows:

Station Region/ Nation Year opened Footfall 2018-19 Station owner
Bedford East 1859 4,058,190 Govia Thameslink Railway (Thameslink)
Cambridge East 1845 11,983,320 Greater Anglia
Kempston Hardwick East 1905 9,692 West Midlands Trains (London Northwestern Railway)
Welwyn Garden City East Current site 1926 2,867,810 Govia Thameslink Railway (Great Northern)
Leicester East Midlands 1840 5,582,286 East Midlands Railway
Nottingham East Midlands 1848 8,004,938 East Midlands Railway
Bottesford East Midlands 1850 63,628 East Midlands Railway
Spalding East Midlands 1848 193,034 East Midlands Railway
Elmstead Woods London 1904 1,213,160 Southeastern
Falconwood London 1936 1,045,686 Southeastern
London Kings Cross London 1852 34,645,924 Network Rail
London Waterloo London 1848 94,192,690 Network Rail
Middlesbrough North East 1847 1,289,866 TransPennine Express
Newcastle North East 1850 8,913,554 London North Eastern Railway
Chathill North East 1847 2,546 Northern
Blaydon North East 1835 21,428 Northern
Ainsdale North West 1848 1,016,242 Merseyrail
Crewe North West 1837 3,305,352 Avanti West Coast
Hindley North West 1848 294,844 Northern
Wigan North Western North West 1838 1,683,184 Avanti West Coast
Chirk NRA Best Station winner 1848 77,106 Transport for Wales Rail
Norwich NRA Best Station winner 1844 4,250,834 Greater Anglia
Penrith NRA Best Station winner 1846 592,462 Avanti West Coast
Reading NRA Best Station winner 1840 17,080,738 Network Rail
Aberdeen Scotland 1867 2,616,142 ScotRail
Glasgow Queen Street Scotland 1842 17,207,208 ScotRail
Motherwell Scotland Current site 1885 1,386,976 ScotRail
Wemyss Bay Scotland 1865 213,988 ScotRail
Aylesbury South East 1863 1,235,236 Chiltern Railways
Hedge End South East 1990 522,492 South Western Railway
Sandown South East 1864 150,748 South Western Railway (Island Line)
Sevenoaks South East 1868 4,376,024 Southeastern
Barnstaple South West 1854 432,196 Great Western Railway
Bristol Temple Meads South West 1840 11,367,652 Network Rail
Sherborne South West 1860 210,170 South Western Railway
Worcestershire Parkway South West 2020 n/a Great Western Railway
Cardiff Central Wales 1850 12,934,304 Transport for Wales Rail
Newport Wales 1850 2,745,064 Transport for Wales Rail
Pontypridd Wales 1840 884,132 Transport for Wales Rail
Swansea Wales 1850 2156036 Transport for Wales Rail
Leamington Spa West Midlands 1852 2,773,782 Chiltern Railway
Stourbridge Junction West Midlands Current site 1901 1,667,752 West Midlands Trains (West Midlands Railway)
Tamworth West Midlands 1839 1,279,204 West Midlands Trains (London Northwestern Railway)
Warwick Parkway West Midlands 2000 682,228 Chiltern Railways
Cleethorpes Yorkshire & The Humber 1863 296,002 TransPennine Express
Huddersfield Yorkshire & The Humber 1847 4,897,612 TransPennine Express
Hull Yorkshire & The Humber 1847 2,356,812 TransPennine Express
Mytholmroyd Yorkshire & The Humber 1847 197,640 Northern

Topics

Categories


Govia Thameslink Railway

Govia Thameslink Railway (GTR) operates Thameslink, Great Northern, Southern and Gatwick Express services as follows:

  • Thameslink – cross-London services between Bedford/Peterborough/Cambridge and Brighton/Horsham/Littlehampton/East Grinstead, and between Luton/St Albans and Sutton/Wimbledon/Rainham; plus services between London and Sevenoaks
  • Great Northern – services between London and Welwyn, Hertford, Peterborough, Cambridge and King’s Lynn
  • Southern – services between London and the Sussex coast (Brighton, Worthing, Eastbourne, Bognor Regis, Hastings) and parts of Surrey, Kent and Hampshire (Ashford International, Southampton, Portsmouth)
  • Gatwick Express – fast, non-stop direct services between Gatwick Airport and London Victoria

www.southernrailway.comwww.thameslinkrailway.comwww.gatwickexpress.comwww.greatnorthernrail.com

Govia Thameslink Railway

United Kingdom