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Belfast Great Victoria Street Station

Great Victoria Street
NI Railways
GVS (1).jpg
Location Belfast
Northern Ireland, United Kingdom
Coordinates 54°35′39″N 5°56′10″W / 54.5942°N 5.9362°W / 54.5942; -5.9362Coordinates: 54°35′39″N 5°56′10″W / 54.5942°N 5.9362°W / 54.5942; -5.9362
Owned by NI Railways
Operated by NI Railways
Platforms 4
Construction
Structure type At-grade
History
Original company Ulster Railway
Post-grouping Great Northern Railway (Ireland)
Key dates
1839 (1839) First station opened
1848 First terminus completed
1968 Terminus largely demolished
1976 First station closed
1995 Second station opened
170433 at Edinburgh Waverley.JPG

Belfast Great Victoria Street is a major railway station serving the city centre of Belfast, Northern Ireland. It is one of two major stations in the city, along with Belfast Central, and is one of the four stations located in the city centre, the others being Belfast Central, Botanic and City Hospital. It is near Great Victoria Street, one of Belfast's premier commercial zones, and Sandy Row. It is in a more central position than Belfast Central, with the Europa Hotel, Grand Opera House and The Crown Liquor Saloon all nearby.

The station is on the site of a former linen mill, beside where Durham Street crossed the Blackstaff River at the Saltwater (now Boyne) Bridge.

The Ulster Railway opened the first station on 12 August 1839 (1839-08-12). A new terminal building, probably designed by Ulster Railway engineer John Godwin, was completed in 1848. Godwin later founded the School of Civil Engineering at Queen's College.

The station was Belfast's first railway terminus, and as such was called just "Belfast" until 1852. By then two other railway companies had opened termini in Belfast, so the Ulster Railway renamed its terminus "Belfast Victoria Street" for clarity. In 1855 the Dublin and Belfast Junction Railway was completed, making Victoria Street the terminus for one of the most important main lines in Ireland. The Ulster Railway changed the station name again to "Great Victoria Street" in 1856.


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