Location | 44-47 Barrow Street, Dublin 4, D04 C3H6 Republic of Ireland |
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Coordinates | 53°20′23″N 6°14′16″W / 53.33961°N 6.23771°WCoordinates: 53°20′23″N 6°14′16″W / 53.33961°N 6.23771°W |
Owned by | Iarnród Éireann |
Operated by | Iarnród Éireann |
Platforms | 3 |
Construction | |
Structure type | At-grade |
Other information | |
Station code | GCDK |
Fare zone | Suburban 1 |
Key dates | |
23 January 2001 | Station opens |
November 2014 | Refurbishment commences |
July 2016 | Refurbishment completed |
Grand Canal Dock railway station (Irish: Stáisiún Dug na Canálach Móire) serves the Grand Canal Dock area in Dublin, Ireland.
Like several stations in central Dublin, it is elevated above street level, with steps leading down to Barrow Street in South Lotts, near Google's European headquarters.
The ticket office is open between 06:00-00:00 AM, Monday to Sunday.
The station has three platforms. Platform 1 is a former terminal platform, which became the Northbound main line on 17 July 2016. Platform 2 is the terminal platform for South Western Commuter trains to Newbridge. Platform 3 is the Southbound main line platform. Platforms 1 and 2 are accessed by a footbridge and platform 3 has level access.
Grand Canal Dock was built on the site of a former locomotive shed at Canal Street, across from the engineering works of the Dublin & Kingstown Railway, which were in use between 1834 and 1925.
This station was opened on 23 January 2001. The first station clerk on duty was Mick O'Grady and the senior depot man was Nigel McArdle. Grand Canal Dock was Dublin's newest station until Docklands Station opened in March 2007.
Between November 2014 and July 2016 the station underwent a major refurbishment to prepare it to serve South Western Commuter trains to Newbridge, which commenced operations on 21 November 2016. Irish Rail rebuilt platform 1, resurfaced the other platforms, installed new destination displays, and provided a new evacuation bridge. Platform 1 lacked overhead electric cables and had a permanent sign reading "Do not board any trains at platform 1" that was removed in May 2015. Platform 1 was fitted with overhead cables in November 2015. Irish Rail also added a centre road terminating turn-back facility to accommodate southbound trains. The refurbishment of the station itself was completed in May 2015, although major resignalling and track work took place for one more year.
The new signalling was commissioned, along with platform 1, on 17 July 2016.
The completion of the Irish Rail City Centre resignalling project has provided for