ChatterBank1 min ago
University towns lacking railway stations
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Decided to post this question here rather than under travel, I'd like to know which university towns in Britain don't have railway stations. St Andrews is the only Scottish one; apart from that I only know of Keele in England and (I think) Lampeter in Wales. Any more?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Keele is about half an hour by bus from Stoke on Trent station - see attached http://www.keele.ac.u.../howtofindus/byrail/.
Thank you. However the settlement of Keele itself (I don't know how much there is to it apart from the university) does not have a railway station, and neither does Newcastle under Lyme. Similarly, although Leuchars is 5-6 miles away, St Andrews itself, although it has a university, has no station. I am trying to find out how many other British university towns are not on the rail network..
The University of Wales, Lampeter is nowhere near a railway station:
http://www.lamp.ac.uk/uni/travel/
Cranfield University isn't particularly close to any rail station:
http://www.cranfield....ranfield/page1302.jsp
But Cranfield isn't a 'university town' either! (It's one of three villages around which the university is spread).
The University of Buckingham has no local rail station:
http://www.buckingham...gettinghere/rail.html
Multi-campus universities might present you with a bit of a problem. For example, while the University of Cumbria has its HQ in Lancaster (which is served by rail), it also has a campus at Ambleside (with no local station).
Those are the only candidates which my first look at this list identified:
http://en.wikipedia.o...in_the_United_Kingdom
Chris
http://www.lamp.ac.uk/uni/travel/
Cranfield University isn't particularly close to any rail station:
http://www.cranfield....ranfield/page1302.jsp
But Cranfield isn't a 'university town' either! (It's one of three villages around which the university is spread).
The University of Buckingham has no local rail station:
http://www.buckingham...gettinghere/rail.html
Multi-campus universities might present you with a bit of a problem. For example, while the University of Cumbria has its HQ in Lancaster (which is served by rail), it also has a campus at Ambleside (with no local station).
Those are the only candidates which my first look at this list identified:
http://en.wikipedia.o...in_the_United_Kingdom
Chris
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