Location type
Station
Name and dates
Aviemore (1863-)
Station code: AVM
National Rail ScotRail
Where: Highland, Scotland
Opened on the
Inverness and Aviemore Direct Railway (Highland Railway).
Opened on the
Inverness and Perth Junction Railway.
Opened on the
Aviemore and Coylumbridge Timber Railway (War Department).
Open on the
Highland Main Line.
Open on the
Strathspey Railway [Preserved].
Description
This is a three platform station, formerly with a bay at the north end on the west side. The station was rebuilt and enlarged when Aviemore became a junction on the opening of the Direct Line to Inverness via Carrbridge. The name Aviemore is from Gaelic, 'An Aghaidh Mhòr' - The big (mountain) face, describing the hill Craigellachie which lies to the west.
Original station of 1863
When the railway opened Aviemore itself consisted of virtually nothing, just a post office and one or two houses, almost all for the railway staff! Some of the houses were converted navvy bothies, built from railway materials such as sleepers.
The original station had a loop and two platforms. In 1885 north and south boxes opened for the loop.
Direct line and reconstruction of 1898
In 1898 the new
Inverness and Aviemore Direct Railway (Highland Railway) opened throughout to
Inverness and Aviemore became a junction station. The new line greatly reduced the length of the main line from
Perth to
Inverness. The station was rebuilt.
The architect for the rebuild was
William Roberts. The new station was slightly incongruous for its location; a large well appointed station set in the midst of a then sparsely populated, albeit beautiful, area.
The main building is a long timber building on the north bound platform with a canopy. This building was erected to the north of the original, which was removed. Platforms are linked by a lattice footbridge.
The north and south boxes were replaced in 1892 and again in 1898 with the complete opening of the new direct route. The north box was on the west side north of the station. The south box was south of the station on the east side. In 1898 a new 'Aviemore Platform' box was added - at the north end of the island platform. Signal wires were placed on poles to protect them from snow fall.
The station now had four platforms, a northbound, southbound and the opposite face of the southbound island platform along with a bay platform at the north end, west side. The buildings had large canopies.
Twin water columns were installed at Aviemore for double headed northbound and southbound trains. The water tank was on the loading bank at the south east end of the station.
Trains to the south from
Inverness via
Carrbridge and via
Forres [2nd] were combined here, continuing south to
Perth.
There were sidings and loading banks on the east side of the station, approached from the south.
North of the station was Aviemore Yard on the west side of the line, sidings approached from the north. On the east side was
Aviemore Shed, approached from the station.
Run down and resurgence
Aviemore Platform box closed in 1914.
In the
Great War the Canadian Forestry Corps operated a 2ft gauge timber extraction railway,
Aviemore and Coylumbridge Timber Railway (War Department), from the loading bank at Aviemore station south east into the forest. With Baltic timber not being available for pit-props other sources of timber were required.
In the Second World War
Aviemore Yard, a marshalling yard was laid out on the west side of the
Carrbridge route, just north of the junction. Trains coming south from
Inverness and
Forres [2nd] were sorted here into portions for Edinburgh and Glasgow which would split in
Perth.
Aviemore was scaled back over some time. With the opening of
Perth New Yard, in 1962, marshalling of trains was relocated there and
Aviemore Yard was closed.
The original main line via
Boat of Garten closed to passengers in 1965 and outright in 1968.
Aviemore Shed closed.
Aviemore South box closed in 1971 and was taken over by the North box, now renamed simply 'Aviemore'.
The
Boat of Garten route was to re-open as the
Strathspey Railway [Preserved], the line being conveyed to the preservation group in 1978.
In 1979 a panel was installed in the signal box to control several locations where the boxes were replaced:
Carrbridge,
Tomatin,
Kincraig (Kincraig box was already closed in 1966 - a loop was reinstated),
Moy (Moy boxes were already closed in 1963 - a loop was reinstated)
Initially the preservation group were allowed a connection through the goods sidings but were blocked from the station so established their own
Aviemore Speyside to the north. It closed in 2000 when the group were given access to the east side of the island platform. This was modified to no longer be served from the north by the main line.
Today
The station remains open and has a long loop. The station was renovated in 1997, following which
Strathspey Railway [Preserved] trains were able to run into the station's east side of the island platform, beginning in 1998 and
Aviemore Speyside closed.
The signal box at the north end and on the west side of the line was 'C' listed. The box, the former north box opened in 1898, closed with the extension of the loop in 2019 and the signalling was taken over by
Inverness Signalling Centre.
The line is supported and promoted by the
Highland Main Line Community Partnership .
Local
The town very much owes its existence to the railway. Before the railway opened there were very few houses here. It became a town to support the needs of the junction between the lines to Forres and Inverness when the direct route to Inverness opened throughout in 1897. The Station Hotel and Cairngorm Hotel were opened after the direct route opened.
Today Aviemore itself is a much bigger place, with expansion of the town to the north of the station. Much of the expansion was with the opening of the Aviemore Ski Centre.
Visit Aviemore
Cairngorm Mountain
The Cairngorm Mountain - Funicular Railway is 9.5 miles away by road. (Currently closed for repairs.)
The Strathspey Railway [Preserved] operate a heritage steam and diesel line north from Aviemore to Broomhill via Boat of Garten. This is the southern portion of the former main line via Forres [2nd] which closed in 1965.
Strathspey Railway
Tags
Station junction preservation heritage Aliases
An Aghaidh Mhòr
External links
Canmore site record NLS Collection OS map of 1892-1914 NLS Collection OS map of 1944-67 NLS Map NLS Map
06/12/2021
Facilities
Gaelic name: An Aghaidh Mhor
Listing: B