thumb|right|Barnes station building in January 2023, now privately owned
Barnes railway station is a Grade II listed station
The station is briefly seen at the end of 'Miracle in Crooked Lane', episode five of the third series of Jonathan Creek as well as the following for films: Scream and Scream Again (1970), Somewhere in Camp (1942), Somewhere on Leave (1943) and Terror (1978).
History
The station at Barnes was opened on 27 July 1846, when the line to Richmond was built. When the first section of the Hounslow Loop Line was opened on 22 August 1849, Barnes became a junction station.
Grade II listed, it was designed by the architect John Thomas Emmett in 1846 and is the only survivor of four brick-built Tudor Gothic-style stations on the Richmond branch, the others being Putney, Mortlake, and Richmond. and was completed in February 2025.
Platforms
The station has four platforms.
- Platform 1: Local to London Waterloo (Next station Putney)
- Platform 2: Express to London Waterloo (Trains do not generally stop)
- Platform 3: Local to Hounslow (both routes), Teddington via Richmond & Weybridge via Brentford (Next station Mortlake or Barnes Bridge)
- Platform 4: Express to Windsor Riverside & Reading (Trains do not generally stop)
Platforms 1 & 2 are swapped on Sundays. On the London side of the station, there are four tracks; one pair turns off along the Loop Line here.
There are 2 ticket machines by Platform 1. The platforms are accessible by a public footbridge, which connect to the bus stops, Station Road and a path to Roehampton. There are station facilities on the central island, however, these are not often open.
Services
All services at Barnes are operated by South Western Railway.
The typical off-peak service in trains per hour is:
- 4 tph to London Waterloo
- 2 tph to via , returning to London Waterloo via and
- 2 tph to via
Additional services call at the station during the peak hours.
Connections
London Buses routes 33, 265, 419, mobility route 969 and night routes N33 and N72 serve the station.
References
External links
- Freeman, Leslie. The Coming of the Railway, Barnes and Mortlake History Society, June 1996
