In St Helens did Network Rail a stately pleasure doughnut decree. So although it was very wet, arriving at the 2007-built modern station was a pleasure. The front of the station building:
A side view of the front of the station building:
An advert for the new station building, in which the EU apparently had a hand:
A poster about the history of the station:
Inside the station building, to the left of the central tower:
Inside the waiting area, a very handsome penguin:
Plaques in the station building:
The National Rail logo seen from inside:
Steps and a lift lead up to the first floor, for access to the footbridge and a coffee shop:
The coffee shop:
The rear of the station building from the footbridge:
The station building backs onto platform 1. Looking north along the platform:
On platform 1, one of the things St Helens Central is for:
At the northern end of platform 1, looking south at the station buildings:
At the northern end of platform 1, looking north at the signalbox:
At the southern end of platform 1, looking south along the line, where a defunct branch heads towards St Helens Junction:
Platform 2's building seen from platform 1. The curve of the steps is a continuation of the curve of the building on platform 1:
Platform 2 has a different idea of what St Helens Central is for:
All photographs are © Alexandra Lanes You may reproduce them anywhere for any purpose. Coastline maps are reproduced from Ordnance Survey map data by permission of the Ordnance Survey © Crown copyright 2001