Originally opened on 1 July 1842 as part of the
Bristol and Exeter Railway, Taunton was the terminus of the line until a new temporary terminus was opened on 1 May 1843 further west at
Beambridge.
Isambard Kingdom Brunel's original design was for a single-sided station with two platforms, each with their own buildings and
train sheds, placed on the south side of the line. A hotel was built between them and the
Grand Western Canal. Having both platforms on the town side of the line was meant to help passengers but was found to be problematic as the railway became busier, with each train having to cross the line used by trains in the opposite direction. An
engine shed was provided at the west end of the station. A series of branches opened in the area over the next thirty years; these were the: •
Yeovil branch line (1 October 1853) •
West Somerset Railway to
Watchet (31 March 1862) •
Chard Branch Line (11 September 1866) •
Devon and Somerset Railway (8 June 1871, extended to
Barnstaple 1 November 1873). The station was unable to cope with all these extra trains and passengers, so a major rebuilding was completed on 17 August 1868. The platforms were extended again in 1895. Now covering the whole length of the original single-sided station, they were the longest platforms on the Great Western Railway (which had
amalgamated with the Bristol and Exeter company on 1 January 1876). New bay platforms were added to handle the trains from the branch lines. This work forced another rebuilding of the station. The train shed was dismantled and new buildings constructed on the up (north) side along with a new island platform in the middle of the station. The platforms were numbered: • The
down relief platform, principally used by expresses from Bristol (now platform 2 and a new lift installed in 2007 to replace an electric stair lift which could carry one seated person at a time but no luggage. A west-facing bay platform has also been reinstated for passenger use, although there are no regular trains timetabled to use it. Today, the original down station building survives, along with the hotel and the extensions added in 1868. An examination of the brickwork on the south-side building reveals where the footbridge was removed in favour of the present subway. On the north side, the ticket office dates from 1983 but the remaining buildings generally date from the 1932 rebuilding and stand on foundations from 1868. The goods warehouse is largely derelict and most of the engine shed has been razed to the ground except for an asbestos-clad repair shop built in 1932 and the ramp that used to serve an elevated coaling stage. The engine sidings are still used by engineers' plant machines;
Freightliner locomotives are generally stabled at Fairwater Yard, but occasionally use the old engine shed sidings for additional storage space. The avoiding line is truncated but serves as a headshunt for the long engineers trains using Fairwater Yard. This was replaced by a more modern bridge with both steps and slopes making it more accessible. The ticket office was moved back to the south side of the station in 2021 as part of works to improve passenger facilities and make easier links to the town centre. A 400-space
multi-storey car park was also built. ==Description==