On 21 November 2013, the first passenger train travelled the railway towards Mountsorrel hauling the project volunteers. Project leader Steve Cramp said on the day that "It’s been an emotional time for us all, everybody has worked so hard over the last six years to bring this vision to reality and it’s so nice to actually see a steam train get back up to Mountsorrel." On 27 January 2014, planning permission for a simple platform built into the base of the cutting next to the bridge at Bond Lane was granted by Charnwood Borough Council. The platform was constructed from concrete blocks faced with Mountsorrel Granite. The aim for the new platform was to link up with
Stonehurst Family Farm and Motor Museum bringing together the local community. The platform is now known as Mountsorrel railway station. After eight years and over 80,000 hours of volunteer time, the Mountsorrel Railway was opened to the public over the weekend of 24 and 25 October 2015 by
Lord Faulkner of Worcester, who is president of the
Heritage Railway Association and vice chairman of the
Science Museum. The site of the former Nunckley Quarry now occupies Mountsorrel and Rothley Community Heritage Centre, which includes a coffee shop, heritage displays, a railway museum, a narrow gauge railway and Nunckley Hill railway station, as well as various other visitor attractions. In January 2018, the Heritage Centre publicised its plans for the construction of the Discovery Centre, a brand new building which planned to provide an innovative and interactive teaching space, featuring an exhibition area, a library with archive storage, a lecture theatre/class room, a study room, and advanced AR equipment for 'hands-on' learning. The Heritage Centre applied for £800,000 from the Heritage Lottery Fund, although the bid later fell through in July of the same year due to a change in the HLF's requirements for grants. In the summer of 2019, an extension to the railway museum was completed, providing a dedicated workshop for the restoration and maintenance of standard gauge rolling stock. A further expansion of the workshop took place in 2022, providing a new store for the narrow gauge locomotives at the site. In July 2020, the iron components of Robert Stephenson's Leicester and Swannington Railway Lift Bridge arrived at the Heritage Centre. The bridge had previously been exhibited at
Snibston Discovery Centre, before it closed in 2015. The lift bridge was originally situated near West Bridge, Leicester and had been built in 1834 by
Robert Stephenson to allow wagons from the
Leicester and Swannington Railway to cross the
Leicester Navigation, accessing nearby coal wharves. Following Snibston Discovery Centre's closure, the bridge was dismantled and the old timbers had been discarded, new beams had to be ordered as result, which did not arrive until 2022. A project of reconstruction is currently being undertaken as a collaboration between Mountsorrel and Rothley Community Heritage Centre, Leicestershire County Council and Leicester Industrial History Society. == Locomotives and rolling stock ==