DMU departs Nailsea & Backwell with a service for Cardiff. The first section of the
Bristol and Exeter Railway's (B&ER) main line opened on 14 June 1841 between Bristol and . Opened as "Nailsea", it was for a while the first station on the line west of Bristol, the next being Clevedon Road (which was renamed in 1847). The line, engineered by
Isambard Kingdom Brunel, was built as
broad-gauge but it had been reconstructed as a
mixed-gauge line to accommodate local -gauge traffic by 1 June 1875. Services were operated by the
Great Western Railway (GWR) on behalf of the B&ER until 1 May 1849. The B&ER then took over its own workings until the company was
amalgamated into the GWR on 1 January 1876. Broad-gauge trains ceased operation on 20 May 1892. A footbridge, built by E. Finch and Co. of
Chepstow, was erected in 1907; until then access between the two platforms was by a track-level crossing. The station was renamed "Nailsea and Backwell" on 1 May 1905. When the railways were
nationalised in
1948, the GWR became the
Western Region of British Railways. In the 1980s the car park was expanded, and new metal and glass shelters were provided. which was in turn succeeded by
Wessex Trains, an arm of
National Express, in 2001. The Wessex franchise was amalgamated with the Great Western franchise into the Greater Western franchise from 2006, and responsibility passed to First Great Western, a subsidiary company of
FirstGroup. The franchise was rebranded as
Great Western Railway in 2015. Extra seating was provided in 2006 following action by the
Severnside Community Rail Partnership, and in 2008 overgrown foliage was cleared from the car park to improve sightlines and help with security. The station was repainted at the same time, and decorated with
silhouettes of students from
Backwell School. The embankment suffered subsidence in 2013. Plans to extend the car park by 200 spaces were drawn up in 2009, with North Somerset Council describing the scheme as "necessary", as the lack of spaces limited the number of people who could feasibly use the station for commuting due to Nailsea being too far from the station to be an easy walk, causing people to drive to the station. That peak passengers filled the car park then meant there are no spaces for offpeak users, limiting leisure travel. North Somerset Council approved the construction of the extension on 17 April 2012, and further approved the car park becoming
pay and display - all car parks in Nailsea had previously been free. Work began in January 2014, and was completed in June the same year - 162 additional car parking spaces were created, drainage was improved and
CCTV was installed. The scheme, which cost £700,000, came in £50,000 under budget and was paid for using money from the Local Transport Plan and Community Infrastructure Levy. Parking prices were raised in 2017 to equalise the cost with Yatton railway station, and thus dissuade people from driving from Yatton to Nailsea for cheaper parking. The works were due to start in 2013, but were delayed until 2014 due to a need to repair
subsidence on the embankment and wait for works on the car park to be completed. However, due to the delays the funding was withdrawn. Further funding was secured in 2015, but plans for ramps were shelved entirely in 2016 due to fears of further subsidence. Great Western Railway stated in 2016 they are looking at installing lifts instead. == Future ==