In
Denmark,
Sweden,
Finland and
Norway, a related concept is the
stationsby or "station town". Stationsbyer are rural towns that grew up around railways, but they were based on agricultural co-operatives and artisan communities rather than on railway industries. Among the Swedish towns mostly influenced by railways include
Alvesta as a hub for the inland south and
Hallsberg as a hub for the interior middle of the country. For Norway, towns such as
Bryne on the west coast,
Lillestrøm and
Ås in the east and south of Oslo are good examples, while
Skjeberg still identifies as a railway town even though no trains stop that any longer. In Finland,
Kouvola and
Riihimäki are the most important such towns.
United Kingdom In
Victorian Britain, the spread of railways greatly affected the fate of many small towns.
Peterborough and
Swindon became successful due to their status as railway towns; in contrast, towns such as
Frome or
Kendal remained small after being bypassed by main lines.
Wolverton was fields before 1838 and had a population of 1,500 by 1844. Other examples of early railway towns include
Ashford (Kent),
Doncaster,
Neasden and
Rugby.
Crewe grew greatly after the
Grand Junction Railway Company moved there in 1843; the two rural towns that became Crewe had a population of 500 in 1841 and the population had reached more than 40,000 by 1900. The railway town of 'New Swindon' displaced the neighbouring pre-existing town after the
Great Western Railway moved there; a market town of 2,000 in 1840 became a railway town of 50,000 in 1905. Railways became major employers, with 6,000 people employed by them in Crewe in 1877 and 14,000 in Swindon in 1905. The growth of railway towns was often in the mould of the '
paternalistic employer' providing housing, schools, hospitals, churches and civic buildings for their workers, similar to Cadbury's
Bournville; Crewe was a 'company town' for its first few decades as workers moved in their thousands from other parts of the country. Most social amenities and organisations were sponsored by the railway, but moves such as the establishment of a town council in 1877 slowly reduced company influence and the railway company began to consider spending on town amenities as a municipal concern. Workers organised their own institutions such as clubs, trade unions and co-operatives to gain independence from company control; they became the basis for political opposition in railway towns.
Germany Railway towns due to traffic junctions are
Aulendorf,
Bebra,
Betzdorf,
Buchloe,
Falkenberg/Elster,
Hagen,
Hamm,
Lehrte,
Offenburg,
Plattling and
Treuchtlingen. Railway towns as locations of depots for pusher locomotives at the foot of gradient lines are
Altenhundem or
Neuenmarkt. Railway towns with large border stations are
Freilassing or
Weil am Rhein.
Austria Knittelfeld is a railway town based on main workshops, with the Austrian Federal Railways as by far the largest employer.
Arnoldstein was once an important border station to Italy.
Switzerland Examples in
Switzerland are
Olten or as the location of a railway depot for push locomotives
Erstfeld. One place with a large border station is
Chiasso.
France Examples of railway cities in
France are
Tergnier and
Miramas. Examples of a railway town by its border station is
Cerbère, where the tracks of the Spanish broad gauge end.
Belgium In
Belgium, the town of
Plombières is of outstanding importance in railway transport, not in the least because of the
Viaduct of Moresnet.
Lithuania As of
2021 Lithuanian census, 8 settlements in Lithuania have the legal classification of a Railway Station, with the largest of them being , which is larger than the nearby town of
Panemunėlis.
Luxembourg With its
marshalling yard and other railway facilities on the international Brussels/Amsterdam-Luxembourg-Metz line,
Bettembourg has gained great importance in transit traffic through Luxembourg.
Poland After
World War I, the city of
Bentschen (today Zbąszyń) was ceded by
Weimar Germany to
Poland. Subsequently, the German
Reichsbahn established the station Neu Bentschen, which functions as a border station and as a junction for three lines leading to the west. Since there was no larger town near the new station, the Deutsche Reichsbahn had a railway settlement built, which subsequently grew into a town. It was given the name
Neu Bentschen (today Zbąszynek).
Portugal An example of a railway town in
Portugal is
Entroncamento.
Romania Simeria in Romania grew into a city through new railway facilities. ==Asia==