map of railways in the vicinity of Yate The Yate station first opened on 8 July 1844 and closed on 4 January 1965, along with other wayside stations on the former
Bristol and Gloucester Railway; the local stopping service on the route having been withdrawn as a result of the
Beeching Axe. This had both its platforms on the southern side of the road bridge mentioned above - the original 1844 goods shed still stands (now in commercial use) next to the old southbound platform site. The station was reopened by
British Rail on 11 May 1989 with the backing of Avon County Council. When first open, trains headed south along the original B&GR/Midland route via to reach Bristol, although a connection was subsequently laid in to link this route with the rival
Great Western Railway's 1903 "Badminton Line" from
Wootton Bassett to (the current
South Wales Main Line) in 1908. The new connection left the older line by means a
flying junction at Yate South before heading southwest to join the SWML at the triangular
Westerleigh Junction. Though jointly built by the two companies for the purpose of giving the GWR access to the
Severn Rail Bridge and
Severn and Wye Railway, it also provided an alternative route to Bristol Temple Meads via
Filton and the Great Western soon made use of it to compete with the Midland for Bristol to Birmingham traffic, much to the dismay of the latter company. All services now use this newer line to get to Bristol, as the original 1844 route through was abandoned in January 1970 following the completion of the Bristol area resignalling scheme. A short section of the old route was retained from Yate South Junction after the rest closed, to serve a domestic waste transfer depot and fuel oil distribution terminal at Westerleigh sidings. This line is still in use today. It is the junction station for the
Thornbury Branchline, however the passenger stations on this branch have long since closed (trains ceased in 1944) and the line remained open to serve
Tytherington Quarry until September 2013, when it was placed 'Out of Use' by
Network Rail following the mothballing of the quarry at the beginning of the year. The line has now (summer 2017) returned to use following the reopening of the quarry, with
Mendip Rail running periodic stone trains. In the
Strategic Rail Authority’s 2007/08 financial year, Yate was ranked as the 1,104th most-used station in the UK. In the
Office of Rail and Road's 2019/20 estimations, Yate ranked 1,114th most used station.
Facilities The station is staffed on weekday mornings. It has two staggered platforms, separated by the
A432 road bridge. An automated ticket machine was installed in mid-2007, but stopped functioning due to vandalism and is reported to be "unlikely to be replaced in the foreseeable future". A new ticket machine was installed in 2013 on platform 1, whilst the portakabin ticket office is on the opposite platform. Digital information screens, customer help points and timetable posters provide train running information, whilst CCTV was installed here in 2011. Step-free access to both platforms is available (via ramps from the road bridge to platform 1). == Services ==