Barabanki Junction railway station

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Barabanki Junction
Indian Railways junction station
Indian Railways Suburban Railway Logo.svg
LocationBarabanki city & Banki town, Barabanki, Uttar Pradesh
India
Coordinates26°56′03″N 81°10′45″E / 26.9342°N 81.1793°E / 26.9342; 81.1793Coordinates: 26°56′03″N 81°10′45″E / 26.9342°N 81.1793°E / 26.9342; 81.1793
Elevation122 meters
Owned byNorth Eastern Railway of Indian Railways (since 1953)
Operated byNorthern Railway & North Eastern Railway
Platforms4
Tracks10
Construction
Structure typeStandard (on-ground station having rail wifi)
ParkingAvailable
Other information
StatusFunctioning
Station codeBBK
Zone(s) Northern Railway & North Eastern Railway
History
Opened1 April 1882[1]
Rebuilt1946s
Electrified2002–03[2]
Previous namesOudh and Rohilkhand Railway (1882–1925)
East Indian Railway (1925–1952)
* Cawnpore–Burhwal Railway (1896–1943)
Bengal and North Western Railway (1896–1943)
Oudh and Tirhut Railway (1855–1952)
* Cawnpore–Barabanki Railway (1943–1953)
Passengers
20158569[3]

Barabanki Junction or Barabanki station is the intercity rail station and a commuter rail hub in the Indian city of Barabanki. It has been important junction since the days of British control of India.[4] In its category it is one of the important stations in NER. The Barabanki Junction railway station is on the Delhi– Basti– Gorakhpur main broad-gauge route in Uttar Pradesh. Barabanki Junction is also the hub for the Barabanki–Lucknow Suburban Railway. Barabanki railway station lies in the zone of high density stations.[5]

History[]

The station became operational on 1 April 1872 with the opening of Burhwal-Barabanki section. It got connected to Lucknow on 24 November 1896 with the opening of Daliganj-Barabanki section. The station underwent major renovation in 1940s.

Of the 301 miles of the Bengal and North Western Railway main line was 17 miles consisting of following section which was used to connect Barabanki from Burhwal:

  • Burwhal–Barabanki line (17 miles)
    • Burhwal to Barabanki (broad gauge) opened 1 April 1872
    • Burhwal to Barabanki (broad to mixed gauge) converted 24 November 1896
    • Burhwal to Barabanki (mixed to metre gauge) converted around 1943

18 miles of the Cawnpore–Burhwal Railway which was later renamed as Cawnpore–Barabanki Railway, was used to connect Barabanki from Daliganj:

  • Daliganj–Barabanki line (18 miles)
    • Daliganj to Barabanki (metre gauge) opened 24 November 1896

In 1981 Railway Budget two enhancements related to Barabanki were proposed:[6]

  • Northern Railway Budget section,
    • Barabanki–Lucknow section: additional broad-gauge line and other connected works
  • North Eastern Railway,
    • Barabanki–Samastipur section: conversion of metre-gauge section via Muzzafarpur into broad gauge outside station parking stand.

Electrification[]

Electrification of tracks at Barabanki Jn took place in two phases spread across span of almost ten years.

Phase I[]

Phase I of electrification of tracks passing through Barabanki Jn took place in 2002–03 in two steps,[2]

Step 1 – Safedabad–Barabanki

Electrification of tracks between Safedabad railway station and Barabanki Jn was completed on 29 September 2002.

Step 2 – Barabanki Yard

Electrification of tracks at Barabanki Yard was completed on 29 March 2003.

Phase II[]

Phase II of electrification of 30 km of tracks from Barabanki Jn to Burhwal Jn (section of Gorakhpur–Lucknow route) took place in 2010–11 and got completed in May 2011.[7]

Goods yard[]

Barabanki station has two yards: one at Faizabad route side and other at Gorakhpur route side. This yard used for load and unload purpose of commodities mainly coal, fertilizer, cement, stone, food grains etc.

Routes from Barabanki Junction[]

Trains originating & terminating at Barabanki Junction[]

Total 5 EMUs/DMUs originate from Barabanki Junction railway station, same number of EMUs/DMUs terminate too at the station.[3]

Trains passing through Barabanki Junction[]

Daily 125 trains pass through Barabanki Junction. Normally around six thousand passengers pass through this railway station, this number can be higher on special occasions e.g. during season of Kumbh Mela 2013, on 7, 8 and 9 February 2013, 8500, 8700 and 8000 passengers travelled from Barabanki to Lucknow railway station to catch trains for Allahabad as there is no direct train from Barabanki to Allahabad.[8]

Gallery[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ The 17 miles long Burwhal to Barabanki broad-gauge line was opened on 1 April 1882
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b [https://web.archive.org/web/20071225163912/http://irfca.org/docs/electrification-history.html Archived 25 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine [IRFCA] Electrification History from CORE]
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 15 September 2017. Retrieved 15 September 2017.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ India Railway Police Committee (1921). "India Railway Police Committee Report, Volumes 1-2". Printed at the Government Monotype Press. p. 277. Retrieved 30 June 2013.
  5. ^ "Transport Geography of Uttar Pradesh, Issue 2 of N.G.S.I. research publication". 1966. National Geographical Society of India. 1966. p. 44. Retrieved 30 June 2013.
  6. ^ "Explanatory Memorandum on the Railway Budget of the Government of India". India Railway Board. Government of India Press. 1981. pp. 37, 39. Retrieved 30 June 2013.
  7. ^ Railways electrifies Barabanki–Burhwal route Archived 14 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ "यहां तो सामान्य दिनों में भी रहती है अव्यवस्था (in Hindi)". Dainik Jagran. 12 February 2013. Retrieved 14 February 2013.

External links[]

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