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4.5 (2 reviews)

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Parson Street Station - Parson Street from Bedminster Down Road: Photo courtesy of Weirdoldhattie on Wikipedia.

Parson Street Station

3.0(4 reviews)
2.5 km

I don't like to come here by proxy, I always come here in Parson…read more Parson Street is one of the many alternative Railway stations for Bristol and it's a nice little station that gets a decent amount of traffic. Bristol has quite a few stations serving the area and they all do a good job, but Temple Meads is still my favourite even though Parson street is cute. It has two tracks, two platforms and serves a nice little neighbourhood on the western super mare line. It's only two miles from Temple Meads so it's close to the heart of Bristol. It's very close to Bedminster as well.

Actually located in Bedminster (which confusingly, Bedminster station is not!), this is a basic…read moreunstaffed halt served by local trains from Bristol to Weston-super-Mare and Taunton. It serves the suburbs of Bedminster, an adjacent area of light industry and is 10-15 minutes' walk from Bristol City FC's ground at Ashton Gate. Opened by the Great Western Railway in 1927 as 'Parson Street Halt', it was rebuilt with four tracks and two island platforms in 1933, and the 'Halt' suffix was dropped. By the 1970s the service frequency had (like adjacent Bedminster) fallen to just a handful of trains in each rush hour. Subsequent rationalisation meant that only the centre tracks were used, and the station acquired a faint air of desolation, with the ticket office on the bridge removed. But things have improved enormously in recent years, and it now benefits from a half hourly service during weekdays, reducing to hourly in the evening. Passenger numbers have more than quadrupled since 2003 as a result. (Which just goes to show that people will use trains if the service is good enough). Facilities are as basic as they could be: a shelter on each platform and a train indicator. There is no level access on any part of the station - the way in is via 31 steps from the adjacent bridge which carries Parson Street over the railway.

Montpelier Train Station - Photo from website

Montpelier Train Station

3.7(7 reviews)
1.5 km

Not to be confused with Montperrier, which is where they drink fizzy expensive water on a mountain…read more Montpelier is a little suburb of Bristol and it has a nice little railway station that fits into the suburbs perfectly. I visited most of the stations in the Bristol area and surrounding countryside when I was doing my extensive traveling here and because I love visiting Rail stations. It's a cute example of a little British station with an amazing urban flair. This tiny little station is especially amazing because of its little Station House on the only platform which is covered in murals and graffiti and that makes it extremely unusual and notable and honestly gives it so much flavour that it's probably one of my favourites in the country.

This is such a fun dinky little train station to use. It's not that easy to find and, once there,…read moreit feels very unlikely that a train will ever arrive! It's usually very quiet, and there's no ticket machine or information booth, or anything to help you at all, bar a small notice advertising potential changes to the timetable - but not the current timetable! It's all very surreal: just one track serving both directions. Make sure you aim for a specific train when using this line; check on the First Great Western website for the Temple Meads-Severn Beach line. With two trains an hour in each direction, it really is a very bad idea to turn up and hope for the best! And be warned: there is no service at all on Sundays! You pay the fare (£2 single for the whole line) once you're on the train. When it's really busy, it's unlikely the conductor will get round everyone with the ancient little ticket machine, so, though I hate to say it so baldly, you can often ride this train for nothing. At rush hour times, morning and evening, quite a few people use this line for commuting around Bristol and I would recommend leaving it to them at those times of day.

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Montpelier Train Station
Montpelier Train Station
Montpelier Train Station

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Bristol Parkway Station

Bristol Parkway Station

4.2(6 reviews)
7.3 km

Bristol Parkway station is located at the intersection of the lines from London (Paddington) to…read moreSouth Wales and the main line from Bristol to Birmingham, providing a major interchange between the two. It was one of the first 'Parkway' stations to be built, in 1972, to attract car users to trains by providing ample car parking at locations with good road links, close to urban areas. This site was chosen both because of the interchange it offered, and because of its proximity to the M4 and M32, just north of Bristol. When opened, shelter was fairly meagre, with 'bus stop' shelters on the platforms and a small waiting room and ticket office by the entrance to the car park. Because of its exposed and windy position, additional long platform shelters were erected, but it still had a reputation for being a cold place to wait for a train. Over the years, substantial suburbs have developed around Stoke Gifford, and in 2001, a new and much larger station building, with a dramatic curved roofline, was built in recognition of its growing importance. In 2007 an additional platform was constructed on the London-bound (north) side, to provide additional capacity. The station is now used by over 1.75 million passengers a year, with in excess of half a million passengers changing trains here. The station now has heated waiting shelters on the platforms, and the main building has a small shop, cafe and ticket office. Other facilities include a taxi rank, payphones, cash points and bus stops for local bus services (including to Frenchay hospital and Bristol city centre). The station has level access (via lifts to the platforms). The station is served by all long distance trains on the London-South Wales main line and the cross-Country main line from the South-West to Birmingham and the North. It is also served by local services from Gloucester, Westbury and Weston-super-Mare.

This is a great, modern, functional station on the North side of Bristol. It's close to the M4/M5…read moreintersection, so it's a far better place to collect someone from than Bristol Temple Meads (in the centre of the city) if you're located to the north of the city. However, there are a few things to be aware of: 1. Parking is £5 a day. The payment meters are awkward to operate, and if you don't pay you will get clamped & fined. 2. The car park gets full by 9:30am most days, and if you park outside an official space, you will get clamped (even if you've paid for a ticket). 3. Traffic in the area is hellish at peak hours. Journeys from the motorway to the station can take in excess of 45 mins between 7:30 - 9:00 and 16:00 - 18:00 for the 2 mile journey. The station is fairly new with good facilities: clean toilets, a small newsagent, a coffee shop and a sandwich shop. There are also lifts to all platforms for the disabled.

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Bristol Parkway Station - Bristol Parkway

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Bristol Parkway

Redland

Redland

3.6(9 reviews)
1.8 km

I dropped all my colouring pencils. I'm still missing one. Where did the Redland?…read more The town of Redland is an entertaining little station for a tiny little part of Bristol. When I was traveling extensively around England when I came down to the Southwest in the Bristol area this is one of the stations which I visited a few times. Just 3 miles from Bristol Temple Meads is this lovely little station with a lovely little old building in a nice little Suburban neighborhood. It's really cute for sure.

Small and quaint, this serves just one track, with trains coming in from Montpelier and Clifton…read moreDown. With no attendants, it feels like a little village station in the middle of nowhere. The lack of travellers contributes to the feeling too, with school kids seeming to make the up the majority of the footfall. A lot of the time all you've got is the birds for company. It's on the Severn Beach line, and you can get connections to the rest of the network at Temple Meads which is only a ten minutes away if you take the train from here. Unfortunately this line has annoyingly infrequent trains (twice an hour, if that). However, it is very pretty, with views of Avonmouth and various historic parts of the Bristol along the way. As I said, it's unstaffed and amenities are pretty thin on the ground. There is no ticket office, so you'll have to buy on the train (and can do so without the worry of a penalty fare). There isn't anything really, in fact, apart from a timetables board and some cycle racks. It would be a bit much to ask anything more of such a small station anyway.

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Redland - Graffiti at Redland Railway Station

Graffiti at Redland Railway Station

Redland - Street Art at Redland Railway Station

Street Art at Redland Railway Station

Redland - Redland Railway Station

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Redland Railway Station

Patchway Railway Station

Patchway Railway Station

3.0(2 reviews)
8.1 km

Those who use a patch to give up smoking may ask, how much does the Patchweigh? This is unrelated…read moreto that. Patchway railway station is a super cute little station in the southwest of England close to Bristol. There are lots of little stations around here serving all the little Villages and towns and suburbs of Bristol and this is a great example of a typical Southwestern English rail station.

Patchway Station is a small station, well situated by rail. It's hidden away where not a lot of…read morepeople seem to know about it. There's free car parking. There are fairly regular trains to the centre of Bristol, towards the South-West, and to Cardiff, and at certain times of day there are even direct services that will take you to Birmingham, Manchester or beyond. If you're travelling to Cardiff regularly, tickets from Patchway are quite a bit cheaper than from Bristol Parkway. What a pity that it is such a desolate hole. The brick shelters smell of wee and are too small to keep more than 3 people dry. There are no ticket-buying facilities and the announcement system often doesn't work. As soon as it rains both platforms become giant puddles. At the risk of sounding old, Patchway station is also a hanging-out ground for an ugly teenage gang with nothing better to do. They document their sexual conquests across the station and I think they may be the reason that the shelters smell of wee. I wouldn't want to be waiting for, or getting off, a train here too late at night.

Filton Abbey Wood Station - On the platform.

Filton Abbey Wood Station

2.0(3 reviews)
5.7 km

I've never learnt how to drive a car. Partly laziness, partly because as a teenager I was a bit of…read morean eco-warrior. Years later, less of an eco-warrior but low on funds, I am still at the mercy of public transport . When you live in the UK that's a pretty depressing thought, made even more depressing when you're waiting at trains stations like Filton Abbey Wood. FAW is possibly one of the worst train stations in the country. And I should know. I had to wait there every week days for six months. The station was built in 1996 by the Ministry of Defence to take its workers from their shiny offices to their homes in Wales or central Bristol. In 2006 it was voted Britain's 647th most used station, making it one of the busiest un-staffed stations in the country. You'd think that this would mean that it'd be one of the best. It isn't. With no seats, no toilets, no cover and no working ticket machines it ranks as one of the worst. The icing on the cake is that the one screen that shows the train times works intermittently so sometimes it can be a guessing game as to when your train will arrive. Avoid at all costs!

The most depressing and dire station to have to wait about on in the entire country, in my humble…read moreopinion. Massively horrid and empty, it's as if aliens have removed all the rest of humanity from the planet and you're there, stuck forever alone, on Filton Abbey Wood Station.. To be strictly fair, it was purpose-built for one reason only, and that was for commuter transport to the vast MOD office complxes there. Maybe the fact that it was built by the MOD in 1996 accounts for the bleak, utilitarian design. It's a three-track station, and has covered shelters on each platform, but apart from that - No refreshments, no waiting room, no toilets, no station staff (There is a portacabin that is allegedly manned for a couple of hours in an afternoon), no ticket office, no lost luggage office, etc etc. There is one public payphone but it's sometimes out of order, has no phone book and smells of wee. There's no taxi rank handy either, or bus terminus. If you end up there for any reason be sure to have someone waiting with a car. If you have to change trains there and will be waiting for any length of time be sure to have snacks, fully-charged cellphone, and hope you don't need a bathroom in a hurry! I'd give it no stars at all, except it is a functional station and serves the purpose of decanting employees of the MOD every morning and evening.

Clifton Down - Clifton Down Railway Station

Clifton Down

3.6(10 reviews)
2.7 km

I prefer Clifton Up, but what goes Clifton Up must come Clifton Down…read more Clifton Down is an urban built-up station in the heart of burby neighbourhoods of Bristol that has two platforms and serves quite a lot of people. It's almost exactly 4 miles from Temple Meads and is on the line to Avonmouth. The Clifton suspension bridge is amazing and the Clifton railway station will get you fairly near there. It's a lovely little part of Bristol and has a lovely little station. There are lots of gorges and what not around these parts and I definitely enjoy visiting all the stations - this one is one of my favourites.

Slightly bigger and grander than it's brothers on the Severn Beach line (with the obvious exception…read moreof Temple Meads), this is a main station on that line. It's mostly a pick up point for commuters into the centre of Bristol, as well as the odd lazy student. Worth noting that there's no ticket office or electronic ticket machine, you'll have to buy on board. The station takes its names from the nearby large park, and there's a tunnel underneath this park that the line emerges out from before coming to Clifton Down station. Having such a long tunnel for what is hardly the busiest of stations probably costs something extortionate, but it means you can get a train across hilly East Bristol. The Victorian buildings attached to the station are listed and its worth a visit just to have a look at them. Their listed status hasn't stopped them turning one of the buildings into an Australian pub, which is a bit of a crime in my opinion. But then I suppose it means you can have a quick pint before getting on the train. A bit too big for the quiet little line it serves Clifton Down Station is worth a visit for a nose around, as well as a means of getting to Temple Meads.

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Clifton Down
Clifton Down

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Southern Railway - trainstations - Updated May 2026

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