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Fort railway station

Coordinates: 6°56′01″N 79°51′03″E / 6.93361°N 79.85083°E / 6.93361; 79.85083
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(Redirected from Colombo Fort Station)
Colombo
Fort Railway Station
කොටුව දුම්රිය ස්ථානය
கோட்டை புகையிரத நிலையம்
Colombo Fort Railway Station
General information
Coordinates6°56′01″N 79°51′03″E / 6.93361°N 79.85083°E / 6.93361; 79.85083
Owned bySri Lanka Railways
Line(s)Main Line
Coastal Line
Tracks11
ConnectionsBuses, via Central Bus Stand, Pettah
Other information
Station codeFOT
History
Opened1908[1]
Electrifiedno[2]
Passengers
73 million annually[1]
Location
Colombo Fort Railway Station කොටුව දුම්රිය ස්ථානය கோட்டை புகையிரத நிலையம் is located in Central Colombo
Colombo Fort Railway Station කොටුව දුම්රිය ස්ථානය கோட்டை புகையிரத நிலையம்
Colombo
Fort Railway Station
කොටුව දුම්රිය ස්ථානය
கோட்டை புகையிரத நிலையம்
Location within Central Colombo

Fort railway station is a major rail hub in Colombo, Sri Lanka. The station is served by Sri Lanka Railways, with many inter-city and commuter trains entering each day. Fort Station is the main rail gateway to central Colombo; it is the terminus of most intercity trains in the country.[3]

History

[edit]
Fort Station is significant for its Victorian-era architecture

When the railways first opened in Ceylon (Sri Lanka) in 1864, trains terminated at Colombo Terminus Station, a now-retired station near Maradana. The earliest station to be called Fort was a small station, built in 1877 when the Coast Line was built. This original station sat on the site of present-day Secretariat Halt just west of today's Fort Station.[4]

The present Fort Station was opened in 1917, as a new central station for Colombo. This has been constructed similar to Manchester Victoria station.[5] The station was built on land reclaimed from the Beira Lake. This project was part of a scheme started in 1906 to reorganize the railway within Colombo, where Colombo Terminus Station was closed and replaced by the new Maradana Station. This was ceremonially opened by G.P. Green who was the General Manager at CGR.[5] Fort was added in 1917 to serve the city centre.[4]

The station was bombed by the LTTE in 2008.

Location

[edit]
Passengers and trains at rail platforms

Fort Station is in the heart of the city, located next to Colombo Fort and Pettah and close to the meeting points of the A1 and A4 highways. The station provides access to businesses and offices in Colombo Fort, as well as the markets at Pettah.

Fort Station is a couple kilometres away from Maradana Station, the other major rail station in Colombo.

Transport connections

[edit]

In addition to providing connection between the many trains that serve the station, Fort Station also provides connections to bus services through the Central Bus Stand in Pettah. Colombo Secretariat Station, the city terminus for the Airport Express, is located to the west of the station, with no direct pedestrian connection.

Services

[edit]
Intercity train at Fort
Passengers embarking and alighting at Fort

The station is served from the east by the Main line, which leads to several other major routes in Sri Lanka's railway network. Most of these trains terminate at Fort Station. The station is served to the south-west by the Coastal line, leading to Galle and Matara.

Fort station is also a hub for commuter rail within the Colombo metropolis.

Inter-city trains

[edit]
Route[6][7] Frequency[6]
Colombo Fort – Colombo Maradana – Vavuniya – Jaffna – Kankesanturai 4 Daily
Colombo Fort – Colombo Maradana – Ragama - Polgahawela – Kurunegala - Maho 4 Daily (3 on weekends)
Anuradhapura – Maho – Kurunegala – Polgahawela – Maho – Ragama – Colombo Maradana – Colombo Fort – Panadura - Galle – Matara 1 Daily
Colombo Fort – Colombo Maradana – Batticaloa 3 Daily
Colombo Fort – Colombo Maradana – Trincomalee 1 Daily
Colombo Fort – Colombo Maradana – Ragama - Polgahawela – Peradeniya - Nawalapitiya - Hatton - Nanu Oya - Pattipola - Ella - Badulla 3 Daily
Colombo Fort – Colombo Maradana – Ragama - Polgahawela – Peradeniya - Kandy 9 Daily (11 on weekends)
Colombo Fort – Colombo Maradana – Ragama - Polgahawela – Peradeniya - Kandy - Nawalapitiya - Hatton - Nanu Oya - Pattipola - Ella - Badulla 2 Daily
Colombo Fort – Colombo Maradana – Ragama - Polgahawela 1 Daily
Colombo Maradana – Colombo Fort – Panadura - Galle – Matara 8 Daily
Colombo Maradana – Colombo Fort – Panadura - Galle 5 Daily (4 on Saturdays)
Colombo Fort – Panadura - Galle – Matara 1 Daily
Colombo Fort – Colombo Maradana – Ragama - Negombo – Chilaw - Bangadeniya - Puttalam 2 Daily (1 on weekends)

Commuter and local trains

[edit]
Route[8] Frequency
Towards Panadura 25
Towards Veyangoda 39
Towards Ja Ela 14
Kelani Valley Line 8

Continuity

[edit]
Preceding station Sri Lanka Railways[3] Following station
Terminus   Yal Devi   Vavuniya
  Udaya Devi   Batticaloa
  Unnamed intercity expresses   Kandy, Batticaloa,
Vavuniya, Galle
Terminus   Udarata Menike   Maradana
  Podi Menike   Maradana
  Tikiri Menike   Maradana
  Senkadagala Menike   Maradana
Terminus   Muthu Kumari   Maradana
Bambalapitiya   Rajarata Rajina   Maradana
Bambalapitiya   Ruhunu Kumari   Maradana
  Samudra Devi   Maradana
  Galu Kumari   Maradana
  Sagarika   Maradana
Slave Island   Commuter Rail   Maradana

Station layout

[edit]
Fort Railway Station

to Coastal Line

Platform 1

to Main Line via Maradana

The station has a through-station layout, despite being the terminus for many services. This allows most platforms to serve both terminating and through trains. The platforms are oriented east-west. The ticket hall is to the north of the platforms.

Trivia

[edit]

The station was used as a film location in the film A Common Man directed by Chandran Rutnam and starring Ben Cross and Ben Kingsley.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Colombo Fort Railway Station". Sri Lanka Railways. Archived from the original on 2012-01-31. Retrieved 2012-02-06.
  2. ^ "Daily News". IESL proposes railway electrification project. 2010-12-25. Archived from the original on 2012-03-08.
  3. ^ a b "Sri Lanka Railways Timetable" Archived 2012-03-31 at the Wayback Machine[dead link]
  4. ^ a b "Hyatt, D. An Overview of the Development of the Sri Lanka Railway 2009" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-07-14. Retrieved 2011-10-26.
  5. ^ a b Rail 2000. Sri Lanka Railway. p. 203.
  6. ^ a b "Train Schedule". Government Information Centre. Government of Sri Lanka. Archived from the original on 16 November 2012. Retrieved 17 November 2012.
  7. ^ "The Rail Routes of Sri Lanka". Model Railroad Club. Retrieved 7 October 2012.
  8. ^ "Search Train". railway.gov.lk. Retrieved 7 September 2014.