Murshidabad railway station

Murshidabad is a railway station on the Sealdah–Ranaghat–Krishnanagar–Berhampore–Lalgola line and is located in Murshidabad district in the Indian state of West Bengal. Murshidabad railway station lies in Murshidabad.


Murshidabad
Express train and Passenger train station
Entrance
LocationLalbagh, Murshidabad district, West Bengal
India
Coordinates24°10′37″N 88°16′54″E
Elevation24 m (79 ft)
Owned byIndian Railways
Operated byEastern Railway zone
Line(s)Sealdah–Lalgola main line
Platforms4
TracksDoubled
Construction
Structure typeStandard (on-ground station)
ParkingYes
Other information
StatusFunctioning
Station codeMBB
Zone(s) Eastern Railway zone
Division(s) Sealdah
History
ElectrifiedYes
Previous namesEast Indian Railway Company
Services
Preceding station   Kolkata Suburban Railway   Following station
Eastern Line
toward Lalgola
Location
Murshidabad
Location within India
Murshidabad
Murshidabad (West Bengal)

Location

It is located in Murshidabad district, 199 km (124 mi) from Sealdah.

History

Ranaghat–Lalgola branch line was opened in 1905 during British reign.

Electrification

The 128 km long Krishnanagar–Lalgola stretch was electrified in 2004 for EMU services.

Infrastructure

The railway station has four platforms after the installation of a double railway track.

Expansion

Railway Ministry tried to connect the railway station to Azimganj Junction. But due to land acquisition problems, the work of connecting these two stations was stopped. However, with help of Mamata Banerjee, the expansion work has been started again in full swing. The bridge named as Nashipur Rail Bridge over the Bhagirathi River is complete. The Murshidabad-Azimgunj link is expected to be commissioned by the end of December 2017. Some North Bengal trains like Darjeeling Mail, Haldibari Express are likely to move through Sealdah–Ranaghat–Behrampore Court–Murshidabad–Azimganj instead of crossing Bali Bridge and move through Barddhaman–Baharwa–Malda Town. Rail Ministry reports say that this linkage will minimise the travel distance (25 km) as well as time.[1]

Mail/Express trains

References

  1. The Nashipur Syndrome, The Week, Retrieved 12 October 2020


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