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Heaton railway station

Buildings and structures in Newcastle upon TyneDisused railway stations in Tyne and WearFormer North Eastern Railway (UK) stationsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1887
Railway stations in Great Britain closed in 1980Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1856Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1887Transport in Newcastle upon TyneUse British English from April 2014
Heaton 2nd railway station (site), Tyne & Wear (geograph 4241948)
Heaton 2nd railway station (site), Tyne & Wear (geograph 4241948)

Heaton railway station was a railway station in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, near the southern boundary of Heaton with Byker. The station was built in the nineteenth century and closed on 11 August 1980.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Heaton railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Heaton railway station
North View, Newcastle upon Tyne Byker

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Wikipedia: Heaton railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 54.9799 ° E -1.5817 °
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Address

Heaton

North View
NE6 1XP Newcastle upon Tyne, Byker
England, United Kingdom
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Heaton 2nd railway station (site), Tyne & Wear (geograph 4241948)
Heaton 2nd railway station (site), Tyne & Wear (geograph 4241948)
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Nearby Places

Ouseburn
Ouseburn

The Ouseburn is a small river in Newcastle upon Tyne, England that flows through the city of Newcastle upon Tyne into the River Tyne. It gives its name to the Ouseburn Valley and the Ouseburn electoral ward for Newcastle City Council elections. The Ouseburn has its source at Callerton in the north of the city near Newcastle Airport. It then flows through the Kingston Park area of the city, Newcastle Great Park, Gosforth Park and Whitebridge Park. The Ouseburn then continues through Paddy Freeman's Park in South Gosforth and into Jesmond Dene, Armstrong Park and Heaton Park, where it marks the boundary between Heaton and Sandyford. The river then flows through a culvert before re-emerging under Ouseburn railway viaduct, whence it flows past the City Farm, Seven Stories and the Toffee Factory and meets the River Tyne. The river was previously tidal from the Viaduct, revealing dark mud at low tide. However, since 2009 a tidal barrage at the river mouth retains high water in the Ouseburn at low tide, with the objective of providing a more pleasant environment alongside its banks at low tide, thus promoting development. Despite the expense of its construction, the Ouseburn barrage has had operational problems and was left open for a length of time while they were corrected.The lower Ouseburn Valley, whilst heavily industrialised in the past, serves as of 2013 as a hub for the arts and creative industries, and has a lively pub scene, noted for live music and real ale. In Roman times the lower Ouseburn Valley was crossed by Hadrian's Wall, but there are now no visible traces to be seen. On the eastern side of the valley, at the eastern end of a new block of flats, there is an information board with an artist's impression of the Wall crossing the valley. This section of the Wall was the later extension from the Roman fort of Pons Aelius (Newcastle) to that of Segedunum (Wallsend). This newer section of the Wall was not backed by the Vallum ditch, because the River Tyne rendered it superfluous.