place

Blackford Hill railway station

Disused railway stations in EdinburghEdinburgh stubsFormer North British Railway stationsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1917
Railway stations in Great Britain closed in 1962Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1884Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1919Scotland railway station stubsUse British English from February 2017
Blackford Hill railway station 1813682 2f1f43f3
Blackford Hill railway station 1813682 2f1f43f3

Blackford Hill railway station was a railway station in the Blackford area of Edinburgh, Scotland. It was located at the foot of Blackford Hill on the Edinburgh Suburban and Southside Junction Railway (ESSJR). It was opened on 1 December 1884. Blackford Hill station closed in 1962, when passenger rail services were withdrawn from the Edinburgh Suburban line although the line itself was retained for rail freight use. The route continues to be used for freight services to this day, so freight trains avoid Edinburgh's main stations of Edinburgh Waverley and Haymarket, and occasionally diverted passenger trains also pass along this line.

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

Blackford Hill railway station
Glenisla Gardens Lane, City of Edinburgh Blackford

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Blackford Hill railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 55.927232 ° E -3.1882577 °
placeShow on map

Address

Blackford Hill

Glenisla Gardens Lane
EH9 2HP City of Edinburgh, Blackford
Scotland, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q4922877)
linkOpenStreetMap (21566409)

Blackford Hill railway station 1813682 2f1f43f3
Blackford Hill railway station 1813682 2f1f43f3
Share experience

Nearby Places

UK Astronomy Technology Centre

The UK Astronomy Technology Centre (UK ATC) is based at the Royal Observatory in Edinburgh, Scotland, and is part of the Science and Technology Facilities Council. The UK ATC designs, builds, develops, tests and manages major instrumentation projects in support of UK and international Astronomy. It has design offices, workshops and test facilities for both ground- and space-based instruments, including a suite of test labs capable of handling the largest current and projected instruments.The UK ATC was formed in 1998 in Edinburgh from the technology departments of the Royal Observatory, Edinburgh (ROE), and the Royal Greenwich Observatory, Cambridge (RGO). Its initial "customers" were the then new Gemini Observatory, the former ROE observatories in Hawaii (the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) and the United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT)), and a former RGO observatory, the Isaac Newton Group on La Palma, Canary Islands. More recently, collaboration with the European Southern Observatory (ESO) and for the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) have gained importance. Major projects and collaborations include: Several first-generation instruments for the Gemini Observatory. A mid-infrared spectrometer for the UKIRT and the Gemini Observatory. Data acquisition and reduction software for the UKIRT and the JCMT. The Wide Field Infrared Camera for the UKIRT. The Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver of the Herschel Space Observatory. The Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for UK universities and ESO. A high-sensitivity, wide-field, sub-millimetre camera for the JCMT (SCUBA2). The MIRI (Mid-Infrared Instrument) for the JWST. Observing tool software for the Atacama Large Millimeter Array. Design studies for ESO's European Extremely Large Telescope. An infrared K-band multi-object spectrometer for ESO's Very Large Telescope. The European Union funded Optical Infrared Coordination Network for Astronomy (OPTICON).Following increased government emphasis on knowledge transfer and declining funds for the Science and Technology Facilities Council the UK ATC is increasingly working on projects with astronomical institutions beyond the UK and the EU, with institutions dedicated to science and technology other than astronomy, and with technology-related businesses.