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Adelaide railway station (Northern Ireland)

Northern Ireland railway station stubsRailway stations in BelfastRailway stations in Northern Ireland opened in the 1890sRailway stations opened in 1897Railway stations served by NI Railways
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Adelaide station, Belfast geograph.org.uk 1392357
Adelaide station, Belfast geograph.org.uk 1392357

Adelaide railway station is located in the townland of Malone Lower in south Belfast, County Antrim, Northern Ireland. It is located just off the Lisburn Road and close to many Queen's University students' houses. The station was opened by the Great Northern Railway of Ireland on 1 November 1897 and was originally called Adelaide and Windsor. It was renamed Adelaide in 1935. It became an unstaffed halt in October 1996. The station also serves the nearby Windsor Park stadium, which is the current home of the Northern Ireland national football team. Beside Adelaide Station there are extensive yard facilities and these used to be packed with cement, container, beer and fertiliser trains. Freight north of the border ended in the late 1990s and the yard has lain empty since. When the 80 Class units were withdrawn from service in 2005 they came to Adelaide to be stored. The yard has been developed into a new DMU depot for the Class 4000 trains recently introduced by Northern Ireland Railways.

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

Adelaide railway station (Northern Ireland)
Adelaide Avenue, Belfast Upper Falls

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 54.5784 ° E -5.955 °
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Adelaide

Adelaide Avenue
BT12 6RD Belfast, Upper Falls
Northern Ireland, United Kingdom
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Adelaide station, Belfast geograph.org.uk 1392357
Adelaide station, Belfast geograph.org.uk 1392357
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Linfield F.C.

Linfield Football Club is a Northern Irish professional football club, based in south Belfast, which plays in the Irish Premiership – the highest level of the Irish League. The fourth-oldest club on the island of Ireland, Linfield was founded in 1886 by workers at the Ulster Spinning Company's Linfield Mill. Since 1905, the club's home ground has been Windsor Park, which is also the home of the Northern Ireland national team and is the largest football stadium in Northern Ireland. The club's badge displays Windsor Castle, in reference to the ground's namesake. Linfield is also the world's most successful club in terms of league titles won; it has 56 league titles, the last being won in the 2021/22 season. Historically, Linfield shared a fierce rivalry with Belfast Celtic until Celtic's withdrawal from the league for political reasons in 1949. Since that time the club's main rival has been Glentoran, with the duo known locally as the Big Two. This rivalry traditionally includes a league derby played on Boxing Day each year, which usually attracts Northern Ireland's highest domestic attendance of the season, excluding cup finals. For the 2021–22 season, Linfield's average league home attendance was approximately 2,900, the highest in the division and more than double the league's overall average of around 1,400. The team, nicknamed The Blues, is managed by former Northern Ireland international and the country's all-time record goalscorer, David Healy. Healy was appointed on 14 October 2015 to succeed Warren Feeney, following Feeney's resignation.Domestically, Linfield has been one of the most successful clubs in the world, holding several domestic and world records. The club has won 56 League titles, 44 Irish Cups and League Cups combined, as well as numerous other domestic cup competitions, taking its trophy count to well over 115. The club was one of the eight founding members of the Irish League in 1890, won the inaugural league title, and is one of only three clubs to have gone on to compete in every season of the Irish League's top division since; a joint world record for the longest continuous membership of a national league's top division. Linfield has won 56 league championships to date – more than twice as many titles as any other Northern Irish club, and 2nd in the world behind only ABC from Brazil. In the 1921–22 season, Linfield completed an unprecedented clean sweep of all seven available trophies – to date, this is the only recorded instance of a seven-trophy season being achieved in world football.In the modern era, the club won all four available domestic trophies in 2006 to complete a domestic quadruple, and has also won three domestic trebles. The club also holds the world record for the most domestic doubles, with 25. Linfield is one of only three clubs to have completed an Irish League campaign unbeaten, having done so on four occasions. The club has lifted the Irish Cup 44 times, the second-highest number of national cup wins worldwide. Linfield has also won the League Cup a record ten times, and has won four all-Ireland cup competitions. The club has never won a European trophy, with the club's best finish being the quarter-finals of the 1966–67 European Cup.