North Devon Line Rail Promotion Group

North Devon Line Rail Promotion Group We have been representing the communties views for the last four decades.

The North Devon Line Rail Promotion Group (NDLRPG) is the voice for passengers and businesses served by the Tarka line (Barnstaple to Exeter) and is North Devons main line.

21/05/2026

For decades Britain’s railways were planned around decline rather than growth.

From the 1960s through to the cash-strapped years of British Rail in the 1980s and 1990s, station land was often viewed as surplus rather than strategic. Goods yards were sold, access roads built over, parking reduced and commercial development encouraged simply to bring in much-needed revenue. At the time, few imagined the railway would once again become central to tackling congestion, supporting economic growth and connecting communities.

Today we are living with the consequences of those decisions.

Across the South West many of our historic town-centre stations are now heavily constrained by poor access, traffic congestion and limited space for expansion. The railway itself may have survived — and passenger numbers grown dramatically — but the ability to easily reach stations has not kept pace.

Barnstaple is a clear example. The former goods yard land around the station has long since been redeveloped. Large-scale retail and commercial traffic movements now dominate the surrounding roads, with HGV deliveries and increasing congestion making access to the station more difficult year on year. The railway sits in the middle of a busy urban environment that was never strategically planned around future rail growth.

Taunton faces similar challenges. Extensive housing growth and urban expansion have added significant pressure to roads around the station. At peak times, congestion can make reaching the station difficult, while limited parking often disappears early in the day. Yet outside the peaks, trains can still have plentiful space available. The problem is not always rail capacity alone — it is the cumulative impact of decades of poor strategic planning around access to the railway.

We regularly hear about overcrowded trains on routes across the region, and these stories understandably put some people off travelling by rail. But the wider issue is how easily people can actually access the network in the first place.

Okehampton offers an interesting contrast. Since returning to the national rail network, the station has attracted significant numbers of people out of their cars and onto trains. However, the station’s hillside location limits easy access from the wider catchment area. Recognising this, plans emerged for a new parkway-style station close to the A30, with substantial parking and bus connections — directly aligned with the Government’s ambitions for “Better Connected Communities”. While recent concerns about proposed reductions to bus infrastructure are worrying, the principle remains sound: modern rail growth requires stations that are easy to access by car, bus, walking and cycling.

So how do we apply this thinking to places like Barnstaple and Taunton?

The answer is not simply bigger car parks or more roads. It is integrated transport planning:
🚆 Better bus links timed to trains
🚶 Safe walking and cycling routes
🅿️ Strategic park-and-ride and parkway access
🚌 Proper interchange facilities
📱 Real-time information and integrated ticketing
🏙️ Development planned around rail access, not against it

For too long transport planning has treated stations as isolated destinations rather than the centrepiece of connected communities.

If we are serious about growing rail use across Devon and Somerset, then we must start planning stations not just for the railway we inherited — but for the railway our region actually needs.

We want to hear from you.

🚆 If you already use the railway — what are the biggest challenges in accessing stations like Barnstaple, Exeter, Crediton, Okehampton or Taunton?

🚗 If you currently drive instead of using the train — what would encourage you to switch? Easier parking? Better bus links? Simpler ticketing? More reliable trains?

🏪 If you are a local business — how does congestion around our town-centre stations affect staff, customers and deliveries? Could better rail connectivity help your business grow?

Too often transport planning is done to communities rather than with them. The future of rail in Devon and Somerset needs to reflect how people actually travel today — for work, education, healthcare, shopping and leisure.

The North Devon Line is not simply a railway line. It is part of the wider transport network that supports our towns, businesses and communities.

Please share your thoughts in the comments, message the North Devon Line Rail Promotion Group directly or email: [email protected]

North Devon Gazette Crediton, Devon Station Masters Cafe Barnstaple The Museum of Barnstaple & North Devon

12/05/2026

People say nothing changes and here is a great example of change and like Okehampton, Tweedbank, Aberdare etc all started with a local campaign

Okehampton is about to get its second station and will open access to wider network across North Devon and Cornwall with...
10/05/2026

Okehampton is about to get its second station and will open access to wider network across North Devon and Cornwall with a direct link of the A30.

In building the business case we highlighted the extensive reach of the railway and this is the next stage of that realisation.

In addition the connectivity between Buses and Trains will continue as well as new facilities for cycling from across Okehampton.

Well done Network Rail, GWR and Devon CC for their support in this new station for Devon

🚉The newest station in the West, Okehampton Interchange in Devon, is almost ready to welcome passengers. 🏗Main construction is now complete, with the car park, footbridge, lift, platform and ramps in place. 🛠We're now applying the finishing touches to the station forecourt and completing te...

It’s shows you what can happen, Portishead lost its railway in 1962 and 2028 it will have it back. Tie residents of the ...
02/05/2026

It’s shows you what can happen, Portishead lost its railway in 1962 and 2028 it will have it back. Tie residents of the town have been campaigning ever since and the opening is now in sight!

11/04/2026

The Government have just released their Better Connected "A Strategy for Integrated Transport".

This follows extensive engagement across the county, which I attended the event in Bristol 18 months ago. T

This gives guidance on improving and strengthen the connectivity all forms of transport, especially rail and bus.

We are have already seen some of these benefits from work GWR has done with DCC and bus operators to join up bus services from Lynton and Lynmouth to railway at Barnstaple.

How the railway impacts beyond its passengers is shared by Mike Day of the Station Masters Cafe at Barnstaple. This arti...
11/04/2026

How the railway impacts beyond its passengers is shared by Mike Day of the Station Masters Cafe at Barnstaple. This article explains how our local businesses are intrinsically linked to our transport systems and the impact when there is disruption.

Barnstaple station café owners hit by ‘devastating’ impact as Storm Chandra leaves business with just ‘£18’ in a single day

22/03/2026

SIR Mel Stride, MP for Central Devon, met with representatives of the North Devon Line Rail Promotion Group at Crediton Station to discuss the resilience of rail infrastructure across the West Country.

Address

Barnstaple Station
Barnstaple
EX311DF

Telephone

+447545857820

Website

https://ndlrpg.org/become-a-member/

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