|  A view taken on 29 August 2020 showing the site of New Buildings station looking north. The higher ground to the right was the course of the railway. The modern road curving to the left follows the same couse as the station approach road. 
                Photo by Jim McBride
 New  Buildings is a small settlement in County Londonderry, Ireland, located to the south  of the River Foyle just over 2 miles to the south of the city of  Derry/Londonderry. On 7 August 1896 the Donegal Railway (DR) obtained an act to  build a 14½ mile single track 3ft gauge railway between Strabane and the  Waterside area that lay on the eastern bank of the Foyle opposite  Derry/Londonderry. The course of the line passed to along the eastern edge of  New Buildings and a station was provided. In 1896 the DR had a 74 mile network of  3ft gauge railways that had Strabane as their easternmost point. To get goods  and passengers to and from the important city of Derry/Londonderry required the  use of the Great Northern Railway Ireland (GNRI) 5ft 3inch gauge line between  Strabane and Londonderry Foyle Road. Financially this situation was to the  detriment of the DR and to the advantage of the GNRI, which was the primary  reason for the line.The line  opened for goods services on 1 August 1900 and passenger services began six  days later. A station was at provided at Waterside which was called Londonderry  Victoria Road. Passengers and goods could move into the city via the double  deck Carlisle Bridge which was adjacent to the station.
 
 
  The station  at New Buildings was located on the eastern edge of its namesake and was well  positioned to serve the settlement. It was 11¾ miles from Strabane and 2¾ miles  from Londonderry Victoria Road. 
 Being a  single track line only one platform was provided. It was located on the west  side of the line. The main passenger facilities were located in a simple single  storey brick building.
 
 The station  had goods facilities which consisted of a siding and a corrugated iron goods  store located at the southern end of the platform.
 
 At the time  of opening there were 6 trains each way between Victoria Road and Strabane and  the CDR hoped to develop some commuter traffic along the Finn Valley through to  Derry/Londonderry. Trains left Victoria Road from 07.15 to 7.25pm and some of  these trains continued to Stranorlar and even Killybegs. In the return  direction trains left Strabane for Victoria Road at times from 08.30 to 7.25pm.  Even in the 1910 timetable there were still 6 departures from Victoria Road and  5 from Strabane with a special express service on Fair Days only from  Letterkenny, though this was not booked to call at New Buildings.
 
 The 1904  Handbook of Stations listed New Buildings as being able to handle general goods  and parcels.
 
 Victoria  Road was not the only station at Waterside. Londonderry Waterside station had  opened in 1852, and since 15 May 1860 it had been the terminus of the Belfast  & Northern Counties Railway (BNCR). In 1903 the BNCR had been taken over by  the Midland Railway (MR) an English company that had aspirations for expansion  in Ireland. They looked west from Derry/Londonderry and saw an opportunity in  the form of the DR. They entered into discussions with them with regards to a  takeover. The GNRI saw this as a threat and made it clear that they would try  to block such a move. A compromise was reached which involved the MR and the  GNRI taking control of the DR as equal partners. On 1 May 1906 the DR was  absorbed by the two larger companies who ran it through a board as the County  Donegal Railway Joint Committee (CDR). As the GNRI had a route between Strabane  and Derry/Londonderry the line through New Buildings (between Londonderry  Victoria Road and Strabane) passed solely to the MR. Staff at New Buildings  station became MR NCC employees and as the sole owner of the branch that  company was responsible for all of the infrastructure. However as the line was  actually an integral part of the CDR network all of the train services  (passenger and goods) were operated by them.
 
 In 1912 a  Sunday service of one train in each direction was introduced. In 1913 an  additional Sunday out and return working was introduced.
 
 On 4 August  1914 the British Empire declared war on Germany and entered the Great War. From  1 January 1917 the CDR was taken under government control (along with all of  the other Irish railways). The Sunday services were withdrawn in 1917 and never  reinstated. The weekday service was also reduced to four trains in each  direction.
 
 In 1919 the  Irish War of Independence broke out and it caused much disruption to the CDR  system. In December 1921 a treaty was negotiated which resulted in the island  of Ireland being split into two separate countries, the Irish Free State and  Northern Ireland which remained as part of the United Kingdom. The majority of  the CDR lines were located within the Irish Free State but the route through  New Buildings lay within Northern Ireland. This caused difficulties for the  company, which were exacerbated by the outbreak of the Irish Civil War  (1922-23) which caused even more disruption. The least disrupted route was the  Londonderry Victoria Road – Strabane line on which no major incidents were  recorded as it ran through a mainly Unionist area.
 
 The July  1922 timetable (see below) showed New Buildings as having three up and four down passenger  trains Monday-to-Saturday. The first departure was the 6.59am down train for  Strabane. The other three down services departed at 10.19am, 2.09pm and 5.09pm.  The up direction trains ran to Londonderry Victoria Road departing at 9.07am,  10.03am and 4.17pm. The journey time to Strabane was 41 minutes and to Victoria  Road it was 7 minutes.
  
 In 1923 the  MR was absorbed into the London Midland & Scottish Railway (LMS) who became  the part owner of the CDR and the owner of the Strabane – Londonderry Victoria  Road line. The LMS let their network in Northern Ireland operate as the  Northern Counties Committee (NCC).
 
 In 1924 the  LMS reduced New Buildings to being an unstaffed halt. The handling of goods  would have ceased at this time and it’s likely that the siding would have been  removed as soon as the works could be arranged.
 
 In 1934  (following the closure of the engine shed at Londonderry Victoria Road) the  passenger service was reduced to three trains in each direction.
 
 During the  Second World War (1939-45) the CDR saw an upturn in traffic. There was a high  volume of cattle movements from the Irish Free State to Londonderry. Because  the GNRI main line between Londonderry Foyle Road and Strabane passed through  the Irish Free State it could not be used for the movement of war materials or  troops (the Free State being a neutral country). As the Londonderry Victoria  Road and Strabane line was located entirely within Northern Ireland serious  consideration was given in 1942 to making it dual gauge (3ft and 5ft 3in), so  that GNRI trains could reach Londonderry without having to pass through the  Irish Free State. In the end the idea proved to be too complicated and all war  related traffic had to operate via the LMS NCC main line to Derry/Londonderry,  a vital wartime naval port, instead.
 
 In January  1948, when the LMS was nationalised as part of the Railway Executive the NCC  share of the CDR passed to the London Midland Region of British Railways. By  April 1949 the railways of Northern Ireland, with exception of the CDR, GNRI  and the SL&NC (as they operated in two countries), were also nationalised  as part of the Ulster Transport Authority (UTA). In April 1949 the former NCC  network was purchased by the Northern Ireland government on behalf of the UTA  for £2.67 million. Being part of the NCC network the Strabane – Londonderry  Victoria Road line passed to the UTA but it continued to be worked by the CDR.  The UTA paid the costs of the Londonderry Victoria Road service and that meant  that there was no incentive to economise. For this reason the trains on this  section of the CDR network were always steam operated and the CDR designed  their timetable after the 1930s so that all steam locos in service would visit  Victoria Road.
 
 
  The UTA  announced its intention to close the line between Londonderry Victoria Road and  Strabane in October 1954. The last trains ran on 31 December 1954. The very  last passenger departure from New Buildings was a down train that departed for  Strabane at 7.14pm. 
 On 29 June  1955 a light engine made a journey through New Buildings as part of a round  trip between Strabane and Londonderry Victoria Road. The purpose of this  movement was to test the permanent way for a special excursion train that was  to run on 30 June 1955. The excursion train carrying, Sunday School children as  part of an outing to Portrush (via a short walk between Victoria Road and  Waterside stations), operated as scheduled. The down train that passed through  New Buildings on the return leg of the journey would be the very last train to  pass through the station.
 
 Track  lifting began at Londonderry Victoria Road in November 1955. New Buildings had  been reached by the end of that month and all rails had been removed from the  station area by the end of that year.
 
 The area around the former station today has changed greatly over the  last 50 years which much new housing in particular as a suburb of Derry/Londonderry.  Shortly after closure the railway bridge over the Woodside Road was removed and a nearby road junction was remodeled, which makes it  difficult to locate the former station. Its site now lies beneath a house. The northern section of the Hayfield Park road follows the same course that the station approach road had taken.
 Full size copies of the Donegal Railway Company poster (shown above) can be purchased from the Donegal Railway Heritage Centre   |