|
This section covers the Goods Yard and Engine Shed area, south of the city centre.
Click here for a street map of this area from multimap
Notes on using the multimaps: The map linked to is a 1:10000 street map. The large scale street map unfortunately does not show the disused railway or the Great Central Way. Zoom out to
1:25000 to see the standard ordnance survey map version, but with no street names. To see an aerial photograph of the area covered by the map click on the “Aerial” tab above the map.
When finished with multimap click on “Back” till you return here.
After the closure of the railway the north end of the freight yard, including the goods shed, had been largely taken over by British Road Services and its successors.
The central part and southern end became to be dominated by the large Vic Berry’s scrap yard. This maintained its rail link with the Leicester to Burton line and received such large quantities of rolling stock for
scrap that they were stacked in the famous piles until they could be cut up. Following a disastrous fire in one of these stacks involving stock which may have contained asbestos the scrap yard closed down in the
early 1990s.
In a corner at the south end of the goods yard site, next to Upperton Road, was the much smaller scrap yard of A.E. Piggott & Sons which cut up general scrap and, after the closure of the through railway, sent it
out via the link to the Leicester to Burton line. For many years it sent nothing out by rail, but in a surprise move in the mid 1990s it sent scrap by rail to South Wales for a year or so. These were the last trains
to leave the old Great Central line in Leicester.
This area, known as Bede Island, has been completely redeveloped from the late 1990s and office units and housing cover the site of the goods yard and subsequent scrap yards. There is also nothing to see of the
carriage shed which was to the west of the main line and bounded by a bend in the Old River Soar.
Leicester Great Central Engine shed was south of Upperton Road, near to the Leicester to Burton railway line. There is nothing to see of the shed as this whole area has been redeveloped too
|