The station was built by the Lancaster and Carlisle Railway, it was opened on 17 December 1846, and was designed by Sir William Tite. Although the station is now relatively quiet at one time this was the terminus for the Cockermouth, Keswick and Penrith Railway and the North Eastern Railway'sEden Valley branch which joined with the Stainmore line at Kirkby Stephen providing connections to the East Coast Main Line at Darlington. There was also in the mid-nineteenth century a plan to connect Penrith by rail to the lead mines at Caldbeck and eventually joining up with the Cumbrian Coast Line near Wigton. Passenger services to Kirkby Stephen and Darlington were withdrawn in 1962, whilst those to Cockermouth and fell victim to the Beeching Axe four years later; the surviving portion of the C&KP to Keswick survived until March 1972. The station currently lacks a cafe. An 1863 Ordnance Survey plan shows refreshment facilities in the large room seen to the right on entering the building, but this is now used for storage. The station was renamed from Penrith to Penrith for Ullswater in the early years of British Railways; and the name reverted to Penrith on 6 May 1974. It has since been renamed again to Penrith North Lakes. Up until August 2006 the station was probably unique in that although being a manned main line station it did not have electronic departure boards or TV screens depicting departures/arrivals but only a handwritten departure board in the waiting room/ticket office. It was also the last station in the UK where mail was collected by a moving train, the practice finally coming to an end in October 1971. The station is operated byAvanti West Coast, who refer to the station as Penrith North Lakes. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II listed building.
Facilities
The station is staffed throughout the day, with the ticket office open from 05:30 - 19:00 Mon-Sat and 10:30 - 19:00 on Sundays. A self-service ticket machine is also available. Train running information is now offered via CIS displays, automated announcements and customer help points on the two main platforms. Waiting rooms are provided on both platforms, along with toilets, a vending machine for snacks and cold drinks, a post box and a pay phone. Step-free access is available to all platforms via lifts.
Services
There are calls provided here throughout the week by both Avanti West Coast and TransPennine Express - the former mostly by to London Euston direct trains and the latter by to Glasgow/Edinburgh services. These combine to provide a minimum of one hourly departure in each direction. Some Avanti West Coast workings via also stop here at certain times of day, whilst the last evening train southbound terminates at.