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Bibhuti Bhushan Halt is a railway station located in the state of West Bengal, India. It functions as a halt station, a category of small wayside stations on the Indian Railways network where only a limited number of passenger services stop and where infrastructure is typically minimal.
| Name | Bibhuti Bhushan Halt railway station |
|---|---|
| Type | Railway halt station |
| State | West Bengal |
| Country | India |
| Operator | Indian Railways |
Halt stations in the Indian Railways system are generally unstaffed or minimally staffed stops intended to serve nearby villages or localities. They usually consist of a short platform and basic shelter, and tickets are often issued by the train conductor or at a nearby larger station. Stations of this kind are common across the suburban and rural rail networks of West Bengal, which are operated principally by the Eastern Railway and South Eastern Railway zones of Indian Railways.
The station is named in honour of Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay, the noted Bengali novelist best known for Pather Panchali and Aparajito. Naming small stations after literary, cultural, or political figures is a recurring practice in West Bengal's rail network.
As a halt station, Bibhuti Bhushan Halt provides local connectivity for residents of its surrounding area, enabling access to larger junctions and to the wider suburban rail system serving Kolkata and adjoining districts. Such stations play an important role in daily commuting, school and college travel, and access to markets in rural and semi-urban Bengal.