As a Prestonian, I approve of the demolition of the bus station, assuming that there is a decent replacement solution. When Tithebarn was proposed, I was wholeheartedly in favour of getting it demolished ASAP, along with all the other excuses for buildings in that part of Preston. Now Tithebarn is off the agenda, I'm somewhat more cautious of rushing things. I think even the sight of the bus station beats a crater in the middle of the city centre. I could list a whole number of reasons as to why it should be demolished, but I'll keep it brief:
For starters,
it's in the wrong place. For several years, the councils regeneration strategy has focussed on trying to reverse the natural gravity of activity in the city centre, which has been moving more and more towards the railway station. It hasn't worked, and what we still have is a massive transport facility that is largely disconnected from the heart of the city's retail offer, the university, and most importantly the railway station. As such, any buses heading outbound generally see greater numbers boarding at the key stops on Fishergate, Ringway, Church Street, and Friargate. Even the 2 Park and Ride services avoid the bus station because they know they would be largely ineffective by taking commuters to the wrong part of town.
Even if the bus station was in the right place,
it's too big. I've seen posts in this thread saying that Preston would struggle with a bus station of 36 bays. Absolute bull. That would be more than enough. The bus station has always been used at under-capacity massively, but this has worsened since with withdrawal of many regional/national routes due to competition from the railways, and the consolidation of routes when Stagecoach took over Preston Bus. I believe that before the Competition Commission forced Stagecoach to sell off many of the Preston Bus routes, they were planning to have the Preston Citi franchise move to the eastern side of the station with the Fishwicks and National services, leaving a whole side of the station completely unused. The eastern side has 37 stands (35 since the pedestrian movement measures were put in place. Still think a 36 stand capacity bus station wouldn't be enough? (not including layover spaces)
The bus station itself isn't the only aspect of the building that is too big, the
car park is also massively underutilised. So much so that a few years ago, the council actually closed the top two levels to save on costs. In addition to that, the purpose built taxi waiting point at the south end of the station was taken out of use years ago. It has now been put back into use as a rarely used pick up/drop off point:
Moving on to aesthetics, to most,
it's a very ugly building, inside and out. The car park facade is certainly striking, but the building has few other redeeming features. This has been made worse since they put in new measures to try and stop pedestrians from crossing the apron, which brings us onto our next point...
...it's not user friendly. The subways and skybridge which were originally built to take people in and out of the station were often avoided by passengers, as like most subways they were very intimidating and often home to shady characters. As such, people resorted to crossing the apron, which resulted in people being injured (and in one case killed) by reversing buses. To avoid this occurring, the council put in 3 pedestrian crossings and surrounded the whole site with metal fencing:
Images courtesy of Tony Worrell
As you can see, it looks more like something you'd see in 1980's East Berlin.
In addition, to all the above, it's cold, wet, vile, and I hate using it.