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HS2 Construction Updates - Birmingham Area

Snow1964

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New drone videos around the delta junctions

appears part of the viaducts have started construction where there are 4 single track viaducts side by side


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28 September
New drone video around Coleshill
There is a very large green mobile crane installing bridge beams

 
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Snow1964

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New drone video around the Delta Junction
Construction proceeding on the viaduct where it splits to 5 viaduct tracks

Around the 4 minute 8s can see what appears to be 3 new steel bridges presumably waiting to be moved


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New Drone video of Curzon Street area


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New HS2 video
bridge beams of road bridge linking the car parks over the 6 tracks and platforms at Birmingham Interchange, Solihull. Outer spans 15m, central span 30m

 
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Geogregor

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9-DJI_0412-scaled.jpg
 

Snow1964

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Balfour Beatty VINCI have issued an update, work has started piling for the A38 dual carriageway bridge, near Lichfield. A temporary deviation of the road has been built and once bridge is built road will be returned to normal alignment.

HS2 line runs in a cutting here on its way to Hansacre, and will pass under the A38, it's slip roads, and nearby under another rail line.

Balfour Beatty VINCI has begun foundation work for a new bridge that will take HS2 trains under a major A road on the outskirts of Lichfield, Staffordshire.

An expert team of engineers has started work directly underneath the A38 carriageway at Streethay to create the foundations of the Rykneld Street bridge, which are between 20 and 27 metres deep. The complex process involves sinking a total of 88 piles – a series of concrete pillars built underground to support the weight of the structure.

In preparation for the start of piling Balfour Beatty VINCI and National Highways have successfully built a temporary 320-metre stretch of the A38, which is now in operation. Once piling has been completed and the bridge deck is installed in late 2025, the realigned section of the road will be moved back to its original position where piling is now taking place – allowing space for the high-speed railway to pass underneath.

At 90.5 metres in length, HS2’s Rykneld Street bridge is the last of three retaining structures to be built at Streethay and contained within a 455-metre-long cutting through the ground. The trio of bridges, which also includes the A38 Southbound Slip Overbridge and the Streethay Overbridge, will enable the HS2 line to pass under the A38, its slip lanes and the existing South Staffordshire freight railway.

Around 750,000 cubic metres of earth will be excavated during the process of building the three bridges and reused to form embankments along the HS2 route locally.

Zachary Walker, Project Manager for Balfour Beatty VINCI, said: “We’re delivering a series of complex structures that will allow HS2 to pass underneath the A38, its slip lanes and the South Staffordshire freight railway near Lichfield.

“This exciting engineering project is about to move onto the next phase, as we begin the foundation work on the third and final bridge we’re building along this 455-metre retained cutting in Streethay.”

David Perry, Senior Project Manager for HS2 Ltd, said: “Carrying out a complex engineering operation of this scale in close proximity to a live carriageway comes with a unique set of challenges, requiring a multi-stage and collaborative approach from everyone involved.

“Our thanks go to National Highways, Balfour Beatty VINCI and our wider supply chain as we start this next phase of construction at Streethay and, importantly, to our dedicated site team charged with safely delivering the Rykneld Street structure.”

A series of phased traffic management measures will continue during the build process and road realignment phase, with HS2 and National Highways working together to keep traffic flowing and to minimise disruption for road users.

David Patmore, Network Planner for National Highways, said: “It is crucial for us that we keep traffic flowing and we do all we can to ensure people’s journeys on our roads are as smooth as possible. But complex operations such as this will inevitably cause some disruption. We have worked very hard and closely with HS2 and their partners to minimise that disruption.

“We will continue to do all we can to ease the impact of the works and would like to thank road users and local communities for their patience.”

The piling operation and ongoing engineering work is being carried out by Balfour Beatty VINCI together with SB3 – a joint venture made up of Bachy Soletanche and Balfour Beatty Ground Engineering.

The new bridge was designed by a design joint venture of Mott MacDonald and SYSTRA working for Balfour Beatty VINCI.

 

bib

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Going to be quite interesting to watch all these viaducts grow over the next year or two, seems to be going a bit quicker than Colne valley, although each section only carries a single track I think. These clips are from separate videos uploaded about 3 weeks apart.
From the article linked in the previous post “We erect a 45m span every six days [per mast and swivel crane] which is much more efficient than any other methodology,”
1729853912787.png1729853951094.png
 
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bib

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First viaduct span over the river Tame at Water Orton, that's about 600m from the start of the box over the Derby line by my reckoning, another 250m or so to go to reach the Leicester line, although it doesnt look like those piers are in place yet.
 

Nicholas Lewis

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First viaduct span over the river Tame at Water Orton, that's about 600m from the start of the box over the Derby line by my reckoning, another 250m or so to go to reach the Leicester line, although it doesnt look like those piers are in place yet.
Great drone video thx for posting
 

chris2

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The structure that the viaduct has almost reached having now crossed the river looks to be an abutment rather than another pier. This render from some time ago gives the idea, although it looks like the line that diverges towards Birmingham will be on piers rather than as depicted.

61-reportajes-hs2-9.jpg
 

bib

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A drone flyover of the area just north of Delta Jn around the Marston Box M42 bridge. A lot of traffic on the roads
Video about the River Cole viaducts which are on the western leg of the Delta triangle
 

Snow1964

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New drone video of viaducts for Delta Junction on Sunday 2nd February 2025.

Looks like working on multiple single track viaducts now

 

Nottingham59

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Thanks for the video. Sorry, but I must be missing something. Why are there 5 tracks? I expected 4.
On the video at 0m50s looking north, the five tracks are from the left:
  1. Northbound slow, after the line from Curzon St and Interchange slow have merged (behind the camera)
  2. Northbound fast line through Interchange on the non-stop centre lines, heading at 360kph towards Manchester
  3. Southbound fast line through Interchange
  4. Southbound, rising to pass over the alignment and curve towards Curzon St
  5. Southbound slow, heading towards the platforms at Interchange
The design allows two trains to run southbound without conflicting; either
  1. From Manchester to Birmingham and Leeds to London
  2. From Manchester to London and from Leeds to Birmingham
Beyond the end of the current build (at 1m00s), there will be a similar pattern in reverse, where the two northbound tracks split into three, and the middle track of the three rises to pass over the other lines and head towards Leeds. (Though they may not build all of that)
 
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absolutelymilk

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On the video at 0m50s looking north, the five tracks are from the left:
  1. Northbound slow, after the line from Curzon St and Interchange slow have merged (behind the camera)
  2. Northbound fast line through Interchange on the non-stop centre lines, heading at 360kph towards Manchester
  3. Southbound fast line through Interchange
  4. Southbound, rising to pass over the alignment and curve towards Curzon St
  5. Southbound slow, heading towards the platforms at Interchange
The design allows two trains to run southbound without conflicting; either
  1. From Manchester to Birmingham and Leeds to London
  2. From Manchester to London and from Leeds to Birmingham
Beyond the end of the current build (at 1m00s), there will be a similar pattern in reverse, where the two northbound tracks split into three, and the middle track of the three rises to pass over the other lines and head towards Leeds. (Though they may not build all of that)
What does the line being slow mean here? Will all trains not stop at interchange?
 

Nottingham59

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What does the line being slow mean here?
The railway between Interchange and Delta Junction has four tracks. The inner tracks are rated at 360kph, so I assumed they will be called the fast lines. The outer tracks will carry trains that have called at Interchange, or will be taking the curves to or from Curzon St (or Leeds) with a speed of 230kph, so I assume they will end up being called the slow lines.

Will all trains not stop at interchange?
Interchange has six tracks. The inner two do not have platforms and allow trains on the mainline between London and Manchester to pass through the station at 360kph. The other four tracks all have platform faces on two islands: one northbound, one southbound.

The four platform tracks can only be reached by turning off the mainline, with a turnout speed of (I think) 230kph. I assume that all trains on these tracks will stop at Interchange.

See the map here:
The central through lines and the lines serving the inner platform lines form a four track railway, so they would have to be built at the same time.

View attachment 173859
You could leave the outer tracks and the platform islands and fitting out the rest of the station until later, but it would add to the complexity of managing the build.

I'd be surprised if they do that. Stations are relatively cheap compared to new line. HS2 say Interchange will cost £370M at 2019 prices (so probably twice that in real money). But £370M is the cost of just 2km of new route. Far simpler to postpone all spending on Delta to Handsacre if they wanted to spread the spending across more financial years.

EDIT: Map of Interchange station from: https://www.gov.uk/government/publi...f-commons-select-committee-2016-west-midlands

[Edited for clarity]
 
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Snow1964

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HS2 has announced the first of the delta junction viaducts has been completed. The single track 472m River Thame west viaduct. A double track viaduct alongside is under construction (3 track section)
The first huge viaduct has been completed at HS2’s Delta Junction in North Warwickshire, marking a major milestone as construction ramps up on the high-speed line in the region.

A team of 40 people working for HS2’s contractor in the Midlands, Balfour Beatty VINCI, used a giant cantilever structure to build the 472 metre single-track River Tame West Viaduct.

It is the first time in the UK that the technique has been deployed - moving the concrete segments into place span-by-span, making it an efficient and flexible construction process.

Work started on the viaduct’s piers in 2023, followed by the concrete deck construction starting in early 2024. Since then, 190 pre-cast concrete viaduct segments have been lifted into place using the specialist cantilever technique.

The River Tame West Viaducts will carry three rail tracks in total, made up of one single track viaduct and one double-track viaduct. Work is now underway on the double-track viaduct.

 

Geogregor

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HS2 has announced the first of the delta junction viaducts has been completed. The single track 472m River Thame west viaduct. A double track viaduct alongside is under construction (3 track section)



There is also video on YT:

 

Neen Sollars

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Question please: Does any contributor know or have any idea when the Government is due to announce/publish the decision regarding the final specification of the Handsacre Junction connection to the WCML, the Fradley headshunt of the cancelled NW HS2 line, and the extent of the build of the Kingsbury Junction of the cancelled NE HS2 spur? Essentially everything north of Delta Junction?
 

The Planner

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Question please: Does any contributor know or have any idea when the Government is due to announce/publish the decision regarding the final specification of the Handsacre Junction connection to the WCML, the Fradley headshunt of the cancelled NW HS2 line, and the extent of the build of the Kingsbury Junction of the cancelled NE HS2 spur? Essentially everything north of Delta Junction?
Handsacre will be a slow line connection. As for the spurs, I doubt any point work is going to be put in as its a maintenance liability if its not being used. Fradley won't be a headshunt, I don't see the point.
 

Snow1964

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Handsacre will be a slow line connection. As for the spurs, I doubt any point work is going to be put in as its a maintenance liability if its not being used. Fradley won't be a headshunt, I don't see the point.
You might (not) see the point of point work (I like your pun)

However I do wonder if the spec is slab track, wouldn't they need to be installed even if the points lead to a short dead end clear of the running line. Even if the points are unpowered and locked. Without them it would be real problem if and when any further extension is added if concrete doesn't have provision for them as curing a replacement slab would take days/weeks
 

hwl

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You might (not) see the point of point work (I like your pun)

However I do wonder if the spec is slab track, wouldn't they need to be installed even if the points lead to a short dead end clear of the running line. Even if the points are unpowered and locked. Without them it would be real problem if and when any further extension is added if concrete doesn't have provision for them as curing a replacement slab would take days/weeks
The base slab for points can be installed with plain rail in exactly the same way NR do for many reasons (early install or damaged frog) every year with normal track.

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Question please: Does any contributor know or have any idea when the Government is due to announce/publish the decision regarding the final specification of the Handsacre Junction connection to the WCML, the Fradley headshunt of the cancelled NW HS2 line, and the extent of the build of the Kingsbury Junction of the cancelled NE HS2 spur? Essentially everything north of Delta Junction?
They don't need to say anything for several years so don't expect any news soon...
 

Wyrleybart

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You might (not) see the point of point work (I like your pun)

However I do wonder if the spec is slab track, wouldn't they need to be installed even if the points lead to a short dead end clear of the running line. Even if the points are unpowered and locked. Without them it would be real problem if and when any further extension is added if concrete doesn't have provision for them as curing a replacement slab would take days/weeks
Why would they need to provide points infrastructure if phase 1A and phase 2A and 2B are all cancelled ?
AIUI the triangle runs from Birmingham interchange either left to Curzon St or right to Handsacre Jn. Much as I think there should be a 2A and 2B, it will be a lot of work and expense for something which will never happen
 

Russel

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I don't have much reason to visit Birmingham any more, but when I use the Cross-City line, maybe once a month, I'm always surprised by how much the construction around Curzon Street / Proof House has progressed since I saw it last.
 

bigbigcheese

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Why would they need to provide points infrastructure if phase 1A and phase 2A and 2B are all cancelled ?
AIUI the triangle runs from Birmingham interchange either left to Curzon St or right to Handsacre Jn. Much as I think there should be a 2A and 2B, it will be a lot of work and expense for something which will never happen
You say "never happen" but 2A is probably the highest value for money section of the whole of HS2. It will happen, it's just a matter of when. It almost certainly won't be this parliament, this government or likely even before Phase 1 opens in the 2040s. But potentially once it does and we have had enough parliaments such that it's no longer politically poisonous it'll be reborn in some shape or form. At which point any provision for it will be very much appreciated.
 

Wyrleybart

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You say "never happen" but 2A is probably the highest value for money section of the whole of HS2. It will happen, it's just a matter of when. It almost certainly won't be this parliament, this government or likely even before Phase 1 opens in the 2040s. But potentially once it does and we have had enough parliaments such that it's no longer politically poisonous it'll be reborn in some shape or form. At which point any provision for it will be very much appreciated.
I totally agree with your sentiment but neither conservative nor labour governments even believe in anything other than phase 1 - and would hasve been happy to tip everybody off at OOC if they could have got away with it.

The way HS2 was "sold" was that it is needed to release pressure on the southern part of the (4 track) WCML. By plugging HS2 into the two track Trent Valley at Handsacre actually makes a mockery of the whole concept. try to be pragmatic in thought and commend the Burnham+Street alliance but it is not visibly bearing any fruit yet.
 

Bald Rick

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The way HS2 was "sold" was that it is needed to release pressure on the southern part of the (4 track) WCML. By plugging HS2 into the two track Trent Valley at Handsacre actually makes a mockery of the whole concept.

Phase 1 does relieve the WCML south of Rugby. But as others say, the business case for 2A must be pretty good, as it releives the WCML Rugby - Crewe (and effectively Stoke), and knocks another 15 mins or so off journey time to Manchester, Liverpool, the North West and Scotland.
 

Wyrleybart

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Phase 1 does relieve the WCML south of Rugby. But as others say, the business case for 2A must be pretty good, as it releives the WCML Rugby - Crewe (and effectively Stoke), and knocks another 15 mins or so off journey time to Manchester, Liverpool, the North West and Scotland.
Yes. It relieves the four track railway south of Rugby, but in turn congests the two track railway in Staffordshire - crazy. You just wouldn't do that in a rational, wealthy, forward thinking railway. Even if you wanted to route intermodal trains away from the WCML NLL and GE you would still need to get towards Birmingham to get onto "table 18"

I really really hope "bigbigcheese" s optimism is real and tangible
 

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