LCRTrainfan979
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- 0703 FS
- 0903 FS
- 1057 I
- 11:03 FS
- 13:03 FS
- 1456 I
- 1503 FS
- 1627 I
- 1633 FS
- 1833 FS
- 1948 I
So generally looking at that, three out of the four Grand Central trains are only a few minutes before an alternative LNER service. Whilst Grand Central will always be useful for going to either Pontefract Monkhill on the two of the four trains, or to Halifax on all of them, their biggest destination is Bradford Interchange, only a few minutes away from Forster Square with a more regular service to London. Otherwise however, three of the four service are simply duplications which have the potential to abstract revenue off LNER's new expanded service. And unfortuanetly, with the nature of open access operators, they can't easily retime their service to different hours (E.G, the Grand Central service could mainly operate on the hour of even-numbered hours, with LNER doing the odd-numbered hours).
Consequently, that could just be reason for the DfT to attempt a break clause to get rid of Grand Central's Bradford service eventually, since their main purpose of serving underserved cities no longer applies with Bradford, and they are abstracting revenue, which Open Access Operators are absolutely not supposed to be allowed to do, and Heidi Alexander is said to be not very keen on open access operators given they take up train paths that the main operators (in this case LNER) could potentially use for some other service eventually.
Obviously, this wouldn't be the end of Grand Central, their main purpose still adequately survives with their Sunderland services, because there, they do have a monopoly of London services there. In many ways, there is even a case where if they were to lose their Bradford service (either their paths were stripped, or a decline in usage made them financially unviable for them), it might be a good idea if they could attempt to increase their Sunderland service, given LNER don't seem interested in serving Sunderland anymore, maybe eventually aiming for a roughly two-hourly service from there.
Grand Central Track Access Extension
Seems the GC have had there track access extended till 2038. I believe this means a new order we be looked at to replace the 180s. 1743200131 https://www.railmagazine.com/news/2025/03/27/grand-central-s-secures-track-access-to-bradford-and-sunderland-until-2038 Grand Central’s request to extend...

I have just looked at Realtime trains. As of May 2025, the times of trains from King's Cross to Bradford (FS for Forster Square, I for Interchange) are going to be roughly:Well I'll be interested to see how their Bradford service performs once LNER ramps up service to Foster Square, we'll get to see how many people in Bradford will stick with GC and how much their other stops in West Yorkshire support the service financially.
Good riddance to them!
- 0703 FS
- 0903 FS
- 1057 I
- 11:03 FS
- 13:03 FS
- 1456 I
- 1503 FS
- 1627 I
- 1633 FS
- 1833 FS
- 1948 I
So generally looking at that, three out of the four Grand Central trains are only a few minutes before an alternative LNER service. Whilst Grand Central will always be useful for going to either Pontefract Monkhill on the two of the four trains, or to Halifax on all of them, their biggest destination is Bradford Interchange, only a few minutes away from Forster Square with a more regular service to London. Otherwise however, three of the four service are simply duplications which have the potential to abstract revenue off LNER's new expanded service. And unfortuanetly, with the nature of open access operators, they can't easily retime their service to different hours (E.G, the Grand Central service could mainly operate on the hour of even-numbered hours, with LNER doing the odd-numbered hours).
Consequently, that could just be reason for the DfT to attempt a break clause to get rid of Grand Central's Bradford service eventually, since their main purpose of serving underserved cities no longer applies with Bradford, and they are abstracting revenue, which Open Access Operators are absolutely not supposed to be allowed to do, and Heidi Alexander is said to be not very keen on open access operators given they take up train paths that the main operators (in this case LNER) could potentially use for some other service eventually.
Obviously, this wouldn't be the end of Grand Central, their main purpose still adequately survives with their Sunderland services, because there, they do have a monopoly of London services there. In many ways, there is even a case where if they were to lose their Bradford service (either their paths were stripped, or a decline in usage made them financially unviable for them), it might be a good idea if they could attempt to increase their Sunderland service, given LNER don't seem interested in serving Sunderland anymore, maybe eventually aiming for a roughly two-hourly service from there.
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