Glenn1969
Established Member
Both
Both
If NPR was to go via Bradford it would run in a tunnel pretty much directly from Manchester to Bradford with no benefit to the rest of the Calder Valley line. If I'm honest apart from Halifax or Bradford the Calder Valley doesn't serve anywhere too important.
I imagine what the express is referring to is a new tunnel from Manchester Piccadilly to around Marsden before running on upgraded lines to Huddersfield and Leeds. There could be ways of serving Bradford and Halifax within that by running trains to Manchester via Huddersfield.
But it was planned by TfN/WYCA for services to share the infrastructure Leeds to Bradford which would have brought substantial benefits and the Interchange rail station would have been replacedThis is how I read in to it. I doubt the government will scrap NPR in it’s entirety, but it will be a mix of new build and upgraded lines. As for the benefits for places like Halifax, there was never intended to be any benefits. If NPR was to be a completely new line via Bradford, it’s services would still be relieving the Huddersfield line, with no changes on the current line via Halifax.
And this is fundamentally an issue with what's happened with Bradford, you've got the City Council announcing a city centre station without knowing what the route is selling a vision, with literally no say in the matter. You then have TfN and others pushing the benefits for areas that are never going to see the benefits, such as the Calder Valley, and you're left in a situation where there is outrage about something that was never confirmed as to be happening.As for the benefits for places like Halifax, there was never intended to be any benefits. If NPR was to be a completely new line via Bradford, it’s services would still be relieving the Huddersfield line, with no changes on the current line via Halifax.
No decisions have been made about the exact route for the rail line into and out of the new station, and there are no immediate implications for traders at St James’s Wholesale Market.
No, it was a vision or an ambition. Just because someone's done a document doesn't mean it will happen.But it was planned by TfN/WYCA for services to share the infrastructure Leeds to Bradford which would have brought substantial benefits and the Interchange rail station would have been replaced
That was supposed to happen when Doncaster and Aire/Wharfe were wired but it got cut from the final scheme, presumably to save money. I said I thought the time penalty the current layout causes is 8/10 minutes which is hardly negligibleI guess the question is "what is Northern Powerhouse Rail/ HS3/ TPR upgrade actually for".
At the moment, Manchester - Leeds is around fifty five minutes.
A direct line from the buffers at Piccadilly to the western edge of the platforms at Leeds is 35.5mi, so the fifty five minute journey time seems quite slow as the crow flies. I could see the point of spending all of this money if it meant something closer to half an hour in duration (not easy, given the twists and turns necessary to get from the Irwell to the Aire, especially given the Pennines and the fact that the eastern side of the Pennines is land that flows into the Calder rather than the Aire, so there's another hill to negotiate once you are on the Yorkshire side - comparisons with things like Reading - London along the fairly flat Thames valley are a waste of time here - the question needs to be about how to best link Manchester and Leeds rather than using unrealistic benchmarks)
Now, that crow flying between Piccadilly and Leeds obviously isn't following the route that the trains currently take - plot a course via Alexandra Park in Oldham, the Tesco Express on Halifax Road on the edge of Huddersfield, passing a stone's throw from Cleckheaton town centre and the back of the IKEA at Birstall. That's the direct route. Manchester - Oldlham - suburban Huddersfield - Cleckheaton - Birstall retail park - Leeds.
So, if you want a proper fast route then that's one starting point. Unrealistic that it'd go exactly that way, sure, and incredibly unrealistic to have stations at places like Cleckheaton, but a direct line is not far from central Huddersfield, maybe two miles. Running a straight line from Manchester to Huddersfield and Huddersfield to Leeds would only be a few hundred metres longer (than running through that Tesco Express).
Bradford though... Bradford is a long way from the crow's route. Bradford would be a much bigger diversion (e.g. Forster Square is north of Leeds station). And then there's the fact that Bradford is in a valley of it's own, a dead end that meets the Aire Valley at Shipley. So more of a diversion required, or more cost to get it under another hill.
So the benefits of "putting Bradford on the map" have to be seen against the time penalty for Manchester - Leeds passengers. How many more hundreds of millions of pounds would it cost to have a longer slower route via Bradford and how much of a time penalty would there be to the point where there's not much time saving (especially compared to just taking the Huddersfield/ Dewsbury stops out of the existing line or actually electrifying that line)?
As for the "Dead End Terminus" at Bradford... I don't think that there's much of a time penalty - the distance from Mill Lane to the southern end of the Interchange platform is around three hundred metres (around seven hundred metres from Ripley Street to the platform, since Ripley Street is where you'd be branching off?)... so it's not much doubling back - and the time taken for a driver to change ends is pretty negligible at a busy city centre station (annoying at somewhere like Battersby but you have a number of people alighting/ boarding in Bradford, so you'd have a few minutes of dwell).
As I've said before, a "Bradford Crossrail" would be a Solution In Need Of A Problem - there's no significant demand from one side of the city to the other - it's just a combination of local people wanting a lot of money thrown at the place and enthusiasts who are members of the Bufferphobic Community (you know the ones, they can't stand dead ends, they want to extend everything to everywhere - they hate the idea of HS2 stations being dead ends - they hate re-opening a line but stopping short of somewhere else, e.g. the Waverley line isn't good enough because it doesn't go through fifty plus miles of empty countryside beyond there until it meets another railway at Carlisle)
A better thing for Bradford would be electrifying the line from Leeds to (at least) Halifax - but where's the fun in modest improvements like that, when we can get the crayons out and design a High Speed network that links one side of Bradford with t'other?
That was supposed to happen when Doncaster and Aire/Wharfe were wired but it got cut from the final scheme, presumably to save money
I said I thought the time penalty the current layout causes is 8/10 minutes which is hardly negligible
Interesting point there - a tunnel to an underground station in Bradford would cost far more than electrifying the Calder Valley, which would probably make quite a difference to journey times on the hilly bit through Halifax. It would also create the opportunity for Manchester-Bradford trains to run via the potential new route and diverge at Huddersfield. Which would people prefer?A better thing for Bradford would be electrifying the line from Leeds to (at least) Halifax - but where's the fun in modest improvements like that, when we can get the crayons out and design a High Speed network that links one side of Bradford with t'other?
Well that's not what the article states, as below:I viewed the Express article as being about the Transpennine Route Upgrade being greenlit. I think that is all we will get
TRU has a budget of £2.9bn. This would give TRU at least an extra £7bn and as previously stated in the Yorkshire Post the via Huddersfield route cost £13bn, £4bn less than via Bradford.Instead the green light would be given to a series of upgrades worth around £10 billion on the “Dingle route”, including the electrification of the transpennine line between Manchester and Leeds.
This will involve building a new hub station in Huddersfield which will see hundreds of homes in the Yorkshire town compulsorily bought and demolished.
Also, could make more sense having a brand new fast spur between Huddersfield and Bradford, potentially following the old Pickle Bridge alignment, rather than the windy nature of going through Brighouse and Halifax.Interesting point there - a tunnel to an underground station in Bradford would cost far more than electrifying the Calder Valley, which would probably make quite a difference to journey times on the hilly bit through Halifax. It would also create the opportunity for Manchester-Bradford trains to run via the potential new route and diverge at Huddersfield. Which would people prefer?
Probably electrificationInteresting point there - a tunnel to an underground station in Bradford would cost far more than electrifying the Calder Valley, which would probably make quite a difference to journey times on the hilly bit through Halifax. It would also create the opportunity for Manchester-Bradford trains to run via the potential new route and diverge at Huddersfield. Which would people prefer?
It wouldn't. Huddersfield to Westtown will be 100/110mph and the Huddersfield rebuild will have 4 through platforms, which would be more than enough to regular fast services passing through it, along with the two bays. The scale of the work to gain the speed and capacity enhancements needed between Manchester and Leeds will be west of Huddersfield.Why would a new Hudd station be needed (post current TRU plans) and where??
It's hard to see how a new station would fit in Huddersfield, with or without demolition of housing, without several miles of new approach tracks that would replace much of what is (we hope) about to be upgraded under TRU. The only reason I can think it might be needed is if they decide to make NPR capable of taking 400m trains, perhaps as a the London-Leeds route instead of the HS2 eastern leg. I've already posted elsewhere that this would cause major capacity problems on the HS2 western leg.It wouldn't. Huddersfield to Westtown will be 100/110mph and the Huddersfield rebuild will have 4 through platforms, which would be more than enough to regular fast services passing through it, along with the two bays. The scale of the work to gain the speed and capacity enhancements needed between Manchester and Leeds will be west of Huddersfield.
Best response yet IMHO.Both
There wouldn't be a new station, it would be the one put forward as part of the TWAO, which can accommodate 200m trains easily. No way will 400m trains be required over the pennines. And I suspect the eastern leg of HS2 will definitely go ahead, given that's where the majority of the benefits come from.It's hard to see how a new station would fit in Huddersfield, with or without demolition of housing, without several miles of new approach tracks that would replace much of what is (we hope) about to be upgraded under TRU. The only reason I can think it might be needed is if they decide to make NPR capable of taking 400m trains, perhaps as a the London-Leeds route instead of the HS2 eastern leg. I've already posted elsewhere that this would cause major capacity problems on the HS2 western leg.
But we must remember, as someone has just posted on another thread, that this is the Express and needs to be taken with a large pinch of salt.
I guess the question is "what is Northern Powerhouse Rail/ HS3/ TPR upgrade actually for".
[..]
As I've said before, a "Bradford Crossrail" would be a Solution In Need Of A Problem - there's no significant demand from one side of the city to the other - [..]
A better thing for Bradford would be electrifying the line from Leeds to (at least) Halifax - but where's the fun in modest improvements like that, when we can get the crayons out and design a High Speed network that links one side of Bradford with t'other?
You better believe that HS2 was, together with the planning regulations, a major factor in the by-election result.The Express (ugh!) is, I think, making links that don't exist except in the Westminster bubble.
I don't doubt there are big decisions that need to be made about NPR and its relationship to the existing "Dingle" (Diggle!) route.
HS3 in its "all new/via Bradford" guise might well be considered unaffordable in the current climate.
But to lay it at the door of the HS2 Nimbys in Chesham & Amersham seems far-fetched.
HS2 has all-party (bar the Greens and UKIP) support, and is proceeding whatever Chiltern MPs might think.
There might be local issues over construction which are hard to judge from a distance, but it would have been the same for a motorway (and was with the M40).
Taxpayers are already funding lengthy tunnels to avoid disturbing the leafy Chiltern lanes.
As I understand it, it's the proposed relaxation of planning regulations on housing which is the main debate in the area, not how to stop HS2.
There is also hostility to the "levelling-up" agenda as it plainly means taking money/priority away from prosperous southern areas.
Bradford-Leeds in 10-15 minutes would likely have a similar effect.
I do wonder if some of the Leeds New Line could be rehabilitated as part of such a route. Gildersome tunnel is only half -filled with colliery spoil...It's Leeds- Bradford-Halifax in 30 minutes (which should be possible given the distance) that needs a new line
Bristol is bypassed, and Nottingham is bypassed by HS2.For added context, Bradford is larger than Bristol, Norwich, Nottingham, Newcastle. You wouldn’t bypass those cities.