RHolmes
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- 19 Jul 2019
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- 641
It’s not even on TfGMs agendaThat is not a given.
It’s not even on TfGMs agendaThat is not a given.
It’s not even on TfGMs agenda
It should be noted that TfGM's plan envisages 'tram-train' operation for the Glossop and Atherton lines (amongst others) rather than conversion to pure Metrolink like Bury and Altrincham. The whole point of this is to enable trams to mix it with other heavy rail services and so not require complicated solutions like quadrupling from Ardwick to Guide Bridge or Hindley to Wigan. The vehicles will be of higher quality, suitable for longer distances, and dual voltage 750V DC / 25kV AC. Eventually I can envisage two distinct systems - a 'Stadtbahn' for the tram-train routes with a dedicated cross Manchester pre-metro type subway and 'Metrolink' for the street-tramway routes. Alternatively, Manchester City Council is pursuing a welcome pedestrianisation policy in the city-centre - to the predictable howls of motorists - so there may be opportunities for further cross-city tram routes, including Deansgate.
We have to remember that if the Atherton, Glossop, Rose Hill and Warrington lines were converted for metrolink usage, it wouldn’t be M5000 trams that use the line. It would be wholly reasonable to expect a tram-train that has the look and feel of any light rail metro train (i.e. 60-70m in length). Also of no tunnel is dug, I doubt there will be a line to Warrington.
The timescale were talking about means that the current fleet would be long gone anyway. Metrolink likes a uniform fleet, so if there is no tunnel I would bet that all units will be tram-trains the equivalent of a double length M5000. If a tunnel is built, I think it will be a mix of light-rail Metro trains at 70m in length, with fleet of tram-trains of similar length too.
Actually a very, very, very, long time ago Altrincham had 12 Manchester train departures within a one hour period in the morning peak and there was an extra train on top of that starting at Sale. That was peak time only though with the off-peak frequency being much lower and it included 3 diesel trains from Chester that only stopped at Sale. On the plus side though a lot more seats than you'd get on Metrolink and faster Altrincham to Manchester journeys, even if the frequency was lower at the smaller stations and you didn't have a choice of stops across the city to alight at. Presumably it was also easier to divert North Wales to Manchester services if the Earlestown line was closed for engineering works, as there wouldn't be pathing issues through Stockport like they are now. I think that's really the issue with conversions is there's a shortage of paths around Manchester so closing lines to trains reduces the number of available options for trains to be diverted or for freight trains to be routed along. I get the impression there's a lot more freight now than when the Altrincham line was converted, I don't know if that is the case or if it's just because I'm seeing more and more freight trains every year.
As someone who lives close by to the Airport Line, I would be against this line being converted to Metrolink.
The reason being is because it not only connects many train services to/from the Airport, but also acts as a diversionary route for Avanti/XC/TfW services in the event the Stockport line is blocked, and is also great that this line has connections to Wilmslow & Crewe (and as Greybeard mentioned, the freight container trains use this line to travel to/from Trafford Park, which would mean that it would need to go via Stockport if converted, and would mean a reduction in passenger services on that line).
What the line does need though is returning to regular half-hourly local service stops, which the Manchester Recovery Taskforce consultation has offered potential solutions for.
Except the CLC isn’t being converted to Metrolink so that doesn’t solve the question
I don't think it would be able to be converted to Metrolink. It's pretty overcrowded as is. Besides, Metrolink already has an aiport connection, albeit a slow one.As someone who lives close by to the Airport Line, I would be against this line being converted to Metrolink.
The reason being is because it not only connects many train services to/from the Airport, but also acts as a diversionary route for Avanti/XC/TfW services in the event the Stockport line is blocked, and is also great that this line has connections to Wilmslow & Crewe (and as Greybeard mentioned, the freight container trains use this line to travel to/from Trafford Park, which would mean that it would need to go via Stockport if converted, and would mean a reduction in passenger services on that line).
What the line does need though is returning to regular half-hourly local service stops, which the Manchester Recovery Taskforce consultation has offered potential solutions for.
Once the Avanti services are moved off thanks to HS2, very likely possibility.The line really needs to be a dedicated all stop airport service.
I was not aware that the Sheffield Tram Trains had a top speed of 62mph! That's not too shabby, definately suitable for those longer routes and indeed equivalent to the Vivarail units currently in use.The limit for trams and tram trains on Metrolink is 60m due to design of key junctions e.g. Piccadilly Gardens. Double units are 57m long. By not wasting space on two cabs and coupling a 60m purpose built tram train would probably increase usable length by maybe 15%. The Sheffield Tram Trains have a top speed of 62mph. Edinburgh trams have good high backed seats. If you put those all together a well designed tram train would be better than an ex BR DMU.
Diversionary routes and flexibility are less important than the capacity freed up by removing the regular passenger services from the network. Imagine what Castlefield would be like with heavy rail services from Sale added into the mix... Short of trying to recreate the network as it was in the 1960s, its simply not viable if passenger numbers return to anything close to 2019 levels.
Redoubling the single section of track near Cheadle would significantly increase capacity on the Mid Cheshire Line for a modest price if more paths are required. Navigation Road could be rebuilt with 2 NR and 2 Metrolink platforms by demolishing two buildings and taking a thin strip of the park. That would significantly increase capacity and flexibility on both lines.
Since the Second City Crossing route was chosen the council has swung behind pedestrianisation of more city centre roads. During the early stages of the pandemic it introduced temporary barriers to close off the northern section of Deansgate for social distancing and I think they will be replaced by permanent barriers. Its already on Open Street map as pedestrianised. Albert Square is being expanded north and west by closing two roads next to it. A "3CC" above ground was bonkers 5 years ago, I am not so sure about that now. A route from Deansgate-Castlefield to south of Piccadilly Gardens via Great Bridgewater Steet, Chepstow Street and Portland Street could work with a couple of semi pedestrian sections used by buses and trams. The bottleneck in the city centre is the on street 3 track section between Deansgate-Castlefield and St Peter's Square. Such a route would remove it and make the bottleneck Cornbrook to Deansgate-Castlefield. A 4 platform stop at Piccadilly Station is a key objective for TfGM from HS2 rebuild. 10tph terminate at Piccadilly therefore capacity has not been entirely used up. I think TfGM have proposed Tram Trains from Marple to Piccadilly and then running through to Altrincham (but keeping Navigation Road segregated due to cost). 5tph from Glossop and 5tph from Marple Rose Hill would use up all the remaining Metrolink capacity in the city centre.
Very speculative idea but how about a tram line between Piccadilly and East Didsbury, going through back roads near Longsight e.g. New Bank Street and then down A34? It would enable Mauldeth Road and Burnage stations to be closed and replaced by neighbouring tram stops to ease timetabling problems caused by local stops.
The Réseau express métropolitain (REM; English: Metropolitan Express Network; previously known as Réseau électrique métropolitain) is a light metro rapid transit system under construction in the Greater Montreal area around Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The system will link several suburbs with Downtown Montreal via Central Station. It involves the conversion of the existing Deux-Montagnes commuter rail line to light metro standards.
With regards to the "back roads near Longsight" stated above, would the existing sub-surface infrastructure such as the Victorian sewer systems in those areas need total upgrading in order to provide a suitable hard base for such a tramway and what is the average street width of those roads? What provision will be made for occasions where house removal vans need to be at the affected properties, as in such a scenario such vehicles take quite a time to fully load and could block the new tramway.Very speculative idea but how about a tram line between Piccadilly and East Didsbury, going through back roads near Longsight e.g. New Bank Street and then down A34? It would enable Mauldeth Road and Burnage stations to be closed and replaced by neighbouring tram stops to ease timetabling problems caused by local stops.
Diversionary routes and flexibility are less important than the capacity freed up by removing the regular passenger services from the network. Imagine what Castlefield would be like with heavy rail services from Sale added into the mix... Short of trying to recreate the network as it was in the 1960s, its simply not viable if passenger numbers return to anything close to 2019 levels.
For a railway forum, I am often surprised at how little attention is given to future Metrolink plans.
For a railway forum, I am often surprised at how little attention is given to future Metrolink plans.
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Metrolink tram-train expansion wins Government backing - Place North West
The Government has signalled its support for the potential introduction of tram-trains to expand the Metrolink network, which could see services extending to Wilmslow, Marple, and Wigan, with more detailed proposals expected to come forward before the summer.www.placenorthwest.co.uk
This link is one of many that discuss the future metrolink proposals, which include a tram-train service to Warrington.
I think you have to remember that the first place chosen to host the development of this new UK transport mode and the subsequent trials was Sheffield, so TfGM and any other interested transport bodies had all such future plans put on hold until final trials were held. We all know just how long this project took to reach completion with many long delays for one reason or another.TfGM seem to have been proposing tram-train trials for the past 15 years. I remember they were suggesting tram-trains could run to Marple and the Northwich area before the airport line got approved and funded. So perhaps it's not surprising people don't get excited about the prospect of something that keeps getting mentioned but never seems to get beyond the drawing board.
This is largely a ‘We would eventually like to do this if we have endless capital’. Let’s not forget it’s taken over 20 years to secure funding and eventually build the Trafford Centre line and the Glossop/Marple metro style operation has been proposed since the 1970’s ‘futuroute’ scheme.
The CLC also is not high at all on TfGMs priorities for the regions transport bar the issue with the Castlefield capacity. The current interests are extensions to existing services to serve Port Salford, Stockport and Bolton. It won’t be happening in our lifetime and certainly won’t happen until a few years after NPR is completed to the west. I’d also predict is the section most likely to be dropped due to financial constraints when to compared the busier and more congested Manchester to York
I agree that Warrington is a post NPR situation, but that was clear from the start. I also agree that there is a chance (let’s say a very high chance) that the western side of NPR will never be built, so yes, we may never see tram-train on the CLC.
Yes, I think on balance (and I know we've discussed at length) changing the CLC to be purely local services (Merseyrail one side, whatever GM wants on the other side) is a non-starter unless NPR is built in full and thus provides a replacement Liverpool-Warrington-Manchester fast service of at least 2tph.
With regards to the "back roads near Longsight" stated above, would the existing sub-surface infrastructure such as the Victorian sewer systems in those areas need total upgrading in order to provide a suitable hard base for such a tramway and what is the average street width of those roads? What provision will be made for occasions where house removal vans need to be at the affected properties, as in such a scenario such vehicles take quite a time to fully load and could block the new tramway.
It is not all that long ago that both Mauldeth Road and Burnage railway stations received brand new modern-style platforms and access points to platforms which must have incurred quite some costs. Was such a scenario as you propose above ever been a consideration in the minds of those charged to cost, plan and construct these new platforms?
Your scenario seems to presume if Metrolink didn't happen the money spent on conversions would have been used to revert the rail system back to how it was in the 1960s but wasn't Metrolink the economy option for creating a link between Piccadilly and Victoria and only built because the government didn't want to fund other options which could have provided more capacity for a higher cost?
While you may want to dismiss the importance of diversionary routes from a passenger's point of view one of the disadvantages of rail over road is trains (or trams) can't drive around an obstruction, the fewer diversionary routes that are available the more likely people are to experience significant disruption and be put off using the system whether it's train or tram. The Metrolink second city crossing doesn't just allow more trams it also helps ensure Deansgate to Victoria services aren't suspended if there's an incident.
Also when disruption does occur passengers have to use alternative routes regardless of whether their normal train or tram is diverted or not. In the case of Metrolink season ticket holders travelling between Altrincham and Manchester if the trams are suspended and they don't fancy spending an hour on an overcrowded bus that should be accepting Metrolink tickets then they have to buy a new ticket for the train. (Metrolink often don't bother to organise replacement buses and tell people their Metrolink ticket will be accepted on the normal 263 bus but often the drivers haven't been told or try to refuse travel to people with valid tickets because they aren't printed on standard yellow Metrolink ticket stock.) Then in the case of North Wales to Manchester passengers they'll often prefer the stopping service via Altrincham over a replacement bus so there not being a path to divert the North Wales service makes overcrowding problems worse.
TfGM seem to have been proposing tram-train trials for the past 15 years. I remember they were suggesting tram-trains could run to Marple and the Northwich area before the airport line got approved and funded. So perhaps it's not surprising people don't get excited about the prospect of something that keeps getting mentioned but never seems to get beyond the drawing board.
Yes, I think on balance (and I know we've discussed at length) changing the CLC to be purely local services (Merseyrail one side, whatever GM wants on the other side) is a non-starter unless NPR is built in full and thus provides a replacement Liverpool-Warrington-Manchester fast service of at least 2tph.
Diversionary routes are not part of cost benefit analysis for funding. They are very popular amongst enthusiasts but they are not considered because railways are not designed around the very small % of time that a line is closed.
In a world with unlimited resources a tunnel would probably be a good option but in the 80s and today Metrolink is the best pragmatic option due to cost. Metrolink stops have some benefits over the city centre stations and any theoretical tunnel station. Multiple stops within the city centre at ground level mean that passengers can (on average) get to their final destination faster than if they arrived at one of the main line station or a theoretical underground station. Heavy rail purists don't like Metrolink but it is (or was until the pandemic started) popular with residents and was growing faster than expected.
Do we really need a Liverpool-Warrington-Manchester fast service?
If you want to get a fast train from Warrington to Manchester you can just go to Bank Quay and take a train via Newton-le-Willows. There seems little cause to have a train that runs basically non stop from Warrington to Manchester via a second route.
Post HS2 you could even have a train that runs Liverpool-Warrington Bank Quay - Manchester if you wanted.
Two things.I'm not sure Metrolink is popular with residents, they use it because it's the only option they have.
Once again, I fail to understand the degree of sneering at trams and light rail on this forum.
I remember seeing a stat that usage doubled on the Bury and Altrincham lines post-conversion. They may have been less comfortable, but a doubling of usage seems like a pretty good downgrade to me! Fair point about dogs and bikes though (and possibly these things could be addressed with future metroisation of bits of the network).I think the thing about Metrolink is that in the early days it was pretty rubbish (uk.railway pretty universally referred to it as "Metroc**p" and it was very much seen as a poor relation to Merseyrail) and a considerable downgrade on the heavy rail services it replaced. It was done on the cheap, the stations felt unsafe and were bare minimum "board the ticket office up, paint it turquoise and leave it unstaffed", the trams rode incredibly badly and were small, it was expensive, and cycle carriage and through ticketing were lost.
OK, some of those things are still true (I think lack of cycle carriage on the wider network is a particular problem, as is the "no dogs" rule). However, many of them aren't, and indeed Metrolink has now reached the sort of standard of a German Stadtbahn, and once put underground as some of it no doubt will be will basically be a proper U-Bahn (as say the Newcastle Metro is).
So I can sort of get it based on past experience.
Two things.
1) passenger numbers would absolutely suggest otherwise.
2) you can apply that the other way round, too - 'people in Knutsford don't like the train, they use it because it's the only option and therefore would obviously prefer trams.'
Once again, I fail to understand the degree of sneering at trams and light rail on this forum.
Redoubling Cheadle Village Jn to Sharston Jn would involve replacement of two single track bridges over M60 slip roads. Not what I would call modest cost!Redoubling the single section of track near Cheadle would significantly increase capacity on the Mid Cheshire Line for a modest price if more paths are required. Navigation Road could be rebuilt with 2 NR and 2 Metrolink platforms by demolishing two buildings and taking a thin strip of the park. That would significantly increase capacity and flexibility on both lines.
Well the easiest way out of the Altrincham problem is Metrolink to Northwich and stuff the freight.
But I know I am in the minority for suggesting that.
The funny thing is, these proposals aren't that capital intensive.This is largely a ‘We would eventually like to do this if we have endless capital’. Let’s not forget it’s taken over 20 years to secure funding and eventually build the Trafford Centre line and the Glossop/Marple metro style operation has been proposed since the 1970’s ‘futuroute’ scheme.
The CLC also is not high at all on TfGMs priorities for the regions transport bar the issue with the Castlefield capacity. The current interests are extensions to existing services to serve Port Salford, Stockport and Bolton. It won’t be happening in our lifetime and certainly won’t happen until a few years after NPR is completed to the west. I’d also predict is the section most likely to be dropped due to financial constraints when to compared the busier and more congested Manchester to York
The only risk is mixing up all these different local/long distance routes simply results in a repeat of the Castlefield debacle. But moving some services onto the Metro system could definitely help relieve capacity through Castlefield and Piccadilly/Victoria in general, so that would help out some of the long distance stuff.The only other possible route would be over the Chat Moss if that could be done. Personally I would route both the north and south Wales services in to Victoria via Warrington & Newton. We also have the problem of Liverpool-Sheffield connectivity.
However both tram-train and light rail metro can operate alongside heavy rail. I wonder if it is possible to run a 5tph metro with 2 tph Liverpool-Sheffield that makes a call at Liverpool South Parkway, Warrington & Urmston?
Now this plays in to the politics of NPR. Andy Burnham has been pushing the agenda for an underground HS2/NPR station, but I suspect this will never happen. As a sop/consolation, initial funding could be provided for an underground Metrolink route under Manchester city centre. (For those who require smelling salts at the mention of a tram, such a tunnel would be operated by Metrolink, but it wouldn't be a tram line). Such a line could be used for any service on the Bury, Altrincham, East Didsbury, Atherton, Glossop or Warrington lines depending on how the tunnel is aligned (n.b. not all lines). Tram-trains would be used on of these lines too outside the city centre.
I think trams and light rail are good, but I think one of the key reasons I started the thread was that they are not suitable for everything. Metrolink is a bit better than other systems in that it is high floor, something that maximises interior space and makes the interiors actually level for disabled people.Two things.
1) passenger numbers would absolutely suggest otherwise.
2) you can apply that the other way round, too - 'people in Knutsford don't like the train, they use it because it's the only option and therefore would obviously prefer trams.'
Once again, I fail to understand the degree of sneering at trams and light rail on this forum.
Well the easiest way out of the Altrincham problem is Metrolink to Northwich and stuff the freight.
But I know I am in the minority for suggesting that.
Everyone forgets about freight, but it is very important.Freight traffic by rail of the type to which you allude does take off a large number of HGV off the roads.
HGVs cause significant damage to roads (road wear increases with square of weight), they are large and therefore more likely to get in accidents, especially on tight congested streets. They are less labour efficient (truck driver shortage in the UK) and less energy efficient than rail. Any plan we create has to consider the needs to at minimum maintain, but preferably increase, the amount of freight moved by rail.
We also have a crippling short of train drivers!
You just have to make a value judgement - I happen to view the conversion of the Mid Cheshire line to multiple Metrolink branches as a greater benefit than the relative handful of freight trains.
If any trains can be rerouted they would be, the others would cease and the traffic would go by road, or in the case of the Drax biomass workings, via sea to a port a bit closer to the destination?That still does not give the answer to the question of where you intend the total daily tonnage of the freight carried by these trains to go and the method used if not by rail.
Well the easiest way out of the Altrincham problem is Metrolink to Northwich and stuff the freight.
But I know I am in the minority for suggesting that.
Redoubling Cheadle Village Jn to Sharston Jn would involve replacement of two single track bridges over M60 slip roads. Not what I would call modest cost!
Quad tracking Deansgate Jn to Navigation Road would require a lot more than two buildings to be demolished. Ain't going to happen!
The existing rail overbridge over Roscoe's roundabout in Cheadle would surely need to be replaced unless I am mistaken in thinking it is only a single track bridge, which is in a location area of where a slip road from the M60 motorway is situated.In the context of the sort of stuff suggested on this thread that is pretty cheap. Most of the Cheadle bottleneck could be removed without replacing the bridges. From similar discussings in the past, I know it would have to wait until the WCML around Stockport is resignalled.
If any trains can be rerouted they would be, the others would cease and the traffic would go by road, or in the case of the Drax biomass workings, via sea to a port a bit closer to the destination?
Removing the station from the bottleneck would make a big difference.