Posted 5th May 2020 | 6 Comments

North’s rail upgrade ‘must not wait for HS2’

A REPORT from the high speed rail pressure group Greengauge 21 is urging the government to improve railways in the north of England soon, and not to wait until HS2 arrives in the 2040s.

The group says important work should be carried out over the next five to ten years, to ease congestion in the centre of cities like Manchester and provide frequent ‘metro’ services based on the example of Thameslink in the London area.

It points to the building of motorways in the 1960s and 1970s, when new sections were added progressively, and says an ‘incremental’ approach would work for the rail network as well. It also says action has become still more urgent because of the present Covid-19 pandemic, because the government needs to support public works which can be completed quickly and so help to restart the economy.

The report, ‘Revisiting High Speed North’, highlights that railway routes in the north are often overloaded by all kinds of traffic, including freight, which moves at an average speed of 25km/h along the TransPennine lines.

Another pinch point is the notorious Castlefield corridor in central Manchester, where local and commuter services share a key section with intercity trains and freight and delays are frequent.

The answer, says the report, is a new ‘Super Hub’ at Piccadilly, including subsurface platforms and a new tunnel from Ordsall in the west into Piccadilly, which could be used by regional and intercity passenger trains, taking significant pressure off the present Castlefield corridor. It also points out that there is no need to wait for HS2 before making such an upgrade, which would make Piccadilly ‘one of the best connected transport hubs in the entire country’. The Castlefield line would also become a ready-made ‘Picc-Vic’ link, with three intermediate city centre stations. Together with the new Ordsall viaduct, this link could carry a Thameslink-style metro service for places like Rochdale and Burnley.

Freight services, meanwhile, should be expanded and more of them hauled by electric traction.

The effect of the various projects, says the report, would be to connect the region’s labour markets, including the more ‘challenging’ areas such as Wigan, Stalybridge, Huddersfield, Bradford, Sunderland and St Helens.

The report is an updated version of a document first published in 2014, and is intended to complement the government’s own High Speed North programme.

The report’s co-authors are Ian Wray, David Thrower and Jim Steer.

They said: ‘Simply put, the rail network in Manchester, Liverpool, Leeds and Sheffield does not work- the North deserves better. The North will benefit from the arrival of HS2 and NPR, but these are long term schemes that will not be delivered to the North until the 2040s. So, it is important that steps are taken in the Government’s new integrated rail plan, known as High Speed North, to address immediate concerns in the existing network.

‘It’s not enough to provide fast links between the major cities of the North. It is also essential to overcome existing bottlenecks, and to tie together more distant labour market areas and towns with the centres of the major cities like Leeds, Manchester, Liverpool and Sheffield.

‘Ultimately we do need a grand design, but we need a realistic delivery programme too.’

Reader Comments:

Views expressed in submitted comments are that of the author, and not necessarily shared by Railnews.

  • John, Thames Valley


    No direct mention of the "E" word, it seems?

    Electrification of the immediate (short) suburban lines would increase speed, capacity and service quality - as needed by the Regions.

    The radial routes around Manchester to the first turn-round, Sheffield to Moorthorpe (Leeds) and Doncaster etc are typical but not considered because they aren't eye-catching schemes. They are also just manageable by NR

  • david c smith, Bletchley

    Recently, attention has been given to improving interurban service within "The Northern Hub" and within "the Midlands Engine". One set of services , however, that are never identified as in need of a revamp are those giving a through link between centres in the midlands ( outside Birmingham ) and centres in northern Britain.

    Here in Milton Keynes, we are lucky , having through service to Glasgow, Edinburgh and Manchester, although nothing direct to Yorkshire and Northeast England, But places such as Northampton , Leicester and Nottingham have no Intercity standard direct links with the northern cities.

    I'm not pressing for regular interval on such routes ; just one or two through trains a day could make all the difference.

  • Garth, Dunkeld

    The problem is the existing lines are mostly slow(ish) speeds with slower junctions, many intersecting lines, a kind of larger-scale Castlefield corridor problem. There may not need to be TGV speeds, but certainly a need for faster say than 125mph, so a new tunnel is essential. Problematic to get it in the correct location, otherwise Sheffield would be left out, that's why TfN proper planning is essential!

  • david c smith, Bletchley

    Liverpool, Manchester, Bradford, Leeds and Sheffield are typically 35 to 90 mile journeys apart - their seems little point in TGV speeds over these distances - the needs appear to be for a more general investment in dealing with eliminating bottlenecks and providing a conventional speed system with up to date signalling / sufficient capacity / modern, quality rolling stock.

    Would a new "base tunnel" between Rochdale and Halifax be an approrpiate part of this?

  • Tony Pearce, Reading

    All current plans do not take into account the fact that none of us know what the UK will look like post Covid-19 - whenever that may be. Apart from the financial cost, there are many imponderables like whether there will be a big increase in working from home. It may be that the UK will decide that we do want to keep clean air and that cars will be banned from city centres. Possibly light rail will be the future for investment. Maybe people will be so scared of picking up the Virus on Public Transport they do everything to avoid it. Whatever the Industry or Activity we have no idea what is going to happen.

  • Garth, Dunkeld

    This report makes a lot of sense. Manchester's rail infrastructure has never really been integrated, and the original Picc-Vic proposal (cancelled on the grounds of cost, of course) needs to be upgraded and made ready for east-west inter-city services. Maybe even made over into a Picc-West route.