Birmingham New Street | |
Location | |
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Place | New Street, Birmingham, England |
Local authority | Birmingham City Council |
Grid reference | SP069866 |
Operations | |
Station code | BHM |
Managed by | Network Rail |
Platforms in use | 13 |
Live arrivals/departures and station information from National Rail | |
Annual rail passenger usage | |
2004/05 * | 16.244 million |
2005/06 * | 17.303 million |
2006/07 * | 14.525 million |
Passenger Transport Executive | |
PTE | West Midlands |
Zone | 1 |
History | |
1854 | First opened |
1964 | Queen's Hotel closed and demolished |
1964 | Power signal box built |
1967 | Rebuilt |
National Rail - UK railway stations | |
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z | |
* Annual passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Birmingham New Street from Office of Rail Regulation statistics. | |
UK Railways Portal
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Birmingham New Street is a major railway station located in the centre of the city of Birmingham, England. It lies on the Birmingham loop of the West Coast Main Line.
New Street is Birmingham's main railway station, and is a major hub of the British railway system. Due to its central location, railway lines from all over Great Britain run into it including lines to London, Liverpool, Manchester, Scotland, Cardiff, North Wales, Bournemouth, Bristol, Penzance, Nottingham, Leicester, Shrewsbury and Newcastle upon Tyne.
The station is also a terminus for many local services from throughout the West Midlands conurbation, including the local Cross-City Line, serving Lichfield, Redditch and stations in between. Direct trains run to more stations from New Street than from any other station on the British railway network.
Over 35 million people pass through New Street station every year, of whom 87% are passengers, making it the busiest major station in the United Kingdom outside London for estimated footfall[1] and the third busiest outside London by ticket sales.[2] It is one of 17 British railway stations managed by Network Rail.
New Street is not popular with its users with a customer satisfaction rate of only 52% - the joint lowest of any Network Rail major station.[3] A proposal to redevelop the station in the £550m scheme named Gateway Plus was given the full funding by the British Government in February 2008 and new designs were unveiled in September 2008.[4]
Contents |
New Street station was constructed as a joint station by the London and North Western Railway and the Midland Railway between 1846 and 1854 to replace several earlier unconnected rail termini, the most notable being Curzon Street. It was opened in 1851 as a temporary rail terminus of the London and Birmingham Railway.[5] The station was constructed by Messrs. Fox, Henderson & Co. was designed by A. E. Coowper of Fox Henderson and Co.. When completed, it had the largest iron and glass roof in the world, spanning a width of 212 feet (65 m) and being 840 feet (256 m) long.[6] It held this title for 14 years. It was formally opened on June 1, 1854[6] however it had been in use for two years before this. The Queen's Hotel was opened on the same day[6] and its telegraphic address became "Besthotel Birmingham".
Those Midland railway trains that had used Curzon Street began to use New Street from 1854. However, those south towards Bristol would have to reverse, so many continued through Camp Hill. Increasing congestion meant that the Midland spent £500,000 on enlargements, which included a second train shed to the south of Great Queen Street, which became a central carriageway. Some through trains to the southwest began in 1885, with a new underpass from Derby Junction to Grand Junction, independent of the LNWR, and a new south tunnel in 1896.[7] The new Midland Rail station opened alongside the original LNWR station on February 8, 1885.[6] This station consisted of two trussed arches, 58 feet (18 m) wide by 620 feet (189 m) long, and 67 feet 6 inches (21 m) wide by 600 feet (183 m) long. This was designed by F. Stevenson, Chief Engineers to the LNWE.[6] By the end of 19th century, New Street had become one of the busiest railway stations in the country.
In 1923, the two companies, with others, were grouped into the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS).
The roof of the original station sustained heavy damage as a result of enemy bombing in the Birmingham Blitz of World War II.[8] The station roof was then removed between 1948 and 1952. In 1964, the Queen's Hotel was closed and demolished whilst the power signal box was completed in the same year.[6] The New Street Station Signal Box is a distinctly Brutalist building with corrugated concrete architecture. It was designed by Bicknell & Hamilton in collaboration with W. R. Healey, the regional architect for the British Railways London Midland Region.[9] The four storey structure is located to the side of the tracks connected to Navigation Street. It is now a Grade II listed building.[10]
In 1964, demolition of the original New Street station commenced and was not completed until 1966.[8] The new New Street station was completed in 1967 by the nationalised British Railways, when the West Coast Main Line was modernised and electrified. Queen's Drive was lost in the rebuilding, but the name is now carried by a new driveway which serves the car park and a tower block, and is the access route for the station's taxis. The rebuilt station was designed by Kenneth J. Davies, the lead planner for the London Midland Region at British Rail.[11] The new station had sold its air rights, leading to the construction of the Pallasades Shopping Centre (known then as the Birmingham Shopping Centre)[12] between 1968-70.[11] Also above the station is a nine-storey office block designed by Cotton, Ballard & Blow, who also designed the Exchange Place building overlooking the ramp from New Street leading into the Pallasades Shopping Centre.[11] An NCP car park is also located on top of the station. The station and the Pallasades are now somewhat integrated with the Bullring Shopping Centre via elevated walkways above Smallbrook Queensway. Alongside the station, a residential tower block named Stephenson Tower was constructed between 1965 and 1966. It was designed by the City Architect of Birmingham and is 20 storeys tall. The tower is on a long lease and administered by Birmingham City Council, with Network Rail having the freehold.[13]
Currently, New Street handles about 80% of passengers travelling to, from or through Birmingham.[14]
There are currently three escalators providing access to the Pallasades Shopping Centre, and two lifts providing access to a subway running underneath the platforms. The subway has lifts for access to the 'A' end of all platforms. There are escalators from the concourse down to the 'B' end of each platform (with the exception of platforms 1 and 12). All 12 main platforms (excluding platform 4c) at New Street have tracks that go straight through the station, as opposed to terminating with buffers like at many other large stations. This results in most platform changes, and access to the concourse, requiring use of the escalators, stairs, or lifts. The main platforms are also all long enough for two relatively short trains to stand at them.
New Street does not have automatic barriers that check tickets. Instead, station staff inspect tickets at peak times, while at off-peak times there is often no ticket checking. Birmingham New Street hosts a British Transport Police station. The distinctive automated announcements are provided by voice artist Phil Sayer and delivered by a computerised service provided by Ditra Systems.[15]
In 1987, twelve different horse sculptures by Kevin Atherton, titled Iron Horse, were erected between New Street station and Wolverhampton. One stands on a platform at New Street.[16]
New Street is frequently derided as one of the most run down and unwelcoming of all the major stations on the British railway network. Although much of this can be blamed on the sub-surface nature of the station and the 1960s architecture, that it is built below the dated Pallasades shopping arcade also contributes to New Street's perceived negative ambience. In November 2003 the station was voted the second biggest "eyesore" in the UK by readers of Country Life magazine.[17] New Street was voted joint worst station for customer satisfaction with Liverpool Lime Street and East Croydon with only 52% satisfied with the national average being 60%.[18]
A feasibility study into the 'redevelopment' of the station site was approved on 21 January 2005. A 'regeneration' scheme was launched in 2006[19]. Since then, the scheme has taken various forms, and various names, such as Birmingham Gateway, Gateway Plus, and New Street Gateway.
So far as can be established, the 'redevelopment' proposed amounts to a partial reconstruction of the station site, focused on cosmetic, rather than capacity issues. The track and platform level would remain essentially unchanged. A target date given for completion is 2013.
On February 12, 2008, then-Secretary of State for Transport Ruth Kelly announced that the Department for Transport will be providing £160 million on top of the £128 million that is to be provided through a government White Paper named Delivering a Sustainable Railway.[20] A further £100 million will be provided by the Department for Business Enterprise and Regulatory Reform and will be channelled through Advantage West Midlands, the regional development agency. The announcement brought the total amount of Government spending on the project to £388 million.[21] Following discarding of earlier sets of proposals, six architects were shortlisted to design the new station following a call for submissions [22] and it was announced in September 2008 that the design by Foreign Office Architects had been chosen.[23]
The fact that the Gateway development leaves the capacity of the station more or less unaltered has not escaped attention. In July 2008 the Commons Transport Committee criticised the plans, saying that it was not convinced that the plans were adequate for the number of trains which could end up using the station. It said if the station could not be adapted, the government needed to look for alternative solutions.[24].
Various alternatives to the Gateway schemes have been put forward, including building a new main station on a different site, and diverting trains to Snow Hill and Moor Street stations.
Preceding station | National Rail | Following station | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Terminus | Arriva Trains Wales Cambrian Line |
Wolverhampton | ||
Terminus | CrossCountry Birmingham - Leicester |
Water Orton or Coleshill Parkway |
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CrossCountry Birmingham - Stansted Airport |
Coleshill Parkway | |||
Birmingham International |
CrossCountry Bournemouth - Edinburgh |
Wolverhampton | ||
Cheltenham Spa | CrossCountry Bristol - Manchester |
|||
Solihull or Leamington Spa |
CrossCountry Brighton - Manchester Piccadilly |
Derby | ||
Cheltenham Spa | CrossCountry Cardiff - Nottingham |
Water Orton | ||
Cheltenham Spa | CrossCountry Plymouth - Edinburgh |
Tamworth | ||
Terminus | London Midland Birmingham - Gloucester (Limited Service) |
University | ||
London Midland Birmingham - Hereford |
Five Ways | |||
Five Ways | London Midland Cross-City Line |
Duddeston | ||
Terminus | London Midland Walsall Line |
|||
Adderley Park | London Midland Rugby-Birmingham-Stafford Line |
Smethwick Rolfe Street |
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Terminus | Virgin Trains West Coast Main Line |
Wolverhampton | ||
Birmingham International |
Virgin Trains West Coast Main Line |
Terminus | ||
Virgin Trains West Coast Main Line |
Sandwell and Dudley |
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