Bradford Interchange | |
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The car park and entrance | |
Location | |
Place | Bradford |
Local authority | City of Bradford |
Grid reference | SE165327 |
Operations | |
Station code | BDI |
Managed by | Northern Rail and Metro |
Number of platforms | 4 rail & 29 bus stands |
Live arrivals/departures and station information from National Rail Enquiries |
|
Annual rail passenger usage | |
2004/05 * | 2.401 million |
2005/06 * | 2.483 million |
2006/07 * | 1.515 million |
2007/08 * | 1.517 million |
2008/09 * | 2.225 million |
2009/10 * | 2.274 million |
Passenger Transport Executive | |
PTE | West Yorkshire (Metro) |
Zone | 3 |
History | |
1850 | Opened as Bradford Exchange |
1973 | Rebuilt |
1983 | Renamed as Bradford Interchange |
2001 | Bus station 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 estimated passenger usage based on sales of tickets in stated financial year(s) which end or originate at Bradford Interchange from Office of Rail Regulation statistics. Please note: methodology may vary year on year. | |
Bradford Interchange is a combined railway, coach and bus station in Bradford, England. Designed in 1962 and hailed as a showpiece of European design, the building was opened in 1971.
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The main entrance with the taxi rank and car park is on a lower level, while the train platforms and bus/coach stops are on a split upper level, both separate with pedestrian access. Downstairs, in the central concourse, there are a few shops, a newsagent, a cafe and sandwich shop and a fast food outlet on the train platforms, where hot drinks are also available. Toilets are located off the main concourse.
There is also a British Transport Police office and lost luggage desk, provided for passengers' concern and safety at the railway station, with a separate security and lost-luggage unit for bus travellers, on the bus concourse. A smoking ban is observed in all parts of Bradford interchange, and CCTV is also in operation with security officers and police regularly patrolling the station.
The railway station has 4 platforms and a short bay that was previously used for the Red Star parcels facility. Platforms 1 and 2 have a run-round facility for locomotive hauled trains (mainly freight services). The track layout and associated signalling was remodelled during the course of a week-long engineering blockade from 25 October to 3 November 2008 to permit higher speeds on both routes into the station and also allow trains to approach the station from both Leeds and Halifax simultaneously (something that was not possible with the old track configuration).[1]
Bradford Interchange has separate bus and train ticket outlets. The bus and Metro office, which also deals with National Express coach enquiries from a separate desk, is located in the central concourse. The train ticket office is next to the pedestrian entrance to the train platforms.
The original railway station, named Bradford Exchange, was opened by the joint efforts of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway and the Great Northern Railway on 9 May 1850.[2] In 1867, the Leeds, Bradford and Halifax Junction Railway, which had previously used Bradford Adolphus Street, built a link to the tracks into Exchange station to join the two existing companies; Adolphus Street station was then closed to passenger use.[3]
The station was completely rebuilt on the same site in 1880 with ten bay platforms and two arched roofs. Constructed of wrought iron, these rested at the outer sides on plain stone walls and classical corinthian style columns down the middle. Glass covered the middle half and timber (inside)/ slate (outside) covered the outer quarters of each span. The four end screens were glazed in a fan pattern with decorative timber outer edging. The dimensions were a length of 450 feet (140 m), a width of 100 feet (30 m) for each arch and a height of 80 feet (24 m), track to apex. The station never had a formal frontage; instead, passengers entered by an opening in the northwest side.
By 1973, the station with its 10 platforms[4] was deemed too large and was again rebuilt, this time on a different site slightly further south. The old Exchange station was demolished soon afterwards and was used for a time as a car park; the site now houses Bradford Crown Court[2] and is due to be developed as a 'Justice Quarter' with new Magistrates' and Coroner's Courts.[5] In 1977, a bus station was built alongside, and, in 1983, the station was renamed Bradford Interchange to link buses and trains in a covered environment. The bus station featured a large ridge and furrow design of overall roof, which was subsequently demolished in 1999 to allow for a rebuilding of the bus station, which was opened in 2001. This was paid for partly by the sale of some adjacent land to the south of the site and some now-surplus land on the old bus station site.[6] During the 1970s and 1980s, the station was considered the mainline station for Bradford with express services to London King's Cross, Trans-Pennine services to Liverpool and Newcastle and summer Saturday services to the South-West. The Inter-city services were moved to Forster Square station in 1992 when the line was electrified. The station also had an adjacent Red Star Parcels terminus but, like most other mainline stations following the privatisation of British Rail, it lost this facility during the 1990s.
The bus station is managed by Metro. The main operators at the bus station include First West Yorkshire, Arriva Yorkshire and Centrebus with other services run by Geldards Coaches, Transdev in Keighley and TLC Travel, National Express coaches run nationwide from the station, Bharat Coaches run coach services to Derby, Leicester, Slough and Southall and Megabus runs services to Burnley, Halifax, Huddersfield, Skipton and East Midlands Parkway railway station (with train connections to London St Pancras railway station) as part of its Megabusplus service.
Local bus services run to many destinations, including Dewsbury, Halifax, Harrogate, Huddersfield, Ilkley, Keighley, Leeds, Otley and Wakefield, as well as services within the Bradford area, such as Shipley. A FreeCityBus service also serve the Interchange and runs to the main shopping sites of town, Bradford Forster Square railway station and the University of Bradford.
Here are bus services that use Bradford Interchange and their stand letter (places in bold are where services terminate):[7][8]
No. | Operator | Destination | Stand | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Monday-Saturday Daytime | Evenings & Sundays | |||
BCB | First West Yorkshire | FreeCityBus | W | - |
72 | First West Yorkshire | Leeds City bus station via Thornbury and Armley | X | |
253 | Arriva Yorkshire | Wakefield via Mirfield and Dewsbury | 3 | |
256 | Arriva Yorkshire | Brighouse via Cleckheaton | 3 | - |
268 | Arriva Yorkshire | Dewsbury via Cleckheaton and Heckmondwike | M | |
283 | Arriva Yorkshire | Thornhill Lees via Birstall, Batley and Dewsbury | 3 | |
363 | First West Yorkshire | Huddersfield via Brighouse | A | |
425 427 |
Arriva Yorkshire | Wakefield via Morley | G | |
570 | First West Yorkshire | Halifax via Brighouse and Elland | J | Service 571 to Brighouse |
571 | First West Yorkshire | Halifax via Brighouse and Southowram | J | |
576 | First West Yorkshire | Halifax via Queensbury | H | |
606 | TLC Travel | Euroway | C | -7 |
606 607 |
First West Yorkshire | Holme Wood | Stops at Bridge Street | W17 |
607 | First West Yorkshire | Thornton | Stops at Broadway | Q |
610 611 612 |
First West Yorkshire | Shipley via Five Lane Ends | Stops at Hall Ings | U |
611 612 |
First West Yorkshire | Buttershaw via Great Horton | Stops at Market Street | H |
615 | First West Yorkshire | Cottingley via Allerton | Q | - |
Eldwick via Allerton, Cottingley and Bingley | - | Q | ||
616 | First West Yorkshire | Bingley via Allerton and Wilsden | Q | - |
Eldwick via Allerton, Wilsden and Bingley | - | Q | ||
617 618 |
First West Yorkshire | Holme Wood via Dudley Hill | S | |
Allerton via Bradford Royal Infirmary | U | |||
619 | First West Yorkshire | Bradford Royal Infirmary | L | - |
620 | First West Yorkshire | Bierley via Dudley Hill | R | Service 621 |
Haworth Road via Bradford Royal Infirmary | V | |||
621 | First West Yorkshire | Bierley via Dudley Hill | Service 620 | R |
Haworth Road via Bradford Royal Infirmary | V | |||
622 623 |
First West Yorkshire | Scholes via Wyke | D | Services 625 or 627 to Wyke |
Eldwick via Shipley and Bingley | Z | Services 625 or 627 to Shipley Services 615 or 616 to Eldwick |
||
624 | First West Yorkshire | West Bowling | P | Service 621 to East Bowling |
Shipley Glen via Shipley | T | Service 627 | ||
625 | First West Yorkshire | Brighouse via Wyke | Service 626 | D |
Baildon via Shipley | Z | |||
626 | First West Yorkshire | Brighouse via Wyke | D | Service 625/627 |
Baildon via Shipley | Z | Service 625 | ||
627 | First West Yorkshire | Brighouse via Wyke | Service 626 | D |
Shipley Glen via Shipley | Service 624 | T | ||
628 | First West Yorkshire | Wrose via Bolton Woods | F5 | - |
630 | First West Yorkshire | Tyersal | C | |
636 637 |
First West Yorkshire | Clayton | Stops at Broadway | J |
Bradford Moor | Stops at Hall Ings | T | ||
640 641 |
First West Yorkshire | Buttershaw | Stops at Bridge Street | B |
Five Lane Ends | Stops at Hall Ings | Z | ||
645 | First West Yorkshire | Buttershaw via Odsal | E | |
649 | First West Yorkshire | Esholt via Shipley | C | - |
653 | TLC Travel | Otley via Shipley and Guiseley | J | Service 737 to Guiseley |
656 to 659 |
First West Yorkshire | Baildon Lucy Hall via Shipley | N | |
660 | First West Yorkshire | Saltaire via Five Lane Ends and Shipley | P | - |
662 | Transdev in Keighley | Keighley via Saltaire and Bingley | Y | |
670 | First West Yorkshire | Leeds City bus station via Greengates, Calverley and Kirkstall | K | - |
675 677 |
First West Yorkshire | West Bowling | N | |
Cottingley via Bolton Woods and Shipley | T | |||
680 | First West Yorkshire | Smiddles Lane via Heaton | K | |
681 | First West Yorkshire | Halifax via Odsal and Shelf | G | Service 682 |
682 | First West Yorkshire | Halifax via Odsal and Shelf | Service 681 | G |
Fagley | Services 613 or 614 | V | ||
696 697 |
Transdev in Keighley | Keighley via Denholme | P | |
698 | Transdev in Keighley | Oxenhope via Denholme | P3 | Service 697 to Cullingworth |
709 710 |
First West Yorkshire | Troydale via Pudsey | F4 | - |
711 | Geldards | White Rose Centre via Pudsey | F | - |
714 | First West Yorkshire | Owlcotes Centre via Thornbury | F5 | - |
737 | Centrebus | Harrogate via Shipley, Guiseley, Leeds Bradford Airport and Pool | C | |
747 | Centrebus | Leeds Bradford Airport via Greengates and Yeadon | C | |
845 | First West Yorkshire | Mayo Avenue | - | L |
846 | First West Yorkshire | Buttershaw | L | - |
963 | TLC Travel | Ilkley via Shipley and Guiseley | Service 653 or 737 to Guiseley | J6 |
X6 | First West Yorkshire | Huddersfield Limited Stop via Brighouse | B | Service 363 |
Leeds City bus station Limited Stop | X | Service 72 | ||
X11 | First West Yorkshire | Leeds Eastgate via Pudsey | T | - |
Coaches | National Express Bharat Coaches |
National Express and Bharat services | 1 2 |
|
megabus | Stagecoach | Megabusplus service | 4 | |
Some services stop not at Bradford Interchange but on nearby Hall Ings: | ||||
610 612 |
First West Yorkshire | Shipley via Five Lane Ends | H1 | |
613 614 |
First West Yorkshire | Fagley | H1 | Service 682 from Interchange |
636 637 |
First West Yorkshire | Bradford Moor | H2 | |
640 641 |
First West Yorkshire | Five Lane Ends | H4 | |
645 | First West Yorkshire | Greengates via Ravenscliffe | H3 | |
846 | First West Yorkshire | Shipley via Five Lane Ends | H2 | - |
Notes:
1 | Service 606 runs one Sunday journey only |
---|---|
2 | Sunday daytime only |
3 | Peak afternoon journey only |
4 | Early morning journey only |
5 | Weekdays only |
6 | Evenings only |
7 | First's 606 and TLC's 606 two separate services |
Bradford Interchange is on the Caldervale Line and is one of the two railway stations serving the city of Bradford. The other station is Forster Square, a 10 minutes walk away.
Monday to Saturday at daytime, services run every 15 minutes between the Interchange and Leeds and hourly onwards to York and Selby respectively. On evenings and Sundays, there is a service every 30 minutes to Leeds and usually hourly to York.
In the other direction, there is a train every 15 minutes to Halifax, with two trains an hour continuing to Manchester Victoria (one limited stop, the other serving all stations to Rochdale), one to Blackpool North and one to Wakefield Westgate via Huddersfield where customers can change for Sheffield and Manchester Airport.
Sundays, there is a service every 30 minutes to Halifax, with an hourly service on to Manchester Victoria and one train an hour alternates between Blackpool North and Huddersfield.
Because of the geography of Bradford, the station was built as a terminus. Trains have to reverse out of the station, and drivers have to change to the other end of the train.
The station now also sees regular services to London Kings Cross via Pontefract and Doncaster. In January 2009, Grand Northern (operating as Grand Central) had their application for train paths to run a Bradford Interchange to London service accepted by the Office of Rail Regulation.[9] Three trains per day operate initially, now that full approval for the service has been granted:[10] these use Class 180 units and started running from 23 May 2010.[11]
The railway station has not seen significant improvements in many years.
The bus platforms were once more plentiful and originally featured a large 'ridge and furrow' glass roof,[12] but it was demolished in the 1990s, following the sale of some land for an office development. The bus station was completely rebuilt in 2001.
Metro are currently considering improvements to the bus and rail platforms, including better access between facilities and pedestrian access between the bus concourse and the rail platforms, to save walking down and up the escalators.
The information displays were replaced in early 2009,[13] following a modest facelift in autumn 2008, which included new signage and a repaint. In January 2010, automatic ticket barriers were installed by Northern Rail.[14]
Further improvements under the National Station Improvement Plan are proposed, which include refurbished canopies, new flooring, more lighting and CCTV, a new waiting room and extra seating.[15]
Under network rail's 'Northern Hub' development, the reintroduction of services to Liverpool Lime Street has been announced.
With the option to combine bus and rail transport, Bradford Interchange allows a flexibility in public transport not experienced in many other major Northern cities such as Manchester and Liverpool. Leeds recently tried to combine access to buses and trains with a small dual transport terminal, Leeds Station Interchange, but most buses from Leeds continue to operate from the city's main bus station. The best example of integrated services, at least for the time being, is now Hull Paragon Interchange.
Preceding station | National Rail | Following station | ||
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Halifax | Northern Rail Caldervale Line |
New Pudsey | ||
Halifax | Grand Central London-Bradford |
Terminus | ||
Disused railways | ||||
Bowling Junction | L&Y | St Dunstans |
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