Manchester to receive a huge £2.5bn transport boost in massive win for the city

Huge changes are coming to the Bee Network with 1,000 new buses, new tram stops, trams, and a even a metrolink extension
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Bee Network

Greater Manchester is set for a bumper transport deal with £2.5 bn coming to the city in the next seven years: with 1,000 buses, new tram stops, tram-trains, revamped interchanges, and a Metrolink extension in the offing.

The government announcement paves the way for Metrolink trams to FINALLY run to Stockport town centre after years of campaigning, as well as purchasing 1,000 new electric Bee Network buses and three stops on existing tram lines.

It’s understood they will be Sandhills in North Manchester, Elton Reservoir in Bury, and Cop Road in Oldham.

£2.5bn investment in the Bee Network

Andy Burnham at the Bee Network launch

“This is a game-changing moment that will underpin Greater Manchester’s green growth for years to come,” Mayor Andy Burnham said.

“Building on our strong track record, we can now move at pace to deliver the next phase of the Bee Network – creating the UK’s first fully electric, zero emission integrated public transport system by 2030,” said Mayor Andy Burnham.

“With a pipeline of major transport projects better connecting our towns and cities, and local rail lines brought into the Bee Network, our communities will be the first outside London to be served by fully joined-up bike, bus, tram and train travel.

“Greater Manchester has had a decade of growth faster than the UK average. This funding, together with our devolved decision-making powers, can be the key to unlocking even more growth in the decade to come. It’s a major boost for our own plans to deliver £10bn of investment over the next 10 years, build thousands of new homes, create skilled jobs, and open up new opportunities right across our city-region.”

No timescales have been given for when construction work will start, let alone when the new facilities will open, but the funding covers 2027-2032, and plans are expected to advance in the coming years.

Victoria North, Manchester’s new town

Victoria North is just one of the huge housing projects planned across the city

The new tram stop in Sandhills will form part of Manchester’s £3.8bn Victoria North project, a ‘new town’ of 15,000 homes that will be built across 155 hectares from Angel Meadow in the city centre to Collyhurst in north Manchester.

It takes its name from the Sandhills park and former quarry, and would sit between Victoria and Queens Road stations, one of the longest gaps between Metrolink halts.

A similar line of thinking is employed for the new Elton Reservoir stop, falling between Radcliffe and Bury.

It’s part of a project to build 3,500 homes on formerly green belt land around the new park and ride station, which will also ‘increase the attractiveness of the reservoir as a leisure destination and provide better access to greenspace in the south of Bury’, the borough’s transport strategy said.

Cop Road, Oldham

A new station on Cop Road, in Oldham, would be built between the Derker station and Shaw and Crompton stop, and like Elton Reservoir is identified as a priority in Andy Burnham’s controversial Places for Everyone plan with 1,450 homes eyed for the location.

Tram-trains are also also set to come to Oldham, as TfGM added it will roll-out the hybrid services to the borough along with Rochdale, Heywood, and Bury. The tech sees services run on traditional tramlines for some parts of the network, but on railway lines using batteries for others.

Few details have been released on the Stockport extension’s route, but previously TfGM chiefs said its bus interchange was built so it can link up to a new tram line

It’s thought the line could extend from the existing terminus at East Didsbury, and publicly-available maps of railway lines show that there is the dormant Manchester South District Railway which runs from the end of the in-use East Didsbury tram line.

Should trams follow the old rail line, they would then run through Heaton Mersey, but require a new spur crossing the M60 motorway and West Coast Mainline to reach the ‘tram capable’ town centre interchange.

1,000 new electric Bee Network buses

Night buses

The 1,000 new electric Bee Network buses are set to be purchased by 2030, meaning Greater Manchester’s transport network should be carbon neutral by the end of the decade.

Those buses could stop at a new Leigh interchange, with regular V1 passengers also set to hop off at a new ‘central Manchester transport interchange’, details of which have yet to be confirmed.

Cllr Bev Craig

Leader of Manchester City Council Cllr Bev Craig said the funding was ‘transformative news for Manchester and the city region.’

She said: “Today’s £2.5bn zero-emissions transport funding announcement is transformative news for Manchester and the city region. Manchester has campaigned for many years to see investment in our transport system. In a settlement that was better than we predicted and will make a real difference right across the city.

“We have already seen the success of bringing the buses under public control and this will be a much-needed boost to improve capacity for years to come.

“This investment will also help create new homes and new jobs – and it is a clear show of support from this government towards our sustainable growth agenda.

“Crucially for Manchester, this funding will help deliver the brand new Metrolink stop at Sandhills in Collyhurst and unlock the ambitious future phases of regeneration in this community that will see more than 2,500 new homes – including significant Council and social housing – and new shops alongside education and medical facilities.

“This is a major driver for the future investment in Collyhurst as part of the once-in-a-generation Victoria North regeneration programme that will deliver more than 15,000 new homes in the next decade across seven neighbourhoods, each connected by quality green space.

“But this is only one element of the ambitious plans for North Manchester. We look forward to working closely with this Government in the coming months to realise the wider potential of this part of our city through the North Manchester General Hospital programme, continued investment into our high streets and district centres, and a raft of new home building that puts North Manchester as a priority for our future growth plans.”

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