Transpennine Route Upgrade proceeds apace

It has been the familiar limbo between Christmas and New Year. Yet, even as the festive season unfolded, Network Rail’s Transpennine Route Upgrade (TRU) project carried on regardless. The project extends well beyond the early days of January, into 2024 and beyond. The multi-billion-pound initiative aims to revolutionise rail connectivity between Manchester, Huddersfield, Leeds, and York. However, the festive focus fell on the somewhat more homely surroundings of Mirfield. The station may be a mere stop, midway between Leeds and Mancehster, but in railway terms it is at the heart of the busiest section of the route.
While most of the country sat around the festive feast table, the spotlights were shining brightly on the teams at Mirfield. Their Christmas dinner has been deferred, while engineers worked on a tight, and transformative agenda. A total of 663 meters of new track, signal testing, and enhancements to station platforms and an access footbridge were all on their Christmas list. Unlike so many unplanned events in the last week of the year, the short-term disruptions to rail operations between Huddersfield and Leeds were all charted in advance. The long-term benefits are substantial.

Real benefits for travel between big cities in the North

The established pattern of Christmas and New Year infrastructure works was in full evidence at Mirfield. “These upgrades are a vital part of our wider programme of work”, said Gareth Hope, Sponsor for the Transpennine Route Upgrade. He emphasised the significance of these upgrades, and the collaboration between the infrastructure agency Network Rail and train operating companies – both passenger and freight. “We have worked closely with our train operating colleagues to keep people on the move”, he said.

Mirfield Station shown on a modified contextual image of the Transpennine Route and selected other main lines in Northern England
Mirfield Station shown on a modified contextual image of the Transpennine Route and selected other main lines in Northern England Image: Wikimedia Commons. © Reprinter123

The TRU project has been through many revisions, but the object remains unchanged. When completed, Network Rail say it will transform rail connectivity in the North of England. The many disparate towns and cities of the region, will for the first time, see a frequent, fast interconnecting service. For passengers, so long envious of upgrades elsewhere, there is the prospect of up to six fast services every hour between Leeds and Manchester, and two stopping services for enhanced local connectivity. “These upgrades will lead to real benefits for our customers who travel between some of the biggest cities in the North”, said Chris Nutton, Major Projects Director at TransPennine Express, one of the passenger train operating companies on the line (a franchise that was taken into direct management by the UK government in 2023). “The engineering works at Mirfield station during the New Year period are vital to delivering a railway fit for the twenty-first century across the North of England.”

Faster for passenger and freight for a sustainable future

Significant reductions in journey times are also forecasted, with an unprecedented 63-minute connection between Manchester and York and a mere 41 minutes between Manchester and Leeds, promising a step-change from current travel durations. The Manchster – Leeds journey currently averages around one hour and compares unfavourably with the road route via the busy M62 motorway. That road route may be a collateral benefactor of the project. Network Rail is spearheading a proposal to move an additional 15 freight trains each day, with the ambitious goal of removing over 1,000 heavy goods vehicles from the roads daily.

An artist's bird's eye view of remodelled Mirfield Station between Dewsbury and Huddersfield, showing tracks bottom left to top right running through an island platform
An artist’s bird’s eye view of remodelled Mirfield Station between Dewsbury and Huddersfield

The rail freight aspects of the Transpennine Route Upgrade not only contribute to a greener environment. They also align with the government-promoted broader goal of creating a more sustainable and efficient transportation network. However, many stakeholders in the region would have liked to see even more radical upgrades to the route. At one stage ambitions included an entirely new line dedicated to high-speed intercity passenger traffic. However no one is arguing against the work already underway. Beyond these holiday period upgrades, the Transpennine Route Upgrade will continue in 2024. Works include electrifying the entire route between Manchester and York, installing a state-of-the-art digital signalling system, and quadrupling the tracks between Huddersfield and Westtown in Dewsbury. According to Network Rail, these developments, coupled with improvements to diversionary routes, are poised to enhance capacity and reliability, ensuring smoother journeys for both passengers and freight in the years to come. That would be a Christmas present worth waiting for, at any time of the year.

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