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Rail route 'challenge' as tunnel battle won



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Published Date:
01 March 2008
HILLSBOROUGH MP Angela Smith told today of the challenges ahead to reopen the Woodhead railway after a lengthy battle was won to preserve the route's main tunnel for trains.
Restoring the disused line - which closed in 1981 - is seen as vital for the future economic development of the region, as part of plans to improve trans-Pennine transport links.

It was feared the route could have been lost forever after National Grid, which owns the main Woodhead tunnel, built in 1953, announced plans to move electricity cables into it from neighbouring tunnels which are collapsing.

The company was planning to abandon and brick up the old tunnels - used by trains in Victorian times and the early 20th Century.

But, following pressure by Ms Smith and other MPs, plus environmental campaigners, Friends of the Peak District and other protestors, transport secretary Ruth Kelly stepped in.

And National Grid is now prepared to maintain the Victorian tunnels, so the cables can be moved back when the main tunnel is required for the railway.

What do you think? Post your comments below.

Ms Smith said: "This is a significant development. Under National Grid's original proposal, the Victorian tunnels would have been bricked-up and we would have lost the main tunnel for rail use forever.

"There is now a clear challenge at the door of those who want the route reopened, to make the case that the line is needed. The sooner we can make that case, the quicker we can get the scheme moving."

She told The Star the idea is unlikely in the next five or 10 years but that extra capacity may be required in 15 years, as the Hope Valley railway - the only current trans-Pennine link from South Yorkshire - can accommodate few additional trains.

Restoring the railway line could provide freight and passenger services, she added.

Unlike a completely new road or rail route, the line is intact and has not been built on - and sections on the approach to Manchester and Sheffield remain in use. Just the line between Hadfield, near Glossop, and Deepcar, has been removed.

However, a new bridge would be needed beneath the Stocksbridge bypass and congestion problems would need to be solved at the Manch-ester end of the line before it can take more trains.

And the most difficult part of the project would be in central Sheffield because the route was built to serve the old Victoria Station, not Midland Station.

A National Grid spokeswoman said: "We are carrying out an essential high voltage cable replacement project through the Woodhead Tunnel.

"The work will not prevent an alternative use of the Victorian tunnels after we have completed the project in 2011.

"If Network Rail or the Department for Transport wish to maintain the Victorian tunnels, National Grid is willing to discuss this option with them."

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The full article contains 496 words and appears in Sheffield Star newspaper.
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  • Last Updated: 01 March 2008 7:02 AM
  • Source: Sheffield Star
  • Location: Sheffield
 
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MuddyCoffee,

woodseats 01/03/2008 12:38:59
So in otherwords, National Grid ARE going to put their cables into the new tunnel. But promise to move them back to the old tunnel if the railway comes back.

A couple of thoughts about this situation,
1 ) If national grid is changed into a new organisation then the promise could easily be forgotten
2 ) What basis in law is a promise ? I seem to remember several other large companies in sheffield who were given permission to build something as long as they promised to build something specific for the city, but the promise was quietly forgotten.
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Mick B 57,

Sheffield 02/03/2008 22:19:38
The battle for the railway line is by no means over. The old route of the railway lines at both ends of the Woodhead Tunnel are now part of the Transpennine Trail and is used for many miles by thousands of people every year. This is not only a national route used by cyclists, walkers and the disabled but is also part of a much longer trail which if I remember correctly is hoped to be expanded across Europe to Istanbul in Turkey. Trains may well be able to run through the tunnel again but were will they go to at either end? Possibly passengers should hire bicycles and continue their journeys to Deepcar at our end or Glossop at the Lancashire end where the can connect to rail services again. Not only would this keep them fit but would save millions in legal battles, public meetings and reconstruction. Anybody reading this could consider firing more shots in a "Keep the Transpennine Trail Open Battle" and follow my lead.
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