A new Alliance will help transform rail stations into community assets
Posted: 29 August 2019 | Global Railway Review | No comments yet
In a bid to rejuvenate railway stations and improve passenger experience across the West Midlands, high street retailers and cafes could be offered the chance to set up shops in stations.
Railway station volunteers from Stechford and Coseley with West Midlands Railway staff
Rail bosses are considering how leasing disused station buildings in the West Midlands to convenience stores, cafes or other businesses could benefit the local community.
It is one of a range of measures which could be adopted under the pioneering West Midlands Station Alliance agreement – promising passengers cleaner, brighter and more welcoming facilities.
Stations selected to pilot the new initiative include Bromsgrove, Rugeley Town, Hall Green and Dudley Port. Some of the pilots will cover paired stations in the same area – including Smethwick Galton Bridge and Rolfe Street.
Further measures being considered range from more shelters, safer crossings, easier access, improved toilets and waiting rooms, benches and bins to new development on or around station sites.
Proposals are outlined in the Station Alliance between operator West Midlands Railway, the West Midlands Rail Executive, which oversees their franchise, and Network Rail.
They promise to not only look after and maintain stations to a high standard but seek new ways to improve them and develop them as community assets.
Cllr Mark Winnington, Chair of the West Midlands Rail Executive and Cabinet member for economic growth with Staffordshire County Council, said: “Our rail stations are at the heart of the communities they serve, and yet many have been under used. Through the Alliance we will look to transform our stations into more welcoming places, not just for the thousands of commuters who use them each day but for the wider communities they serve.
“If we can also offer facilities to shops and businesses or groups, this will help to create jobs.”
West Midlands Railway Customer Experience Director, Richard Brooks, said: “This initiative can benefit passengers, businesses and local community groups. Travelling by rail in the West Midlands has never been more popular. We are investing in more trains, better services and upgrading our stations. This means more people entering the railway creating new opportunities for businesses and community groups to use station buildings for the benefit of all rail users.”
David Golding, Interim Route Managing Director for Network Rail, said: “The Railway Upgrade Plan is about providing passengers with a better railway. We fully support the West Midlands Station Alliance’s plans to improve facilities in stations which will mean passengers have better access to shops, cafes and services when they start or finish their journeys across the West Midlands.”
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Network Rail, West Midlands Rail Executive (WMRE), West Midlands Railway, West Midlands Station Alliance