1 / 29

Getting the North Up to Speed: On Liverpool, High Speed 2… and High Speed 1.5

Getting the North Up to Speed: On Liverpool, High Speed 2… and High Speed 1.5 . Professor Ian Wray University of Liverpool 18 June 2013. HS2 is great for Manchester…. Airport - Euston 59 minutes Potential airport catchment growth City centre - Euston 68 minutes

stesha
Télécharger la présentation

Getting the North Up to Speed: On Liverpool, High Speed 2… and High Speed 1.5

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Getting the North Up to Speed: On Liverpool, High Speed 2… and High Speed 1.5 Professor Ian Wray University of Liverpool 18 June 2013

  2. HS2 is great for Manchester… • Airport - Euston 59 minutes • Potential airport catchment growth • City centre - Euston 68 minutes • Three trains per hour - each with 1100 seats We should all support this…

  3. Disappointing for Liverpool … in terms of journey times

  4. …total hourly seats

  5. …and catchment population per available seat

  6. Causes • No high speed link • Scheduling of services (Liverpool services make multiple stops en route) • 2 trains per hour with only 500 seats

  7. Consequences • HSR could support regional economies – though evidence can be ambivalent • But regional polarisation can occur if one larger place is better served • French planners at pains to avoid in Pas de Calais

  8. Options • Liverpool high speed spur • Closer connection to London Manchester route • Upgrade to Crewe Liverpool route for ‘nearly high speed’ running • Improve Liverpool’s wider connections especially east- west to Manchester (the UK’s second London?)

  9. Evaluation • Wholly new spur or closer links to HS2 route impractical on cost and capacity ground • Upgrading Crewe-Liverpool achievable • And complementary HS1.5 seems low cost and achievable

  10. Towards HS 1.5… • Electrification committed to Liverpool/ Manchester/Leeds/ York and thus Newcastle • Some capacity enhancements committed via ‘Northern Hub’ • Why not an integrated transport and regeneration corridor?

  11. What’s missing? • Electric tilting trains • Branding and refurbished stations • More park and ride • Four tracking over Pennines and elsewhere • Re-signalling, better junctions, passing loops

  12. A French style corridor contract • ‘Low speed high speed rail’ • Faster journey times • Faster access to Manchester Airport • Reimaging • Agglomeration economies • Rail related development • A new residential corridor, ideal for dual income families

  13. NOMA and HS1.5

  14. Costs and funding • Low capital outlay (especially re HS2) • Tilting trains • Minor infrastructure (no major structures and no disturbance) • Potential for planning gains via Community Infrastructure Levy • Potential for European funding

  15. Can we tick the boxes? • ‘Electric Spine’ • More capacity and faster journey times between key cities • Improved commuter travel into urban areas • Better links to ports and airports

  16. Connecting the North ‘The North is not an easy place to get around…the most efficient way of bringing representatives together could be to travel to London… Connectivity in the North is defined by interdependence between northern cities and London, and by barriers between northern cities themselves. Removing these barriers could make a key contribution to economic performance.’ Manchester University for the Northern Way, 2008

  17. Can we afford it?

  18. Can we afford it?

  19. Who might lead?

  20. Strategic planning and institutional platforms Some institutional options: • Metro mayors? • The private sector? • A Northern Infrastructure Corporation? • A wider role for Network Rail or for HS2?

More Related