YorkshireBear
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- 23 Jul 2010
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Is this the same exchange that they want to reopen for HS2? By they i mean local campaigners nothing actually planned.
MerseyTravel have also held talks with TPE and Virgin on new services from Liverpool to Scotland from Jan 2015 once the electrification and new track and platforms at Roby & Huyton have been completed allowing high speed express trains to pass local commuter trains.
I am pretty certain that there was a morning working from Edinburgh to Liverpool using a 158 which then formed another XC service to Portsmouth. The 1700 service from Liverpool to Edinburgh utilised an inbound 158 from the south coast arriving late afternoon.yMy memory isn't the greatest so if anyone can confirm or correct this please do. There were a few Virgin XC services including Scotland to Manchester that used class 158 dmu.
They did use 158's, although up to about 1994 or 1995 they were loco-hauled, often with a Res liveried 47 between Liverpool and Preston (it also stopped at St Helens Central), then electric hauled from Preston onwards.
Exchange was on the site surrounded by Tithebarn Street, Bixteth Street and Pall Mall. It was the southern terminus of what is now the Northern Line services towards Southport, Ormskirk & Kirkby.
Can you not share this source, because I'm rather sceptical? Having read this thread earlier, I went and took a good look at this siding this evening, assuming that '6A' is the one immediately adjacent to Platform 7. It just ain't happening. At least, not without large scale engineering works. There are pillars at regular intervals with virtually no clearance between them and the platform edge. It isn't practical. Removing the columns would be difficult because they prop up both of the shed rooves.
I can remember seeing voyagers in p7 at lime street with Edinburgh on the front fairly regularly so it wasn't just 158s they used.
I really can't see this siding being re-instated, partially because, as already mentioned, the roof pillars are in the way and also because anything that uses P7 blocks the entrance to it.
I'm happy to say that at least the grand frontage of Liverpool Exchange railway station on Tithebarn Street has survived, although now it's in use as an office building "Mercury Court". Photo taken on 6th April 2013:-
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It still has a facade that adds a great deal of character to the area. Thank you for the visual image submitted which many forum members would never previously have seen.
I note that the picture was taken this year on my 68th birthday..![]()
I used to work opposite in the early sixties. 14 Tithebarn Street. The facade you see is what used to be the Exchange Hotel. The station was behind and through a pair of 'tunnels' which don't appear to be apparent in the photo. It had no frontage itself. The site is built on these days and not available for HS2, or any other fanciful ideas.
Was quite a stuffy hotel in those days, so it was surprising to see the Rolling Stones staying there for a week in 1961 or '62. Only had two or three groupies hanging around outside! Their fame came later.
Direct Liverpool to Scotland services survived until 2003, I think, when Virgin XC withdrew from Liverpool completely.
When XC withdrew and if TPE were running trains at that time and showed no interest in the service,would Scotrail have been able to change one of it's Scotland-Newcastle services to a Scotland-Liverpool one ?
Would this of been against the rules due to some franchise at the time ?
I imagine BR sold off the land since closure which is why it will never see rail use again sadly.
The John Swift signalling plans (Signalling Record Society publication) shows no crossover at the buffer stop end between Platform 7 and "Siding E" (as it was then known). Locos remained at the buffer stops until either :Am I right in recalling that pre electrification there was a crossover near the buffer stops of platform 7 which enabled the siding to be used for locomotive run round purposes? However I think most trains using platform 7 were too long for this to be much use.
The DFT economic case for HS2 anticipates 2 tph from London to Liverpool, initially via Runcorn and Warrington Bank Quay (1 tph each) under phase 1 moving to 2 tph via Runcorn only under phase 2 using compatible stock so unless their is a drastic rethink I think it reasonable to take it Lime Street will be terminus station in Liverpool.
Similar in construction to that envisaged at Manchester Piccadilly ?
I don't see why you couldn't restore a station of some sort at Exchange, if the will were there to do so. The land's hardly been built over entirely, the majority of the site is a car park. You could easily fit in a basic terminus of some sort.
I can't see this actually happening, mind you, and certainly not for HS2. Perhaps it might be plausible if HS2-related capacity demands mean more space is needed in Lime Street, and then Blackpool and Wigan trains could theoretically be routed into a restored Exchange station, but that'd be a very dramatic solution to the problem.
Operationally, I'd imagine that a restoration of Central High Level station would be rather more useful, but I think a restoration there would be considerably more expensive and disruptive than it would be at Exchange. A restored Liverpool Central could happily accommodate everything coming off the old CLC lines, plus perhaps an expanded Merseyrail service. But, again, it's not going to happen, sadly.
Incidentally, on the subject of Liverpool-Scotland trains, in the 1969-70 timetable, expresses took a smidgeon over half an hour to run from Liverpool to Preston: by this point, they were running nonstop northbound, but continuing to halt at Ormskirk (and sometimes Burscough Junction) southbound. Even the Saturdays-only 2F67 most-stations DMU managed the journey from Preston to Liverpool in a very creditable 61 minutes, and that's accommodating the detour via Lostock Hall!
Of course, the direct former L&Y mainline from Liverpool to further north was severed in 1970, so we'll never know what more modern traction could've done on it.
HS2 stock will be built to Continental standards which I suspect would be too large to travel through the tunnels to reach Lime Street let alone greater clearances along the existing route via Runcorn. Unless a brand new HS2 branch was built to Liverpool which seems very unlikely as the cost would prohibitive so the use of compatible HS2 stock is the only answer. Interestingly, Merseytravel is today talking about electrifying the CLC route to Manchester with interested parties as part of the plans to spend up to 400 million on new stock for the Merseyrail system due to enter service in 2019. Electrification of the CLC route is one of those infill projects that could follow the Chat Moss scheme and would allow additional services along the route creating further platform capacity issues at Lime Street.
HS2 stock will be built to Continental standards which I suspect would be too large to travel through the tunnels to reach Lime Street let alone greater clearances along the existing route via Runcorn.
No it won't, HS2 stock will be "classic-compatible". That means it'll be built to fit the loading gauge of the classic routes as well as HS2.
Interestingly, Merseytravel is today talking about electrifying the CLC route to Manchester with interested parties as part of the plans to spend up to 400 million on new stock for the Merseyrail system due to enter service in 2019. Electrification of the CLC route is one of those infill projects that could follow the Chat Moss scheme and would allow additional services along the route creating further platform capacity issues at Lime Street.
Yes, also there will be additional non-compatible stock "trapped" on the high speed parts.