To my (limited) understanding, there are two key problems facing the rail network in the West Midlands:
1) New Street is hopelessly overcrowded with no place to expand.
2) Once Curzon Street is built, it will be very poorly connected (yes, I am aware it sits right next to Moor Street and there are plans to extend the metro to it).
It seems as though a very obvious solution to both of these problems is to provide some platforms for regional and intercity trains for the line that passes RIGHT NEXT TO the Curzon Street site. This would improve connectivity, making it easier for more people to use HS2, and some services that currently serve New Street could stop at Curzon Street instead, providing additional capacity.
Instead of doing this, we have the promises of the West Midlands Hub and the West Midlands Metro solving problem 2 and (to a limited extent) alleviating problem 1.
Both of these projects will require a lot of money and are arguably worse than the solution above. It is also worth pointing out that if further growth occurs in terms of rail usage, there are few opportunities to add extra capacity in the future. Adding platforms at Curzon Street now would leave the metro and Moor Street projects available further down the line (had to get a pun in here somewhere...).
There are rightful arguments for not building a Hauptbahnhof-style station in a city like London, given a single station could not handle the capacity. But New Street and Moor Street currently facilitate ~30mil and ~5mil passengers respectively, while Liverpool Street in London handles ~80mil. With the vast area of land available, I can't see why Curzon Street couldn't handle the volume of both HS2 and local/regional passengers. Euston and OOC are expected to manage fine...
OOC has several lines passing nearby that haven't been incorporated into its design, but these are smaller, slightly removed lines like the Overground NLL which have a site already earmarked for an interconnection station and don't face problem 1.
I've tried to find a good reason for not implementing this idea but I can't find one. There are plenty of clever people overseeing HS2, so I must have missed something. Please enlighten me.
1) New Street is hopelessly overcrowded with no place to expand.
2) Once Curzon Street is built, it will be very poorly connected (yes, I am aware it sits right next to Moor Street and there are plans to extend the metro to it).
It seems as though a very obvious solution to both of these problems is to provide some platforms for regional and intercity trains for the line that passes RIGHT NEXT TO the Curzon Street site. This would improve connectivity, making it easier for more people to use HS2, and some services that currently serve New Street could stop at Curzon Street instead, providing additional capacity.
Instead of doing this, we have the promises of the West Midlands Hub and the West Midlands Metro solving problem 2 and (to a limited extent) alleviating problem 1.
Both of these projects will require a lot of money and are arguably worse than the solution above. It is also worth pointing out that if further growth occurs in terms of rail usage, there are few opportunities to add extra capacity in the future. Adding platforms at Curzon Street now would leave the metro and Moor Street projects available further down the line (had to get a pun in here somewhere...).
There are rightful arguments for not building a Hauptbahnhof-style station in a city like London, given a single station could not handle the capacity. But New Street and Moor Street currently facilitate ~30mil and ~5mil passengers respectively, while Liverpool Street in London handles ~80mil. With the vast area of land available, I can't see why Curzon Street couldn't handle the volume of both HS2 and local/regional passengers. Euston and OOC are expected to manage fine...
OOC has several lines passing nearby that haven't been incorporated into its design, but these are smaller, slightly removed lines like the Overground NLL which have a site already earmarked for an interconnection station and don't face problem 1.
I've tried to find a good reason for not implementing this idea but I can't find one. There are plenty of clever people overseeing HS2, so I must have missed something. Please enlighten me.