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Paul Bigland

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Paul Bigland

Tag Archives: Manchester Victoria

1st December picture of the day…

01 Sunday Dec 2024

Posted by Paul Bigland in Manchester, Manchester Victoria, Musings, Photography, Picture of the day, Railways, Social media

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Manchester, Manchester Victoria, Musings, Photography, Picture of the day, Railways, social media

As expected, we’ve had a quiet day here at Bigland Towers, although the mild weather’s been a boon as it’s allowed me to spend more time preparing the gardens for winter by cutting back various plants and shovelling bags of dead leaves to prevent the back of the house (where there’s lots of cobbles) becoming a skating rink. Another positive is that Dawn’s finally on the mend, shaking off the lurgi that’s bedeviled her these past couple of weeks, which is good timing as it’s her fathers 90th birthday next week.

Apart from getting mucky in the garden I have managed to get some photographic work done, filing and editing pictures clogging up my laptop’s hard-drive which are now safely duplicated on several different hard-drives for safety. Modern digital cameras are wonderful things, but file sizes have increased so much in recent years that they soon eat up disc space.

I have had time to peruse social media whilst I’ve waited for stuff to copy. I can’t say I’ve been impressed with what I’ve seen. I used to be an avid user of Twitter, but since Elon Musk bought it he’s turned it into a right-wing cesspit full of conspiracy loons and clowns who’ve paid for blue ticks that spend all their time rage-farming in order to try and make money. The day’s when it was the place to go to for real breaking news are long gone. Now, like millions of others, I’ve set up a new account at ‘Bluesky‘, which is far more civilised as it doesn’t have Musk screwing around with the algorithms in order to promote his own world view whilst supressing real news. You can find me at (@paulbigland.bsky.social). The levels of engagement are far better as a result and the people there are far more reasoned and civil. You can actually engage without getting bombarded by shit-posts from Trump or Farage groupies. I still use Twitter (I refuse to call it X) as there’s still some people who I want to listen to who haven’t made the transition yet, but it’s clear Twitter’s dying bit by bit. Why would anyone want to spend their time in such a depressing place? The other day I saw a post on Bluesky which made me laugh as it summed up the situation perfectly. It said ’25 years ago we used social media to escape the real world. Nowadays we use the real world to escape social media’. So true…

With that thought I’ll leave you with today’s picture, which is another one from the archives as I’ve not been out with the camera for a few days now. I took this at Manchester Victoria station on the 5th October.

I’ve a small favour to ask…
If you enjoy reading this or any of the other blogs I’ve written, please click on an advert or two. You don’t have to buy anything you don’t want to of course – although if you did find something that tickled your fancy that would be fab! – but the revenue from them helps me to cover some of the cost of maintaining this site (which isn’t cheap and comes out of my own pocket). Remember, 99% of the pictures used in my blogs can be purchased as prints from my other website –  https://paulbigland.zenfolio.com/

Or – you can now buy me a coffee! https://ko-fi.com/paulbigland68312

Rolling blog: rest day working…

20 Sunday Oct 2019

Posted by Paul Bigland in Food and drink, Manchester, Manchester Victoria, Railways, Rolling blogs, West Yorkshire

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Food and drink, Manchester Victoria, Railways, Rolling blogs, West Yorkshire

10:50.

It may be Sunday but it’s no day off for me. RAIL magazine have asked me to cover todays 175th anniversary events at Manchester Victoria station. Train services through the Calder Valley are disrupted by engineering work, so ‘bustitution’ from Hebden Bridge Westwards is the order of the day so So Dawn’s given me a lift to Huddersfield so I could catch the 10:52 direct to Victoria. Weatherwise it’s a glorious sunny day and the autumnal colours of the trees look stunning. Let’s see how the day goes…

12:54.

The event at Victoria’s worth a visit. Outside the front of the station there’s two old Manchester buses and a vintage tram.

Insise there are stalls on the main concourse and upstairs on the mezzanine entrance to the arena. They include the East Lancs Railway and the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway society who have an excellent display of old pictures of Victoria station. Many more are included in this commemorative book which can be bought for £5 from their website.

To add to the fun, Queen Victoria herself has dropped in to admire her namesake!

14:03.

Homeward bound! I caught a packed TPE service from Victoria to Huddersfield, where I had enough time between trains for a ‘swifty’ in the wonderful ‘Kings Head’, one of the two pubs the station’s blessed with.

Now I’m bouncing my way home to Halifax on the generously proportioned 13:52 Huddersfield to Leeds via Brighouse. It’s a 3-car 144 and 2-car 150 lash-up, which means I’m the only passenger in the lead car! No doubt the train will fill up later in the journey.

19:46.

After getting back home Dawn and I had some quality time together, enjoying on of our favourite walks from home, down the hill and along the canal into Sowerby Bridge. The sunshine had deserted us, but it’s still a lovely walk this time of year as the leaves on the trees that line our route look stunning. We stopped off for a quiet drink and a chance to read the papers in Williams Bar before strolling back up the hill to home, feeling virtuous having spent Sunday active. Now we’re relaxing at home with a spot of culinary therapy. Dawn’s busy cooking a mixture of chorizo, cannellini beans and spinach which is used as a base for a fish dish whilst I’m waiting in the wings (and a chance at the cooker) with monkfish tails ready to go into a Thai green curry.

Down memory lane. No 4, Manchester Victoria then and now.

28 Saturday Apr 2018

Posted by Paul Bigland in Manchester, Memory Lane, Photography, Railways

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Manchester, Manchester Victoria, Memory Lane, Railways

I first got to know Manchester Victoria as a teenager in the early 1970s. In those days I was growing up in Southport, some 40 odd miles away – or an hour by train, so it was easy for me to make my way over when pocket money (or summer jobs) allowed. Then the place still had a steam age feel to it as it was almost unchanged since the days ‘Black 5s’ or Stanier tanks or 8Fs would have darkened its decrepit roof with soot and steam. Instead, dirty diesels added their patina and fumes to the place. That said, it was an atmospheric place for a young rail enthusiast.

Sadly, I couldn’t afford a camera then. It was only in the late 1980s when I’d moved to London and was working as a Housing Officer in Tower Hamlets that I bought a second-hand Pentax ME super off a friend (thanks, Paul Martin! Neither of us knew at the time what that would lead to!)…

My photographic memories start in 1990, just as the station started to change with the arrival of the new Manchester metrolink tram system. Here’s a look across the old platforms 4 to 10 taken in May 1990.

01080. Manchester Victoria. platforms 4 to 10. 25.5.90.

Here’s a 21st June 1991 view of the old South side platforms used by the electric services to Bury which were operated by 2 car Class 504s. Note the staff facilities, which were reduced to a garden shed! These units, which had operated the Bury line since 1959 (the year I was born) were in the final few months of service as the line was closed in August 1991 for conversion to the tramway.

02687. 77172. 65451. Manchester Victoria. 21.6.91.

Here’s a view taken on the same day looking across to these platforms, showing work on building the new curved tram platform. The garden shed marking the cut back Bury platforms can be seen on the left…

02583. Tramway building. Manchester Victoria. 18.6.91. 02583.

Now let’s fast forward 24 years to 2015 and look at the area again. It’s unrecognisable!

DG208002.Tram 3032. Manchester Victoria. 27.3.15

Despite the impending arrival of metrolink platforms 11-16 were largely unchanged as can be seen from this shot from May 1990, looking across to platforms 12 and beyond. Two Class 47s sit in the loop that was used to stable banking engines (engines which would give heavy freight trains a push up the Miles Platting bank).

01078. 47450. 47115. Manchester Victoria. 25.5.90.

This is how I remember Victoria! A woman watches a Class 31 trundle through platform 11 from the ‘comfort’ of an unprotected wooden bench, surrounded by puddles of water from the leaking roof! People often get nostalgic about the ‘good old days’ and British Railways, but this was the run-down reality.

02625. 31420 Manchester Victoria. 19.6.91.

37371 stands in the loop whilst 47343 passes through platform 12. The sir of decay in this 1991 shot is evident with weeds growing on both track and platform, plus graffiti no-one’s bothered to remove.

02587. 37371. 47343. Manchester Victoria. 18.6.91.

Here’s platform 12 bereft of trains (and passengers) with the wooden waiting room and the buffet next door. I spent many a cold and windy day stood on the end of here, looking up the bank to see what might be approaching…

01085. Platforms 12-13. Manchester Victoria. 25.5.90.

The waiting room on platform 12 as it was in 1991. A Class 37’s reflected in a fading and peeling mirror. The room was tatty but it was somewhere to get warm in winter!

02591. Mirror reflections. Manchester Victoria. 18.6.91.

Over the far side of the station opposite platform 16 was an un-numbered bay which was used for parcels traffic or (on this occasion) stabling empty stock. On the 18th June 1991 it was occupied by 37430 and a rake of coaches.

02573. 37430. Manchester Victoria. 18.6.91.

On 19th June 1991 31420 and 31232 rest in the stabling siding by Victoria West signalbox.

02657. 31420. 31232. Manchester Victoria. 19.6.91.

On the 25th May 1990, 32427 heads one of the Southport ‘club trains’ at platform 13.

01096. 31426. Manchester Victoria. 25.5.90.

Sadly, BR decided to downsize the station after the Windsor link had opened and many services (including long-distance trans-pennine) had been transferred away. Between 1992 and 1994 platforms 12-16 were demolished and part of the area was sold to build the Manchester arena. It was an incredibly short-sighted move, but typical of the BR era. It severely reduced the capacity of the station (capacity we really could have done with now). It didn’t do much for the station’s aesthetic qualities or passenger comfort either! Here’s a series of shots of the demolition taken on the 19th August 1993. The first shows the view along platform 14, looking towards Salford and across to the other island platform (the now disused 13 and 12). The roof and buildings have already been torn down, only some of the roof pillars remain. Meanwhile, the new footbridge which will span the four remaining through tracks is under construction. In the background is the temporary footbridge that allowed access to platform 14

03469. Manchester Victoria rebuilding. 19.8.93.

Here’s the view from the Salford end of platform 14. To the right you can see the new roof on platform 11 starting to take shape. This is now platform 3.

03470. Manchester Victoria. Plat 11-12. 19.8.93.

150203 is framed by the exit of the temporary footbridge as it waits to leave platform 15 with the 17:00 to Rochdale.

03475. 150203. 17.00 to Rochdale. Man Vic. 19.8.93.

A staff member framed is surrounded by the truncated remains of the old roof supports on platforms 14-15. As you can see, there was little in the way of shelter (or facilities) for long-suffering passengers – or staff.

03476. Manchester Victoria rebuilding. 19.8.93.

Here 47576 leads a mail train through platform 14. These trains were once synonymous with the station as the vast Red Bank parcels stock sidings used to be a few hundred yards away on the Manchester loop.

03472. 47576. Manchester Victoria. 19.8.93.

1994 to 2013

This (yet to be written) will cover the years between the rationalisation of the station and it’s rebirth.

2013 to the present day

Work on a £44 million pound rebuilding of the station began in April 2013. The work included demolishing and replacing the Edwardian roof, rebuilding the tram stop with extra platforms, refurbishing the station buildings and providing a new access deck for the Arena. At the same time, work was carried out on the trackwork to allow for electrification and ease congestion. Network Rail commissioned me to document some of the work so some of the photos you’ll see in this section aren’t taken from places the public normally get to see…

Here’s one of the original T68 trams leaving the side of Victoria to head up to Shudehill. The area’s swathed in scaffolding to allow the old roof to be dismantled.

DG157861. Tram 1013. Manchester Victoria. 30.8.13.

Here’s a shot taken from atop the 1909 station building, looking down on construction of the bases for the roof piers and the new Metrolink platforms. The crash deck that was built to allow the old roof to be demolished is gradually being dismantled. The project site offices are visible in the former car-park behind the Ainscough crane which had been erected to lift the ribs of the new roof into place.

DG174391. Changes. Manchester Victoria. 31.3.14.

On 28th December 2013 engineers were busy lowering the track under the A665 road bridge at the Eastern end of the station to create sufficient clearance for electrification.

DG166905. 66152. Manchester Victoria. 28.12.13.

I’ve a small favour to ask…
If you enjoy reading this or any of the other blogs I’ve written, please click on an advert or two. You don’t have to buy anything you don’t want to of course – although if you did find something that tickled your fancy that would be fab! – but the revenue from them helps me to cover some of the cost of maintaining this site (which isn’t cheap and comes out of my own pocket). Remember, 99% of the pictures used in my blogs can be purchased as prints from my other website –  https://paulbigland.zenfolio.com/

Or – you can now buy me a coffee! https://ko-fi.com/paulbigland68312

Manchester Victoria resurgent,

29 Sunday Mar 2015

Posted by Paul Bigland in Uncategorized

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Manchester Victoria, Network Rail, Rail Investment

On Friday I popped over to Manchester for a catch up with a few friends and chance to sample some of Manchester’s most atmospheric pubs. A bonus to this foray across the Pennines was the chance to check out progress on the refurbishment of Manchester Victoria station & Northern hub electrification work.

The ‘march of the masts ‘has progressed Eastwards from the station with the first concrete mast bases & uprights appearing past Cheetham Hill road bridge. Contact wires have been strung on all the through roads although there’s a lot of work to be done before they can be energised. The West end of the station appears to be fully wired. The area’s a veritable forest of masts & cables now. This has resulted in the loss of a well used photographic location because the view from the footbridge outside the station is obscured by the ‘knitting’. In addition, the bridge sides have been built up to protect unwary passengers from the overheads.

To give you an idea of the changes, here are two views. The first is from Friday:

DG207976. 142036. Manchester Victoria. 27.3.15.

Here’s the same view from atop the bridge in August 2013;

DG157867. 150115 150425. Manchester Victoria. 30.8.13.

In another new development, automatic ticket gates have appeared on the concourse between platforms 1-3, leading to some of the exits on platform 3 near the train crew office being blocked off. These were used by fare dodgers ‘in the know’ but also by staff slipping out for a fag break!

Progress on the roof & concourse is impressive. Many of the ETFE panels have been installed in the roof structure making Victoria watertight for the first time in decades! Hoardings have been stripped away from the concourse & much of the temporary raft protecting passengers from work above has been removed. This has really opened the area up. Now it’s possible to start to an impression of what the station will be like when it’s finally complete. The Metrolink tram stop has changed too. There’s now a maze of tram tracks leading out of the station into town as the junctions for the second crossing of the city have been installed. The tram stop has been remodeled to provide an extra platform & through road to cope with the vast increase in services. Work continues to the inside of the building with no major changes discernible to the public just yet – but it’s only a matter of time. It’s great to see a previously neglected Manchester gateway receiving the attention that it deserves.

Here’s a few more pictures from Friday:

DG207992.New tram tracks. Manchester Victoria. 27.3.15

The complex tram trackwork that accommodates the new second city crossing which branches off to the right of the picture.

DG208007.New tram tracks. Manchester Victoria. 27.3.15

Looking towards Victoria from Shudehill. The original tram tracks are on the right, whilst the new second city crossing is being built on the left.

Here’s something the public can’t yet see, one of the rooms under restoration;

DG205986. Restored room. Manchester Victoria. 24.2.15

One of the rooms in a main building alongside the tram stop. The tiles have all been cleaned and restored. The pattern on the floor gives away the shape of the former counter.

DG205993. Restored smoking room. Manchester Victoria. 24.2.15

This is an old smoking room.The panels have all been restored but the original seating has disappeared. This room won’t be seen by the public when the building reopens.

DG205999. Restored flooring. Manchester Victoria. 24.2.15

Ornate tiling in the smoking room.

If you want to see pictures of Manchester Victoria from the present day right back to the 1990’s – follow this link which will take you to a gallery on my website;

http://paulbigland.zenfolio.com/?q=Manchester%20Victoria

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