Sheffield Region Transport Plan 2019 – Tram-Trains Between Sheffield And Doncaster-Sheffield Airport
The Sheffield plans, state this as a medium to long-term priority.
Regional tram-train services to be maximised through Rotherham Central, with direct fast services to Doncaster, DSA and Sheffield.
The tram-train route between Sheffield and Doncaster, would probably be as follows.
- Tinsley Meadowhall South
- Magna
- Rortherham Central
- Rotherham Parkgate
- Swinton
- Mexborough
- Conisbrough
- Doncaster
The distance between Rotherham Parkgate and Doncaster is under twelve miles and has full electrification at both ends.
The Class 399 tram-trains being built with a battery capability for the South Wales Metro to be delivered in 2023, should be able to reach Doncaster.
But there are probably other good reasons to fully electrify between Doncaster and Sheffield, via Meadowhall, Rotherham Central and Rotherham Parkgate.
The major work would probably be to update Rotherham Parkgate to a through station with two platforms and a step-free footbridge.
Currently, trains take twenty-three minutes between Rotherham Central and Doncaster. This is a time, that the tram-trains would probably match.
Onward To Doncaster Sheffield Airport
I have clipped this map of services from the report on Sheffield’s plans.
The tram-train route to the Airport is clearly marked in a broken orange line.
- The tram-train uses a loop from the East Coast Main Line.
- It shares the loop with expresses between London and Doncaster, that call at the Airport.
- The tram-train extension from Doncaster to Doncaster Sheffield Airport has new stations at Lakeside, Bessacarr and terminates at a new station at Bawtry.
It looks a well-thought out plan.
Sheffield Region Transport Plan 2019 – Renewal Of Supertram Network
Sheffield’s plan has renewal of the Supertram network as a short term priority.
The Sheffield Supertram is twenty-five years old and when you consider, many UK urban railway and tram systems of the same vintage have been substantially updated with new rolling stock and new routes.
The plan lists three things that must be done.
Network Rerailing
This has already been done over part of the network to allow the Class 399 tram-trains to operate on the Supertram network.
So I suspect that the rest of the network needs to be re-railed.
Certainly, the Class 399 tram-trains, which are cousins of the tram-trains working in Karlsruhe don’t seem to have had any serious problems, that have surfaced in the media.
New Vehicles
New trams are needed, mainly because the original trains are twenty-five years old.
But will these new trams, be trams or tram-trains?
That question has already been answered, as Sheffield uses some Class 399 tram-trains as capacity enhancers on some normal tram routes.
The Class 399 tram-trains that have been ordered for the South Wales Metro are being delivered with a battery capability.
So if Class 399 tram-trains or something similar, should they have a battery capability?
Undoubtedly, as Birmingham are showing, the ability to extend a route without wires is extremely useful and cost-saving.
I also suspect that Cardiff, Karlsruhe and Sheffield will share similar vehicles, as the latter two cities do now.
The only differences are the German version runs on 15 KVAC as opposed to the UK’s 25 KVAC, some changed body panels, boarding heights, door number and position, colour schemes and couplers.
Sheffield and Cardiff will be using a standard European tram-train, adapted to our working practices and track standards.
Extending The Network
Suppose Sheffield choose as the tram replacement, a vehicle with the following characteristics.
- Tram-train.
- Able to use 25 VAC and 750 VDC overhead wires.
- Able to use battery power.
- Regenerative braking to battery.
- Enhanced performance, as the original vehicles struggle on the hills, according to drivers to whom I’ve spoken. But the 399s are much better!
- Extra capacity.
- 75 mph operating speed
Sheffield would be able to develop several new routes.
I am particularly curious, as to whether a tram-train with a battery capability delivered in say 2025, will have the capability of handling a route like the Penistone Line.
It should be noted, that if Sheffield were Karlsruhe, there would be tram-trains to Doncaster, Doncaster-Sheffield Airport, Huddersfield, Retford and Worksop.
But the German city is at the centre of a network of electrified lines.
Conclusion
Sheffield will be the next city in the UK, after Cardiff, that will have a wide-spread battery-electric tram-train network.
Sheffield Region Transport Plan 2019 – A New Tram-Train Route To A New Station At Waverley
Sheffield’s plans state that a medium to long term priority is to have a new station on the Sheffield-Lincoln Line.
This Google Map shows the location of Waverley between Darnall and stations.
Note.
- Darnall station is in the North-West corner of the map.
- Woodhouse station is in the South-East corner of the map.
- Waverley is a new housing area and is highlighted in red towards the North-East corner of the map.
The plans also propose that the service will be run by tram-trains and they will also serve the Advanced Manufacturing Park (AMP)
This Google Map shows AMP and Waverley in a larger scale.
Note.
- Waverley in the South-East corner of the map.
- The AMP in the North-West corner of the map.
- The Sheffield-Lincoln Line curving through to the South.
Most rail and tram systems are straight out-and-back layouts, but there are two very important loops that serve a wider area under Liverpool City Centre and Heathrow Airport.
Could Waverley and the AMP be served by a surface loop from the Sheffield-Lincoln Line?
- The loop could be single- or double-track.
- Stops would be in appropriate places.
- The loop could be electrified as needed with 750 VDC to the Sheffield Supertram standard.
As Sheffield is less than three miles from Waverley, the battery-electric version of Class 399 tram-trains could be used.
- These have been ordered for the South Wales Metro,
- They are now numbered Class 398 tram-trains.
- They should be able to run to and from Sheffield on battery power.
- If the loop was fully electrified, this could charge the tram-trains.
The Sheffield-Lincoln Line passes to the back of the Sheffield Supertram Depot, so I suspect, if required the tram-trains could sneak through the depot to join the main tram route through Sheffield City Centre.
But as the Sheffield Supertram expands, there must surely come a point, where a second route across the City is needed to handle increasing numbers of trams. Manchester found this a few years ago and have since built the Second City Crossing.
Sheffield already has a second route across the City and it is the rail line through Sheffield station, which will be electrified in the next few years, to allow High Speed Two trains to reach the City.
So I can see no reason, why tram-trains from Waverley and the AMP can’t terminate in Sheffield station or go across the City.
To show what the Germans get up to, here’s one of Karlruhe’s tram-trains in a platform in Karlsruhe HBf, with a double-deck TGV in an adjacent platform.
This is one of Karlsruhe’s older train trains, that are being replaced by tram-trains, which are cousins of those in Sheffield.
If the Waverley loop is built, it can be considered as a separate tram system, that connects to Sheffield station, by running as a battery-electric train.
Conclusion
Why shouldn’t Sheffield have an advanced tram-train system to serve the Advanced Manufacturing Park?
I feel the service should be as follows.
- It should be terminated in a loop around the Waverley area and the Advanced Manufacturing Park.
- In the West it could terminate in Sheffield station or perhaps pass through and terminate in the West of the City.
- The service could be run using battery electric tram-trains, similar to the Class 398 tram-trains, that will be used on the South Wales Metro.
I don’t think that the engineering will be very challenging.
High Speed Two And Brexit
This article on the BBC, is entitled HS2: High-Speed Line Cost ‘could Rise By £30bn’.
Brexiteers like Boris Johnson and Nigel Farage have said in the past, that they are minded to cancel the project.
But surely Boris and Nigel believe that we’ll all be better off under Brexit, so we will have the money for the NHS, kicking the foreigners out of the UK, building a wall to stop the emigrants walking across the Irish Border and High Speed Two.
They can’t have it both ways!
Or is it that both wouldn’t be seen dead on a train?
Aerial Pictures Show New Trains Housed In Mid-Norfolk
The title of this post, is the same as that of this article on the Eastern Daily Press.
Greater Anglia has a storage problem for all the new trains being delivered from Stadler in Switzerland.
So the train operating company has done a deal with the Mid Norfolk Railway to store the trains in the depths of deepest Norfolk.
Wikipedia gives more details in a section, entitled Storage Of Main Line Stock.
Working with Abellio Greater Anglia, the Mid-Norfolk Railway have developed a rolling stock storage facility close to their Kimberley Park station. The £3 million sidings have been funded by Abellio Greater Anglia to allow them to store their Class 745 and 755 fleets until they are ready to be in service.
It has also been reported that the site, will be used to store the replaced trains, whilst they await new operators or the scrapyard.
This picture clipped from the Eastern Daily Press article, shows the trains.
Reading the Wikipedia entry for the Mid Norfolk Railway, which is obviously a well-maintained standard gauge heritage railway, it gets used for various rail-related training and other purposes, so as the multi-million pound deal shows, I’m pretty certain there is a lot of co-operation between all parties in Norfolk, including Greater Anglia, Network Rail, Balfour Beatty and the Emergency Services.
Will The Class 755 Trains Return With Passengers?
The following should be noted.
- Rail tours and charters use the branch and visit Dereham, several times a year.
- An InterCity 125 has even used the line.
- Dereham is a town of 19,000 people.
- Norfolk is a county, that welcomes lots of tourists.
- Wymondham station will soon have a direct hourly service to and from Stansted Airport.
Given the co-operation between Greater Anglia and the Mid-Norfolk Railway over the train storage, where a long term conveniently-located facility is of benefit to both parties, will we see occasional visits of Class 755 trains to Dereham?
There must be long-term possibilities.
- Weekend steam trains between Dereham and Norwich, similar to the Shakespeare Express, that runs between Birmingham Snow Hill and Stratford stations.
- A limited commuter service between Dereham and Norwich.
The Mid-Norfolk Railway’s long term ambition to extend their route past Dereham to reopened stations at County School and Fakenham, would surely increase the viability of these services.
Sheffield Region Transport Plan 2019 – Park-and-Ride Expansion At Rotherham Parkgate
This is a short-term objective and is probably sensible, as I know in the past that parking in Sheffield wasn’t easy and parking never gets better.
This Google Map shows the large Rotherham Parkgate Shopping Centre
Note the railway running around the South of the sight.
There is a blue dot , which is the position of the Rotherham Parkgate station, that is used by the tram-train.
To the North-East and the South of the Shopping Centre, there appears to be a lot of spare land.
Will these be spaces be more shops of car-parking?
The Tram-Train Frequency
Currently, the tram-train frequency between Cathedral and Rotherham Parkway is a tram-train every twenty minutes.
As the tram-train route could be extended from Rotherham Parkgate, more capacity will probably be neeeded.
Will this go to one tram-train every fifteen minutes, to increase capacity?
Sheffield Region Transport Plan 2019 – A New Tram-Train Station At Magna
When i was last riding on a Class 399 tram-train, a rail enthusiast mentioned this.
He said his grand-daughter liked to visit Magna or the Magna Science Adventure Centre, to give it its full name, and a tram-stop would be very welcome.
This is a paragraph from the Wikipedia entry.
The site, often used for staging events, conferences and gigs, is over 1/3 of a mile long and won the Enjoy England Gold Award for Business Tourism in 2006[2] and has received other awards for the high quality of product.
That backs up my informant.
This Google Map shows the site.
Note that the tram-train line between Sheffield and Rotherham runs across the top of the map.
So when Sheffield’s plans include this wording.
New tram-train station and associated park and ride facilities at Magna.
I think it is likely, that a tram-stop and Park-and-Ride will be built at Magna.













