Blackburn's new £5m bus station move is on (From Lancashire Telegraph)
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Blackburn's new £5m bus station move is on
11:40am Friday 25th May 2012 in Transport news
By Bill Jacobs, Local government reporter
THIS is Blackburn’s new £5million glass-fronted bus station which will welcome passengers from autumn 2015.
The covered complex, which will take 18 months to construct, will be sited on part of the town centre’s old market site following a decade of searching for the necessary cash and best location, the Lancashire Telegraph can reveal.
Council bosses said the enclosed, airy, warm and secure Ainsworth Street building will include a cafe and be equipped with the technology for London Transport Oyster-style cards to speed passenger boarding and real time information screens.
The bus station has been designed by Capita Symonds, the firm behind major projects nationwide including the £188 million Library of Birmingham, the BBC’s Salford Quays Media City, and the extension to the British Library.
Design and project manager Richard Saint has incorporated the best features of similar complexes around the UK and Europe while trying to keep the character of nearby retail developments.
The hi-tech terminal using the latest natural ventilation techniques will be just up the road from the existing windswept interchange by the railway station and will offer state-of-the-art passenger comfort facilities.
The first stage of the long-awaited redevelopment of the former Blackburn market site, the bus station will have a single central concourse with direct access to 14 bus boarding and alighting bays.
There will be a staffed travel information office, cafe, cash machines and public toilets with a disabled access WC and baby change facilities.
It will be closely linked to the new £8 million indoor market and Mall shopping centre while a new smaller bus interchange will be built next to the railway station as part of the town’s £30 million Cathedral Quarter development, with most main services stopping at both places.
The new plan, scheduled to start in April next year and due to take 18 months to complete, is one of the key parts of unlocking the further redevelopment of the town centre.
The bus station plans will go on show for two weeks from today on a special stall next to the visitor centre.
Money for the work on both the new station and bus/rail interchange has come from the £40 million Pennine Reach programme aimed at improving public transport bwteen Blackburn and Accrington.
Labour leader of Blackburn-with-Darwen Council Kate Hollern said: “The redevelopment of the market site and the new proposed additional bus station is a key part of the regeneration of the town.
“It will bring major improvements for bus passengers as well as linking better transport links for the Mall and the market.”
John Threlfall, business director at Lancashire United, said: “We are delighted. It is long overdue. The town centre generally is being enhanced and a new bus station will just add to that.
“It will be an improvement for passengers to have a warm covered bus station rather than the existing wet and windswept one on the Boulevard. The bus station is large enough for bigger buses than we currently operate.
“This new bus station is going to be right in the heart of the shopping centre and we hope to see the number of people coming to the town centre by bus where there will be a warm, friendly and dry reception will now rise.”
Tony Duckworth, president of Blackburn Chamber of Trade, said: “I am delighted to have a new bus station but it seems a pity that it has moved away from the existing railway station.
“It doesn’t place people in immediate vicinity of King William Street which we perceive as being the centre of town.”
Comments are closed on this article.
Comments (27)
11:51am Fri 25 May 12
stefjam says...
12:10pm Fri 25 May 12
A Darener says...
12:22pm Fri 25 May 12
happycyclist says...
What will happen to the Boulevard?
12:30pm Fri 25 May 12
cathedral citi says...
It's a sensible compromise.
12:33pm Fri 25 May 12
sean_brfc says...
12:39pm Fri 25 May 12
HU says...
12:41pm Fri 25 May 12
badref says...
12:51pm Fri 25 May 12
A Darener says...
1:04pm Fri 25 May 12
Mill62 says...
1:29pm Fri 25 May 12
GrindletonBob says...
If anyone from the Council/Capita (same difference!) is reading this, it may be worthwhile getting your cleaning contractors to occasionally jet wash the floor and clean the glazing. Looks like it was last done when it was originally built to replace the concrete shelters.
Anyone remember those old shelters? I recall the yobs used to smash the windows on their way home on a Friday and Saturday night on the infamous last buses of the evening!
1:30pm Fri 25 May 12
doolish says...
1:42pm Fri 25 May 12
happycyclist says...
I agree with you now; it is a sensible compromise.
2:18pm Fri 25 May 12
Greenline says...
3:01pm Fri 25 May 12
happydaysagain says...
3:16pm Fri 25 May 12
woolywords says...
Anyone fancy walking under the station, down a dimly lit walkway, that has no CCTV, to the cab rank? Thought not.
4:02pm Fri 25 May 12
ROBERTSLUMDWELLER123 says...
4:06pm Fri 25 May 12
ROBERTSLUMDWELLER123 says...
5:45pm Fri 25 May 12
Noiticer says...
5:46pm Fri 25 May 12
in it to win it says...
it will porbably cost £1m to demolish and ready the site, which leaves £3m... waste another £.5m on turning streets into one way, leading to fielding st carpark, which leaves £2.5m for a building that size... it will be a dump in 3yrs...
Option, 1 leave it as it is
Option, 2 give me the money & I will do a betterjob than the captia comedy act...
5:56pm Fri 25 May 12
Michael@ClitheroeSince58 says...
6:55pm Fri 25 May 12
Reality50 says...
10:11pm Fri 25 May 12
M.DANNY says...
11:24pm Fri 25 May 12
blackburn_man says...
9:24am Sat 26 May 12
Gaz M says...
9:19am Sun 27 May 12
kojak10 says...
It just isn't good enough in this day and age.
1:17pm Sun 27 May 12
disgusted tunbridge wells says...
9:52am Wed 30 May 12
malstar says...