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Economic Development

£400,000 investment to build new Black Country station

Land deal will signal next stage of plans to improve rail connections across the West Midlands

(Image: Derby Telegraph)

Plans to build a new railway station in the Black Country have moved a step closer after council chiefs agreed a £400,000 investment for a land deal.

West Midlands Combined Authority will use the capital to acquire a patch of land next to the Anchor Meadow Health Centre off Westfield Drive, in Aldridge, which is currently owned by the NHS.

It will mean proposals can be drawn up to design and build the new station to serve the town again after its previous facility was closed as a result of the Beeching cuts in the 1960s.

Detailed designs are still being worked up but initial plans include a 150-space car park.

Transport chiefs hope to have two trains an hour running to Walsall and Birmingham New Street, serving an estimated 500,000 people a year.

The land being purchased was once used as the approach entrance to the old station and would be needed for similar purposes for the new facility.

The original Aldridge station was opened by the Midland Railway in 1879 and in 1923 became part of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway before passing to the London Midland Region of British Railways on nationalisation in 1948.