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Economic Development

Manchester's Oxford Road station set for two-year closure amid major upgrade plans

Project aims to reduce rail congestion in city centre

Manchester Oxford Road train station is set to be revamped(Image: Gary Oakley/Manchester Evening News)

Major plans to revamp Manchester Oxford Road station have been revealed. The station would be closed for just over two years under the proposed scheme aimed at reducing rail congestion in Manchester city centre by having fewer but longer platforms.

Network Rail's proposals, which include new lifts and a footbridge, are designed to allow longer trains with an additional 120 seats to stop at the station. While the construction is estimated to close the station for just over two years, project leaders say the timing is 'subject to change'.

Trains will still be able to pass through the station, limiting the impact on the wider rail network, although neighbouring stations are expected to experience increased traffic during the closure. This project follows the quiet scrapping of long-standing plans to construct two new platforms at Piccadilly station in May 2023, over a decade after they were initially promised.

Network Rail had previously labelled the platforms 15 and 16 project as 'hugely expensive' and 'incredibly disruptive', arguing that remodelling Oxford Road was the optimal solution.

A Network Rail review in 2019 concluded that 'no other option comes close' to increasing capacity on the congested Castlefield corridor to 16 trains per hour than the previous plans. The report, which was never published but has been obtained following a Freedom of Information (FOI) request, identifies the Castlefield corridor as the 'ruling Manchester network constraint', reports .

It warned that doing nothing would likely worsen services. The report concluded that the full package of work, which included building two new platforms at Piccadilly as well as lengthening platforms at Oxford Road would achieve the required increase in capacity. It stated that 'no other option comes close' to achieving this, unless there are reductions elsewhere, such as fewer trains stopping at certain stations.

Network Rail says its review of the previous plans found that the high cost of the scheme 'wouldn't deliver the necessary benefits'. The public body says the new plans to improve the track and signalling at Oxford Road will improve reliability across the regional network, allowing for an increase from 12 to 14 trains per hour.

The plans for platforms 15 and 16 at Piccadilly, which were supposed to end rail delays and congestion across the North, went through a public inquiry and had been awaiting final sign off since 2015.