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Hull set for HS2 logistics role as European steel giant plans £10m rail terminal investment

Voestalpine Railway Systems has won a major contract on HS2

An engineer works on a rail set for Voestalpine. The Austrian company is to establish a logistics hub in Hull to handle a contract won for HS2.

Hull looks set to play a part in the delivery of HS2 with a £10 million investment planned.

European steel giant Voestalpine has identified a former container terminal site in the city as ideal for a new logistics facility, having won a major contract on the high-profile build. The Austrian business’s Voestalpine Railway Systems subsidiary will supply points and crossings for the first two phases of the project.

A total of 20 jobs could be created at the rail-linked Freightliner Road location, with an application lodged with Hull City Council for a 50m by 20m warehouse, a two storey modular office building and welfare unit.

Read more: Major HS2 contracts won by East Yorkshire off-site construction specialist

The submission also looks for a change of use to the land for open storage, with two rail sidings reinstated at the facility last used in 1987.

Voestalpine, listed on the Vienna Stock Exchange, was last month named as the company to design, manufacture and deliver around 180 switches and crossings, for use between London and Crewe, with a time frame stretching into the early 2030s. Components up to 70m in length could be handled at a location that first saw rail activity in the mid-19th century.

£10m investment: The Freightliner Road site in Hull that could see rail sidings reinstated and new facilities to serve HS2 as a logistics hub after Austrian firm Voestalpine won a major contract. The A63 runs across, with the site bordered by existing rail, the main line to the south and a freight track beyond.

It will despatch from Hull to four project construction hubs, having received the manufactured parts from Germany, with the proposal to be a secure custom-cleared site.

A spokesperson for the company told Business Live: “Due to the size of the components a new rail connection site is required to stage deliveries to HS2. A logistics hub in Hessle will receive the components to assemble high speed switches and crossings via rail from Europe, reducing carbon footprint and road congestion. The logistics site will employ 20 employees responsible for receiving and supplying the assemblies to HS2 building sites by rail.