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Corporate Offer - Cycle Hub

Update - Metrolink Eccles line – Temporary closure

Guest User

Dear recipient

Metrolink Eccles line – Temporary closure for upcoming Trafford Park Metrolink line construction and Eccles line maintenance works

I am writing to update you regarding the above work taking place when the Eccles Metrolink line including the MediaCityUK stop will close, with no tram services running between Cornbrook and Eccles from Saturday 28 July to Thursday 9 August 2018 inclusive.

A full replacement bus service will be in operation for Metrolink passengers.

The closure is to accommodate works at Pomona in preparation for the next phase of construction of the new Trafford Park Metrolink line. During the closure, we will also be working with the Metrolink operator KAM and other partners to carry out additional enhancement works at Metrolink stops and at other locations along the Eccles route. All works are scheduled to take place during the same closure to minimise disruption for customers, local residents and businesses.

Please click here to access a copy of the letter sent to residents and businesses along the Eccles line, for your information.

In the meantime, if you have any queries regarding the works, please do not hesitate to contact me on 0161 244 1555 or email at MetrolinkTPL@tfgm.com. Information can also be found at Metrolink Eccles Line Closure.

Kind regards

Angela Forster

Senior Communications Officer

Transport for Greater Manchester

Cycle boost for Trafford

Guest User

Work to provide more space and protection for people travelling by bike in Trafford has started, Transport for Greater Manchester (TfGM) and Trafford Council announced today.

When complete, Stretford Cycleway will provide 3.2km of high quality cycling infrastructure on Stretford Road and Talbot Road, including segregated cycle lanes in both directions and improved cycle markings and carriageway surfacing.

The segregation will be provided by Rediweld ‘Wand Orcas’, which combine vertical wands with reflective markings and horizontal rubber modules to further protect cycle lanes from other road traffic.

Other measures set to be improved by the works include traffic signals, bus stops and pedestrian facilities. Bus stop and parking bay bypasses for people on bikes will also be created.

The aim of the scheme is to provide a safer, more segregated environment to encourage those with less confidence to saddle up more often.

Work will be done in two parts, with the first section already underway. The second part will see further improvements made to the West Point junction where the two roads meet. This will include a dedicated cycle phase at the junction that will boost safety by allowing the separation of cycles from motor vehicles.

Trafford Council has also committed to looking at further enhancements at all other junctions to allow the route to meet the design standards set out in Greater Manchester’s cycling and walking infrastructure proposal.

Executive Councillor for Environment, Air Quality and Climate Change, Cllr Steve Adshead, said: “This is great news for cyclists; this scheme will significantly enhance the experience for those travelling along one of Greater Manchester's major commuter routes.

“The initiative also supports the Council's commitment to improving the health and wellbeing of our residents. It will hopefully encourage people to be more active while reducing the number of car journeys so that there is a positive impact on air quality in the area.”

Greater Manchester’s Cycling and Walking Commissioner, Chris Boardman, added: “Trafford Council deserve praise for committing to looking at enhancing this cycleway even further to make it work better at junctions for people on bikes and on foot.

“We will support Trafford to ensure that the route meets the high standards that will in time give it the full seal of approval.”

Work on the first phase of the project is currently expected to take up to five months to complete and as been strategically timed to try to minimise disruption to residents, businesses and current road users.

Following the £20 million first phase of the Greater Manchester Cycle City programme which is now complete, this second phase involves a £22 million investment in mainly segregated new and improved cycle routes across the region, five new cycle-friendly district centres, and further improvements to cycle parking. It also involves ten new schools joining the Cycle Schools and Colleges project, including Trafford College.

To find out more about the Cycle City programme, visit the TfGM cycling pages.

Chris Boardman launched an innovative new proposal last month to create a city-region-wide cycling and walking network made up of more than 1,000 miles of routes, including 75 miles of Dutch-style segregated bike lanes.

The network will be the largest joined-up system of walking and cycling routes in the UK and has been developed with all 10 Greater Manchester local authorities.

Are you ready for the match?

Guest User

england1.JPG

Can you believe it? England take on Croatia tomorrow in the World Cup semi-final!

A live screening of the fixture will take place at Castlefield Bowl for 8,000 people, with a number of other large showings across the city including at Victoria Warehouse and Albert Hall.

We anticipate a large number of people travelling in and out of the city, by road and on public transport.

It is expected that rail and bus routes, as well as trams and roads will be busier as passengers alter journey plans. 

Journey times are expected to be longer as well, particularly in the evening peak which is expected to start at 3pm.

We strongly advise if you can travel prior to 3pm on this date, do so. Consider retiming your journey and avoiding the affected areas when planning ahead.

We hope you enjoy the match wherever you watch it!

Metrolink Trafford Park Line - Temporary Traffic Regulation Orders - Parkway Circle

Guest User

Dear recipient

 Metrolink Trafford Park Line – Temporary Traffic Regulation Orders – Parkway Circle

 Please note ALL of these road closures will take place overnight – 8pm to 6am

 We have written to you previously about Trafford Park Line Metrolink works taking place in your area. This email is in regard to the next and final stage of works on various roads leading to and from Parkway Circle.

A range of Temporary Traffic Regulation Orders (TTROs) will be brought into force from 23 July through to approximately 18 Aug 18.

The work is to enable the permanent carriageway surfacing to be undertaken around Parkway Circle and the roads immediately approaching and leaving the roundabout. This work will see the substantial completion of the works to bring into use the permanent highway arrangements associated with the Trafford Park Line extension immediately around Parkway Circle, including the introduction of the signalised junctions.

The remaining works, including the construction of the smaller traffic islands, will be carried out in a number of phases (detailed below) to minimise disruption to traffic as far as possible.

Temporary Traffic Regulation Orders – Parkway Circle - Details:

 Phase 1

From 23 July - for nine to eleven nights (8pm to 6am)

 1.       Parkway overnight closure of both carriageways (Ref TPL0065 click to view).

2.       Westinghouse Road ‘one-way’ working southbound from Parkway Circle to Warren Road (Ref TPL0066 click to view).

3.       Ashburton Road West ‘one-way’ working from Longbridge Road to Parkway Circle (Ref TPL0067 click to view).

 Phase 2

From 1 or 3 Aug (on completion of the above works) – for eight to ten nights (8pm to 6am)

 1.       Parkway closure of the north-east bound carriageway (Ref TPL0068 click to view).

2.       Ashburton Road West ‘one-way’ working towards Parkway Circle with a prescribed left turn into Tenax Road. NB Access onto Parkway Circle will not be permissible (Ref TPL0069 click to view).

3.       Parkway circulatory carriageway closure with a prescribed left turn from Tenax Road into Village Way (Ref TPL0070 click to view).

Westinghouse Road ‘one-way’ working between Warren Road and Parkway Circle with access only onto Parkway. NB Access onto Parkway Circle will not be permissible (Ref TPL0072 attached).

 Phase 3a

From 9 or 13 Aug (on completion of the above works) – for one or two nights (8pm to 6am)

1.       Ashburton Road West ‘one-way’ northbound from Parkway Circle to Longbridge Road and Tenax Road and ‘one-way’ southbound from Tenax Circle to Parkway Circle.

NB Access to premises on the northbound carriageway of Tenax Road will be maintained where necessary via Tenax Circle. (Ref TPL0073a click to view).

 Phase 3b

From 10 or 16 Aug (on completion of the above works) for one or two nights (8pm to 6am)

 1.       Village Way closure between Parkway Circle and Mosely Road (Ref TPL0071 click to view).

Tenax Road ‘one-way’ northbound from Parkway Circle to Tenax Circle.

NB Egress from premises on the southbound carriageway of Tenax Road will be maintained, where necessary, via Tenax Circle (Ref TPL0073b click to view).

 Variable Messaging Signs (VMS) will be set up in key locations to provide driver information and temporary diversion routes that will be required are included in the attached/enclosed temporary traffic regulation order notices

We appreciate your patience and understanding at this time.

If you have any family, friends, co-workers who you feel would benefit from being kept up to date with the project works, please forward the website details www.tfgm.com/MetrolinkTPL on to them where they can sign up to receive regular updates.

TfGM will continue to engage with stakeholders along the route and will provide further information as we progress. In the meantime, if you have any queries regarding the scheme or if you would like to arrange a meeting, please contact either me or a member of the Metrolink team on 0161 244 1555 or email MetrolinkTPL@tfgm.com

Kind Regards

Angela Forster

Senior Communications Officer

Transport for Greater Manchester

​​​​​​​Metrolink - Trafford Park Line – Temporary Traffic Regulation Orders

Guest User

Dear Recipient

Metrolink Trafford Park Line – Temporary Traffic Regulation Orders

We have written to you previously about Trafford Park Line Metrolink works taking place in your area. This letter is in regards to the next stage of works at various sites in the area (listed below). The work is mainly to improve the highways and includes carriageway surfacing work, safety improvements and repairs.

A variety of Temporary Traffic Regulation Orders (TTROs) will be brought into force from the end of June 2018.

Details are included here:

  1. 30 JuneVillage Way will be closed overnight (10pm Saturday to 6am Sunday) for one night, between Parkway Circle and Fifth Avenue. The closure is to enable repairs to be made to manhole covers and frames that are in the carriageway. Ref TPL00063 click here to view.
  2. 2 July – There will be one way working on Ashburton Road West – from Parkway Circle to Longbridge Road, in a northerly direction for a total of three weeks. The one way working is required to facilitate the construction of traffic islands for traffic signals on Parkway Circle. It will remain in place until surfacing works begin in this area. Ref TPL00062 click here to view.
  3. 6 JulyA 20mph speed limit will be introduced on Warren Bruce Road and Trafford Wharf Road through the roadworks. The speed limit will be in place for 12 month in order to encourage the safe movement of traffic through the roadworks and improve the safety of the workforce in the adjacent work site. Please heed the ‘give-way’ at the junction of Warren Bruce Road onto Trafford Wharf Road. This is required as there is reduced visibility of the oncoming traffic at this site. Ref TPL0064 click here to view.
  4. 14 July - Praed Road will be closed at its junction with Village Way for two weeks. This is to enable the required highway improvement works to be undertaken at this junction. Ref TPL0075 click here to view.
  5. 14 July - Mosley Road, south of Village Way, will be one way from Village Way for a distance of 100m in a southerly direction, and Mosley Road, north of Village Way, a prescribed left turn from Mosley Road onto Village Way. This will be in place for 18 months. The restrictions are required to facilitate the highway improvement works at the junction, whilst maintaining highway safety until such time the new traffic signals are installed. Ref TPL0074 click here to view.
  6. 28 July There will be a road closure at Pomona Strand for two weeks. The closure is required to allow the installation of a bridge deck structure that will link the Trafford Park Line extension to the existing Metrolink network at the Pomona Stop. Ref TPL0061 click here to view.

Suggested diversion routes are included in the attached/enclosed temporary traffic regulation order notices.

Next week, we will provide details of overnight closures planned for parts of Parkway Circle and roads leading to and from this roundabout from 23 July – 18 August*. This is to enable carriageway surfacing and lining works to take place before the final highway layout opens in late August 2018. This work will be undertaken in phases to minimise any disruption and road closures will be in operation overnight from 8pm to 6am. *dates are indicative at this stage tbc in next week’s email.

We appreciate your patience during the construction of the Trafford Park Line.

TfGM will continue to engage with stakeholders along the route and will provide further information as we progress. In the meantime, if you have any queries regarding the scheme or if you would like to arrange a meeting, please contact either me or a member of the Metrolink team on 0161 244 1555 or email MetrolinkTPL@tfgm.com.   

Kind Regards

Angela Forster

Senior Communications Officer

Transport for Greater Manchester

Greater Manchester announces plans for ‘Beelines’ – the UK’s largest cycling and walking network

Guest User

Chris_Boardman.jpg

Chris Boardman, Greater Manchester’s Cycling and Walking Commissioner, has unveiled an innovative new plan to create a city-region-wide cycling and walking network made up of more than 1,000 miles of routes, including 75 miles of Dutch-style segregated bike lanes.

The ‘Beelines’ network will be the largest joined-up system of walking and cycling routes in the UK and has been developed with all 10 Greater Manchester local authorities.

Once built, the network will better connect every community in Greater Manchester, benefitting 2.7 million people and making cycling and walking a real alternative to the car.

The proposals, which are subject to formal approval by the Greater Manchester Combined Authority (GMCA) on Friday 29 June, also include plans for 1,400 safer road crossings on the majority of routes and 25 ‘filtered neighbourhoods’, where priority will be given to the movement of people and where more public spaces to sit, play and socialise will be created.

People in Greater Manchester make around 250 million car journeys of less than one kilometre each year – the equivalent of a 15-minute walk or a five-minute bike ride.

A large proportion of these trips are school runs. In the Netherlands, 50% of children cycle to school every day – in Greater Manchester the number is less than 2%. Beelines aims to make walking and cycling the natural choice for short journeys.

Mayor of Greater Manchester, Andy Burnham, said: “Greater Manchester has a long history of doing innovative things and our approach to Beelines is no different.

“This proposal is bold and I make no apology for that. If we’re to cut congestion and clean up our air, decisive action is needed. I want to make Greater Manchester one of the top 10 places in the world to live and it’s action of this sort which will help to deliver that promise.

“I’ve no doubt that Chris Boardman and the 10 local authorities which make up Greater Manchester will do us proud and make journeys on foot or by bike the first choice for local trips.

“This will help to tackle congestion and it will help to tackle poor air quality, as well as boosting people's health and fitness levels.

“We have £160m to get us started and we have a plan that has something in it for every single person in Greater Manchester.”

Greater Manchester’s Cycling and Walking Commissioner, Chris Boardman, said: “I’ve been massively impressed by the political will of all of Greater Manchester’s 10 authorities to come together to make this plan a reality.

“It’s not really about people using bikes and walking – it’s about making better places to live and work by giving people a real choice about how they travel. In doing so, we’ll make the city -region healthier and more prosperous.

“We’ve seen from other global cities that these methods work and the benefits are there for all to see – we simply can't afford to be left behind.

“So now the hard work begins and we’ll be working closely with all local authorities and partners to deliver this plan as urgently as possible.”

Government Minister for cycling and walking, Jesse Norman MP, added: “The great city-region of Manchester is setting a fantastic example with this project. I commend Chris Boardman and his team for their energy and focus in making it happen.

“This is a really exciting plan to encourage more people to cycle and walk. But at the same time it will improve air quality, reduce congestion and improve health, by giving local people real alternatives to driving.

“Earlier this year we awarded Greater Manchester nearly £250m as part of the Government’s new Transforming Cities Fund, and I am delighted to see it being put to good use.

“Greater Manchester is already a great place to live, but this initiative plan will make it even better. I hugely look forward to seeing how this work progresses.”

Maps showing the proposed plans for each local council area in Greater Manchester have today been published on the Cycling and Walking Commissioner’s page on the Transport for Greater Manchester (TfGM)’s website. The proposed routes and crossing points have also been published on open data website mappinggm.org.uk, where interested members of the public can collaborate on the plans for their area.

The plans represent the first version of the network that could be built over the next five years. An updated version of the Beelines map will be published later in the year.

Chris Boardman added: “Beelines will connect the quiet streets of Greater Manchester and lead in the most direct way to new crossing points to get people across busier roads.

“People using these routes will see new, distinctive signage which will be a marker of quality and will encourage them to take more journeys by bike or on foot.

“Beelines will be lined with zebra crossings at every side road, encouraging people to cross roads with priority and without fear.

“Planners, engineers and, most importantly, local people in each council area led on creating the first draft of these plans, which will evolve in the months and years ahead. By involving local people from the very first stage, and enabling them to inform the details of each proposed route and crossing, we’ll get the outcome they need, not what we think they need.

“That’s why we’ve taken the decision to create a first draft then immediately make it available to the public. This will be Greater Manchester’s network and it’s important that residents’ voices are the loudest, that they own it from start to finish.”

The plans published today have a combined budget of around £500 million and represent a first step in the planned £1.5 billion investment. Andy Burnham made the decision in March to allocate £160 million of the government’s Transforming Cities Fund to the project, which brings the total spend on cycling and walking in Greater Manchester to around £15 per head.

This funding is at levels seen in cities such as Copenhagen and Amsterdam, where cycling and walking make up 25% of all journeys.The first list of routes and crossings that will be built in this financial year will be published at the end of July. All 10 local authorities are now working with the GMCA and TfGM to identify sites where work can start quickly.

Salford City Council’s ambitious proposals for Chapel Street East are one of the first schemes to be submitted to the new Mayor’s Cycling and Walking Challenge fund. They will create an environment where walking and cycling are attractive alternatives to driving and will support the sustainable development of city centre Salford. The scheme is modelled on the best Dutch streets including continuous footways and cycle tracks, implied zebras, traffic-calming, streets trees and planting.

Paul Dennett, Salford City Mayor, said: “Salford has been investing in our award-winning traffic-free cycling and walking network for many years but recognise we need to do more and welcome the Cycling and Walking Commissioner’s proposals. It’s also great to see the Greater Manchester Mayor’s commitment to spend £160 million on walking and cycling over the next four years. With this level of financial commitment we should be able to positively encourage more active travel in Salford and across Greater Manchester. We are confident that our ambitious plans for Chapel Street East are of the right quality and design to enable people to choose walking and cycling over using cars.”
To find out more, visit the Beelines pages on the TfGM website at www.tfgm.com/beelines .