Skip to main content

Manchester has £14m integrated travel funding

North-west English region progresses plans to improve buses and active travel
By Alan Dron February 10, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Bee Bikes are already available in Manchester (© Anna Regeniter | Dreamstime.com)

The UK region of Greater Manchester’s plans to create a new integrated transport network have moved a step closer to reality with the approval of a £14 million funding package.

The funding will go towards creating necessary infrastructure behind the planned Bee Network, Greater Manchester’s vision for an integrated, London-style transport system that will stitch together buses, trains, trams, cycling and walking.

The bee has long been a symbol of the city and its shared Bee Bikes are already available.

The Greater Manchester Combined Authority (GMCA) agreed in late January to approve the £14 million, which will come from a variety of national and local sources. It will be used to develop bus, cycling and walking routes.

The package is just a small part of a huge funding initiative for the Greater Manchester area that will include more than £1 billion from the UK Government’s City Regional Sustainable Transport Settlement (CRSTS).

Part of CRSTS involves new bus corridors, cycling and walking routes, alongside improved transport infrastructure and connectivity for towns and high streets.

The latest tranche of funding for the Manchester conurbation agreed in January will include money for a new bus programme to improve pinch points on main bus routes, as well as funding to build new walking and cycling networks in Oldham and Wigan.

Easing the pinch points aims to enhance passenger journey times, journey time reliability and accessibility through a mixture of delivering low-cost interventions and providing existing maintenance, including:

•    providing improved passenger waiting facilities and raised kerbs for level boarding and alighting at bus stops;
•    improving access to real-time information at key points on the network;
•    and enhancing intelligent traffic solutions to provide optimised signals, monitoring and improved information for bus and wider public transport customers.

“Momentum continues to build behind delivery of the Bee Network - the integrated, affordable and accessible public transport and active travel network for our city-region, said Vernon Everitt, transport commissioner for Greater Manchester.

“These schemes will provide much-needed improvements such as dealing with pinch points on main bus routes experiencing delays or poor journey time reliability, improved passenger waiting facilities, raised kerbs for better access at bus stops and better real-time customer information.” 
 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Congestion-busting roads boost across England
    September 15, 2014
    A widespread congestion-busting road improvement programme worth hundreds of millions of pounds has now tackled 39 bottlenecks, with more than another 80 to be completed in the next seven months. According to the Highways Agency, the US$515 million ‘pinch point’ programme will cut congestion, increase safety and improve journey times and help support the creation of 300,000 new jobs and 144,000 homes. The improvement plans, part of the biggest programme of road enhancements since the 1970s, were dra
  • Reducing climate impacts starts at the intersection, says Inrix
    September 11, 2023
    The tools to identify and reduce unnecessary delays at intersections are here – and traffic signal performance improvement is also eligible for US government funding, points out Rick Schuman of Inrix
  • New technology revolution in urban traffic control?
    January 26, 2012
    Urban traffic control is a well-defined and practised art. Nevertheless, there are technologies here and on the horizon with the potential to revolutionise how we do things. By Gavin Jackman and Andrew Kirkham, TRL, and Jason Barnes. Distributed monitoring and control of urban traffic networks and flows is nothing new. PC-based Urban Traffic Control (UTC) is now well established and operating in many locations around the world. However, it is worth considering the effects of the huge growth in the use of sm
  • New name offers new solutions
    November 26, 2013
    Pete Goldin examines Nokia’s rationale for combining its location services, digital mapping and other capabilities under the HERE brand. While it has divested itself of its mobile phone business to Microsoft, Nokia has kept hold of its HERE business unit and brand which incorporates the company’s location services with digital mapping and other capabilities. The creation of HERE is much more than rebranding as its services are heading off the map and into the cloud. “HERE offers the first location cloud