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Grand Central tram stop

Railway stations opened in 2016Tram stops in Birmingham, West MidlandsTransport infrastructure completed in 2016
Two trams in Stephenson Street, geograph 5012475 by John Sutton
Two trams in Stephenson Street, geograph 5012475 by John Sutton

Grand Central tram stop is a tram stop on the city-centre extension of Line 1 of the West Midlands Metro. It opened on 30 May 2016 as the terminus of the line on Stephenson Street outside the shopping centre from which its name was derived and Birmingham New Street station. This stop serves Birmingham New Street and Birmingham Moor Street railway stations. In October 2013 Birmingham City Council voted to extend the line, adding two additional stops beyond Grand Central, at Town Hall and Library. This opened in December 2019. In July 2022 the line was further extended to Edgbaston Village.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Grand Central tram stop (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Grand Central tram stop
Stephenson Street, Birmingham Digbeth

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Wikipedia: Grand Central tram stopContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.4786 ° E -1.8992 °
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Address

Stephenson Street

Stephenson Street
B2 4BL Birmingham, Digbeth
England, United Kingdom
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Two trams in Stephenson Street, geograph 5012475 by John Sutton
Two trams in Stephenson Street, geograph 5012475 by John Sutton
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Birmingham New Street railway station
Birmingham New Street railway station

Birmingham New Street, also known as New Street station, is the largest and busiest of the three main railway stations in Birmingham city centre, England, and a central hub of the British railway system. It is a major destination for Avanti West Coast services from London Euston, Preston, Glasgow Central and Edinburgh Waverley via the West Coast Main Line, the CrossCountry network, and for local and suburban services within the West Midlands; this includes those on the Cross-City Line between Lichfield Trent Valley, Redditch and Bromsgrove, and the Chase Line to Walsall and Rugeley Trent Valley. The three-letter station code is BHM.The station is named after New Street, which runs parallel to the station, although the station has never had a direct entrance except via the Grand Central shopping centre. Historically, the main entrance to the station was on Stephenson Street, just off New Street. As of 2022, the station has entrances on Stephenson Street, Smallbrook Queensway, Hill Street and Navigation Street. New Street is the fifth busiest railway station in the UK and the busiest outside London, with 46.5 million passenger entries and exits between April 2019 and March 2020. It is also the busiest interchange station outside London, with just over 7 million passengers changing trains at the station annually. In 2018, New Street had a passenger satisfaction rating of 92%, the third highest in the UK.The original New Street station opened in 1854. At the time of its construction, the station had the largest single-span arched roof in the world. In the 1960s, the station was completely rebuilt. An enclosed station, with buildings over most of its span and passenger numbers more than twice those it was designed for, the replacement was not popular with its users. A £550m redevelopment of the station named Gateway Plus opened in September 2015; it includes a new concourse, a new exterior facade and a new entrance on Stephenson Street.