Eccles Interchange

Eccles Interchange is a transport hub in Eccles, Greater Manchester, England. It is composed of a bus station, and a single-platform Metrolink light rail station, the latter of which is the terminus of the system's Eccles Line. It opened on 21 July 2000. It is roughly 310 metres (340 yd) away from Eccles railway station.[1]

Eccles
Metrolink
The Metrolink station at Eccles Interchange in November 2018.
Eccles
Location of Eccles in Greater Manchester
Location
PlaceEccles
Local authorityCity of Salford
Coordinates53.4830°N 2.3348°W / 53.4830; -2.3348
Grid referenceSJ779985
Platforms1
Fare zone information
Metrolink Zone2
Present statusIn operation
Operations
Original operatorManchester Metrolink
History
Opened21 July 2000

History

The Eccles line for the Metrolink was approved in 1996, with the station being built next to on Regent Street in the town centre, next to existing bus stops in the town centre. The station was opened for service on 21 July 2000,[2] while the station was given the official opening, along with the Eccles line, in January 2001, when the Princess Royal visited the town centre.[3] The new bus station was built next to the existing tram stop and opened in 2001,[4] with additional stops and shelter added adjacent to the station in 2005.[5]

Service pattern

12 minute service to Ashton-under-Lyne (via MediaCityUK at offpeak times).

Bus services

The majority of services are run by Go North West with the remainder of services run by Arriva North West, Manchester Community Transport, Diamond Bus North West and Stagecoach Manchester.

There are frequent buses running to Manchester, Pendleton, Brookhouse, Irlam, Cadishead, Seedley, Weaste, Hope Hospital/Salford Royal Hospital, Worsley and the Trafford Centre. Buses also run to Sale, Farnworth, Bolton, Swinton, Winton, Stockport and Warrington, with evening and Sunday journeys running to Wigan.

gollark: > Isolating that elsewhere is also not good for various reasons I indicated before.
gollark: That could be solved with multiple off-topics.
gollark: You have to see *some small amount* of them, which is much more manageable.
gollark: Oh, NOW it pings me somehow?
gollark: You have a reasonable point that you can be nice to people inside a conversation but (possibly inadvertently) non-nice to those outside it. I think niceness within conversations is more important, as people outside them can more easily choose not to participate in them, but this doesn't work excellently. Banning discussion of anything some people do not like reading is *a* fix for some of this, but I don't like the tradeoffs, given the wide range of things in this category. Isolating that elsewhere is also not good for various reasons I indicated before. A generalized rule-4-y approach could end up doing basically the same thing as preemptively banning it, and people seem dissatisfied with "ignore the channel for a bit". Thus, I'm unsure of how the issue can be solved nicely and it's worth actually investigating the options.

References

  1. Google Maps distance measurement
  2. "Metrolink - History" (PDF). Metrolink. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 March 2009. Retrieved 18 July 2010.
  3. "Manchester Metrolink - News 2001". Light Rail Transit Association. Archived from the original on 1 July 2011. Retrieved 18 July 2010.
  4. "Greater Manchester Transport Campaign - November 2007 issue" (PDF). National Alliance Against Tolls. Retrieved 18 July 2010.
  5. "The £250,000 bus shelter". Manchester Evening News. Retrieved 18 July 2010.
Preceding station   Manchester Metrolink   Following station
TerminusEccles – Ashton-under-Lyne Line



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