Growth Track 360 - improved railways to attract tourism local MPs back direct HS2 trains for Chester and North Wales
Growth Track 360 release
The House of Commons Welsh Affairs Committee has published written evidence from business and local authority leaders in the Growth Track partnership explaining how public transport is a key aspect of the visitor economy and how a step change is required in quality, capacity, speed and resilience.
Submitted following a call for evidence for the Committee’s inquiry into Wales as a global tourist destination, Growth Track 360’s paper says that North Wales and Cheshire (in particular, the City of Chester) have the potential to become ‘must see’ destinations for a greater number of visitors from within the UK and especially from overseas.
To increase the attractiveness of the cross-border region whilst reducing congestion, a package of improvements to public transport infrastructure and services is required including – in the longer term – electrification of the Chester and North Wales Main Line providing access for HS2 trains from London Euston calling at Old Oak Common (for London Heathrow Airport), Birmingham and Manchester Airports.
Publication of Growth Track 360’s evidence comes in the same week that the House of Commons approved a Second Reading for the High-Speed Rail (Crewe – Manchester) Bill which will, when enacted, authorise construction of the next stage of HS2.
In the debate on Monday, 20 June, local MPs Christian Matheson (Labour, City of Chester) and Dr James Davies (Conservative, Vale of Clwyd) both made the case for electrification of the existing railway between Crewe, Chester and North Wales. Dr Davies referred in the House of Commons to the “amazing graphical interpretation” of how an HS2 train might look passing Conwy Castle commissioned by Growth Track 360 from Chester-based Ukrainian artist Nataliia Marchuk.
Growth Track 360 Chair and Leader of Cheshire West and Chester Council, Councillor Louise Gittins, said:
Growth Track 360 Vice Chair and Leader of Flintshire Council, Councillor Ian Roberts, said: