| Re: Church Fenton residents fear being stranded if bridge demolished Posted by grahame at 07:23, 9th November 2025 | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
The headline and picture reminded me of Pilning.
Except that there they took the bridge away, permanently, and provided no alternative - resulting in a withdrawal of all westbound trains. I note that more recently the car park has been provided with a heavy security gate, and the 8 parking spaces advertised at the time are no longer available.
| Church Fenton residents fear being stranded if bridge demolished Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 07:04, 9th November 2025 | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
From the BBC:

Residents in a North Yorkshire village say they will be left stranded if a railway footbridge is removed before a new road bridge is finished.
Network Rail plans to demolish the Church Fenton footbridge as part of the Transpennine Route Upgrade between Manchester, Huddersfield, Leeds and York.
The residents said removing the footbridge before a new road bridge is finished would isolate part of the community and urged Network Rail to halt plans until the road bridge is open.
The village has one other route across the railway line, a staffed level crossing, which can mean long waits at the gates.
Resident Sophie Nabhan-Sandison said she crosses the railway line at least six times a day during the week to take her three-year-old daughter to nursery. She said: "Imagine having conditional access to your property and conditional access to leave. It's not a matter of someone can just come and open the gates. It's highly conditional on what trains are running, how many trains are running. There could be a significant wait."
Network Rail said the bridge needed to be demolished because it was too narrow and too low for the additional track and electrification required for the upgrade. The new road bridge is due to be completed by mid-December, the company said.
Network Rail added the level crossing would stay open during the works for vehicles and pedestrians and be operated by crossing keepers, while delivery and utility vehicles would be guided through the new highway bridge.
(BBC article continues)














