Huddersfield Viaduct

Huddersfield Viaduct
A stone viaduct with a road in the foreground, and businesses occupying the arches of the viaduct
Huddersfield Viaduct
Coordinates53°39′11″N 1°46′52″W / 53.653°N 1.781°W / 53.653; -1.781
OS grid referenceSE145173
CarriesHuddersfield line
Other name(s)Hillhouse Viaduct
OwnerNetwork Rail
Characteristics
Total length663 yards (606 m)
Height53 feet (16 m) (Maximum)
No. of spans47
Rail characteristics
No. of tracks2 (4 by 2030s)[note 1]
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
ElectrifiedOverhead catenary (2030s)
History
Construction start10 October 1845
Construction cost£49,000 (1847)
Opened3 August 1847
Rebuilt1883
Statistics
Listed Building – Grade II
Designated28 September 1978
Reference no.1223531
Location
Map

Huddersfield Viaduct (or Hillhouse Viaduct)[2] is a railway bridge to the north-east of Huddersfield railway station in West Yorkshire, England. The viaduct carries the Huddersfield Line connecting Huddersfield with Dewsbury, Leeds, and York eastwards, and Manchester and Liverpool westwards. The viaduct was built to carry two lines, but was widened in the 1880s to take four tracks, and then reduced to two tracks in 1970. Huddersfield Viaduct is less well-known than other viaducts in the Kirklees area as they are higher, but Huddersfield Viaduct is the longest in the Kirklees district.

As part of the Transpennine Route Upgrade (TRU), the viaduct will again have four lines along the whole 663 yards (606 m), and will additionally be electrified with a 25 kV overhead catenary by the 2030s.

  1. ^ Johnston, Howard (13 December 2023). "£3.9bn for trans-Pennine route after HS2 cancellation". Rail Magazine. No. 998. Peterborough: Bauer Media. p. 6. ISSN 0953-4563.
  2. ^ Biddle, Gordon; Nock, O. S. (1983). The railway heritage of Britain: 150 years of railway architecture and engineering. London: M. Joseph. p. 35. ISBN 0718123557.


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