Station lift kicked in by vandals just 15 months after being built: Mills Hill station exterior and damage composite

Thursday 31 Mar 2022

Station lift kicked in by vandals just 15 months after being built

Region & Route:
North West & Central
| North West & Central: North West

Vandals have kicked in the doors of a new passenger lift at Mills Hill station in Greater Manchester - just 15 months after it was installed to make platforms accessible for everyone.

Millions of pounds were spent making the station step-free to improve access to the railway for disabled people, passengers with pushchairs and those carrying heavy luggage.

The facilities only fully opened in January 2021, but senseless vandals have now kicked the lift doors off its mechanism.

The inside and outside doors now won't align meaning the lift can’t be operated safely.

Glass in one of the doors has also been smashed and has been taped up to keep station users safe.

Fitting new doors will cost an estimated £10,000 and take the 15-month-old lift out of service for many weeks.

Passengers can still travel into Manchester by using the ramp on platform one. However people who need step-free access are unable to access the Rochdale-bound platform two.

Phil James, Network Rail’s North West route director, said: “I’m appalled that this careless act of vandalism has cut rail travel off from people with additional needs who we worked so hard to improve Mills Hill station for.

“This reckless crime affects real people who need step-free access to travel and also taxpayers, as the thousands of pounds needed for repairs will come from the public purse. We’re working hard with the lift engineers to get it back in service as quickly as we can.”

Chris Jackson, regional director of Northern, said: “I can’t imagine why someone would take pleasure in causing damage to new infrastructure that is designed to make travel more accessible for all.

“We will do everything we can with Network Rail to get these facilities back into operation as soon as possible.”

The station upgrade was part of the Department for Transport's 'Access for All' programme, which is a scheme to improve accessibility at railway stations nationwide.

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