Thursday 16 Oct 2025
Upgrades underway for oldest in-situ cast-iron railway bridge in the world
- Region & Route:
- Eastern
Crawshaw Woods Bridge near Leeds is the oldest cast-iron railway bridge in the world to still be in use over a live railway, and last weekend (October 11-12), engineers carefully moved it as part of the multi-billion-pound Transpennine Route Upgrade.
A bespoke arched framework was constructed to support the 191-year-old Grade II listed structure, before it was slowly manoeuvred in one piece using a specialist 128-wheel self-propelled modular vehicle.
Following the successful movement of bridge, the railway line was restored and re-opened to trains on schedule on the Monday morning.
The cast iron arched girders, bridge deck, parapets, and original iron railings will now be repaired and renovated off-site while additional layers of stone are added to the bridge’s abutments to raise its height by 1.5 metres.
This will create room for the electrification of the Transpennine main line between York, Leeds and Manchester, allowing faster, greener and quieter electric trains to run, before the restored structure is carefully reinstated in Spring 2026.
Lucy Grogan, sponsor for TRU, said:
“Great care has gone into the upgrade of Crawshaw Woods Bridge. It's Grade II listed status and title as the world's oldest cast-iron bridge over a railway meant that, like other structures of historic importance across the route, extra factors are considered when carrying out vital upgrades.
"It is fitting that this work has started during Railway200, which is celebrating rail’s remarkable past, its role today, and its importance to a sustainable future. We are taking great care to preserve the bridge’s character while making space for a modern, electrified railway.”
Opened in 1834, Crawshaw Woods Bridge has spanned the reign of eight monarchs and is recognised by Historic England as one of the most significant structures on the Transpennine route. It has overlooked trains steaming into Leeds during the city’s textile production boom during the Industrial Revolution, and served as a main access bridge to the nearby Barnbow Munitions Factory during the First World War.
Notes to Editors
The Transpennine Route Upgrade (TRU) is a multi-billion-pound railway programme that will transform journeys across the North, better connecting towns and cities like Manchester, Huddersfield, Leeds and York.
TRU fast facts
- TRU is a £10.7bn railway upgrade programme
- Once complete, TRU aims to halve the time lost to delays
- There are currently 70 worksites across the 70-mile route
- TRU will deliver:
- The full electrification of the line
- Double the amount of tracks in key locations, allowing fast trains to overtake stopping services
- Implement digital signalling to increase speed and capacity
- Improve all 23 stations on the route, supporting accessibility
- TRU has over 5000 staff, with 85% coming from within 40 miles of the route – TRU will have created over 8000 jobs across the duration of the programme
- TRU is expanding freight provision, opening 15 extra freight paths and widening tunnels so shipping containers can travel between ports on the east and west coasts via rail, removing over 1000 lorries a day from the busy roads across the Pennines
Key milestones to date
- Electric train services now running between Manchester and Stalybridge, and York and Church Fenton
- New station built at Morley
- Introduction of a fully accessible platform 2 at Castleford station to support diverted services between York and Manchester
- £100m upgrade of diversionary routes completed ahead of major works across the Transpennine Route, increasing railway resilience
- Upgrade of Hope Valley line complete, with a second platform built at Dore & Totley, as well as 1km of additional track at Bamford to reduce bottlenecks
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Journalists
Ewan Bayliss
Communications Executive
Network Rail
ewan.bayliss@networkrail.co.uk
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We own, operate and develop Britain's railway infrastructure; that's 20,000 miles of track, 30,000 bridges, tunnels and viaducts and the thousands of signals, level crossings and stations. We run 20 of the UK's largest stations while all the others, over 2,500, are run by the country's train operating companies.
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