Misplaced Pages

Black Lake Tunnel

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
This article does not cite any sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Black Lake Tunnel" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (May 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Black Lake Tunnel is a 412-yard railway tunnel on the West Bromwich and Wednesbury border, in England.

Past

The tunnel was built by the Great Western Railway for trains travelling between Snow Hill station in Birmingham and Low Level station in Wolverhampton, and was one of two tunnels on that route, the other being Hockley Tunnel.

The next stops after the Black Lake tunnel northbound was Wednesbury and Southbound was Swan Village, West Bromwich Central.

It fell out of use with the closure of the line in March 1972.

Present

In 1999, the line to Wolverhampton was re-opened as a light-rail (tram) line, the Midland Metro, with the addition of overhead electrification. There are tram stops at either end of the pair of tunnels

The Metro side of the tunnel is illuminated, to enable tram drivers to see the track ahead. The next stop northbound is Wednesbury Great Western Street tram stop, this used to be GWR Wednesbury Central Station. Southbound is Black Lake tram stop.

Location

The tunnel runs under open ground, and New Street, near its junction with the appropriately named Tunnel Road.

Coordinates

Point Coordinates
North portal 52°32′19″N 2°00′57″W / 52.53872°N 2.01588°W / 52.53872; -2.01588 (North portal)
Approx. midpoint 52°32′14″N 2°00′53″W / 52.53719°N 2.01485°W / 52.53719; -2.01485 (Approx. mid-point)
South portal 52°32′08″N 2°00′49″W / 52.53564°N 2.01371°W / 52.53564; -2.01371 (South portal)
Categories: