Showing posts with label Bromborough Rake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bromborough Rake. Show all posts

Saturday, 21 January 2012

The Rakes: Progress

It started with a kettle.

The BF's mum - who lives in the flat below ours and, in a hilarious twist, doesn't realise her son is gay - broke her kettle.  He walked in one morning to find it billowing steam like Puffing Billy.  Since she's elderly, we headed to our nearest retail behemoth to get her a replacement.

The Currys at Bromborough is roughly the size of Andorra, and features enough electronics options to get a gadget freak like me drooling.  After fondling the DSLRs and coveting an iPhone, we bought a kettle and headed into the car park.

"Do you know what?" I said to the BF.  "I'm not coming home."

"Ever?" he said, with what I hope wasn't glee.

"I'm going to do some stations."

It's been a while.  Not for lack of desire.  I nearly went out a couple of times last week, heading for Acton Bridge, but they were miserable mornings and so the prospect of getting an 8am train just didn't appeal.  Here I was though, in Bromborough, with an uncollected station just a few minutes walk away.  I couldn't resist.


It's more than a few minutes walk, actually.  First you have to trek across the soulless plains of the retail park, then cross the A41, just to get to Bromborough village itself.  It's a dinky little enclave, and surprisingly busy.  In most places the presence of a massive retail park would devastate the local shops, but here they've carved out a niche for the kind of homely, small products you can't get in Bensons for Beds or Comet.  There's Muffs, the award winning butcher with the snigger-worthy name, and real hardware stores, and coffee shops, and locally-owned clothes shops.  The Co-op provided a more ethical alternative to the sprawling Asda across the way.  There was even a 1960s precinct, with a Boots and an Italian restaurant, Roberto's.


It underlined the fact that, no matter how hard the Council tries, the Wirral will never be one entity.  It's not a single body, like a normal city, but a series of tiny towns thrown together through geographical convenience.  Birkenhead's the biggest centre, but if you lived in Bromborough or Wallasey or West Kirby or Heswall you'd have no need to ever visit it.  It'd just be somewhere you passed under on your way to Liverpool.  It makes you realise that the Council should just give up on its attempts to unify the peninsula - like its ridiculous bid for city status back in 2002 - and instead embrace the differences.  Stop with homogenisation and instead show it for what it is - colliding city states, brushing up against one another but never merging.

Oddly, the nearest station to the village centre isn't Bromborough, but Bromborough Rake, at the end of the long straight road of the same name.  It passes through one of those wonderful Council estates.  The ones that were built with true optimism in mind.  They took the lessons from the Garden City Movement and applied it to Corporation housing.


Long straight roads, with grass verges at the roadside, intermingle with symmetrically curved avenues.  Big solid red brick houses with generous gardens overlook communal greens and playgrounds.  Shopping precincts and pubs all provided.  My nan lived on one of these estates her whole life, bringing up children and grandchildren there, and there was always something impressive about the estate's spaciousness.  Plus, if I'm honest, all those symmetrical roads appealed to my OCD.


It's a shame the greens are now blighted by "No Ball Game" signs.  It's incredibly mean-spirited.  A bit like building a fairground then putting up a sign saying "No riding on the roller coaster".  What else are you meant to do on those big expanses of flat turf?  Barbecue?  Go for a perambulation round the edge?  At least teenagers playing football aren't sniffing glue or smashing up bus stops.

Pass a row of shops with half the store fronts shuttered - including the copyright baiting "Sunny D's" - and you reach Bromborough Rake station.  This wasn't an original halt on the line.  It opened when the line to Hooton was electrified in the mid-80s, and it shows.  The building's minimalist to the point of barely existing, just a brown box with a ticket window in it.  You could build it out of Lego and you wouldn't even have to reach for your specialist bricks.


Still, the ticket lady was friendly and jolly, and it served its purpose.


To reach the platforms you head down a long ramp which, on the southbound side, takes the place of what used to be the third and fourth tracks.  These were cut back decades ago and instead you find yourself wandering through mature trees and bushes.  Combined with the woodlands behind the northbound platform, and its position at the foot of a cutting, there's it a surprisingly rural feel.  Not easy when you're metres from a massive housing estate.


One steamy train later (inside I mean - it was electric like all the other trains) and I was at Bromborough station.  This is a vintage Victorian station, though why they built it quite so far from the village centre baffles me.  It's even clearer here that there were once four tracks, as the footbridge looks unbalanced and a bit lost without the third stairway.


It's nice inside though, like Hooton's old footbridge.  Only dry.


The building's a little Victorian gem as well.  It's interesting to note how the attitude to passengers shifted between Bromborough and Bromborough Rake.  Their footprint is more or less the same, the design - a square ticket office with a footbridge - is similar, but at the older station the travellers are sheltered from the rain and wind.  You don't queue in the rain here, and your passage to the platform is warm and clean.


Lovely though it was, Bromborough's best feature was tucked away next to the Photo-Me booth.


A station cat!  A bloody marvellous station cat!  Ok, he wasn't there, but just knowing he exists cheered me immensely.  A little internet research reveals he's a ginger tom called Owen.  Wonderful stuff.  I'm really disappointed I didn't see him, as he seems to be a little star.

I was so excited about the station cat, I completely forgot to take a picture of myself in front of the sign. I had to turn back ten minutes later and come back, even more soaked through, for the snap.


I was walking south, towards Eastham Rake station.  I always knew I'd have to do these three stations as a set.  Their names form a lovely Venn diagram.


This sort of thing pleases me.

Plymyard Avenue was a cut above the Council houses of Bromborough Rake.  These were detached manses, four and five bedrooms of pre-war exclusivity.  It was a stroll through Metro-land, with Tudorbethan houses surrounded by mature hedges and high walls with security gates.


The verges here didn't have signs banning the local kids from games of footie; they didn't need to.  The disapproving stares of the local Marples were a far greater deterrence.

Behind some of the houses, by the railway line, the owners had sold portions of their back lawn to developers.  Tiny closes of orange bricked semis were squeezed in, each with a beach towel sized garden and a square of parking.  In some places the builders had just given in to the size constraints and built a block of flats who could peer down into the back windows of the posh houses on the avenue.

The road began to take a downward slide as I got further and further from the station.  The detached houses became smaller and separated by alleys instead of gardens; they became Modernist seventies cubes instead of period throwbacks.  And sometimes they just couldn't hide the fact they weren't in a very nice place to live.


It was lunchtime, and South Wirral High School was filling the neighbourhood with the smell of school dinners.  I was amazed that it smelt exactly the same as my old school dinner hall.  I never ate there - I went home at lunchtime for a sandwich and to feed the dog - but the whole building reeked of greasy chips and oil.  I thought that in the modern, health-conscious 21st century I'd have been hit by the scent of tuna nicoise and Quorn burgers, but no, it still turned my stomach in exactly the same way it always did.  In a further two fingers to Jamie Oliver, there was a queue of kids outside the chippy in the neighbouring precinct.

I was accompanied by the noise of the motorway now.  The M53 curls round at Eastham, and the houses here nestled in the crook of its elbow.  Combined with the sound of Merseyrail trains, it was like a reminder that people were off out, elsewhere, going places.

On Eastham Rake itself, a plaque memorialised a young girl who'd been run down - a sobering way to end the walk.


Eastham Rake opened in 1995.  It's indirectly responsible for my Merseyrail fascination.  I moved here the same year, and I was impressed to see the map in the trains with Under Construction under its name.  It made me think that Merseyrail was a vibrant network, still developing, still modern.


The station building demonstrates the shift in attitude that had taken place since Bromborough Rake was built.  Merseytravel was re-energised and they built a large, impressive building, with a car park.  It was a real step up from the brick block that passed for a station building in 1985.


And, as you can see, it was a wet dream for the Colour Tsars.

It was a perfect spot for a station.  The motorway was close, allowing for park and ride, and there was a residential population who were unserved by Merseyrail.  The only question was where to site it: the north side of the road would mean the station was behind houses, but if they built it to the south, they'd have to build on a nature reserve, and extremely close to the motorway.

After much negotiation, the northern site won, but the residents insisted on high walls so that they retained their privacy.  Spoilsports.  I love staring in people's houses from the train.


With the grey walls and the strange shelters (only seen here and at Birkenhead Park, I think) Eastham Rake has a unique feel to it.  It's perhaps the most exciting looking station on the Wirral Line; there's a vibrancy to its design, with clean minimalist lines and good facilities.  It's a shame that Merseytravel have lost the momentum with adding new stations on the network; Headbolt Lane and Maghull North have been on the drawing board for years with still no sign of progress.


I plonked myself down in the shelter, glad to get out of the rain, and allowed myself a moment of sadness.  This was the end of the Wirral.  This was the end of everything west of the Mersey, in fact.  Those three stations meant I was almost done with the Merseyrail map.  I've got four stations left now - Leyland, Euxton Balshaw Lane, Acton Bridge and Winsford - plus the four city centre stations.  And that's it.  Not long to go.  Not long until it's all over.

Thursday, 28 October 2010

Victory!

Above is the happy smiling face of Gary Briscoe, the newly crowned winner of the Station Staff of the Year award at the RailStaff Awards. The Wirral Line Manager was nominated for the award a couple of months ago, but in a ceremony last Saturday he was given the prize by none other than Pete Waterman. I don't think Gary demeaned himself as I would have done by berating Pete for our lacklustre Eurovision entry, but that's why he's a classy award-winner and I'm not.

A hearty well done to Gary for the award - a real achievement, and on a national scale too. It's great to see great customer service rewarded in this way. I still haven't collected Bromborough Rake station, and I look forward to it now; not only to see all of his achievements in the flesh, but also to get a paparazzi-like photograph with the newly crowned King of Merseyrail!

You can see all the winners here.


Friday, 20 August 2010

And the Winner Is...

It is one of my life's ambitions to win an Oscar. And a proper Oscar, not Best Sound Editing or something. A real Academy Award, which will be presented to me by a tearful Halle Berry, and which I will accept wearing a chic tuxedo (Armani, naturally). I will thank Ms Berry profusely, then the Academy, then make a personal political statement ("Free Tibet" perhaps?), before saying that I couldn't have been named Best Actor In The World Ever without the support of everyone I ever met, but actually, I'm pretty amazing, and probably would have done it without them anyway. The Kodak Theatre will rise to its feet in applause, and my fellow nominees (Robert de Niro, Al Pacino, Daniel Day Lewis and Russell Tovey) will graciously accept that I am in fact marvellous, and they deserved to lose to someone as fantastic as me.

This may not happen.

In reality, I've never won anything at work. I tell a lie: I seem to remember winning a Cadbury's Creme Egg while I worked at WH Smith in Birkenhead. I can't remember what for. I don't think it was for being the Best Actor In The World Ever, anyway.

I should have joined the rail industry as it turns out they have an annual beano: the RailStaff Awards. Due to be presented in Birmingham this October, the awards acknowledge the contribution of staff from across the rail network, and give a reward to those who go above and beyond the call of duty. And what prizes! 3d tvs, a New York break, a trip on the Orient Express... it's better than an Oscar in fact, as all you get there is a manky old lump of metal. Penelope Cruz didn't get an iPad for being Best Supporting Actress, did she?

I'm happy to report that Merseyrail has not one, but two nominees in the category of Station Staff of the Year. The first is Craig Munnerley, who by day works at the MtoGo in Hamilton Square. He's been nominated for his work with Liverpool Pride, and in particular, for getting Merseyrail to become such an integral part of the event. Craig helped to get them involved both financially and also in promoting the day across the network. It turns out that he was also the extremely enthusiastic guy on the microphone on the Merseyrail stand - the one who caused me to run a mile. A lifetime of cynicism has meant that I recoil whenever people are happy and keen - I'm far better at standing in the background, raising an eyebrow and pursing my lips.

Craig on the other hand is far more of a "doer", and his efforts at getting a rousing chorus of "Oops Upside Your Head" have now been rewarded with a nomination at the RailStaff awards. Well done him!

The other nominee is Gary Briscoe, who is the Duty Manager at Bromborough Rake station. The station backs onto a nature reserve, and Gary has been working with the wardens there to encourage wildlife - there are now nesting boxes on the trees. He's also been nominated for his community work, including helping a terminally ill man nearby and driving a drunk woman home after she collapsed outside the station. I like to hear stories like this, mainly because, as a professional drunk myself, I like to think that people will help me out when I'm sprawled in the gutter somewhere. I'll make sure that next time I'm comatose after too many JD and Cokes I'll jump off at Bromborough Rake.

Gary also proved his worth as a railway man, spotting a track defect and getting it fixed overnight, sparing the morning commuters all kinds of hell in the process. In recognition of his contributions, Gary's been nominated for the Outstanding Customer Service Award in addition to the Station Staff Award.

Both of them are worthy nominees but sadly, there's only one winner. You can vote for who you want to win the Station Staff of the Year Award here. Vote early, vote often, that's what I say. They're both clearly marvellous chaps and fully deserving of the accolades. It's also good to see Merseyrail itself getting some kudos for its customer service skills. I'll keep an eye out for the results of the awards when they're announced on October 23rd.

In the meantime, I'll be in front of the mirror, practising my speech.