Welshpool & Llanfair Railway celebrate Disability First project

Michael Holden - Editor Add a Comment 4 Min Read
'The Earl' awaits departure from Welshpool Raven Square // Credit: RailAdvent

A celebration at the Welshpool & Llanfair Light Railway's Llanfair Caereinion station on Sunday 28th July marked the successful completion of the line's ‘Disability First' project.

This was a major investment that has helped open up the popular Mid-Wales tourist attraction to less-able visitors.

In early 2016 the W&LLR was awarded £42,500 as part of the £1 million Heritage and Community Rail Tourism Innovation competition, run by the Challenge Fund of the Department for Transport and the Rail Safety & Standards Board (RSSB).

The railway's Disability First project aimed to improve access to trains for wheelchair-bound passengers – at the time the restricted dimensions of the narrow-gauge rolling stock and the use of wheelchair ramps meant that only manual wheelchairs could be accepted on trains.

The funding firstly allowed the W&LLR to invest in two specialist wheelchair lifts, which were based at its two terminal stations and immediately proved both more comfortable for visitors to use and easier and safer for the railway's volunteer train crews to operate.

Phase two of the project, expertly managed by W&LLR member Philip Crook, saw the line's two former Hungarian State Railways ‘MAV' bogie carriages sent for modifications at specialist Rampart Engineering, in Barrow Hill near Chesterfield.

Each carriage had one of its end balconies extended to allow access to the larger wheelchairs now used by most people with mobility issues. The doors and internal layout of the carriages were also changed, the former fixed seating replaced by tip-up versions.

The two carriages were also repainted with funding from W&LLR resources, while the grant also covered the building of accommodation for the wheelchair lifts when not in use.

One of the modified carriages went into service in 2018 and the other joined it in time for the start of the 2019 season.

At Llanfair on Sunday the official conclusion of the project was marked by the High Sheriff of Powys, David Lloyd Peate, cutting a symbolic barrier ribbon across the entrance to one of the carriages.

What did the officials say?

W&LLR general manager Charles Spencer said:

“The new seats allow total flexibility which was an important part of the project. We want our less-able travellers to enjoy a fully inclusive journey, not segregated into their own compartment.”

“It has not just been wheelchair users who have welcomed the changes, many less able-bodied visitors, those using walkers or canes for example and who otherwise would struggle with the carriage steps, have been able to stand on the lifts and rise to carriage level in safety and comfort.”

“This was a project properly managed and delivered to plan – it will enable more visitors to travel in comfort with us, which we are delighted about, while the railway will also benefit as a result,”

David Peate said:

“This project is already a huge success,” Mr Peate said. “I have seen the smiles and delight on the faces of those who have already used the lifts, including the families of wheelchair users as they are being elevated onto the carriages.

“This has been a big investment for the W&LLR which will open up new experiences for so many people, and I congratulate the railway for taking the initiative.”

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