Are you sitting comfortably?

The existing seating at Common Garden Street in the city centre.

Passengers using one of Lancaster’s busiest bus stops will soon find waiting for their buses a more comfortable experience following an initiative by local councillors assisted by the Bus Users’ Group.

Many elderly passengers and people with disabilities find the existing seating uncomfortable and difficult to use due to it being too close to the ground and with a lack of armrests other than at the ends. As the image above shows there are also large gaps between the benches and therefore insufficient seating for all the passengers using these busy city centre bus stops.

Requests for improvement.

Following requests by passengers to city councillors Gina Dowding and Caroline Jackson to improve the seating Cllr. Abi Mills (who is also LBUG’s vice-chair) was called upon in her role as the council’s disability champion to get something done. Abi consulted with groups representing people with disabilities and through working with them, and after considerable research, was able to identify the sort of seating that was needed.

Solution found

The “Broxap Ilford” seating to be installed is made by a family-owned business based in Staffordshire. Six three-seat units, totalling eighteen seats will be installed at the Common Garden Street stops and will be similar to those below, except they will be painted green.

The new “Broxap Ilford” seating that will be installed.

The seats are higher off the ground than the benches they will replace and the arms will make it easier for people to get in and out of them. The total amount of seating at the stops will also be increased.

Whose job is it?

As with most things involving buses and bus stops the process of purchasing and installing the seats wasn’t straightforward. Permission and agreement had to be obtained from Lancashire County Council as the highway authority, Lancaster City Council, which is responsible for the “public realm” within the city and which also has an involvement in bus stops and also Marketgate, whose property they adjoin and who had provided the original seating and presumably still owned it.

And who is going to pay?

This involved considerable negotiation that took several months and once agreement had been reached it just left the small matter of who was going to pay for it! The City Council had no provision in its budget and the proprietors of the Marketgate site said that whilst they were happy to see the seating replaced they were also unable to fund it, whilst Lancashire County Council originally said that its budget would not stretch to funding the high standard of seating that Cllr Mills and the Bus Users’ Group felt was needed.

Clllr. Mills then approached the Bus Users’ Group for assistance in identifying an alternative funding source. Her approach was timely, because the Group is now a member of the Stakeholders’ Forum of the Lancashire “Enhanced Partnership” through which the County Council and the county’s bus operators work together to improve bus services.

Bus Service Improvement Plan

The Group was able to advise that the Partnership had access to money through the Bus Service Improvement Plan allocated specifically to enhance bus stops. Armed with this information Cllr Mills was able to get the county council to agree to fund the full cost of the chosen seating and to meet the costs of installing it. They even allowed Cllr Mills to choose the colour of the new seats (which will be green!).

Cllr Abi Mills, the Disability Champion at the City Council said:
“I am so pleased that the new seats will be installed soon. It is incredibly important to ensure that we make our environment as accessible as possible for all, and I’d like to thank both the County and City Councils for their support on this project”.

Co-operation

The exercise is a welcome, but all too rare, example of the city and county councils working together rather than seeking to pass the buck and claim that any task is the other’s responsibility. From the Bus Users’ Group’s point of view we were happy to have the opportunity to be involved. The humble bus stop is usually ignored by bus companies and local authorities alike, except when they want to move it or do away with it altogether when it gets in the way, but we see it as the bus industry’s shop window and the point of entry to the bus system for new and existing customers and we are always happy to advise or assist anyone seeking to improve their local stop.

Shake-up on the Sixes

The New Year will see a re-organisation of Stagecoach services 6 and 6A that link the Westgate area with Lancaster and Morecambe, which will see service 33 replaced by two new routes to give an improved service and new links to Bare and Branksome.

     Service 33 will disappear under the new arrangements

Here is a summary of the changes, which will come into effect on 14th January 2024

6A Lancaster – Westgate – Morecambe

The through journeys between Lancaster and Morecambe will continue as service 6A with only minor changes to timetables, the biggest being the retiming of late evening journeys to run five minutes earlier than now and of Sunday trips to run eight to ten minutes later.

6 Morecambe – Westgate

One of the two service 6 journeys each hour between Morecambe bus station and Westgate will be renumbered 6B and will continue to Branksome, Lancaster Road, Sainsbury’s, Burlington Avenue, Beaufort Road, Strickland Drive, Lonsdale Road, Bare Lane, Oak Avenue, Princess Crescent and Marine Road East and the promenade to Central Drive for the Festival Market and Morecambe bus station.

       The new service 6B route will be an anti-clockwise circular.

33 Morecambe – Bare Circular

Service 33 will be replaced by new service 6C which will run from Morecambe bus station via Central Drive, Euston Road, Thornton Road, Lord Street, Marine Road East, Bare, Princes Crescent, Oak Avenue, Bare Lane, Lonsdale Road, Strickland Drive, Beaufort Road, Burlington Avenue, Lancaster Road, Sainsbury’s, Branksome, Westgate and then as the existing service 6 route to the Festival Market and Morecambe bus station.

        The new service 6C route will be a clockwise circular

The new pattern retains the two buses an hour between Lancaster, Westgate and Morecambe as well as the four buses an hour between Westgate and Morecambe during the day time, although passengers will have to get used to the Westage bus being either a 6, 6A, 6B or 6C! 

Passengers on most of the current 33 route will see the number of buses more than doubled (although the two buses an hour from the bus station will leave at similar times). They will benefit, however, from later departures on service 6C at 1734 and 1834 to Bare and Branksome, whilst the current 160-minute gap in the service on schooldays between 1400 and 1640 is eliminated, with only the 1539 service 6B journey running “school holidays only” and new 6C journeys at 1434,1534 and 1634 throughout the year.

The first bus of the day will be at 0908 from Branksome and 0913 from Bare (currently 0929 and 0935) and the last bus from Bare to Morecambe at 1808 (1813 from Branksome).

Altogether, the number of buses to Bare and Branksome increases from 8 on schooldays / 11 on Saturdays and school holidays to 18 on schooldays and 19 on Saturdays and school holidays.

New Links

The new services open up a number of new journey possibilities for passengers such as

Bare and Branksome to Westgate and the West End and vice-versa.

Westgate and Branksome to the full length of Morecambe promenade between Bare and Regent Road.

Buses in both directions between Sainsbury’s and Westgate, Branksome and Bare.

Commercial or Contract?

Not that it will bother the passengers, but the new services are an interesting mix of commercial and contract operation. The 6 and 6A are fully-commercial services, provided by Stagecoach without any assistance from the county council. The 33 on the other hand was a fully-supported service paid for by Lancashire County Council and which until 2021 was operated by Kirkby Lonsdale Coach Hire. Stagecoach won the contract on retendering in March of that year with an expiry date of October 2023 and it is not clear whether the contract has been extended or whether Stagecoach is now to run the whole service commercially.

The new timetable can be read and downloaded here: 

Services 6 6A 6B 6C from 14 January 2024