King's Heath businesses excited to see new Camp Hill line stations nearly finished after a decade of talk
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Transport for West Midlands bosses said work to build the Camp Hill Line stations at Kings Heath, Moseley and Pineapple Road is on track to finish by the end of the year.
There has been talk of a new station, off the High Street in Kings Heath, for around a decade.
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But the project has been beset with delays and was put back twice – once from its original finish date of 2023 and then again last year due to budget pressures of £121 million as a result of soaring costs.
People living and working in the area said they were looking forward to the new station not only bringing extra footfall but also helping to ease congestion on the busy main road.
Matt Powell, manager of Enjoy Kings Heath BID, said: “We’re excited to see it nearing completion.
“We are looking forward to the benefits it will bring to Kings Heath High Street.
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Hide Ad“Whilst there have been delays, it’s a project which has been talked about for 10 years and we haven’t had a station here for 70 so ultimately most people – businesses included – think it can only be a good thing for the High Street.
“I think the opportunity for us is getting more people here more easily from other parts of the city.”
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Road works and lane closures to enable the project to progress have caused some delays in the area.
Mr Powell said: “Obviously we understand you can’t complete a project of this scale without causing some knock on challenges which we’re working with our businesses to try to communicate back to them as much as possible.
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Hide AdIt’s been a challenge. But at the same time, you can’t have an omelette without cracking eggs so we’ve got to go through this if we want a new station. We’re looking forward to it opening.”
Joe Fearn, aged 39, who runs Circus Mash has grown up in the area. He said: “It’s exciting. I’ve grown up in Kings Heath and I live here and there’s not been a train station.
“I run a circus company and we provide classes for young people and circuses are not really accessible around the West Midlands so there’s a lot of people who contact us from far but can’t really come to evening classes.
“What the train station will provide is the accessibility to widen the circus for the Midlands community. People want to get involved in this and there is a big demand for this now.
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Hide Ad“There is a disconnect. It is a busy High Street. There is the 50 bus route which runs from Druids Heath. But our closest train station is Kings Norton which is a bus ride away anyway. This now connects everything.”


And Claire Rinet, who runs CDC Dance Ltd on the High Street, said: “As well as being a Kings Heath business owner, I have lived here for 20 years.
“The area has changed massively in that time, certainly in terms of the growth of the High Street and the variety of businesses we have here.
“Having a train station is going to attract more businesses and greater footfall as a result.
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Hide Ad“The key benefit for me personally is my own daughters. They are at a specialist art school which is over by Millennium Point.
“To be able to get a train straight into the city centre will be revolutionary for them and their school journey.
“That’s also the key benefit for my business. I lose kids purely because they can’t get back here.
“I rarely use my car – I have got one but only use it when I’m going outside of Birmingham but once we have the station I’ll be able to get the train.”
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