Halifax Bus Station May 2018 and a Ghostly Tale.
The first bus station to be opened in Halifax was to be found at Ward's End, opposite the Victoria Theatre. Opened in the 1940s, it was nothing like a modern-designed bus station, offering only limited stops. This was soon obsolete due to increasing bus travel, and in 1954 Halifax was to gain its first (proper) bus station at Cross Fields, an area of slums recently cleared known as the City.
In the 1980's, Halifax's bus station at Cross Fields had outgrown the site it occupied, with many buses now stopping in the town centre with their passengers never visiting the station. The local authority targeted a site nearby to develop between Northgate and Winding Road, and in October 1989, at a cost of £2 million, the new bus station was opened, with the former Sion Sunday School, Congregation Church, and Jubilee Hall being incorporated into its development.
This bus station was recently demolished to allow for the development of a new bus station on the site. At a cost of £17.7 million, a new bus station serving Halifax will open in 2023.
A couple of recent stories to feature the bus station include the discovery of bones during its recent redevelopment and an interesting ghostly tale from a waiting passenger; this can be read at the bottom of the pictures.
These pictures were taken in May 2018 using a Nikon d3300 SLR camera. They can be seen below and on Clickasnap in full size, resolution, and unwatermarked.
As I alluded to earlier, there is a story about the bus station being the subject of ghostly happenings. A man waiting for his bus to depart saw two women approaching the bus weighed down with shopping. Upon them preparing to embark, he looked away for a moment, and when he looked back, they had disappeared completely from view on the bus and the surrounding station.
These pictures were taken on May 27, 2018. I'm not sure how much of this bus station still exists as the redevelopment works are still ongoing, with a plan to open the new bus station sometime in 2023.
Thanks for looking; please take a moment to share and follow me on social media.
All the pictures remain the copyright of Colin Green.