Stockport hasn’t always been a hive of happenings, but if there’s one thing it has always been home to, it's ambition. Dubbed the ‘New Berlin’, the brick-clad textile town has been transformed by an influx of hotspots, independents and boutique everythings. Now, the momentum behind Stockport has new fuel, with the incoming Metrolink expansion. Here’s our rundown of what’s coming and why it matters.
The BRIK-Down
The rumours have been confirmed, a £2.5bn injection of funds from the government is bringing the tram network to Stockport. In a move that could shift urban mobility for the whole region, TfGM is expanding its Metrolink system. This is good news for residents and visitors alike, laying the groundwork for a more connected, greener future that will keep the city moving and its economy growing. Stockport is far from a footnote in the plans; in fact, it’s practically the epicentre.
The Route Ahead
There are three proposed routes, and so far they read like a study in thoughtful urban design.
Core Line: A classic tram extension from East Didsbury to Stockport Town Centre.
Hazel Grove Branch: A tram-train hybrid using the underutilised Adswood freight line.
Marple Loop: Possibly converting rail to tram-train through Bredbury and Romiley.
The Big Picture
Central Stockport is in the midst of a not-so-quiet boom. Over 4000 new homes, the rising icon that is The Underbank and a wave of small businesses in streets once sidelined by retail decline. Metrolink is the connective tissue that makes this growth sustainable, and attractive for investment.
For residents, it promises a future with frictionless travel, where tapping into the city’s jobs, schools, cafés and culture doesn’t mean busy, expensive services or reaching for the car keys.
For planners and policymakers, it brings infrastructure that ticks all the boxes. Supporting cleaner air, denser footfall, sharper investment and a richer quality of life. No small thing when you consider Greater Manchester’s commitment to carbon neutrality by 2038.
“Building on our strong track record, we can now move at pace to deliver the next phase of the Bee Network – creating the UK’s first fully electric, zero emission integrated public transport system by 2030”
– Andy Burnham
The Next Stop
Like Rome wasn’t built in a day, Stockport won’t get its full network until 2030-something. But there have already been many strategic milestones in the run-up to the proposed timeline – a signal of real progression.
- March 2023: Trailblazer Devolution Deal
TfGM given power to integrate rail and tram networks fully by 2030. - June 2023: Next Stop Stockport Initiative
Local transport planning and regeneration blueprints backed by Stockport Council - July 2024: Greater Manchester Rapid Transit Strategy
Stockport identified as “Southern Gateway” - Jan 2025: Andy Burnham’s Bee Network Commitment
8 rail lines integrated by 2028 - 2025: Strategic Outline Business Case development begins
- 2026: Infrastructure safeguarding (Greek Street/bridge upgrades)
- 2027: Five-Year Delivery Plan confirmed
- 2028: Bee Network rail integrated
- 2028 and beyond: Stockport tram construction
- Early 2030s: Service set to begin
Our Take
TfGM’s expansion will be a recalibration of how people and investment flows, which will see Stockport reinforced as a destination in its own right, and positioned as an anchor in Greater Manchester’s expanding vision. Is it ambitious? Yes. Is it achievable? If funding aligns and the political appetite holds, absolutely. Brik will be watching.