Much-loved cliff railway reopens to passengers

Bridgnorth Cliff railwayImage source, John Bray
Image caption,

Bridgnorth Cliff Railway is one of the country's oldest and steepest inland funicular railways

  • Published

A much-loved funicular railway has reopened after 14 months of major repairs to a retaining wall that had been damaged.

The first service on the Bridgnorth Cliff Railway in Shropshire ran at about 09:00 GMT, staff told the BBC.

The railway connects low-town to high-town and had been out of action since December 2022.

Repair work cost £750,000 with the town council, which owned the wall, partially funding it through a loan.

The service is one of the steepest cliff railways in the country and has taken people up and down the 34 metres (111ft) sandstone cliffs for more than 130 years.

Media caption,

Bridgnorth Cliff Railway to reopen after 14 months

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