Wolverhampton bus station
Wolverhampton bus station is the first part of a major public transport interchange in the city centre of Wolverhampton, in the West Midlands region of England.
It is managed by Transport for West Midlands. Local bus services operated by various companies serve the bus station which has 19 departure stands and a single unloading stand although due to logistics in practice most buses unload at or near their departure stand. The bus station is located between Wolverhampton, St George's, West Midlands Metro tram terminus and Wolverhampton railway station, on the site of the former bus station and Pipers Row House, a mid-1990s retail and office block.
Background
Prior to 1923 Wolverhampton had a mix of motor buses and trams. Trolleybuses ran in the town from 1923 until 1967. The station, which had existed since 1986, was closed after service finished on 3 April 2010. The 1986 bus station replaced the 1980 bus station on the same site which in turn had replaced the original bus station on the northern side of Railway Drive which had primarily been used by Midland Red services.Current bus station
The bus station was designed by architects, Austin-Smith:Lord and the mechanical & electrical consultants were Hilson Moran. The three steel and glass 'boulevards' are under a translucent, PTFE architectural fabric roof and feature glass-enclosed waiting areas and electronic doors, allowing passengers out of designated pedestrian areas only when buses are on stand. The station's W-shaped design removes the need for bus and pedestrian paths to cross.The bus station's enquiry office is now in the main building, but was in the Queen's Building, a grade II listed building, which was host to Costa Coffee, but which was formerly the carriage entrance to the railway station and is currently empty. The travel shop closed permanently on 1st April 2023.