Londonderry's new £27m transport hub opens Published duration 21 October 2019

image caption Work on the modernisation of the old railway station began in 2018

Londonderry's new £27m railway station has opened to the public.

The regional transport hub is located on the site of the city's former Victorian railway station.

The listed building closed in 1980 but was chosen as the site for the new station following a public consultation.

Translink say the hub creates a 21st Century transport centre which it is hoped will encourage commuters to shift to public transport.

The hub will improve co-ordination between rail and local and cross-border bus services and provide a greenway link to the city centre via the Peace Bridge, Translink added.

image caption Derry's mayor believes the new hub will act as an economic catalyst

It has been funded by the European Union's Interreg programme and managed by the Special EU Programmes Body.

Derry and Strabane District Council, the Department for Infrastructure and the Department for Transport, Tourism and Sport in the Republic of Ireland provided additional funding to the project.

Work on the first phase of refurbishing and modernising the old station got under way in 2018.

A second phase of works including a park-and-ride facility at the site will be completed next year.

If you are reading this page on the BBC News app, you will need to visit the mobile version of the BBC website to submit your question on this topic.

'At the heart'

"This important project has taken a key piece of the North West's architectural heritage and restored it to a modern transport facility, an appropriate gateway to the vibrant city of Derry-Londonderry and the wider region," Translink chief executive Chris Conway said.

John McGrath, from the Department for Infrastructure, said the hub was an example of a commitment to encourage "people to consider active travel options".

He said it placed rail "at the heart of Derry-Londonderry's transport network".

image copyright Google image caption The old Waterside train station was originally built in the 1800s

Irish Minister for Transport, Tourism and Sport, Shane Ross said the station acted as a "hub for cross-border connectivity in the years to come.''

Derry's Mayor Michaela Boyle said the hub would further "act as a catalyst for development in the Waterside area of the city".

The station was chosen as the location for the new hub following the results of a public consultation in 2013.