Skip to main content

Tram time

A driver of a compact Nissan car gave passengers waiting for a tram in the UK town of Oldham something of a surprise. Instead of the tram they expected to see, the small Nissan car drew to a halt in front of the stop.
November 20, 2014 Read time: 1 min
A driver of a compact Nissan car gave passengers waiting for a tram in the UK town of Oldham something of a surprise. Instead of the tram they expected to see, the small Nissan car drew to a halt in front of the stop. The driver had swerved off a road and onto the tram tracks. Passengers and then police and emergency workers came to the rescue and managed to move the misplaced vehicle. One passenger was taken to hospital but did not require treatment, while the driver was later arrested on a charge of drink-driving. The incident delayed trams and also had an impact on planned engineering works to the tracks, although only minor damage was caused. This is not the first incident in the area involving drivers making similar mistakes. On three previous occasions drivers have managed to drive their cars, a Jaguar, a Nissan and a Citröen, onto the tram tracks.

Related Content

  • The cycle of potholes in the UK
    May 9, 2019
    Since 2015 almost a million potholes have been recorded annually by UK local authorities, with the 2016 count reaching 1,088,965, according to an insurance provider. The Insurance Emporium obtained data from 175 local authorities and compared it to the incidence of injury and damage claims made against these authorities by cyclists. During 2017-18, there were 335 pothole damage and injury claims filed against local authorities. Personal and dental injuries to cyclists accounted for 16% of these and d
  • More on the Newmarket Viaduct replacement
    June 15, 2012
    When it was completed in 1965 – just six years after the Auckland Harbour Bridge – the six-lane Newmarket Viaduct with its tall, slender piers was something of an engineering wonder, the first of its kind in the Southern Hemisphere. Forty years on it had become a much-maligned contributor to Auckland’s chronic traffic congestion, too weak seismically to withstand the heaviest loaded trucks let alone a severe earthquake, so narrow in the shoulders that any accident stopped traffic flow and made it difficult
  • Infrastructure stays strong on the road to recovery
    July 1, 2021
    After more than a year of uncertainty, the road industry is coming back stronger than ever before thanks to new ways of working and increased investment – because building new infrastructure lays the foundation for a more resilient and economically robust world.
  • King is queen of cone laying
    December 9, 2021
    A second automated cone-laying vehicle, this time from King Highway, is completing off-road trials with England’s National Highways agency.