42072 at Bradford Exchange, 1966–67 ,
First Bradford Traveller and
WYPTE liveried buses. The original railway station, named
Bradford Exchange, was opened by the joint efforts of the
Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway and the
Great Northern Railway on 9 May 1850. In 1867, the
Leeds, Bradford and Halifax Junction Railway, which had previously used
Bradford Adolphus Street, built a link to the tracks into Exchange station to join the two existing companies; Adolphus Street station was then closed to passenger use. The railway station was completely rebuilt on the same site in 1880 with ten bay platforms and two
arched roofs. Constructed of
wrought iron, these rested at the outer sides on plain stone walls and
classical corinthian style columns down the middle. Glass covered the middle half and timber (inside)/ slate (outside) covered the outer quarters of each span. The four end screens were glazed in a fan pattern with decorative timber outer edging. The dimensions were a length of , a width of for each arch and a height of , track to apex. The railway station never had a formal frontage; instead, passengers entered by an opening in the northwest side. In its 1920s heyday, it served routes to via
Ardsley (used by many of the city's through trains to
London King's Cross), via and
Ossett, & Halifax via
Queensbury, via
Cleckheaton (the
Spen Valley Line) and to Leeds via the
Pudsey Loop in addition to the current lines. These however had all closed by the end of 1966 – most having fallen victim to the
Beeching Axe. By 1973, the railway station with its 10 platforms was deemed too large and was again rebuilt, this time on a different site slightly further south. The old Exchange station was demolished soon afterwards and was used for a time as a car park; the site now houses the
Bradford Law Courts In 1977, a bus station was built alongside, and, in 1983, the station was renamed
Bradford Interchange to link buses and trains in a covered environment. The bus station featured a large ridge and furrow design of overall roof, which was subsequently demolished in 1999 to allow for a rebuilding of the bus station, which was opened in 2001. This was paid for partly by the sale of some adjacent land to the south of the site and some now-surplus land on the old bus station site. During the 1970s and 1980s, the station was considered the mainline station for Bradford with express services to
London King's Cross, Trans-Pennine services to
Liverpool and
Newcastle and summer Saturday services to the South-West. The Inter-city services were moved to
Forster Square station in 1992 when the line was electrified. The station also had an adjacent
Red Star Parcels terminus but, like most other mainline stations following the
privatisation of British Rail, it lost this facility during the 1990s. The bus stands were once more plentiful and originally featured a large 'ridge and furrow' glass roof, but this was demolished in the 1990s, following the sale of some land for an office development. The bus station was completely rebuilt in 2001. The information displays were replaced in early 2009, following a modest facelift in autumn 2008, which included new signage and a repaint. In January 2010, automatic
ticket barriers were installed by
Northern Rail. Network Rail upgraded the track and signalling infrastructure on the Calder Valley line in October 2018. This saw the
signal box at Mill Lane Junction closed (along with those at Halifax, Milner Royd Junction and Hebden Bridge), new signals installed and route control passed to the
Rail Operating Centre at . The same scheme has also seen track and line speed improvements carried out, in order to reduce journey times to Manchester and Preston. On 4 January 2024, a large chunk of concrete was found to have fallen from the Interchange's underground car park ceiling, situated directly underneath the Interchange's bus station. As a result, the bus station was closed on 5 January, whilst survey work was conducted to repair the affected concrete and the bus station's structure. As of 22 March it was announced that the bus station will be closed for a further 3 months until June to allow more extensive surveying work to take place, and to do further repairs to the station. All bus services starting/terminating at or moving through the bus station have been redirected to over 40 alternative bus stops around the city, to areas such as Market Street, Bridge Street and Hall Ings, all of which are within reasonable walking distance from the Interchange. The Interchange's train station remains open with rail services and ticket kiosks unaffected. The bus station reopened in January, 2025. ==Layout and facilities==