The reinstatement of local rail services to the former Camp Hill line had been a long-term aspiration of the city. During 2007,
Birmingham City Council announced that they were looking into the possibility of reopening the line between
Kings Norton and
Birmingham Moor Street via the construction of a railway viaduct from Sparkbrook to
Bordesley, where trains would be taken into Birmingham Moor Street station. In October 2007, a 1,500-name
petition was delivered to the council calling for the line to be re-opened. In 2013 the proposal was shelved indefinitely. The 2007 proposed station sites were
Moseley,
Kings Heath, and
Hazelwell. In 2016, the newly created
West Midlands Combined Authority revived the plans to restore local passenger services to the line and declared it one of their priority transport schemes to be delivered by 2025. In 2017, the then newly elected
Mayor of the West Midlands,
Andy Street, pledged to get work started on restoring services to the line by 2020. Officials were said to be investigating the business case for a fourth station at
Balsall Heath (previously called
Brighton Road). This would mean and
Camp Hill would be the only stations not to be reopened. In August 2017,
West Midlands Trains announced plans as part of their franchise deal to reopen the stations by December 2019 as part of a £1 billion investment in the West Midlands. This included a new station at Moseley. In February 2018 Street said that the viaduct would not immediately be needed to open the line.
Hereford to Birmingham New Street trains – currently routed via
University Station – would be diverted along the Camp Hill line to serve the three new stations, meaning that extra capacity at Birmingham New Street would not be required. This would also facilitate through train operation toward
Shrewsbury. In September 2018, the designs of the new stations – , , and – were revealed and were planned for reopening by 2021 with a frequency of two trains per hour. In March 2021 it was announced that funding had been found for the project, with an opening date expected in 2023. In June 2022, West Midlands Rail Executive announced that following a public consultation, the three stations would be named Moseley Village, Kings Heath and Pineapple Road. An investigation into the business case for reopening Brighton Road as Balsall Heath railway station has since been awarded funding. It was concluded that the construction of a station in Balsall Heath would require construction of the Bordesley Chords to link the Camp Hill Line to Moor Street Station, and also for capacity to be increased at Moor Street, as New Street already operates at capacity. This line was identified by
Campaign for Better Transport in 2019 as a priority 1 candidate for reopening. The reopening was hit by a series of delays. West Midlands Combined Authority eventually aimed to reopen the line for passenger use by early 2026, with incumbent West Midlands mayor,
Richard Parker, blaming overpromising by his predecessor, Andy Street, as the reason for the delays. In February 2026, the timetable for the new service was released. West Midlands Railway intended running the service every half an hour for most of the day, with three hourly trains in the late evening, from Monday to Saturday, in both directions, with an hourly service on Sundays. All three stations reopened on 7 April 2026. They are in Zone 3 of
TfWM's ticketing system. ==Bordesley Chords==