Background and initial launch In common with many British cities,
Sheffield used to have an extensive tram network, the
Sheffield Tramway (1873–1960). This finally closed in October 1960, it then being argued that motorised
buses offered superior economics. and deposited several bills to Parliament in 1985–1990 to gain the necessary powers. Financial approval was given by the
Department of Transport towards the end of 1990, allowing the £240million construction of the initial line to commence in 1991. a wholly owned subsidiary company of SYPTE established to run the venture. In the early years, the scheme was viewed by some as a failure; passengers continued using cheaper and more frequent
buses, and retailers complained about the disruption caused by the lengthy construction works. The complex ticketing system was also a source of irritation and confusion to passengers. leaving several local councils with the long-term debt for the Supertram's establishment. Under the terms of the deal struck by the
Labour government, a reduction in operating costs was achieved, but it was calculated that the people of South Yorkshire were each paying 5p per week for the Supertram, which continued over many years. Reasons presented for the reduction included the disruptive rail replacement effort across the network, which involved partial closures and the use of buses as temporary replacements, as well as the impact of cheaper
petrol.
Tram-train services The
tram-train extension to
Rotherham opened on 25 October 2018, using seven new
Vossloh-built
Class 399 Citylink articulated
electric multiple units. Trams operate on
Network Rail's line from Tinsley to
Rotherham station and beyond to the Parkgate shopping centre, where services terminate on a short spur at the side of the railway, after travelling on the Supertram line from Cathedral to Meadowhall South/Tinsley. The station at Rotherham Central is a combined tram stop and railway station, with platforms 1 and 2 at Rotherham Central extended, with the new extensions numbered platforms 3 and 4 respectively. The stop at Parkgate is a single platform terminus. The first test run of the tram-train service (as far as the
Magna Science Adventure Centre) was performed in the early hours of 10 May 2018, and the first gauging run all the way to Parkgate occurred in the early hours of 5 June 2018. 109 at Sheffield station The existing
Siemens-Duewag Supertram fleet were not upgraded for tram-train operation, so were not registered under
TOPS and cannot be used on the line as they lack the relevant
Network Rail safety systems and
crashworthiness. The tram-train scheme was first planned to be in service by 2015 but was delayed. The Class 399 units were built in 2015/16 with the first delivered in December 2015. Until the completion of the tram-train line, some were used to provide increased capacity on the existing Supertram network. They first entered service on 14 September 2017. On the opening day of tram-train passenger operations the service was suspended following a road traffic collision on the tram network involving one of the tram-train vehicles. The incident was caused by lorry operated by Ability Handling passing a red traffic light and caused the tram to be derailed. The service has also been suspended twice after faults were found on the Citylink units. The first suspension was on 9 April 2019, when the fleet was withdrawn to undergo safety checks, although service resumed the next day. The service was later suspended again on 14 December 2019, resuming three days later on 17 December. Services have also operated on a reduced frequency several times whilst work has been undertaken on the Citylink fleet. In July 2021 a public consultation was opened about plans to build a new stop on the Tram Train route at
Magna, outside the Magna Science Adventure Centre. In March 2024 Network Rail and South Yorkshire Mayoral Combined Authority (SYMCA) approved the new station at Magna, Templeborough. The station is located between the Meadowhall South/Tinsley stop and the Rotherham Central stop. It has two staggered low-level tram-train platforms, one for each line, with a connecting footbridge and an additional 29 parking spaces were created at the Magna site. The scheme costed £6.6million and was funded from the Sheffield City Region's £166million Transforming Cities Fund. Construction on the Magna stop commenced in March 2025 and it officially opened to passengers on 9 April 2026.
Return to public operation On 18 October 2022 the South Yorkshire Mayor Oliver Coppard announced that the service would return to public operation once Stagecoach's contract expired in March 2024, alongside a £100million grant by the central government to modernise parts of the system. The date of the transfer was 22 March 2024, with a new operating company known as the South Yorkshire Future Tram Limited (SYFTL) taking over all Supertram operations. Coppard's authority manages the publicly owned
arm's length organisation to manage the tram service.
Summary of opening dates • 21 March 1994: Fitzalan Square to Meadowhall • 22 August 1994: Fitzalan Square to Spring Lane • 5 December 1994: Spring Lane to Gleadless Townend • 18 February 1995: Fitzalan Square to Cathedral • 27 February 1995: Cathedral to Shalesmoor • 27 March 1995: Gleadless Townend to Halfway • 3 April 1995: Gleadless Townend to Herdings Park • 23 October 1995: Shalesmoor to Middlewood/Malin Bridge • 25 October 2018: Tinsley/Meadowhall South to Parkgate (tram-train) ==Current network==