Since it started running in the late 1990s, the Midland Metro between Birmingham Snow Hill and Wolverhampton St. George's has become an indelible part of the Birmingham/Black Country landscape.
The tram runs along the old passenger line from Snow Hill to Wolverhampton which had been shut since the early 1970s. To travel the whole distance takes about 35 minutes (not as fast as the train from New Street to Wolves, but a lot faster than any bus) and stops at a hell of a lot of stops (twenty-something all in all) including West Bromwich and Wednesbury. It runs regularly, is almost always on time (or very close) and apart from not running particularly late; is a very useful service indeed. One piece of advice I will give is that if you've got long legs, sit on the seats at the very front or back of the tram. If you sit on the more bench-like seating down the middle, you may frequently find yourself having to move out of the way of the conductor and other passengers. Besides, if you sit by the doors in winter you get an icy blast of weather every time the doors open.
One growing past-time amongst groups of ale-seekers is a kind of Metro pub crawl, starting from one end working your way up the line with a day ticket, stopping off at well-known establishments in places like Bilston and Handsworth.
As I write, work is beginning to extend the line at Snow Hill down to New Street Station by running it along Bull Street and Corporation Street. Personally I think that money would've been better spent running a new line from Wednesbury to Dudley (the old railway line along this route remains mothballed and overgrown with such a project in mind) as Dudley suffers greatly from a lack of quick public transport link to Brum. read more