35mm · Film photography · Photography

Fun fun funiculars

Scarborough’s has had, at one time, five separate funicular railways to transport people up and down from the seafront to the clifftop areas. Two are still in operation today, including the Central Tramway, which is featured in today’s picture. This originally opened in 1881.

The other still-operating funicular is the South Cliff lift, which runs from the spa to the hotels and residential areas above. This is a little older, first running in 1875.

One more still exists and is only a stone’s throw from the Central Tramway. The St Nicholas Cliff Lift was opened in 1929. It operated until 2007 when the local council, who now owned it, could not afford the upgrade costs to meet health and safety standards. Rather than demolish the railway (which had a hefty price tag also), the two cars were both moved to the top of the slope, secured in place, and now operate as seating areas for a cafe. The station at the foot of the tracks is currently an ice-cream parlour.

The other two funiculars no longer exist, at least not in Scarborough. The North Bay Cliff Lift, which opened in 1930, operated until 2007 when it was decided to close and dismantle the structure due to corrosion and mechanical issues. Much of the dismantled railway was donated to the Launceston Civic Society and is currently in storage at the Launceston Steam Railway.

The final of the five was the Queens Parade Cliff Lift, opening in 1878. It was, however beset by misfortune, including on it’s opening day when one of the cars broke loose and crashed, forcing the railway to close until the following year. Then a series of mechanical issues and landslides meant it was deemed untenable to operate and it closed less than a decade later in 1887.

Victorian tramway to town

Minolta X-300, Minolta MD 50mm f/1.7 & Kodak Gold. Lab developed. Home scanned and converted with Negative Lab Pro.

Taken on 14 March 2026

35mm · Film photography · Photography

Photography is fun(icular)

Yesterday’s photo had the Grand Hotel in the background and here it is again, albeit much closer this time, providing the brick backdrop to the funicular station.

The funicular railway here was built almost 15 years after the hotel, opening to passengers in 1881, and it still serves residents and visitors to this day. There were originally a total of five funicular railways at the resort, but there are only two still in service today: the one here (the Central Tramway), and another on the south cliffs (aptly named the South Cliff Lift). Another between these two (the Saint Nicholas Cliff Lift, just the other side of the Grand Hotel) is still in place, but the bottom station is now an ice-cream parlour while the two carriages are fixed in place at the top of the incline and make up the Saint Nicholas Cafe.

The other two were in the North Bay area of the town. The North Bay Cliff Lift was closed in 1996 and has been dismantled and placed in storage, while the Queen’s Parade Cliff Lift appears to have had a somewhat ill-fated lifespan, being subject to runaway cars, accidents and mechanical failures until a landslide eventually caused it to close for good in 1887, just nine years after it opened.

There are various meandering pathways to and from the seafront for those who don’t wish to ride in style (or some seriously imposing sets of steps for those of a sturdy disposition!).

FILM - At the top of the funicular

Pentax Espio 140M & Kodak Colorplus.

Taken on 13 July 2019