Mail centre
The Royal Mail operates a network of 38 mail centres.[1] Each mail centre serves a large geographically defined area of the United Kingdom[2] and together they form the backbone network of the mail distribution operation. The number of mail centres has been reducing as the service is modernised[3] and in 2008 there were 69 mail centres. In 2013 and 2014 a further eight are planned to be closed. Mail items are delivered to homes and businesses from 1,356 delivery offices, which are supplied by the mail centres.
Operations
As part of the sorting process, mail is collected from pillar boxes, Post Office branches and businesses, and brought to the local mail centre. The process is divided into two parts. The 'outward' sorting, identifies mail for delivery in the mail centre geographic area, which is retained and mail intended for other mail centres, which is dispatched. The 'inward' sorting forwards this mail to the relevant delivery offices within the mail centre area.[2] The geographic area of the mail centre corresponds to one or more postcode areas.
List of mail centres
As of June 2016, the 38 operational mail centres (divided into Royal Mail regions) are:[4]
- East: Chelmsford, Ipswich, Norwich, Nottingham, Peterborough, Romford, Sheffield, South Midlands (Northampton)
- West: Birmingham, Chester, Manchester, North West Midlands (Wolverhampton), Preston, Warrington
- South East: Croydon, Gatwick, Greenford, Home Counties North (Hemel Hempstead), Jubilee (Hounslow), Medway, Mount Pleasant
- South West: Bristol, Cardiff, Dorset, Exeter, Plymouth, Southampton, Swansea, Swindon, Truro
- North: Aberdeen, Inverness, Carlisle, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Leeds, Northern Ireland (Newtownabbey), Tyneside (Gateshead)
International Mail
Royal Mail operates an international mail sorting centre in Langley, Berkshire close to Heathrow Airport called the Heathrow Worldwide Distribution Centre to handle all international airmail arriving into and leaving the United Kingdom, plus some container and road transported mail.
Closures
The number of mail centres has been declining as part of the Mail Centre Rationalisation Programme. In 2008 there were 69 mail centres and in 2010 there were 64. It is anticipated that around half of these could be closed by 2016.[5] Oldham and Stockport along with Oxford and Reading all closed in 2009 Bolton, Crewe, Liverpool, Northampton, Coventry and Milton Keynes mail centres were closed in 2010. Farnborough and Watford were closed in 2011. Stevenage, Hemel Hempstead, Southend, Worcester and Maidstone mail centres were closed in 2012.[3] The East London and South London mail centres were closed during summer 2012.[6]
In 2013 and 2014 a further eight mail centres were planned to be closed.[1] The old mail centres in Northampton, Coventry and Milton Keynes were replaced with the new South Midlands mail centre in Northampton covering Warwickshire, Coventry, Northamptonshire and Milton Keynes.[7] The South Midlands Mail Centre is the largest in the UK.[7]
References
- 1 2 Quick change | myroyalmail
- 1 2 http://stakeholders.ofcom.org.uk/binaries/research/cmr/cmr12/UK_6.pdf
- 1 2 Mail Centre Closures - a Freedom of Information request to Royal Mail Group Limited - WhatDoTheyKnow
- ↑ https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/130509/response/314722/attach/4/Mail%20Centre%20Addresses.pdf
- ↑ BBC News - Royal Mail to cut 1,700 jobs and close two mail centres
- ↑ https://www.myroyalmail.com/sites/default/files/courier/0716a905db154196b5652d3a53db066c.pdf
- 1 2 "Hundreds of Royal Mail workers in Northampton could go on strike". www.northamptonchron.co.uk. Retrieved 2016-06-09.