Vital rail upgrades are to be carried out at the end of July to extend platforms for new trains and provide power for the Elizabeth Line ahead of the next stage of opening when services from Shenfield will be connected to Paddington station via the City of London and the West End.
The works will take place on Sunday 24 July and will affect passengers travelling to London from Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex and Cambridgeshire. Passengers are advised to check before they travel.
The work is vital to support the growing number of passengers returning to the railway and includes:
The next phase of opening the Elizabeth line will integrate services from the east and west into the new central tunnels and stations bringing additional benefits to those travelling to and from the east and west. This connection brings the three railways together and enables services from Reading and Heathrow through to Abbey Wood and from Shenfield through to Paddington. The service in the central stations between Paddington and Whitechapel will be 22 trains per hour during the peak and 16 trains per hour off peak.
- A power upgrade at Pudding Mill Lane near Stratford that will provide power for the Elizabeth Line services.
- Work to lengthen platforms on the West Anglia main line to accommodate 10-car trains
Buses will replace trains on the Great Eastern main line between Ingatestone and Liverpool St, and on the West Anglia main line, buses will replace trains between Bishops Stortford and Waltham Cross, and also between Hertford East and Waltham Cross.
All this ‘we need time to get everything bedded down’ is just an excuse, trains have been running right the way through for months. The real reason why services are running in three parts is that if something does go wrong no one wants the blame…Still? It has only just opened!
It was always the plan to operate the line ‘in parts’ to start with. Get the brand new bit of the railway opened as a self-contained system to shake out any issues and get everything to bed down, before moving on to joining up with the east and west. There is more experience to be gained before moving on to the next stage.
If all goes well, there is talk of sometime in September for services to link up, GE services to Paddington and GW services to Abbey Wood. However the transition between the different signalling systems needs to be reliable first before that step is taken.
Quite simply this railway is so complex in signalling terms, you wouldn’t want to do everything at once, that would be planning to fail.
I’m afraid all you’ve done there is show a total lack of understanding of what is actually involved, although posts like these do make me smile.All this ‘we need time to get everything bedded down’ is just an excuse, trains have been running right the way through for months. The real reason why services are running in three parts is that if something does go wrong no one wants the blame…
The next sage is to run to Paddington, then Heathrow at a later date. Running the full length from Shenfield to Reading is a bigger performance risk, which has emerged with various timetable modelling.Well one bit of info I hadn't known about was that the Shenfield trains will only be running to Paddington - or I have I misunderstood? I thought they too would go to Reading.
The other thing was that press release from Network Rail. It seems to mix two different subjects into their announcement - Elizabeth Line (Pudding Lane), and West Anglia (platform mods) - or are longer West Anglia trains also going onto the Elizabeth Line underground section?
That wouldn't be physically possible even if desired.are longer West Anglia trains also going onto the Elizabeth Line underground section?
It hardly takes modelling to work that one out! Though I guess the modelling helps to illustrate the scale of the problem.Running the full length from Shenfield to Reading is a bigger performance risk, which has emerged with various timetable modelling.
To expand on that, there's no connection allowing trains to get from the Pudding Mill Lane portal to the West Anglia lines at Stratford. There are crossovers but they're further west than the portal.That wouldn't be physically possible even if desired.
I agreeQuite simply this railway is so complex in signalling terms, you wouldn’t want to do everything at once, that would be planning to fail.