Flyover to boost capacity and reliability on one of Europe’s busiest rail routes: A Virgin train on the West Coast main line

Monday 7 Apr 2014

Flyover to boost capacity and reliability on one of Europe’s busiest rail routes

Region & Route:

Plans for a new railway flyover which will help provide increased capacity and improved reliability on the Stafford to Crewe section of the busy West Coast main line have been given the go-ahead.

Network Rail’s plans for the flyover at Norton Bridge (north of Stafford) will see six miles of new 100mph railway constructed as well as 10 new bridge structures, one bridge enhancement, four river diversions, major environmental mitigation works and pipeline, road and footpath diversions.

The upgrade is part of the £250m Stafford Area Improvements Programme, delivered by the Staffordshire Alliance, which will provide a significant boost to journeys made by millions of passengers who use the West Coast main line every month.

Ian Jones, head of the Staffordshire Alliance, said: “With the West Coast main line set to reach capacity in just five years time, the flyover at Norton Bridge is one of the last improvements which can be made on the route which will help to provide a better service for passengers. It will remove a major pinch point and allow faster, more frequent and reliable passenger and freight services.

“Building on the recent completion of line speed improvements between Crewe and Norton Bridge, this has been a milestone month for the programme. Our key focus now is to deliver these works efficiently and effectively and minimise the impact they will have on the local community.”

As an infrastructure project of national significance, the Norton Bridge scheme was the subject of a Development Consent Order (DCO) application – a process preceded by comprehensive consultation dating back to 2010, with the views of stakeholders directly influencing the final scheme.

Following submission of the DCO application by Network Rail in December 2012, a six month examination period began in April 2013, with a recommendation made to the Secretary of State for Transport, Patrick McLoughlin MP, who last week made a decision to grant the DCO application.

Based around the construction of six miles of new railway, the Norton Bridge project includes:
- A new flyover, removing a key bottleneck at Norton Bridge Junction and segregating intercity, commuter and freight traffic
10 new bridges and one bridge enhancement
- A major realignment of the B5026 highway
- Road, river and footpath diversions
- Major environmental mitigations works to protect flora and fauna including great crested newts, barn owls and otters

The Norton Bridge project team will be holding a public information event on Thursday 24 April between 4pm and 8pm at Chebsey Village Hall, School Lane, Chebsey, ST21 6JU. This is an opportunity for local people to find out more about the work and ask the team any questions.

Work on the flyover is due to start in spring 2014 and be completed in summer 2016.

For further information contact Network Rail’s national helpline on 08457 114 141; email: CRNW@networkrail.co.uk; or visit www.networkrail.co.uk/StaffordImprovements

Notes to editors

Stafford Area Improvements Programme

 

With unprecedented levels of passenger and freight growth on the rail network and the West Coast Main Line full to capacity within the next five years, the Staffordshire Area Improvements Programme seeks to remove a major bottleneck through the Stafford area. Once complete, the £250m programme will facilitate the introduction of new timetables between 2015 and 2017 and help to create the capacity to run:

  • Two extra trains per hour (each direction) between London and the north west of England
  • One extra fast train per hour (each direction) between Manchester and Birmingham
  • One extra freight train per hour (each direction) through Stafford

The programme will deliver this through the following three key projects:

  • Phase 1 – Linespeed improvements between Crewe and Norton Bridge, increasing the line speed on the ‘slow’ lines from 75mph to 100mph. Running from January 2013 to April 2014, these works include modifications to the overhead line equipment and installation of four new signals and will be delivered during weekends and midweek nights, significantly reducing the impact to passengers and lineside residents.
  • Phase 2 – Stafford resignalling. The installation of a new freight loop and the replacement of life expired signalling, telecoms and power supplies, with the signalling control transferred from the existing Stafford No4 and No5 signal boxes to Rugby, plus the installation of bi-directional signalling for all platforms and an increase in the ‘slow’ line speeds (predominantly used by local passenger/freight services) from 75mph to 100mph between Great Bridgeford (near Norton Bridge) and Stafford. Running from spring 2014 to late 2015 (with an August 2015 commissioning), the majority of these works will also be delivered during weekends and midweek nights.
  • Phase 3 – Proposed flyover at Norton Bridge. The proposed construction of a grade-separated junction, including 6 miles of new 100mph railway, 10 new bridge structures and one bridge enhancement, four river diversions, major environmental mitigation works, pipeline, road and footpath diversions and the construction of temporary haul roads. Main works are scheduled to run from spring 2014 to 2017, with key commissionings in 2016. These works have been preceded by preparatory works carried out under separate planning consent.

Staffordshire Alliance

The Stafford Area Improvements Programme is being delivered by the Staffordshire Alliance – a partnership of Atkins, Laing O’Rourke, Network Rail and VolkerRail, working as part of a new collaborative contract that will help to transform the delivery of rail infrastructure projects in the UK.

Atkins

Atkins (www.atkinsglobal.com) is one of the world's leading design, engineering and project management consultancies*, employing some 17,400 people across the UK, North America, Middle East, Asia Pacific and Europe. Over 75 years, from post-war regeneration and the advent of nuclear engineering to high speed rail and the integrated sustainable cities of the future, our people’s breadth and depth of expertise and drive to ask why has allowed us to plan, design and enable some of the world’s most complex projects.

*14th largest global design firm (Engineering News-Record 2013) and the third largest multidisciplinary consultancy in Europe (Svensk Teknik och Design 2012).

Laing O’Rourke
Laing O’Rourke is a globally diverse engineering enterprise with a commitment to delivering Excellence Plus performance, founded on 164 years’ of experience. It funds, designs, manufactures, constructs and maintains the built environment – providing the facilities to accommodate, educate, employ, transport, care for and sustain communities. www.laingorourke.com

Network Rail

Network Rail is the not for dividend owner and operator of Britain's railway infrastructure which includes the tracks, signals, tunnels, bridges, viaducts, level crossings and stations - the largest of which it also manages. Network Rail aims to provide a safe, reliable and efficient rail infrastructure for freight and passenger trains to use. www.networkrailmediacentre.co.uk Twitter: @networkrailPR

VolkerRail

VolkerRail is a leading multi-disciplinary railway infrastructure contractor with over 70 years’ project experience in both the heavy and light rail sectors. In addition to the delivery of major projects, it provides design, manufacture, construction, installation and testing services in the following disciplines - electrification, HV power distribution, signalling, plant, track construction, renewals and maintenance. VolkerRail is part of VolkerWessels UK, a multi-disciplinary civil engineering, construction and rail group with a turnover of £700 million. VolkerWessels UK employs c2,000 staff in six operating companies. The group is the UK arm of Dutch based VolkerWessels, one of the largest construction groups in Europe. www.volkerwessels.co.uk.

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About Network Rail

We own, operate and develop Britain's railway infrastructure; that's 20,000 miles of track, 30,000 bridges, tunnels and viaducts and the thousands of signals, level crossings and stations. We run 20 of the UK's largest stations while all the others, over 2,500, are run by the country's train operating companies.

Usually, there are almost five million journeys made in the UK and over 600 freight trains run on the network. People depend on Britain's railway for their daily commute, to visit friends and loved ones and to get them home safe every day. Our role is to deliver a safe and reliable railway, so we carefully manage and deliver thousands of projects every year that form part of the multi-billion pound Railway Upgrade Plan, to grow and expand the nation's railway network to respond to the tremendous growth and demand the railway has experienced - a doubling of passenger journeys over the past 20 years.

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