CARDIFF AND VALLEY RAILWAY POISED FOR THE NEXT FRONTIER: Cardiff Central southern entrance to be improved

Tuesday 12 Apr 2011

CARDIFF AND VALLEY RAILWAY POISED FOR THE NEXT FRONTIER

Region & Route:
| Wales & Western: Wales & Borders
| Wales & Western

 


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Network Rail unveils today a £200m plan to boost the rail capacity of the Cardiff and Valley area by 2015. The company is also welcoming support from the community and businesses on the largest programme of improvement work in the area.

 

The congestion-busting scheme will remove the rail bottleneck on the city line, allowing extra four trains per hour to run through the Cardiff area. This will unlock the potential for more and longer trains to serve the Valley lines and to boost the railway’s capacity, bringing 600 more seats during rush hours.

The massive upgrade will allow more freight trains to operate through Cardiff, supporting business. Rail services will also become more reliable as the signalling equipment becomes more robust and efficient.

Passenger demand in the Cardiff and Valley area is increasing at 8% on average each year. It is forecast that the number of passengers travelling in the Cardiff and Valley areas will exceed 12m per year by the end of 2015. With 900 trains already travelling through the Cardiff area to support current demand every day, the railway needs more capacity by the end of this decade.

Mike Gallop, principal programme sponsor for Network Rail said: “This scheme will take the railway in Cardiff and South Wales Valleys into the next frontier. The benefits of this scheme are huge as it lays the fundamental building blocks to unlock the untapped potential of this area, whilst paving the way for electrification and meeting a growing demand. Wales relies on rail - a reliable and robust railway forms a key pillar for a healthy economy and this scheme will help Wales continue to thrive.”

The scheme will modernise the dated signalling infrastructure to be compatible with electrification and the advanced European Railway Train Management System (ERTMS) respectively.

The existing track layout, built in the1930s, at Cardiff East Junction will also be untangled and extra tracks will also be built on parts of the railway in Cardiff and South Wales Valley.

New platforms will be created at Cardiff Central, Cardiff Queen Street, Barry, Tir-phil, Caerphilly and Pontypridd to accommodate more and longer trains. Extra efforts will also be put in to improve the accessibility and station environment of Cardiff Central, Cardiff Queen Street and Pontypridd.

The main engineering work will begin by autumn 2011 and is planned to be completed within three years and in time for new trains to be introduced to the Valley area by 2018.

Network Rail is currently tendering for different contractors, including signalling, buildings and track, to help deliver the scheme, whilst the detailed design plan is being finalised and some minor preparatory work begins onsite.

Notes to editors

Improvements include:

1. Cardiff area
- An extra platform at Cardiff Central for more trains to travel to and from Valley lines
- Improved station at Cardiff Central with refurbished southern entrance and new lifts
- Two extra platforms at Queen Street station for more trains to travel to and from Valley lines
- An extra bay platform at Cardiff Queen Street for the Cardiff Bay shuttle service to operate
- Refurbished Queen Street station with new entrance and lifts to enable improved access to the station
- Doubling of the Treforest Curve (Cardiff West Junction to Ninian Park) to enable improved frequency of trains onto/from the City lines

2. Barry line
- Extra platform at Barry station to create extra capacity especially for trains to be diverted to minimise disruption.
- Upgrade the freight line at Cogan Junction to enable passenger trains to create extra capacity especially for trains to be diverted to minimise disruption.

3. Rhymney Valley
- Extra platform and passing loop at Tir-phil to enable increased frequency of trains to half hourly
- Extra platform at Caerphilly to created extra capacity for extra two trains to run per hour to and from Bargoed and more seats on services between Caerphilly and Cardiff

4. Pontypridd
- Extra platform and passing loop at Pontypridd to allow extra two trains per hour to run between Pontypridd and Radyr

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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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