COUNCIL SIGNALS BETTER ACCESS FOR CANTERBURY WEST STATION: Canterbury West Access For All

Friday 20 Nov 2009

COUNCIL SIGNALS BETTER ACCESS FOR CANTERBURY WEST STATION

Region & Route:
| Southern

Passengers travelling from Canterbury West are set to benefit from a more accessible station after the city council granted provisional planning approval for the installation of a new footbridge and two new lifts.

The project, which will create a step-free route between the station entrance and both platforms, will also include new tactile paving along the edge of the platform to assist the visually impaired and an enhanced CCTV system. 

Dave Ward, Network Rail's route director for Kent, said: "The improved facilities at Canterbury West will help bring the station into the 21st century.  The railway provides an important public transport link into London and across Kent and we are pleased to make it easier to use, safer and more accessible for everyone, including those with reduced mobility or people with heavy luggage or accompanying young children."

Vince Lucas, Service Delivery Director Southeastern, added: "Passengers using Canterbury West have already started benefiting from the high speed services and we are pleased they will soon also have better access and movement around the station.  We will be working with Network Rail to keep disruption for passengers to an absolute minimum while this important work is carried out.”

Final plans and designs will now be drawn up and it is anticipated that construction work will start next year.

Network Rail is managing and delivering the improvements, which are being funded through the Department for Transport's £370m Access For All scheme.

Canterbury West station has been identified as one of the stations which will be improved through the national stations improvement programme. 

Notes to editors

Other stations in the Southeastern area that have already benefited from Access for All improvements are Herne Hill, Orpington and Staplehurst.  Work is already underway at Lewisham, while improvements are also planned for a further 10 stations, which includes, Gravesend, Sittingbourne, Strood and Swanley in the Kent area.   

About Access for All 

Access for All is a £370m ring-fenced fund for station accessibility improvements under the Government’s ten-year Railways for All strategy. Station selection and prioritisation is made by the DfT. To date, 145 stations in England, Wales and Scotland have been selected to receive step-free access improvements.

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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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