Friday 13 Dec 2024
Drone pictures and video released of £8m Yarm Viaduct strengthening work
- Region & Route:
- Eastern
- | Eastern: East Coast
Major work to protect and strengthen historic Yarm Viaduct for passengers and freight is nearly complete.
Network Rail is securing the Grade II listed structure’s supports – known as piers – by drilling more than 600 piles deep into the ground.
The £8.2m investment into the 43-arch Victorian viaduct on the Northallerton to Eaglescliffe line will make future journeys more reliable for passengers and freight.
Today (Friday 13 December) Network Rail has released drone photography to show the sheer scale of the structure, alongside video footage of the strengthening work.
When Yarm Viaduct was built between 1848 and 1852, the foundations of many of its piers were built into the bedrock.
However a number of them – 14 – were not, and with some of the foundations being made from timber, they have deteriorated over time.
With varying degrees of support across the structure, it has caused slight movements at some points along the 690-metre-long viaduct.
Just like subsidence in a building, eventually this can lead to structural issues, such as cracks appearing.
To prevent that from happening, and from potentially significant delays to trains in future, Network Rail and its contractor AMCO Giffen have found a 21st century civil engineering solution to strengthen the 19th century railway icon.
A series of holes were cut through the bottom of each pier inside which steel beams were pushed horizontally, leaving some steel poking out at each end.
The steel left on show was then encased in a block of concrete, and down through each block a series of piles were then drilled 13-metres deep.
A total of 656 piles - which act like massive nails - were fixed into the bedrock underground. As they're attached to the concrete block above, with the new steel beams encased inside which go through the base of each of the viaduct's piers - the modern and the old are fused together.
Jon Calvert, Network Rail portfolio delivery director, said: “The Victorians did a great job in building this huge structure high over Yarm, but they did not know the same about the geology deep underground as we do today, leading to some of the foundations not being as strong as the others.
“Without this multi-million-pound investment, eventually it could have affected the stability of the historic viaduct and resulted in lengthy delays to passenger and freight trains. Doing this preventative work – all while keeping trains running normally above – secures not only the future of the viaduct for our passengers – but also its future as a much-loved icon for people in the town.”
Rob Cox, TransPennine Express, operations director, said: “The Yarm Viaduct is a crucial part of our network and I’d like to thank our colleagues at Network Rail and fellow train operators for their support and hard work throughout this project.
“The work to this historic structure will mean we can keep passengers on the move in the future.”
The 172-year-old structure carries trains overhead for practically the whole length of the town, but it is nestled in between Yarm’s narrow terraces so the viaduct’s scale isn’t ever entirely seen from street level.
Being so close to properties meant the team had to come up with a practical solution to avoid disturbing residents over the 14-month programme.
To keep noise and disruption to a minimum, a driven piling method powered by hydraulics was adopted, otherwise known as ‘Jack piling’, which hardly makes any vibrations (unlike Hammer piling).
This vastly reduces the noise but is also beneficial for the structure itself – being much gentler for the Victorian viaduct.
For more information on how Network Rail repairs and protects heritage structures you can visit: https://www.networkrail.co.uk/who-we-are/our-history/working-with-railway-heritage/
This work completes in the same year as Railway 200, marking the bi-centenary of the invention of the first passenger railway between Darlington and Stockton in September 1825.
For more information on the festivities throughout next year, you can visit https://railway200.co.uk/
Notes to Editors
Facts about Yarm Viaduct
- Yarm Viaduct is 172 years old
- The foundations on 14 of the structure’s 43 supports have been secured
- 656 piles have been driven 13 metres into the ground
- Network Rail has invested £8.2m into the viaduct as part if the major investment
- When finished in late January it will have taken 14 months in total to complete
- The viaduct consists of 43-arches – 41 made from red brick and two arches crossing the River Tees made from stone
- An estimated 7 million red bricks were used to build the viaduct
- The structure was given Grade II listed status in 1966
- It extends for 690 metres in a north/south direction for nearly the entire length of the town
- It opened on 15 May 1852
Contact information
Passengers / community members
Network Rail national helpline
03457 11 41 41
Latest travel advice
Please visit National Rail Enquiries
Journalists
Chris Halpin
07740 782954
chris.halpin@networkrail.co.uk
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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