Friday 26 Jul 2013
England's railway signalling heritage recognised
- Region & Route:
- National
Twenty six of England's rarest and best preserved signal boxes have been given Grade II listed status by the Department for Culture Media and Sport as a result of a joint English Heritage and Network Rail project to safeguard the nation's railway signalling heritage.
The listings come as Network Rail decommissions many mechanical signal boxes to consolidate signalling into 12 regional centres, as part of a 30 year plan to modernise the system and provide a better value railway for Britain.
Heritage Minister, Ed Vaizey said: "Our interest in everything to do with trains and railways - and the 'golden age' of steam in particular - is one of our most endearing and enduring national preoccupations. Signal boxes are a big part of this, and so I am very pleased indeed to be able to list these lovely examples of the type. It is greatly to Network Rail's credit that they have worked so constructively with English Heritage to bring this project to such a successful outcome."
Installed from the mid-19th century onwards, signal boxes numbered around 10,000 at the peak of their use in the 1940s. Today fewer than 500 are still in use by Network Rail. They were built in highly visible spots at stations or level crossings to an infinite variety of designs, sometimes with beautiful detailing and embellishment far beyond what is needed for their practical function. They were constructed both by specialist contractors like Saxby & Farmer and individual railway companies, each developing their own distinctive style.
English Heritage has worked in close partnership with Network Rail to identify and protect a representative sample of the most significant designs, especially those within groups of historic railway buildings, capturing a snapshot of the Victorian heyday of railways for future generations.
Local landmarks
From Cornwall to Kent and Sussex to North Yorkshire, the newly listed signal boxes date from the 1870s to the 1920s, many still retain their original operating equipment and have become much loved local landmarks. The box designs range from imposing structures, like the enormous Saxby & Farmer designed box at Eastbourne, to simple single-storey timber buildings, like the diminutive Stevens & Sons box at Grain Crossing in Medway, Kent, the last survivor of a once numerous design.
In the North of England, Hebden Bridge Signal Box built in 1891, one of only a handful of Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway boxes to survive in anything like original condition, has a time warp quality, where both it and nearby listed station buildings still retain their original 1914 signage.
The East of England boasts well preserved boxes built for the Great Eastern Railway like the one at Downham Market, which complements one of the most attractive small stations in East Anglia, and the wonderfully elaborate example at Brundall which was built in 1883 and unusually is built of wood blocks cut to resemble stone.
At Totnes in Devon, the large signal box, built to the Great Western Railway's standard design used between 1896 and the 1920s, has what are in effect a series of bay windows to give the signalman a clear view down the line and striking contrasting blue brickwork. With the removal of the original operating equipment, the building has now found a new use as a café. Totnes shows that, although there can be issues with access and location, decommissioned signal boxes can sometimes be rejuvenated. They have been reused as cafes, museums or holiday lets and, in some cases, moved to new locations, often on heritage railways.
John Minnis, Senior Investigator at English Heritage said: "We are delighted to be working in partnership with Network Rail as part of our National Heritage Protection Plan to seek out the best examples of historic signal boxes up and down the country. These are very special buildings, at one time a familiar sight on our railway system. Today's listings will ensure that many of these highly distinctive designs, which were full of character, are protected for years to come providing a window into how railways were operated in the past."
Jerry Swift, Network Rail's head of community rail, said: "Our operating strategy would see a marked acceleration in the number of signal boxes decommissioned each year, so it is vital that we have plans in place to deal with that sensitively and sustainably.
"Identifying the most significant signal boxes so that they are safeguarded for future generations is something we are all committed to. It is important that they have a life after the national railway network has finished with them and we are working with a number of heritage organisations to try to find suitable homes for them for the future. It is great news that these newly listed boxes will survive as examples of our railway's colourful past as we modernise the network for the twenty-first century."
Notes to editors
In total English Heritage is announcing 26 new designations today; all are listed at grade II
North
Hebden Bridge, Calderdale, West Yorks, listed Grade II (May 2013)
Hensall, Selby, N Yorks, listed Grade II (April 2013)
West
Bournemouth West Junction, Poole, Dorset, listed Grade II (April 2013)
Lostwithiel, Restormel, Cornwall, listed Grade II (April 2013)
Marsh Brook, S Shrops, Shrops, listed Grade II (April 2013)
Par, Restormel, Cornwall, listed Grade II (April 2013)
Totnes, S Hams, Devon, listed Grade II (April 2013)
East
Brundall, Broadland, Norfolk, listed Grade II (April 2013)
Bury St Edmunds Yard, St Edmundsbury, Suffolk, listed Grade II (May 2013)
Downham Market, Kings Lynn and W Norfolk, Norfolk, listed Grade II (April 2013)
Skegness, E Lindsey, Lincs, listed Grade II (June 2013)
Thetford, Breckland, Norfolk, listed Grade II (April 2013)
Wainfleet, E Lindsey, Lincs, listed Grade II (June 2013)
Wymondham South Junction, S Norfolk, Norfolk, listed Grade II (May 2013)
South
Aylesford, Tonbridge and Malling, Kent (July 2013)
Canterbury East, Kent, listed Grade II (April 2013)
Cuxton, Medway, Kent, listed Grade II (April 2013)
Eastbourne, E Sussex, listed Grade II (April 2013)
Grain Crossing, Medway, Kent (July 2013)
Littlehampton, W Sussex, listed Grade II (April 2013)
Liverpool St, City of London, listed Grade II (April 2013) (owned by London Underground ltd, not an NR box)
Maidstone West, Maidstone, Kent (July 2013)
Rye, Rother, E Sussex (July 2013)
Shepherdswell, Dover, Kent, listed Grade II (April 2013)
Snodland, Tonbridge and Malling, Kent, listed Grade II (April 2013)
Wateringbury, Maidstone, Kent, listed Grade II (July 2013)
About Network Rail’s operating strategy
Britain’s railway is more popular than it has ever been and demand for passenger and rail freight services is expected to double over the next 30 years.
Currently Network Rail has over 800 operating locations (including around 500 mechanical signal boxes), many with legacy equipment which is becoming difficult and expensive to operate and maintain. This equipment cannot keep up with today’s fast paced technology and is limiting the potential of the rail network.
The operating strategy sets out Network Rail’s vision to consolidate all signalling and control activity into 12 modern rail operating centres over the next 15-30 years. Instead of controlling just a few miles of railway, as most signal boxes were designed to do, the new centres will control hundreds of miles of railway involving the movement of thousands of trains a day.
Benefits:
- Fewer delays – better technology means normal services can be restored much quicker following disruption
- More flexibility and capacity – more reliable performance and better train regulation will allow Network Rail to be more flexible with train plans and potentially put more services onto the network
- Reduced operating costs – when complete, this will save £250m a year. A more affordable railway with more passengers will help create a sustainable future for the network
As part of the operating strategy, Network Rail is working with heritage organisations – English Heritage, Historic Scotland, Cadw (the Welsh government’s historic environment service), the Railway Heritage Trust and the National Railway Museum – to document the history and way of life association with signal boxes.
Further information, including a photo gallery, a searchable database of all signal boxes and reviews of signal boxes by various heritage organisations, can be found here: http://www.networkrail.co.uk/community/interest-groups/signalling-heritage/
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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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