Friday 10 Jan 2025
No direct London King’s Cross trains for two weekends as East Coast Main Line receives important upgrades
- Region & Route:
- Eastern
- | Eastern: East Coast
Passengers using the East Coast Main Line are being advised to plan ahead and check before they travel ahead of consecutive weekends of planned engineering work.
Services will be affected and London King’s Cross station closed on 25-26 January and 1-2 February, as vital improvements are made to the track, drainage and overhead lines which power trains.
Preparatory work is also taking place as part of the East Coast Digital Programme (ECDP), which will deliver more reliable, greener journeys through the introduction of in-cab digital signalling.
There will be no direct trains to and from London King’s Cross on both weekends, with LNER operating a reduced service to Peterborough where rail replacement coaches will transfer passengers to Bedford, allowing them to use Thameslink services to connect to London St Pancras.
Grand Central will be operate a reduced service from Sunderland to Peterborough, with coach connections to King’s Cross. There will be no services to and from Bradford.
Hull Trains will have two trains per day in each direction running to and from St Pancras rather than King’s Cross, and Lumo’s reduced service will involve a non-stop rail replacement coach between King’s Cross and Peterborough.
EMR services to and from London St Pancras are expected to be extremely busy and customers are advised to use Thameslink services and interchange at Bedford for rail replacement services to Peterborough.
Also, there will be no Thameslink or Great Northern services between London and Peterborough, Royston and Stevenage via Hertford North. Further details can be found here.
Simon Pumphrey, Network Rail infrastructure director, said: “The work our teams will be carrying out over both these weekends goes well beyond regular maintenance tasks.
“This work is carefully planned to maximise the time when there are track closures, allowing us to undertake several projects at once and avoiding more frequent track closures.
“We’re sorry to passengers affected by the disruption and thank them for their patience as we make improvements that will help make the railway more reliable.”
A spokesperson on behalf of LNER, Hull Trains, Lumo and Grand Central, said: “Customers are advised to plan ahead and check before they travel, with the latest journey details available on our websites and social media feeds.
“Our colleagues will be on hand to help people’s journeys run as smoothly as possible through both weekends while this work takes place.”
The engineering work includes renewing the line north of Stevenage, investment in bridge timbers south of Finsbury Park and, at Welwyn Garden City, upgrading switch and crossing equipment which allows tracks to separate, cross and rejoin.
Tunnel drainage work will be undertaken Hadley Wood, and there will be improvements to the overhead line equipment at Biggleswade and Bounds Green.
Under-track cables will be installed between Biggleswade and Peterborough to prepare for digital in-cab signalling, under the £1.4 billion ECDP project. It follows further testing of the new signalling system being carried out between Welwyn and Hitchin during the Christmas shutdown.
Check all parts of your journey with National Rail Enquiries or your train operators before travelling.
Notes to Editors
- LNER will operate a reduced service terminating at Peterborough. Rail replacement coaches will run between Peterborough and Bedford, allowing passengers to join Thameslink services to London St Pancras.
- Grand Central will be operate a reduced train service from Sunderland to Peterborough, with coach connections to King’s Cross. There will be no services to and from Bradford.
- Hull Trains will have two trains per day in each direction using St Pancras rather than King’s Cross
- Lumo’s reduced service will involve a non-stop rail replacement coach between King’s Cross and Peterborough.
Digital signalling
Digital signalling, using the European Train Control System, is a proven technology already in use in many countries in Europe and elsewhere. The ECDP will see the first introduction of ETCS to an intercity mainline in Britain, and will provide the foundation for the future expansion of digital signalling across the network. ETCS is currently in use in the central London section of Thameslink and on the Cambrian Line in Wales, and now on the Northern City Line (Finsbury Park to Moorgate), in the first stage of ECDP.
For further details about ECDP, visit www.eastcoastdigitalprogramme.co.uk.
Contact information
Passengers / community members
Network Rail national helpline
03457 11 41 41
Latest travel advice
Please visit National Rail Enquiries
Journalists
Gareth Dennison
Media Relations Manager, Eastern region
Network Rail
07561 874858
gareth.dennison@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.
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