Thursday 9 Apr 2026
Weekend of significant upgrades will include milestone in station footbridge project
- Region & Route:
- Eastern
- | Eastern: East Midlands
A modern footbridge designed to last 120 years opened today (Thursday 9 April) at Harlington station to improve safety and long-term reliability.
The old footbridge will be removed during a busy programme of improvement work affecting passenger services between Bedford and Harpenden on Saturday 18 and Sunday 19 April.
Improvement work will also be taking place on the Harlington’s overhead line equipment, which was directly attached to the old bridge but will be free-running beneath the new one.
Other planned engineering work taking over the same weekend, making the most of the time the railway is closed, includes:
- track renewal at Flitwick, where five engineering trains and a tamper maintenance machine will install 642 metres of new rail, along with 2,760 tonnes of ballast and 1,008 concrete sleepers.
- further progress on the Access for All project at Luton station, where we’ll install an accessible footbridge and three lifts.
- drainage work at Harpenden station to prevent flooding, protect the railway and support safer, more reliable services for passengers.
The work means that on Saturday 18 and Sunday 19 April:
- No East Midlands Railway (EMR) services will run between Bedford and London St Pancras. An amended service will run between Sheffield/Derby/Nottingham and Bedford, and between Corby and Kettering/Bedford. Replacement buses will run between Bedford and Hitchin, and tickets will be valid on Great Northern/Thameslink services between Hitchin and London.
- Buses will replace Thameslink trains between Bedford and Harpenden. Tickets can be used on EMR replacement buses between Bedford and Hitchin, and on Great Northern/Thameslink services between Hitchin and London.
On Saturday 18 April, a revised train service will run between Harpenden and Brighton, and between London Bridge and Rainham. Trains between Peterborough and Horsham will call additionally at Norwood Junction, South Croydon, Purley, Earlswood and Salfords.
On Sunday 19 April, a revised train service will run between Harpenden and Brighton, West Hampstead Thameslink and Three Bridges/Horsham/Sutton, London Bridge and Rainham.
Dan Matthews, Network Rail operations director, said:
“The footbridge project at Harlington is nearing completion and will improve safety and reliability for many years to come. The milestone of removing the old bridge is just one part of a packed programme of improvement work on 18-19 April.
“By co-ordinating this work with other key upgrades along the route, we’re keeping disruption to a minimum and helping passengers see the benefits as quickly as possible. We appreciate everyone’s understanding while these important improvements take place.”
The car park at Harlington station has been partly closed throughout the project to replace the footbridge. It will be fully closed from 10pm on Sunday 12 April to 11.59pm on Friday 24 April to allow Network Rail contractors to set up and break down their worksite.
The station will remain open to passengers throughout. Motorists are advised to travel to Leagrave or Luton stations while the car park is closed. Users with monthly, quarterly or annual car park tickets will be able to use Leagrave and Luton car parks at no extra cost.
Adrian Gogay, infrastructure director at GTR, said:
“The opening of Harlington’s new footbridge is really good news for our passengers and paves the way for the removal of the old bridge on 18 and 19 April. I would like to apologise that, with buses replacing trains between Bedford and Harpenden for this essential improvement work, journeys are going to take longer. The station car park will also be completely closed for 12 days. Please do plan ahead, allow more time and check the latest online before setting out – especially if you are travelling to Luton Airport.”
Philippa Cresswell, customer experience director for East Midlands Railway said:
“We’re working closely with Network Rail to support this important programme of improvements and keep customers on the move.
“We’re advising anyone travelling to/from London over the weekend of 18-19 April, to allow extra time to complete their journey. There will be rail replacement buses in place between Bedford and Hitchin.
“We’d like to thank customers for their patience; the completed works will help deliver a more reliable railway for customers in the future.”
Check with National Rail Enquiries or your train operator’s website for full details of your journey.
Notes to Editors
In addition to this closure in April, there will be three further weekend closures later this spring affecting trains between Bedford and London:
Saturday 9 and Sunday 10 May: No EMR trains from Bedford to London St Pancras and no Thameslink trains between Bedford and Mill Hill Broadway.
Saturday 20 and Sunday 21 June: No EMR trains between Bedford and London St Pancras and no Thameslink trains between Bedford and London Bridge/Sutton.
Saturday 27 and Sunday 28 June: No EMR trains between Bedford and London St Pancras and no Thameslink trains between Bedford and West Hampstead Thameslink.
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.
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.
Follow us on Twitter: @networkrail
Visit our online newsroom: www.networkrailmediacentre.co.uk