Weekend work in early January to enable introduction of digital signalling to East Coast Main Line: East Coast Digital Programme-7

Monday 14 Nov 2022

Weekend work in early January to enable introduction of digital signalling to East Coast Main Line

Region & Route:
Eastern
| Eastern: East Coast

Passengers intending to travel to and from London and other destinations on the East Coast Main Line via Peterborough, and across Great Northern routes over the weekend of 7 and 8 January are being asked to plan ahead due to engineering work and check how their journey may be affected.

Work is taking place as part of the Government funded transformational East Coast Digital Programme (ECDP), aimed at boosting reliability and allowing faster recovery from disruption, enabling a better and more punctual, service for passengers.  The transformational programme will see state-of the art digital signalling introduced, providing continuous, real time information to the driver’s cab. 

Over the weekend of 7 and 8 January a new signalling system is being tested in the Wood Green-New Barnet area of North London, preparing the area for digital signalling while reducing faults involved with the current system.  New lineside equipment and technology is also being installed between Welwyn Garden City and Hitchin, preparing the way for this section to become the first part of the East Coast Main Line to operate with digital signalling.

On 7 and 8 January, no train services will run between St Neots (south of Peterborough), Royston and London.​

A reduced LNER service will start and terminate at St Neots or Peterborough, with rail replacement coaches between St Neots and Bedford where passengers can connect to Thameslink services to or from London St Pancras. 

Hull Trains will operate a reduced service via the Midland Main Line into London St Pancras with extended journey times.​

Thameslink will operate a limited shuttle service between Peterborough and St Neots, and Great Northern will run trains between Royston, Cambridge, Ely and Kings Lynn. Rail replacement bus services will serve intermediate stations between St Neots, Royston and Finsbury Park. ​

For customers wishing to travel to London, there will be rail replacement bus services from selected Great Northern stations across to the Midland Main Line to connect into Thameslink services from Bedford to London St Pancras.  No Great Northern services will operate on the Hertford branch between Stevenage and Alexandra Palace, with stations being served by rail replacement bus services.  There will also be no services on the Moorgate branch. ​

There will be a similar level of disruption to services over the weekend of February 17/18 in what will be the only other significant weekend of ECDP related disruption in the first half of 2023.  It is expected that the first trains to operate on the East Coast Main Line using digital signalling technology will run in 2025.

Ed Akers, Principal Programme Sponsor, Network Rail, said:

“The work taking place in early January is an essential early stage towards delivering the transformation of a digitally signalled East Coast Main Line.   This will create better journeys on a state of the art, reliable railway, whilst reducing emissions and providing further safety protection.

“We are sorry for the disruption that this will cause passengers, and I urge people to plan ahead and check before you travel”.

David Horne, Managing Director, LNER, said:

“We welcome this investment in a vital project that will bring numerous benefits for our customers. It will take our railway into a digital age, helping to transform customer journeys and make rail travel even smoother, more punctual and more sustainable.”

Jenny Saunders, Customer Services Director, Thameslink and Great Northern, said:

“With no trains into London on the Peterborough and Cambridge routes south of St Neots and Royston, as well as the Hertford branch, on the weekend of 7 and 8 January, passengers will really have to plan carefully to avoid being caught out.

“In the long term, the new digital signalling system being installed will give our customers better, more reliable journeys but in the short term, on this weekend and another in February, journeys will take much longer and probably involve a rail replacement bus.

“Please plan ahead and check online at nationalrail.co.uk to see how you will be affected.”

ENDS

Notes to Editors

Trains are already being tested with digital signalling operations on the Northern City Line between Finsbury Park and Moorgate in the City of London.  It is expected that in early 2023 driver training will begin and the first passenger services on the Northern City Line will be digitally signalled.

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