Monday, 31 May 2021

Support pro-affirma the rebuilding of a Northampton-Market Harborough Rail Link

FYI Please respond and support the rebuild of a Northampton-Market Harborough rail link. We need it even with Rugby-Narborough and solutions to problems with finding backers to help push it forward are welcome to entertain. Our events page on our website has recently been updated. Please feel free to tap in. https://ertarail.co.uk/events/ 

Our thanks to Cllr Dominic Fosker for giving us notice. 

My thoughts on the rail link are:
a. The trackbed needs widening to cater for plethora uses as a 'green corridor' inclusive of walk-way, cycle-way, railway.
b. It would link Oxford-Milton Keynes/Aylesbury with Leicester/East Midlands and vice versa inclusive of Northampton as a main beneficiary.
c. Tracks can be lowered for tunnel 9'6 clearances for freight and with a north-west curve, would enable direct running to / from DIRFT.
d. Would take on the M1 as a parallel rail alternative for passenger and freight
e. Market Harborough end would need some new alignment and linkage with the Midland Main Line.
f. Nothing is trouble free, but we need to restore strategic missing rail alternatives.
g. Studies done hitherto show positive case merits and these should be built on/consolidated.
h. A508 corridor grows, more traffic and congestion ends up at urban centres and land use parking demand exacerbates and needs stemming at source. 
i. Buses can link with rail and feed each other, does not translate to a challenge per se as these transport modes cater for different audiences. Buses have a largely stabilized audience pattern, whereas rail deals with bulk and gets people out of their cars as per other reopenings can illustrate. Hope helpful.
j. Trains could also run onto the Brackmills Branch for freight (Industrial Market) and passenger - clearing through lines for other pathing/services. THe Brackmills Branch could have wait-over capacity for trains between turns in some cases.

You can NOW read the climate emergency action plan and have your say at:


Paper copies, for those without the internet, are available at Broughton Astley, Lutterworth and Market Harborough libraries. Alternatively, people can complete the survey, via telephone, with a customer service advisor, by making an appointment on 01858 828282.

Please, please do contribute, and share widely!

Please also write in support of rebuilding the railway to MP Mr Chris Heaton-Harris - Constituency includes much of the old route and as Rail Minister needs to practise what Government touts in his own back yard of route protection, delivery plan and putting the railway first in critical decision making/resourcing and implementation in a timely manner - there is a Climate Emergency! https://www.heatonharris.com/news/northampton-market-harborough-train-line

Sunday, 30 May 2021

ERTA Response to East-West Consultation 2021

27-05-21

Clearly some may agree or disagree with varying aspects, but we submit in good faith and hope instigatedly or defaultively, our ideas may prove to be better/the right ones. Some of you may find it helpful to look at our publicity page on our website: https://ertarail.co.uk/publicity/ and our diagrams which give a flavour: https://ertarail.co.uk/gallery/

You are never going to please anyone all the time. An east-west rail link (indeed more than one) is needed, as closure of originals and subsequent road building at huge cost and land take precursors creeping urbanisation expansion and gentrification pricing out of traditional urban and rural landscapes, means that we need to rebalance road with rail choices and alternatives. This does not mean a pigs ear superimposition per se, but has to go somewhere and options have been allowed to be eroded over the last 5 decades. Lesson to be learnt is Government of all tiers should be mandated to protect old rail routes/keep options open and public calls for this have been long standing, but ignored and drowned out with other plethora agendas from widening A14, Guided Busways on old railway formations and must-have more housing regardless of contextual considerations to name but a few. Risk and liability and cost means Government is comfortable to sit back and allow special dispensation to delivery vehicles like HS2 to plough through, bridge or tunnel and concrete over, contrast a wish-for more organic approaches which negotiates with people, stewards the landscape better and delivers capacity and choice if not high speed per se. The rail lobby like denominations, reflects the mosaic of public opinion, has popularist takes and agendas and again, it is the still small voices, which urge caution, protection and localism to be at the heart of our planning, transport accessibility and choices, not big brother stealth and power superimposed. I hope we strike a balance and wish the scheme well in principle, notwithstanding the dissenting aspects we have been careful to raise concerns about, namely the Northern Route E. As someone said, "you can disagree and still be friends" and we very much hope this will be the case.

ERTA Response to East-West Consultation 2021

1.0 Preamble:

1.1 The English Regional Transport Association (ERTA) is a pro-public transport membership-based association with a particular interest in reopening, rebuilding and select new pieces of restoring missing rail links across the English Regions. Our Chairman has been associated with organisations which have advocated an East-West Railway from Oxford-Bedford-Cambridge since 1987 His history is as follows:

1.2 1981 joined the Bedford-Bletchley Rail Users Association (BBRUA) – then seeking to save the last remnant of the Oxbridge line from closure threats (Serpell).

1.3 1985 Joined Railway Development Society (now Railfuture) and served on the Reopenings Committee with a brief to help forge forward the Oxford-Bletchley line for reopening.

1.4 1986/7 Forged Links and supported the formation of the Oxon and Bucks Rail Action Committee (OBRAC) which served as an umbrella organisation to bring various reopening advocating groups together between Oxford-Bicester/Aylesbury and Milton Keynes

1.5 1987 Formed the Bedford and Sandy Rail Reopening Association (BASRRA) which called for route protection, studying and reopening a rail link to link with the main line at Sandy for through services elsewhere and to the east-west corridor.

1.6 1990 Formed the Bedfordshire Branch of Transport 2000 (now Campaign for Better Transport/CBT) and carried on raising the profile of reopening the east-west rail with variations as much as possible. Coalesced local councils to support the idea and project which ultimately morphed into the East-West Rail Consortium (EWRC).

1.7 1997 Formed the Bedfordshire Railway and Transport Association (BRTA) which carried on route protection, advocacy and widening dynamic appeal of the strategic nature of the railway and courted councils to come together to support more. This carried on for about 8 years and after a 5-year break, was resuscitated to morph into the English Regional Transport Association (ERTA).

1.8 East West Rail Consortium (EWRC): The forming of the EWRC in 1994/5 was a game changer, levelling in funding for studies to put on a formal basis what we as lay-people had been advocating but without the resources to give it formal footing in an increasingly competitive arena of competing agendas, conflict and demands for science-based evidence.

 

1.9 Examples of time-line and development conflict:

However, the EWRC came after 7 years of calling for route protection which was not supported by Bedford Borough and Bedfordshire County Council, resulting in a. a cycleway along the old route which became and end in itself and an objector to a railway and b. the damage extensively done by allowing both the A1 Girtford Underpass, a lack of underpass to the A421 Bedford Southern Bypass and other encroachments of a development kind. Likewise, in latter years, the policy of the Office of Road and Rail (ORR) of opposing new level crossings for reopened railways, increases cost, affordability and rules out where layout of roads or urban landscapes do not lend themselves to the land-take of bridging with possible clearances in such wakes. However, that must be compared and contrasted with bridges, which get hit by lorries and buses aplenty, cost more and are not a panacea against clearances, witness 6-tracking north of Bedford Midland for example, totally unnecessary if part of the old route east of Bedford is adopted.

2.0 The Consultation Process and how we feel somewhat disenfranchised:

2.1 2019 Consultation came out of the blue to us and was held for Bedford at Scott Hall, easy for parking, remote for people who do not drive unless they live within walking distance of Fenlake in south-east Bedford. The long tradition is for civic consultations to be done in a central and optimally accessible place like Harpur Suite, Corn Exchange or Central Library for example. There walking, cycling, bus and rail access lends itself, driving and parking is a cost-time exercise, but a balance is not struck by locating to out-of-town centre areas. That consultation, took away a 30+ year consensus on what, if any reopening meant east of Bedford; formalised by the EWRC’s own 1997 study which verified what we had previously advocated, namely that east of Bedford meant the old route, with realignments south of Station Court Blunham, and swinging round to a new build alignment north of Sunderland Road Sandy and new links facing south to the East Coast Main Line (ECML), the idea of bolting on to the Cambridge-St Ives-Huntingdon corridor being scuppered by the decision and implementation of a Guided Busway on a railed (freight only/mothballed) railway corridor, blocking the northern access at Chesterton Junction which now has Cambridge North Station bestriding it.

2.2 The 5 options after £10 million to whittle down to just 5 from some 33 options ruled out/did not include the old route/turned away from the Steer Davis Gleave option or variants on it. This was a complete unexpected and shock to us and we were bitterly disappointed and disenfranchised/alienated from the whole process. The turning on its head all that had been understood and campaigned for at cost to start anew with 2 options supporting ‘via Bedford Midland’ and 3 avoiding Bedford altogether. The nudge psychology of Bedford Midland or bust of course twisted people’s arm for inclusion, but then led to the question of how you then end up at Cambridge and head off eastwards in some shape or form. Our view and reflection, given these changes of design dynamic and policy, however informed or not, was to accept the link with Bedford Midland, but calling for 2 new bay platforms bolted alongside the current Platform 1A for passenger trains to reverse and freight Midland Main Line (MML)-East-West to use existing tracks, albeit realigned and upgraded between St John’s area and Bedford Midland ‘box’ area. East-West freight, would avoid the Bedford Midland ‘box’ area, by a reinstatement of the triangle anew at St John’s area and thus conflict and away from any encroachments of residential areas.

3.0 Our emergent view of a new build between Bedford and north of Sandy/Tempsford area:

Rebuild/new build east of the old St John’s area reinstated anew triangle and either bridge or level crossing for Cardington Road/A603 dual carriageway. Head off east on old corridor with new level crossing needed at Priory Marina entrance, raise the A421 Bypass as per DfT were to give ‘sympathetic consideration’ at the Side Roads Order 199 1993 Inquiry and such an under-pass bridge would also, with perimeter fencing, enable a cycle/footway alongside the railway. Heading east, either plough through on old trackbed at Willington and relocate Danes Camp to Willington Woods or realign the railway to the north, cross over the Great River Ouse west of Willington and swing round and cross exact same River east of Willington and thence on embankment and new build go to the north of built Blunham alongside the Great Ouse River Valley and corridor to approach crossing A1/Ivel River from a south-westerly direction and – contrast the agenda of the 2019 and post discourses – choose physical linkage of tracks with the outer slows of the East Coast Main Line (ECML) for optimum scope, business courting and through rail journey capture. We are against segregated lines, we are against a new station, we are against 300 houses on a flood plain and a lack of facilities when existing settlements would be better enlarged with enhanced facilities.

Alas, this 2021 Consultation rejects this completely and presents us with a Northern Route E which arrives at the Tempsford area from a north-westerly direction.

4.0 Key objections to the Northern Route:

4.1 Six tracking through Bedford Midland and Poets area of Bedford. We need to see how the design and land use of a rebuilt Bedford Midland would look and fit in a context of growth on and off the rails.

4.2 Rebuilding of A4280 Bromham Road Bridge – going to need a land-take and be a massive under-taking with huge disruption and had Bedford Borough, Network Rail and other agencies listened to us, would have had an extra arch for bolting on to existing twin slows north of the bridge, we were completely ignored and now face more cost and disturbance as a result.

4.3 Fifty plus houses taken – not just residencies, people’s homes, our route option required fewer if any demolitions. Extended back gardens are not residencies and there is a difference between inconvenience and family dwellings.

4.4 The eyesore of a 50’ viaduct/flyover/bridge to get from ground level to incline of a hill over trunk roads and associated issues on a mainly flood plain which perennially floods.

4.5 The unnecessary intrusion, cost and upheaval of the Northern Route E arcing route and what of demolitions at Ravensden or associated to get through an increasingly built area both sides or projected route/s?

4.6 The conundrum of negotiating A1/A421, Black Cat Roundabout, Roxton, Roxton Garden Centre to get to the Tempsford Flood Plains east of the River Great Ouse/River Ivel conjoined area? Our route is flatter, more direct, in all probability less cost and less intrusive, courting fewer objections. Why not consider it, why not study it, why not compare and contrast? Instead, we have a stiff-necked ‘Northern Route or bust’ attitude, presumption and in our view, abuse of power.

5.0 The consultation Section by Section:

5.1 Oxford-Calvert:

Islip Station must have a regular train service and be invested in as an equal partner, optimising footfall and spend with things like capitalising on visitorship, country walks, cycle rides, more food and drink access and modest development in-keeping with the quasi-rural nature of the location.

5.2 A west-south new curve for Bicester-Aylesbury (nodal points of reference) should be studied and considered to enable rail to do more (passenger and possible freight).

5.3 Calvert must have a new station:

The area (3–5-mile radius) is growing, possible new town development, so a. keeps rail reopening and servicing by rail land-take-use options open and b. look at other servicing projects like extending Chiltern to Brackley alongside HS2 and indeed re-railing the Great Central corridor with new build to West Coast Main Line (WCML) Rugby connectivity for passenger and freight by rail options, capacity, re-railing outlying areas and catering for growth on a sustainable basis. We are not so concerned who does it, who serves it or who operated what services over it – the rails – but it is needed and should both be looked at and design options kept open instigatively and passively by others including HS2 and other development agendas and plans. Likewise, a new Calvert-Grendon rebuild of former GC rail corridor gives access by existing rails to Princes Risborough, High Wycombe, Old Oak Common and if we get our way, the new Southern Heathrow rail link to Woking and Guildford which provides off peak other use like freight away from residential areas of Aylesbury and London centric tracks (few other choices currently to orbit the capital north-south and east-west). Can also approach Reading from the east and link on to South West and/or Southampton flows.

5.4 Calvert-Winslow:

There should be land protected/identified around the old Claydon Station area with a view to a new station. The Claydons and surrounds have and are growing, Claydon House a major attraction of national interest and the gap between Bicester and Winslow is too great (given Buckingham a 10-mile distance is included in commuter use catchment potential case making) – needs to share-out the loading and parking/traffic flow and capacity more. Claydon could fill that gap and bring better public transport interchange in a quasi-rural transformed setting going forward.

5.5 Newton Longville/West Bletchley:

Growth of Milton Keynes and east of Winslow, north, south, east and west, makes consideration of a Parkway Station serving these areas out of urban cordons tangible and should be a. land use allocation identified, b. should be studied further/case making and c. kept under review/implemented at design stages now. Services can be diverse, fast end to end, semi fast with limited stops, slow, every stop plus freight. 24 x 7 railway, gives plenty of scope to optimise. However, this goal should be a constant along the whole project, alas flounders and stalls in some cases.

5.6 Bletchley:

This is good but should give more consideration to a. expanding capacity/baying and through tracks at Milton Keynes Central Station, b Wolverton and c. how Newport Pagnell and Northampton can more be included in the frame for Aylesbury links, Old Oak Common via Calvert links, Oxford via Bicester links and vice versa, bringing regenerative footfall and spend on a sustainable basis. The current one train per hour from Southern tracks to MK Central is an example of how capacity constraints, diagramming and available paths, stifle access. Some study needs to look at this and come up with rail-based solutions. Diversity on a theme makes sense and our suggestions seek to take it into account. a. where do people wish to go, b. what main hubs like places and airports could rail direct serve better/market capture.

5.7 Marston Vale Railway:

The quasi-rural nature, albeit a changing landscape constantly, should be valued, cherished and retained where possible. Likewise, the local hourly shuttle serving multiple halts should be retained and enhanced with a. Sunday and Bank Holiday Services, b. Increased hours inclusive of later night running say 11pm as a get you home/mop up service base note. c. The service could do more. Line guides should be produced and sold. Food and drink trolley service nurtured and retention of the toilet on a train and conductor likewise and retain the cash economy alongside other options. d. I do not think people would object to a bi-hourly service on Sundays and Bank Holidays if it is rock-solid reliable, sadly this has not been the case in recent years, however informed or not. e. We object to closure and relocation of stations, diversity of services should be the goal, not end to end whole line timings per se. f. Extension of the local service to Milton Keynes Central (£20 million spent), the electrification of the line and utilising old stock which could do more, a line-side freight development plan inclusive of regenerating freight to/from Forders loading gantry use and sidings – recycling centre and sending to processing centres by rail – located as is off the A1-M1 A421 link and near A6, could service a wide area with aggregately less lorries pounding the roads as a result. We need to think creatively, scope widely and court an alliance geared to making use of the infrastructure just sitting there, rotting in a world of need and resource demand. g. Kemspton Town/Retail Park – see attached report. But upwards of 18, 000 population/Kempston Town could bolster usership to any local or regional service on the Marston Vale Railway and should be round-tabled, supported, studied and progressed to boost all trains calling there. It is a short-sightedness that has not had station and development together for 40 years and needs rectifying with integrative bus services for local distribution and two-way feed.

5.8 St John’s – Bedford Midland:

a. Reinstate a Bedford St John’s area rail triangle for optimum operations (passenger and freight)

b. Claim and utilise the former Danfoss area for a realignment of railway, straightening and line speed increases.

c. Relocate the 1984 St John’s Halt to serve both sides of the railway and make 4-coach standard on all halts and stations for exact the same or more in principal locations like Bedford Midland Baying facilities.

d. install twin bays at Bedford Midland with a booking office/reception annex wedged between looking down Midland Road and the new station/track layout for pedestrian and cycle and bus access whilst car drivers can continue to use Ashburnham Road access and a new facility over Ford End Road Bridge – see diagram for an idea to be worked on.

e. Bedford St John’s – Tempsford – see 3.0 above.

5.9 Tempsford-Cambridge:

We would have preferred a going through a rebuilt purposed Sandy Interchange Station and via new interpretation through/tunnel the golf course near Potton and straight gradient line to south of Gamlingay and rebuild on old route to M11 where a new build and facilitation across the M11, River Cam, new re-claim of old route through Trumpington Meadows Development, Trumping ton P&R and junk the Guided Busway to roads and utilise old trackbed to serve both Addenbrookes/Cambridge South and a east-south curve for direct Stansted running from the west and via Long Road underpass bridges, to enter a broadened Cambridge ‘box’ of extra platforms, through or bay facilitation and broader neck enabling more than 3 tracks in/out from the south. In any case, if you went for the Shelford option, curving from the old route to a southerly direction would be less intrusive and hazardous than current derivative options. The reality is that all tiers of Government failed to protect the old route despite calls from public based organisations and developed even with an intent to reopen in mind well into the 2010’s. This flagrant breach of trust and stewardship should be translated to a levy of compensation shared both to the builders of the new rail link and those affected by it more.

5.10 On freight:

A new line off the Soham and Ely Junction lines across via Northstowe to join ECML slows at Tempsford (from a north easterly direction) to go out south-westerly makes sense to segregate freight and also ‘not via Cambridge’ extra capacity to reduce the conflict of intense passenger requirements to an international centre like Cambridge from multiple directions. This segregational approach means more by rail, not less. Yet this needs looking at now or the exact same scenarios as before, whereby land is taken for development, no corridor planned, and failing to plan means planning to fail! We cannot afford to if we are serious on climate change, climate emergency and modal shift/cutting road emissions and associated volume pro-rata of road space informing congestion, pollution and wasting both time and energy as a normative bi-product of human activity. The rail alternative is needed and we must think bigger, better and act now to secure this new route.

 

Richard Pill

ERTA Chairman

richard.erta@gmail.com

29-05-21



 


Thursday, 20 May 2021

Press Release ERTA Welcomes new initiative to part renationalise the British Rail System 20-05-21

20 May 2021

Press Release

ERTA Welcomes new initiative to part renationalise the British Rail System

ERTA welcomes the news of Government moves towards renationalisation of the railways under the umbrella title of Great British Railways. We very much hope this ‘new dawn’ lives up to that word ‘Great’ whereas a more honest title may have been British Rail or British Railways. We welcome the bringing together of train and track and maybe some better cohesion of the railways as a robust, environmentally friendly public transport system upon which to base the masse conveyance of people and goods. However, we want guarantees from the Secretary of State for Transport, Rt. Hon Grant Shapps MP that the following will be built-in to the new organisations’ ethos, goals and fabric:

1. That the Rail Reopenings Fund is not a one-off but renewed with fresh annual funding allocations and a rolling programme fostered. In particular, signalling a change from road to rails more in environmental terms will mean reducing the new roads budget of £27 billion to boost the rail reopenings budget from a mere £500 million to parity at very least to indicate a wish to transfer more traffic to the rails.

2. That walk-on, walk-off access and services to the general public will be retained and boosted with better streamlines, concessionary fares, cards and flexible approaches to ticketing and reasonable expectations of ratios of seats to passengers per train and an end to overcrowding.

3. There will be a line-born freight plan to nurture modal shift from road to rail from parcels click, collect and send at stations over 10, 000 populations to recycling by rail, block trains and pallets, parcels and post by rail more.

4. That Concessionary bus and rail passes will be nationwide and homogenised and broadened for lifestyle choices and mobility as a right, not a cost-managed exercise.

5. That design of trains will include more capacity for bikes, luggage, small consignments as well as information hard copy as well as technologically communicated.

ERTA welcomes the initiative, but will be concerned that the fine detail, timely delivery and greater cohesion for apprehension by the public with a duty of care including good on/off rail toilet provision is benchmarked for accountability on standards and passenger’s rights, rather than mere aesthetic tick-boxing of political correctness.

End of Press Release

Notes:

1. Useful source: https://www.gov.uk/government/news/great-british-railways-for-the-passenger

2. Further comment: Mr Richard Pill, ERTA Chairman and Media Spokesperson 01234 330090/ richard.erta@gmail.com



Tuesday, 18 May 2021

Horses for courses and railways too! Local Railways for Local People

 Dear Friends, Colleagues and Elected Representatives,


This is the latest story on East-West Rail. Key question is why? Why go to such lengths, why build a route requiring 50' viaducts and up-hill and down-hill and maybe even tunnels with 50 houses and whatever else needed to plough through the Ravensden area? This, when using the old route via St John's with reversals of passenger services at Bedford Midland or even a segregated 'local' Oxford-Bedford interchange at Bedford Midland with 'local' Bedford-Cambridge is not beyond realms of work-ability. Afterall, one call from the Bedford Committee of the 1960's was to run trains into Bedford Midland for better connectivity and boost the cross-country services as a result. X5/905 buses truncate at Bedford now. Whether immediate lag or 10 minutes, it gives people choices whether to break journeys or not. What opportunities could that kind of planning present, especially if the bays were next to existing Platform 1A Bedford-Bletchley line and a new booking hall was built facing down Midland Road pointing towards the town centre? Then modifying the current station layout off Ashburnham Road, more parking demand is likely and so an extra twin-tracks through that compound, seems at odds with that goal? 

What of freight services? That is why reinstating the triangle at St Johns could enable these to go straight by without recourse to Bedford Midland. The only freight needing recourse to Bedford Midland would be north MML-East West tracks and vice versa, considerably less if you adopt the old St John's route instead.

Likewise at Tempsford, we call for physical tracks linking outer slows of East Coast Main Line for wider market reach and range to and from those destinations like Peterborough, Stevenage and East Bedfordshire DIRECT to Bedford and beyond. Likewise a north-east rail link for direct running from St Neots to Cambridge South Addenbrookes - driving is a nightmare, public transport likewise due to congestion, so rail could offer a real choice. Not so if segregation and changing trains in a bleak landscape is the name of the game as is current in designs!

The battle continues, but at least this time, we are offering a painless relief whilst improving on east-west rail connectivity, than losing it to new roads, A428 dualling and Black Cat Roundabout going on now without regards to the railway... Roxton Garden Centre in the frame? There are few panaceas, but our suggestion may be cheaper, may do a better job and do justice to all concerned. Surely it is worth studying? Please make your views known to the consultation: https://eastwestrail.co.uk/consultation

Yours sincerely,


Richard Pill
ERTA Chairman





Sunday, 16 May 2021

Support the Guildford-Horsham-Shoreham Rail Link Reinstatement Campaign

ERTA calls on people everywhere to wade in and support the campaign for reinstating the Guildford-Horsham-Shoreham Rail Link. It needs pro-active protection with Government having a role and responsibility but sadly not insisting it be done. The route is under pressure from various development pressures. Meanwhile Binstead shows what you get without investment in the railway - more roads, bypasses and development with yet more traffic turning up at urban interfaces causing congestion and air pollution, but also land used for more parking is land which cannot be used for employment or housing for example. There's a sense these things are not being properly thought through. We need campaigners to join with us and urge councils to come together with resolve that 'the railway must be reopened'. The Wey and Arun Canal project does not have to assume the old railway trackbed, it has other options. Please join ERTA or at least our email loop for more information: richard.erta@gmail.com


Greetings. Letters sent to local MP's calling for the following, are far more powerful than remote hosted emails from people living outside the areas concerned, however caring they may be. If an MP gets a handful of letters, they are legally obliged to at least look into it and take action where appropriate. Therefore we appeal to you and please forward to like-minds - to email/write to the local MP's between Guildford-Waverley/South West Surrey/Horsham and beyond to Shoreham and Brighton. The missing rail link of Guildford-Cranleigh-Horsham-Shoreham is a vital missing strategic rail link for both carrying passenger and freight off local and regional roads.
ERTA has updated its diagram and tables Zoom Meetings which are open to all/please encourage others to attend these.
The next one is:
July 5th 14.00 hrs Guildford and South East Area Meeting Hosted by Mr Iain Sears iainsear22@hotmail.com Please do contact Mr Sear and register your interest.
Currently the route is used as a cycle-way/footpath 'green corridor' but now there's a dual application for turning part of the route to a canal 'Wey and Arun'. This, apart from a broadening of the route, would in our view conflict with the railway interest and other options exist combining existing water courses and new build elsewhere. These applications tabled at Guildford and Waverley must be rejected to keep the rail option alive surely? Broadening the trackbed on which a railway could go, would require lands but could accommodate a railway and perimeter fence with walk-way/cycle-way slewed but accommodated. But a canal would be a completely different animal to deal with.
I attach updated brochure and flyer and welcome volunteers to be found to advocate for the railway at the local level. We do have some members in the area, but Covid has taken a toll and physical meetings will take time to nurture in the new context. You may find perusal of our website: https://ertarail.co.uk/publicity/ useful.
You may observe from our diagram, we want a new direct link between Polegate and Stone Cross. Please again, help protect lands to ensure it can be done and the benefits to all received. Development with a new station on existing lines, does not address the time-taken to reverse at Eastbourne whereas if the direct link was restored in some shape or form, it would enable some Hastings-Brighton fasts and more capacity for London-Gatwick-Resort fasts as well, bringing diverse footfall and spend sustainably all year round.
We appeal to Government to enact measures to:
a. protect rail routes wanted for reopening/reinstatement/select new builds
b. to bring the councils together and bid for funding
c. ensure a rolling programme of rail reopenings is on-going, not just a gimmick with a disproportionate spend on new roads, rather than new rails.
Please do email Rt. Hon Grant Shapps MP, Secretary of State for Transport and the Rail Minister, Mr Chris Heaton-Harris MP to get a nationwide plan and action going to keep options open, especially in a context of laissez-faire development without much responsibility to these vital corridors and links.
Does it make any sense to support Guildford-Woking-Heathrow without a rail link south of Guildford for through trains to once delivered and loaded, to run on to elsewhere including Horsham, Crawley and Gatwick from the south or Brighton via Shoreham and those audiences vice versa? Trains waiting on platforms at Guildford going no-where occupy space other trains could be using, so we do need more options and capacity for diverse rail services and less time waiting at signals. Guided Busways are useless for freight and lock out rail, as the example of Cambridgeshire may well be held up as an illustration: http://www.simplonpc.co.uk/CambridgeBusway.html
Email richard.erta@gmail.com for brochure and flyer pdf.

Update 19-06-21

The following minutes have been submitted to me to redistribute. 
Please contact either David Ferguson or Colin Crawford for any enquiries. Due to restrictions on Covid gatherings indoors, our physical meetings are curtailed and most are Zoom only for the time being. See https://ertarail.co.uk/events/ for details and tap into the relevant host and request inclusion.

Minutes are therefore as follows:

Minutes of ERTA Guildford Saturday 12th June  at 3.00 pm- at The Rodboro Buildings, 1–10 Bridge Street, Guildford, Surrey, GU1 4RY
Present{ David Ferguson, Colin Crawford, Simon Barber, Aliatair Smith (Guildford Society- GS)

1. Appointment of Chair for the meeting was Somon Barber. David Fergusion  was appointed Minute Taker for the meeting
2. The Chairman welcomed members to the meeting particularly Alistair Smith as Chairman of the GS who reciprocated by offering to send copies of various papers and links.
3. Apologies for absence:  Richard Pill, Peter Trevaskis, Cllr
4. Guildford-Cranleigh-Horsham-Shoreham 
a. Trackbed Watch – a general discussion took place.Rushett Farm bridge is closed on a cycle track. Dunsford Aerodrome:planning permission but transfer of ownership from Trinity College Cambridge. The GS is monitoring this case.
5. North Downs Link: Baynards tunnel may need re-boring.There is a problem with the south end of Rudgewick with development on a cutting site. The Guildford Society would like to see a rail reopening to Cranleigh with a branch line to Dunsford firsta
6. Guildford Rail Issues:
The Royal Surrey Hospital is at Grip 3 status for a new station. Burpham & Merrow also a new station. The GS want to increase the Portsmouth line from 4rph to 6 tph and ro 4 tph on the North Dows line and to reduce trains terminating at Guildford except from Effingham
7. Guildford town centre : The GS are supporting  the Council in a total revamps of the town centre which will make it a lot easier to move to the train station.
8. Any Other Business. general discussion.
9. Day, Date, Time and Place of Next Meeting: To be advised.  Members to Liaise directly with theConvenor: Mr David Ferguson: T. 0208 9774181daferguson1212@gmail.com who will  report back to the  EC.

DF/CC 18.6.21

End.

Chairman's Note: The proposed intrusion on the trackbed of the Wey and Arun Canal Project may seem to lock tranquility in, but the flip side if it deters ability for a railway, is that it locks in all growth to go by roads and that in turn will inform demand for road upgrading. The result is more loss of land and countryside with a green oasis rather than getting people onto public transport and enjoying the wider benefits of doing so. Please help by writing to Waverley and Guildford Councils and your local MP.



Saturday, 15 May 2021

Great Central Report - pdf with photos available via richard.erta@gmail.com

 

After crossing Olney Lane at SP 5166 7252 the trackbed is part of the Great Central Way, a well-maintained cyclepath and footpath, for the next 3km. The line of the former railway is unbroken north of here until the point that Abbey Street, Rugby is reached, just before the West Coast Main Line.

{…..detail to come on the bit between Olney Lane and Ashlawn Road}

The trackbed runs under the Ashlawn Road overbridge at SP 5159 7319, and from here until the West Coast Main Line is reached at SP 5160 7569 it is part of National Cycling Network Route 41. Continuing just west of north from Ashlawn Road in a deep cutting (Figure 1) the trackbed passes under the footbridge between Pytchley Road and Catesby Road at SP 5148 7394 (Figure 2). After this the trackbed approaches the site of the former Rugby Central Station. The surface has been well-maintained throughout this walkway, but until a few years ago it had been very muddy in places. Much work has been done to improve the drainage, so now we have good walking/cycling surfaces with areas of wetland to the sides (Figure 3). In places the footpath/cyclepath meanders slightly to move around the wet areas on opposing sides of the path, even though the line of the trackbed is very straight (Figure 4). There are numerous access points for walkers along this stretch.

Looking south along the Great Central Walkway, with the B4429 Ashlawn Road overbridge ahead (SP 5155 7353).

Figure 1 Looking south along the Great Central Walkway, with the B4429 Ashlawn Road overbridge ahead (SP 5155 7353).

Looking south along the Great Central Walkway, towards the footbridge connecting Pytchley Road and Catesby Road (SP 5147 7400).

Figure 2 Looking south along the Great Central Walkway, towards the footbridge connecting Pytchley Road and Catesby Road (SP 5147 7400).

Looking north along the Great Central Walkway, showing some of the nearby wetland (SP 5145 7406, or close).

Figure 3 Looking north along the Great Central Walkway, showing some of the nearby wetland (SP 5145 7406, or close).

Looking south along the Great Central Walkway at the southernmost extent of the raised station platform. It shows how the walkway has been created to meander with vegetation and wetland in pockets on each side (SP 5139 7445).

Figure 4 Looking south along the Great Central Walkway at the southernmost extent of the raised station platform. It shows how the walkway has been created to meander with vegetation and wetland in pockets on each side (SP 5139 7445).

At SP 5141 7438, shortly before Rugby Central Station is reached, the cutting widens out slightly. I think this was probably railway sidings. At the station site itself, the central island platform is still in evidence, and the footpath/cyclepath is carried along the length of the platform while the trackbeds on either side are mainly full of water and vegetation (Figure 5, Figure 6, Figure 7).

Detail of the wetland that has been established in part of the trackbed at the site of Rugby Central Station (SP 5137 7461).

Figure 5 Detail of the wetland that has been established in part of the trackbed at the site of Rugby Central Station (SP 5137 7461).

Looking north towards Hillmorton Road bridge from the platform at Rugby Central station (SP 5137 7461).

Figure 6 Looking north towards Hillmorton Road bridge from the platform at Rugby Central station (SP 5137 7461).

A closer look at the platform at the former Rugby Central station. Looking north from the trackbed (SP 5139 7447).

Figure 7 A closer look at the platform at the former Rugby Central station. Looking north from the trackbed (SP 5139 7447).

The trackbed passes underneath Hillmorton Road bridge at SP 5137 7464. It is at this point that there would have been passenger access to Rugby Central Station, although the only access now is via switchback footways on the north side of Hillmorton Road bridge.

At various points on this stretch the local Rotary Club has carried out maintenance on self-seeded and dead trees, as well as installing some short stretches of old railway track in order to add to the interest on this section.

Just north of Hillmorton Road bridge the footpath drops down to track level as the northern end of the island platform is reached (Figure 8). The trackbed continues in a cutting towards Abbey Street and the West Coast Main Line, passing under bridges at Lower Hillmorton Road (SP 5137 7490), Clifton Road (SP 5142 7523) and Bridge Street (SP 5146 7535).

Looking south at Hillmorton Road bridge and the northern extent of the Rugby Central station platform (SP 5137 7467).

Figure 8 Looking south at Hillmorton Road bridge and the northern extent of the Rugby Central station platform (SP 5137 7467).

North of Bridge Street the surrounding land falls away and the cutting becomes shallower. The trackbed passes between rows of houses until it reaches Abbey Street at SP 5160 7570. At this point the trackbed is above street level and this section of the Great Central Way comes to an end. A bridge would have taken the track across Abbey Street and further north across the West Coast Main Line, but the bridge has been removed (Figure 9). It is possible to view some of the bridge supports that are still in place when looking north across the West Coast Main Line from the point at which the Great Central Way comes to an end (Figure 10).Remains of the bridge taking the GCR across Abbey Street just before it reaches the West Coast Main Line (SP 5161 7570).

Figure 9 Remains of the bridge taking the GCR across Abbey Street just before it reaches the West Coast Main Line (SP 5161 7570).

Looking at the gap across Abbey Street to the bridge support before the West Coast Main Line is reached by the GCR. The photo is taken from the raised trackbed, at the northernmost walkable extent of this portion of the Great Central Walkway, looking north (SP 5161 7570).

Figure 10 Looking at the gap across Abbey Street to the bridge support before the West Coast Main Line is reached by the GCR. Taken from the raised trackbed, at the northernmost walkable extent of this portion of the Great Central Walkway, looking north (SP 5161 7570).

For the pdf with photos please email richard.erta@gmail.com

 

Monday, 10 May 2021

Notes of ERTA Guildford and South East Area Meeting Saturday May 8th 2021 starting 14.00 hrs Host: Mr Iain Sear iainsear22@hotmail.com

 Notes of ERTA Guildford and South East Area Meeting

Saturday May 8th 2021 starting 14.00 hrs

Host: Mr Iain Sear iainsear22@hotmail.com

Present: Nick Houston, Rob Cooke, Iain Sears, Colin, East Sussex County Councillor, Richard Pill and Margaret Darvill.

1. Apologies for absence: None

2. Guildford-Horsham-Shoreham Rail Reopening/Rebuild: There was discussion with one person saying they may try to widen the corridor to accommodate a railway, a cycleway-cum-footpath and a canal. This was debated a bit, but if can be done, better than no railway accommodation.

a. Wey and Arun Canal Threat Updates: One source said still at planning level, awaiting Environmental Agency approval. Richard explained Simon who was working on the matter was taken ill with a stroke and is therefore out action. ERTA can aim to facilitate Zoom and other gatherings in due course and will aim to notify people of them. We need people to commit to keeping in touch with us also.

b. Getting Councils on board with MP’s: Chicken and egg, which comes first, although bids for the Railway Reopening Fund required MP leadership from the constituency upwards. Richard said we had contacted councils and MPs along the line but mixed responses.

c.  Physical Meetings at Guildford, Horsham and Redhill starts June (dates to be confirmed): David Ferguson was the main contact to keep in touch with.

3. Heathrow Rail Link Progress: Richard reported that some coverage was in Rail Magazine that Secretary of State for Transport Grant Shapps had signalled some support and keeping the door open on it. The result could be a direct Guildford-Heathrow service possibly running onto Old Oak Common Interchange and maybe a new link/tunnel to the Chiltern Main Line for an Aylesbury-Guildford rail arc. How short sighted then not to want rail links south of Guildford to places like Horsham and Shoreham with through running to Gatwick from the south via Horsham and Crawley via Three Bridges for example and also Shoreham for Brighton and vice versa? It was also noted this could alleviate capacity issues at Guildford with trains dropping off/picking up and going onto somewhere rather than sitting on the platforms. The idea of an Arundel Curve was also raised, enabling more for less-than 500 meters and again the avoiding line reinstatement at Eastbourne would only be about 1 mile of track. Fields exist, but height clearances of the main north-south road out of Eastbourne was a concern potentially (see item 4).

4. Brighton-Ashford: Discussion was had on the pros and cons of a direct Polegate-Stone Cross reinstated direct avoiding line to Eastbourne to enable faster Brighton-Ashford services via Hastings and vice versa without recourse to Eastbourne every time. A mix could be looked at and more Capital-Gatwick-Eastbourne direct services lotted in as well. Realignment of the avoiding line would be needed to avoid new development. It may be too late as new development Stone Cross side is envisaged and a new station on existing lines locking in the Eastbourne reversing model. Cllr Colin of East Sussex County Council offered to raise the subject at a future meeting. This was welcome news.

5.  Electrification agendas in the South East pros and cons: The debate on the North Downs lines is whether to electrify and which sort, Overhead or Third Rail and why? Hydrogen powered trains remain an option as well. Electrification could enable Thameslink’s to run to Guildford via Redhill direct as they do from Three Bridges to Horsham.

6. Any Other Business: Richard to email Wealden District Council about it in due course.

7. Day, Date, Time and Place of next Zoom Meeting: July 5th 14.00 hosted by Mr Iain Sear to whom we thank for his help.

Meeting finished 14.43pm.