Network Rail Route 7 (Great Eastern)
Strategic Route 7 - Great Eastern was the designation given by Network Rail, from 2004 to 2009, to a grouping of railway lines in the East of England that encompassed the Great Eastern Main Line and its various branch lines. The route serviced the regional centres of Colchester, Ipswich and Norwich as well as the ports of Felixstowe and Harwich. [1]
In 2010, Network Rail restructured its route categorisation. Routes 5 and 7 were merged into Strategic Route D: East Anglia.[2]
Strategic route sections
The Route was divided into a number of separate Strategic Route Sections (SRS's) that were defined based on route use, infrastructure and historical lines.
Route | Strategic Route Sections (SRS) | Corresponding historical lines (whole & partial) |
---|---|---|
Route 7 - Great Eastern | 07.01 - Liverpool Street – Shenfield | Great Eastern Main Line |
07.02 - Shenfield – Ipswich | Great Eastern Main Line | |
07.03 - Ipswich – Norwich | Great Eastern Main Line | |
07.04 - Freight Lines | freight only lines within area covered | |
07.05 - Shenfield – Southend Victoria/Southminster | Crouch Valley Line, Shenfield to Southend Line | |
07.06 - Braintree Branch | Braintree Branch Line | |
07.07 - Harwich Branch | Mayflower Line | |
07.08 - Walton and Clacton Branches | Sunshine Coast Line | |
07.09 - Romford – Upminster | Romford to Upminster Line | |
07.10 - Sudbury to Marks Tey | Gainsborough Line | |
07.11 - East Suffolk line and Norfolk Branches | Bittern Line, East Suffolk Line, Wherry Lines | |
07.12 - Felixstowe – Ipswich Yard | Felixstowe Branch Line |
Railway planning
As part of Network Rail's Strategic Business Plan a Route Plan for each route, including Route 7, was published annually. The Route 7 plans for 2008[3] and 2009[1] are made available online.
Together with Route 5 - West Anglia and Route 6 - North London Line and Thameside the route was included in the Greater Anglia Route Utilisation Strategy.[1]
Proposed developments
The Greater Anglia RUS includes a number of proposals for the future development of the route. In the medium term, 2009–14, this includes minor infrastructure works and additional rolling stock to allow main line peak-service trains to be extended to 12-car formation. Also included is the proposal for the extension of platforms at Stratford to handle 12 cars, to allow all main line peak-service trains to be extended to 8 or 12-car formation. In the longer term intentions are to continue the lengthening of peak trains to 12-car formation.[4] Enhancements to the power supply of the route are intended for completion by 2012 to interface with those carried out on Route 5 and Route 6.[5]
References
- 1 2 3 "Route 7 - Great Eastern 2009" (PDF). Network Rail. 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-27.
- ↑ "Route Plans archive". Network Rail. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
- ↑ "Route 7 - Great Eastern 2008" (PDF). Network Rail. 2008. Retrieved 2009-05-27.
- ↑ "Greater Anglia Route Utilisation Strategy" (PDF). Network Rail. Retrieved 2009-05-08.
- ↑ "Enhancements programme: statement of scope, outputs and milestones" (PDF). Network Rail. 2009-03-31. Retrieved 2009-07-01.
See also
- Network Rail Route 23 (North West Rural)
- Network Rail Route 5 (West Anglia)
- Network Rail Route 6 (North London Line and Thameside)