Network Rail delivers biggest Easter investment programme on time despite Storm Katie
OREANDA-NEWS. Despite Storm Katie doing her best to disrupt the long weekend, Network Rail's orange army completed a record-breaking 450 engineering projects planned for the Easter bank holiday on time.
Network Rail chief executive, Mark Carne, said: “Dealing with the damage caused by Storm Katie would have been challenging in itself, but it came on top of the biggest programme of Easter engineering works ever. I am immensely proud of the dedicated people who worked so hard to safely deliver over 450 improvement projects that will make a difference to passengers and businesses who rely on the railway every day.”
As Storm Katie battered Britain yesterday (Monday 28 March), overhead electrical wires were damaged on the East Coast mainline, a wall collapsed onto the tracks in north-west London, part of the roof was blown off a station in Bognor and over 100 trees were blown onto the railway in the south east of England. Engineers were drafted in overnight to clear lines, make repairs and keep passengers and freight moving.
Network Rail’s £60m Easter investment programme, part of the £40bn Railway Upgrade Plan, saw the successful building and construction of new station facilities, longer platforms, extra tracks, new junctions and the installation of thousands of pieces of new, more reliable equipment.
In and around London, overhead lines were renewed and Crossrail work was completed on the Great Eastern Main Line, while old track was replaced near Waterloo.
In Manchester, a major nine-day programme of work was started to improve the track layout at Manchester Victoria station as part of Network Rail’s Northern Hub project.
In Scotland, work continued to replace 1,800m of ageing track leading up to Glasgow Queen Street station to allow faster, greener and longer trains to run between Glasgow and Edinburgh.
Between Reading and London, work was completed to make way for electric trains and Crossrail, and in Kent signals were upgraded to improve the reliability of the railway for passengers.
About Network Rail
Network Rail owns, manages and develops Britain's railway - the 20,000 miles of track, 40,000 bridges and viaducts, and the thousands of signals, level crossings and stations (the largest of which we also run). In partnership with train operators we help people take more than 1.6bn journeys by rail every year - double the number of 1996 - and move hundreds of millions of tonnes of freight, saving almost 8m lorry journeys. We're investing £40bn in the railway by 2019 through our Railway Upgrade Plan to deliver more frequent, more reliable, safer services and brighter and better stations.
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