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Commuter (Iarnród Éireann)

Commuter (Irish: Comaitéir) is a brand of suburban rail services operated by Iarnród Éireann in the Republic of Ireland, serving the cities of Dublin, Cork, Limerick and Galway. This brand is distinct from the longer distance InterCity brand, and Dublin's higher frequency DART brand. Most Commuter services share a track with InterCity services. During the first decade of the new millennium, Iarnród Éireann put a significant amount of effort into upgrading its network, with new tracks, signalling, station upgrades and trains. Commuter services are operated by diesel multiple unit train sets.

Commuter
Overview
StatusOperational
OwnerIarnród Éireann
LocaleGreater Dublin Area
Cork
Stations74
Service
TypeCommuter rail, Suburban rail
SystemIarnród Éireann
Services7
Operator(s)Iarnród Éireann
Depot(s)Cork
Drogheda Depot
Limerick
Portlaoise Traincare Depot
Rolling stock2600 Class
2800 Class
29000 Class
22000 Class
History
Opened16 May 1994 (As Arrow)
30 June 2003 (As Commuter)
Technical
Number of tracks2-4
Track gauge1,600 mm (5 ft 3 in)
Operating speed120 km/h (75 mph)
160 km/h (99 mph) (Kildare services)

History

Arrow

The brand was introduced on 16 May 1994 as 'Arrow', the first specific branding for diesel suburban services, with the launch of the Arrow brand on the newly opened Kildare line. This brand was applied to stations on the line, as well as the 2600 Class railcars. It was also applied to the 2700 Class and 2800 Class railcars upon their introduction (however in the case of the latter, it was removed shortly after their introduction into service and replaced with the National Development Plan logo). Thus the Arrow brand became the first major branding for suburban railway services in Dublin (officially, its use remained limited to the Kildare line, but Arrow branded or liveried trains were used on most suburban services).

 
An IE Commuter 29000 Class at Tara Street Station, 2009. The LED Screen translated From Irish to English reads "Destination: Pearse Station

Commuter

On 30 June 2003, the Arrow brand was renamed 'Commuter', upon the introduction of the 29000 Class railcars and was also extended to the entire suburban railcar fleet. It was also used in some signage and advertising, giving the diesel commuter networks a consistent look for the first time. The Dublin railway system is now called "DART/Commuter" in line with the new brand, with the former Arrow brand having been completely phased out by 2007.

Rolling stock

In March 2007, IÉ placed an order for five additional 6-car 22000 Class DMU sets, totalling €79 million, to be added to its initial order of 150 cars. These additional trains are currently used on the outer Dublin suburban network to destinations including Portlaoise, Carlow and Athlone. A further order for an additional 51 cars, formed into 17 three-car units and totalling €140 million, was made in March 2009, for use to other suburban destinations, including Dundalk, Portlaoise, Longford and M3 Parkway.[1]

In July 2007, IÉ announced that it was in the process of placing orders for a further 400 carriages. The bulk of these (up to 250 cars) was intended as EMUs to expand DART services. This project was cancelled in 2009.[citation needed]

The remainder, totaling up to 150 cars, consisted of DMU sets for the expansion of Commuter services in Cork and Limerick, as well as the long-distance Commuter sets for services in Leinster. These sets were introduced into revenue service from 2009 until April 2012, when the final deliveries took place.[citation needed]

Rebranding

In 2010, 2600, 2700, and 2750 Classes began to be re-liveried from Commuter to a grey and green colour scheme with no reference to the Commuter brand. Instead, an Irish Rail logo referencing the then booking website was displayed on the side of the trains. In 2012, the 2800 Class was re-branded leaving only the 29000 Class in the Commuter livery. Then in 2014, the 29000 Class received a new all-over two-tone dark green livery. Since March 2013 the new bilingual logo has been introduced across the company's rolling stock, including the Commuter service. This is designed to eliminate customer confusion between the two names Iarnród Éireann and Irish Rail and create a more unified image.[2]

Services

Dublin

There are four commuter services serving Dublin along with the DART.

Cork

There are three suburban rail lines servicing the Greater Cork area, which comprise the Cork suburban network.

Limerick

The Limerick commuter rail network consists of three suburban rail lines which comprise the Limerick suburban network.

Galway

The Galway commuter rail network consists of one suburban rail service which comprises the Galway suburban network.

Other

Other services operate between Mallow and Tralee, and Manulla Junction and Ballina. In addition, some InterCity services operate using Commuter branded DMUs – these include Dublin–Sligo and Dublin–Rosslare Europort services.

 
A 29000 Class DMU (29003) arriving at Malahide

Rolling stock

Commuter services are operated primarily using DMU "railcars,” with four separate classes operating on most routes:

Current Fleet

 Class  Image  Top speed   Number   Routes operated   Built   Notes 
 mph   km/h 
2600 Class   70 110 8 Mallow-Cork-Cobh
Mallow-Tralee (Sundays only)
Cork-Midleton
1993 2609 operated as a hybrid 2-car unit with 2716 (withdrawn in 2012)
2800 Class   75 120 8 Limerick-Waterford
Limerick-Limerick Junction
Limerick-Ennis
Limerick-Galway
2000
29000 Class   29 Dublin-Maynooth
Dublin-Dundalk
Dublin-Gorey
Dublin-M3 Parkway
Dublin-Longford
2002–2005
22000 Class   100 160 28 (3-car)
25 (4-car)
10 (5-car)
Dublin-Maynooth
Dublin-M3 Parkway
Dublin-Kildare-Portlaoise
Dublin-Longford
Dublin-Rosslare
Dublin-Dundalk
Limerick-Limerick Junction
Limerick Junction-Waterford
2007–2011 Also used on InterCity services

Former Fleet

 Class  Image  Top speed   Number   Routes operated   Built   In service   Notes 
 km/h   mph 
2700 Class   110 68 12 All routes 1997-1998 1998-2012 2716 operated as a hybrid 2-car unit with 2609 (also withdrawn); all stored at Inchicore Works and Cork Kent railway station
2750 Class   2

Operation

All of the DMU types can operate either independently or can be attached to another set of their own class or of another class to form trains of up to ten cars.

In addition to the DMUs, locomotive-hauled coaches supplemented services. The introduction of the 22000 Class units on InterCity services allowed the 2800 Class and 29000 Class units to be cascaded to Commuter services, which allowed the locomotive hauled stock to be fully phased out by 2009.

Eventually, since all 63 22000 Class railcars were delivered in 2012, they operate all InterCity and some Commuter services in Dublin, excluding the Dublin-Cork route and the Dublin-Belfast route.

Future

Irish Rail is due to undertake a major expansion of its Commuter services from 2020.[citation needed]

Rolling stock

Over 600 new bi-mode and electric coaches are due to arrive starting from late 2023, as stated in the Invitation to Tender issued in May 2019.[citation needed]

Infrastructure

Under this plan, several commuter lines will be refurbished and re-opened - plans include:

  • Reinstating a rail service to Navan which will connect with the Western Commuter Line into Dublin.
  • Expanding the Cork suburban network with new stations between Cork and Mallow.
  • Reopening the Western Rail Corridor between Limerick and Sligo in stages. Ennis to Athenry is complete.

Feasibility studies have also been made into the possibility of creating airport links to several airports; a link to Ireland West Airport Knock is a long term aim of the Western Rail Corridor project while a feasibility study into a link to Shannon Airport from Limerick was commissioned by Iarnród Éireann in 2006.[3][4]

Other proposals

There have been calls by outside groups for other railway refurbishments to enhance commuter services:

  • Drogheda-Navan - The pressure group Rail Users Ireland have been critical of plans to reinstate the line to Navan in two stages, which would leave the town without a direct rail service until 2030. They have called for the refurbishment of the line between Navan and Drogheda, currently used by freight trains, to be reopened for passenger services.[5]
  • Mullingar-Athlone - There have also been calls, especially by the Midland Railway Action Group, for the reopening of the link line that connects the Dublin-Sligo main line at Mullingar (into Dublin Connolly) and the Dublin-Galway/Westport main line at Athlone (into Dublin Heuston), restoring the railway network to the town of Moate, which was recommended in the strategic review which led to the Transport 21 proposals.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ Iarnród Éireann orders DMUs 13 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine Railway Gazette International 2009-03-02
  2. ^ Reilly, Jerome (3 March 2013). "Irish Rail defends new logo cost". Irish Independent. from the original on 17 October 2013. Retrieved 28 March 2013.
  3. ^ "Iarnród Éireann initiate study on Shannon rail link". from the original on 22 November 2007. Retrieved 8 January 2008.
  4. ^ "IRRS 164". from the original on 13 May 2008. Retrieved 8 January 2008.
  5. ^ Navan Already Has a Rail Line to Dublin 18 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine - Rail Users Ireland
  6. ^ Penrose raises Mullingar-Athlone rail project 13 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine - Athlone Advertiser, 29 January 2009

commuter, iarnród, Éireann, commuter, irish, comaitéir, brand, suburban, rail, services, operated, iarnród, Éireann, republic, ireland, serving, cities, dublin, cork, limerick, galway, this, brand, distinct, from, longer, distance, intercity, brand, dublin, hi. Commuter Irish Comaiteir is a brand of suburban rail services operated by Iarnrod Eireann in the Republic of Ireland serving the cities of Dublin Cork Limerick and Galway This brand is distinct from the longer distance InterCity brand and Dublin s higher frequency DART brand Most Commuter services share a track with InterCity services During the first decade of the new millennium Iarnrod Eireann put a significant amount of effort into upgrading its network with new tracks signalling station upgrades and trains Commuter services are operated by diesel multiple unit train sets Commuter29000 Class 29009 Commuter train at Dublin ConnollyOverviewStatusOperationalOwnerIarnrod EireannLocaleGreater Dublin AreaCorkStations74ServiceTypeCommuter rail Suburban railSystemIarnrod EireannServices7Operator s Iarnrod EireannDepot s CorkDrogheda DepotLimerickPortlaoise Traincare DepotRolling stock2600 Class2800 Class29000 Class22000 ClassHistoryOpened16 May 1994 As Arrow 30 June 2003 As Commuter TechnicalNumber of tracks2 4Track gauge1 600 mm 5 ft 3 in Operating speed120 km h 75 mph 160 km h 99 mph Kildare services Contents 1 History 1 1 Arrow 1 2 Commuter 1 3 Rolling stock 1 4 Rebranding 2 Services 2 1 Dublin 2 2 Cork 2 3 Limerick 2 4 Galway 2 5 Other 3 Rolling stock 3 1 Current Fleet 3 2 Former Fleet 3 3 Operation 4 Future 4 1 Rolling stock 4 2 Infrastructure 4 2 1 Other proposals 5 See also 6 ReferencesHistory EditArrow Edit The brand was introduced on 16 May 1994 as Arrow the first specific branding for diesel suburban services with the launch of the Arrow brand on the newly opened Kildare line This brand was applied to stations on the line as well as the 2600 Class railcars It was also applied to the 2700 Class and 2800 Class railcars upon their introduction however in the case of the latter it was removed shortly after their introduction into service and replaced with the National Development Plan logo Thus the Arrow brand became the first major branding for suburban railway services in Dublin officially its use remained limited to the Kildare line but Arrow branded or liveried trains were used on most suburban services An IE Commuter 29000 Class at Tara Street Station 2009 The LED Screen translated From Irish to English reads Destination Pearse Station Commuter Edit On 30 June 2003 the Arrow brand was renamed Commuter upon the introduction of the 29000 Class railcars and was also extended to the entire suburban railcar fleet It was also used in some signage and advertising giving the diesel commuter networks a consistent look for the first time The Dublin railway system is now called DART Commuter in line with the new brand with the former Arrow brand having been completely phased out by 2007 Rolling stock Edit In March 2007 IE placed an order for five additional 6 car 22000 Class DMU sets totalling 79 million to be added to its initial order of 150 cars These additional trains are currently used on the outer Dublin suburban network to destinations including Portlaoise Carlow and Athlone A further order for an additional 51 cars formed into 17 three car units and totalling 140 million was made in March 2009 for use to other suburban destinations including Dundalk Portlaoise Longford and M3 Parkway 1 In July 2007 IE announced that it was in the process of placing orders for a further 400 carriages The bulk of these up to 250 cars was intended as EMUs to expand DART services This project was cancelled in 2009 citation needed The remainder totaling up to 150 cars consisted of DMU sets for the expansion of Commuter services in Cork and Limerick as well as the long distance Commuter sets for services in Leinster These sets were introduced into revenue service from 2009 until April 2012 when the final deliveries took place citation needed Rebranding Edit In 2010 2600 2700 and 2750 Classes began to be re liveried from Commuter to a grey and green colour scheme with no reference to the Commuter brand Instead an Irish Rail logo referencing the then booking website was displayed on the side of the trains In 2012 the 2800 Class was re branded leaving only the 29000 Class in the Commuter livery Then in 2014 the 29000 Class received a new all over two tone dark green livery Since March 2013 the new bilingual logo has been introduced across the company s rolling stock including the Commuter service This is designed to eliminate customer confusion between the two names Iarnrod Eireann and Irish Rail and create a more unified image 2 Services EditDublin Edit Main article Dublin Suburban Rail There are four commuter services serving Dublin along with the DART Northern This route operates from Dublin to Dundalk with its central terminus at Dublin Connolly The route is shared as far as Malahide with the DART service The trains run on the Dublin Belfast line South Eastern This route operates from Dublin to Gorey with its terminus at Connolly Station and is shared with the DART as far as Greystones This route is shared with trains to Rosslare Western This route has two branches in the city centre one starts at Docklands railway station while the other starts from Dublin Pearse The two converge at Broombridge with the line going as far as Longford In September 2010 services on this line were introduced from the Docklands to M3 Parkway South Western This route operates from Dublin to Portlaoise with its central terminus at Dublin Heuston In November 2016 services from Newbridge to Grand Canal Dock which operate through the Phoenix Park Tunnel were introduced on this line Cork Edit Main article Cork Suburban Rail There are three suburban rail lines servicing the Greater Cork area which comprise the Cork suburban network Cork Kent Mallow line Stations at Kilbarry Monard and elsewhere had been proposed for the future Cork Kent Cobh line calling at Little Island Glounthaune Fota Island Carrigaloe and Rushbroke Cork Kent Midleton line calling at Carrigtwohill It had been proposed to eventually extend the line to Youghal with intermediate stops at Mogeely and Killeagh Limerick Edit Main article Limerick Suburban Rail The Limerick commuter rail network consists of three suburban rail lines which comprise the Limerick suburban network Limerick Colbert Ennis line calling at Sixmilebridge Limerick Colbert Nenagh line calling at Castleconnell and Birdhill This is a skeleton service Limerick Colbert Limerick Junction for Tipperary town Galway Edit Main article Galway Suburban Rail The Galway commuter rail network consists of one suburban rail service which comprises the Galway suburban network Galway Ceannt Athenry calling at OranmoreOther Edit Other services operate between Mallow and Tralee and Manulla Junction and Ballina In addition some InterCity services operate using Commuter branded DMUs these include Dublin Sligo and Dublin Rosslare Europort services A 29000 Class DMU 29003 arriving at MalahideRolling stock EditCommuter services are operated primarily using DMU railcars with four separate classes operating on most routes Current Fleet Edit Class Image Top speed Number Routes operated Built Notes mph km h 2600 Class 70 110 8 Mallow Cork CobhMallow Tralee Sundays only Cork Midleton 1993 2609 operated as a hybrid 2 car unit with 2716 withdrawn in 2012 2800 Class 75 120 8 Limerick WaterfordLimerick Limerick JunctionLimerick EnnisLimerick Galway 200029000 Class 29 Dublin MaynoothDublin DundalkDublin GoreyDublin M3 ParkwayDublin Longford 2002 200522000 Class 100 160 28 3 car 25 4 car 10 5 car Dublin MaynoothDublin M3 ParkwayDublin Kildare PortlaoiseDublin LongfordDublin RosslareDublin DundalkLimerick Limerick JunctionLimerick Junction Waterford 2007 2011 Also used on InterCity servicesFormer Fleet Edit Class Image Top speed Number Routes operated Built In service Notes km h mph 2700 Class 110 68 12 All routes 1997 1998 1998 2012 2716 operated as a hybrid 2 car unit with 2609 also withdrawn all stored at Inchicore Works and Cork Kent railway station2750 Class 2Operation Edit All of the DMU types can operate either independently or can be attached to another set of their own class or of another class to form trains of up to ten cars In addition to the DMUs locomotive hauled coaches supplemented services The introduction of the 22000 Class units on InterCity services allowed the 2800 Class and 29000 Class units to be cascaded to Commuter services which allowed the locomotive hauled stock to be fully phased out by 2009 Eventually since all 63 22000 Class railcars were delivered in 2012 they operate all InterCity and some Commuter services in Dublin excluding the Dublin Cork route and the Dublin Belfast route Future EditIrish Rail is due to undertake a major expansion of its Commuter services from 2020 citation needed Rolling stock Edit Over 600 new bi mode and electric coaches are due to arrive starting from late 2023 as stated in the Invitation to Tender issued in May 2019 citation needed Infrastructure Edit Under this plan several commuter lines will be refurbished and re opened plans include Reinstating a rail service to Navan which will connect with the Western Commuter Line into Dublin Expanding the Cork suburban network with new stations between Cork and Mallow Reopening the Western Rail Corridor between Limerick and Sligo in stages Ennis to Athenry is complete Feasibility studies have also been made into the possibility of creating airport links to several airports a link to Ireland West Airport Knock is a long term aim of the Western Rail Corridor project while a feasibility study into a link to Shannon Airport from Limerick was commissioned by Iarnrod Eireann in 2006 3 4 Other proposals Edit There have been calls by outside groups for other railway refurbishments to enhance commuter services Drogheda Navan The pressure group Rail Users Ireland have been critical of plans to reinstate the line to Navan in two stages which would leave the town without a direct rail service until 2030 They have called for the refurbishment of the line between Navan and Drogheda currently used by freight trains to be reopened for passenger services 5 Mullingar Athlone There have also been calls especially by the Midland Railway Action Group for the reopening of the link line that connects the Dublin Sligo main line at Mullingar into Dublin Connolly and the Dublin Galway Westport main line at Athlone into Dublin Heuston restoring the railway network to the town of Moate which was recommended in the strategic review which led to the Transport 21 proposals 6 See also EditDublin Suburban Rail Cork Suburban Rail Galway Suburban Rail Limerick Suburban RailReferences Edit Iarnrod Eireann orders DMUs Archived 13 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine Railway Gazette International 2009 03 02 Reilly Jerome 3 March 2013 Irish Rail defends new logo cost Irish Independent Archived from the original on 17 October 2013 Retrieved 28 March 2013 Iarnrod Eireann initiate study on Shannon rail link Archived from the original on 22 November 2007 Retrieved 8 January 2008 IRRS 164 Archived from the original on 13 May 2008 Retrieved 8 January 2008 Navan Already Has a Rail Line to Dublin Archived 18 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine Rail Users Ireland Penrose raises Mullingar Athlone rail project Archived 13 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine Athlone Advertiser 29 January 2009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Commuter Iarnrod Eireann amp oldid 1126683964, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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