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High Speed 1

High Speed 1 (HS1), legally the Channel Tunnel Rail Link (CTRL), is a 67-mile (108 km) high-speed railway linking London with the Channel Tunnel.

High Speed 1
High Speed 1 approaching the Medway Viaducts
Overview
StatusOperational
OwnerUK Government
under concession to: HICL Infrastructure, Equitix, National Pension Service of Korea (until 2040)
Locale
Termini
Stations4
Websitehighspeed1.co.uk
Service
TypeHigh-speed rail
SystemNational Rail
Operator(s)Eurostar International
Southeastern
DB Cargo UK
Rolling stock
History
Opened
  • 2003 (Section 1)
  • 2007 (Section 2)
Technical
Line length108 km (67 mi)
Number of tracksDouble track throughout
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Loading gaugeUIC GC
Electrification25 kV 50 Hz AC OHLE
Operating speed
  • 300 km/h (186 mph)

[1][2][3]

SignallingTVM-430, KVB, AWS, TPWS
Route map

(Click to expand)
High Speed 1
(Channel Tunnel Rail Link)
0 km
0 mi
London St Pancras
International
London King's Cross
London Tunnel 1
7.5 km
4.7 mi
9 km
6 mi
Stratford International
London Tunnel 2
10 km
6 mi
21 km
13 mi
Ripple Lane freight connection
Rainham viaduct
0.5 km
0.3 mi
27 km
17 mi
Aveley viaduct
over LT&S
1.0 km
0.6 mi
30 km
19 mi
Thurrock viaduct A282
1.2 km
0.7 mi
32 km
20 mi
Thames Tunnel
2.5 km
1.6 mi
37 km
23 mi
Ebbsfleet International
Section 1
Section 2
boundary
39 km
24 mi
Fawkham Junction link line
50 km
31 mi
1.2 km
0.7 mi
54 km
34 mi
3.2 km
2 mi
Lenham Heath passing loop
88 km
55 mi
1.5 km
0.9 mi
90 km
56 mi
Ashford International
Ashford CTRL-DS Depot
91 km
57 mi
Ashford Flyover
1.5 km
0.9 mi
106 km
66 mi
108 km
67 mi
High Speed 1 / Network Rail
Getlink

It is part of a line carrying international passenger traffic between the United Kingdom and mainland Europe; it also carries domestic passenger traffic to and from stations in Kent and east London, and continental European loading gauge freight traffic. From the Channel Tunnel, the line crosses the River Medway, and tunnels under the River Thames, terminating at London St Pancras International station on the north side of central London. It cost £5.8 billion to build and opened on 14 November 2007.[4][5] Trains run at speeds of up to 300 km/h (186 mph) on HS1. Intermediate stations are at Stratford International in London, Ebbsfleet International in northern Kent and Ashford International in southern Kent.

International passenger services are provided by Eurostar International, with journey times from London St Pancras International to Paris Gare du Nord in 2 hours 15 minutes, and London St Pancras International to Brussels South/Bruxelles-Midi/Brussel Zuid in 1 hour and 51 minutes.[6] As of November 2015, Eurostar uses a fleet of 27 Class 373/1 multi-system trains capable of 300 km/h and 320 km/h (199 mph) Class 374 trains. Domestic high-speed commuter services serving the intermediate stations and beyond began on 13 December 2009. The fleet of 29 Class 395 passenger trains reach speeds of 225 km/h (140 mph).[7] DB Cargo UK run freight services on High Speed 1 using adapted Class 92 locomotives, enabling flat wagons carrying continental-size swap body containers to reach London for the first time.[8]

The CTRL project saw new bridges and tunnels built, with a combined length nearly as long as the Channel Tunnel itself, and significant archaeological research undertaken.[9] In 2002, the CTRL project was awarded the Major Project Award at the British Construction Industry Awards.[10] The line was transferred to government ownership in 2009, with a 30-year concession for its operation awarded to a consortium of Borealis Infrastructure (part of Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System) and Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan in November 2010.[11]

Early history

A high-speed rail line, LGV Nord, has been in operation between the Channel Tunnel and the outskirts of Paris since the Tunnel's opening in 1994.[12] This has enabled Eurostar rail services to travel at 300 km/h (186 mph) for this part of their journey. A similar high-speed line in Belgium, from the French border to Brussels, HSL 1, opened in 1997.[13][14] In Britain, Eurostar trains had to run at a maximum of 160 km/h (100 mph) on existing tracks between London Waterloo International and the Channel Tunnel.[15] These tracks were shared with local traffic, limiting the number of services that could be run, and jeopardising reliability.[16] The case for a high-speed line similar to the continental part of the route was recognised by policymakers,[17] and the construction of the line was authorised by Parliament with the Channel Tunnel Rail Link Act 1996,[18] which was amended by the Channel Tunnel Rail Link (Supplementary Provisions) Act 2008.[19][20]

An early plan conceived by British Rail in the early 1970s for a route passing through Tonbridge met considerable opposition on environmental and social grounds, especially from the Leigh Action Group and Surrey & Kent Action on Rail (SKAR). A committee was set up to examine the proposal under Sir Alexander Cairncross; but in due course environment minister Anthony Crosland announced that the project had been cancelled,[21] together with the plan for the tunnel itself.

The next plan for the Channel Tunnel Rail Link involved a tunnel reaching London from the south-east, and an underground terminus in the vicinity of London King's Cross station. A late change in the plans, principally driven by Deputy Prime Minister Michael Heseltine's desire for urban regeneration in East London, led to a change of route, with the new line approaching London from the east. This opened the possibility of reusing the underused St Pancras railway station as the terminus, with access via the North London Line that crosses the throat of the station.[22]

The idea of using the North London line proved illusory, and it was rejected in 1994 by the then Transport Secretary, John MacGregor, as too difficult to construct and environmentally damaging.[23] The idea of using St Pancras station as the core of the new terminus was retained, albeit now linked by 20 kilometres (12 miles) of specially built tunnels to Dagenham via Stratford.[22]

London & Continental Railways (LCR) was chosen by the UK government in 1996 to build the line and to reconstruct St Pancras station as its terminus, and to take over the British share of the Eurostar operation, Eurostar (UK). The original LCR consortium members were National Express, Virgin Group, SG Warburg & Co, Bechtel and London Electric.[24][25] While the project was under development by British Rail it was managed by Union Railways, which became a wholly owned subsidiary of LCR. On 14 November 2006, LCR adopted High Speed 1 as the brand name for the completed railway.[26] Official legislation, documentation and line-side signage have continued to refer to "CTRL".

Project

As the Channel Tunnel Act 1987 made government funding for a Channel Tunnel rail link unlawful,[27] construction did not take place, as it was not financially viable. Construction was delayed until the passage of the Channel Tunnel Rail Link Act 1996,[18] which provided construction powers that would run for ten years. The chief executive, Rob Holden, stated that it was the "largest land acquisition programme since the Second World War".[28]

The whole route was to have been built as a single project, but in 1998, serious financial difficulties arose, and extensive changes came with a British government rescue plan.[29] To reduce risk, the line was split into two separate phases,[30] to be managed by Union Railways (South) and Union Railways (North). A recovery programme was agreed whereby LCR sold government-backed bonds worth £1.6 billion to pay for the construction of section 1, with the future of section 2 still not settled.

The original intention had been for the new railway, once completed, to be run by Union Railways as a separate line from the rest of the British railway network. As part of the 1998 rescue it was agreed that following completion, section 1 would be purchased by Railtrack with an option to purchase section 2. In return, Railtrack was committed to operate the whole route as well as London St Pancras International, which, unlike all other former British Rail stations, had been transferred to LCR/Union Railways in 1996.[31]

In 2001, Railtrack announced that because of its own financial problems, it would not undertake to purchase section 2,[32][33][34] triggering a second restructuring.[35] The 2002 plan agreed that the two sections would have different owners (Railtrack for section 1, LCR for section 2) but with common Railtrack management. Following further financial problems at Railtrack,[36] its interest was sold back to LCR, which then sold the operating rights for the completed line to Network Rail, Railtrack's successor. Under this arrangement LCR became the sole owner of both sections of the CTRL and the St Pancras property, as per the original 1996 plan.[citation needed] Amendments were made in 2001 for the new station at Stratford International and connections to the West Coast Main Line.

As a consequence of the restructuring, the LCR consortium in 2001 consisted of engineering consultants and construction firms Arup, Bechtel, Halcrow and Systra (which form Rail Link Engineering (RLE)); transport operators National Express and SNCF (which operates the Eurostar (UK) share of the Eurostar service with the National Railway Company of Belgium and British Airways), the electricity company EDF and UBS.

There were several deaths of employees working on the CTRL over the construction period. One occurred on 28 March 2003 near Folkestone when a worker came into contact with the energised power supply.[37] Another death occurred two months later, in May 2003, when a scaffolder fell seven metres at Thurrock, Essex.[38] Three companies were found guilty of breaching health and safety legislation by omitting to provide barriers, resulting in Deverson Direct Ltd. being ordered to pay a fine of £50,000, J.Murphy & Sons Ltd. £25,000, and Hochtief AG £25,000.[38] Two more deaths resulted from a fire on board a train carrying wires, one mile (1.6 km) inside a tunnel under the Thames between Swanscombe, Kent, and Thurrock, Essex on 16 August 2005. The train shunter died at the scene[39] and the train driver later died in hospital.[40] It has been suggested that a large amount of blame for accidents throughout the project lay with individual behaviour, becoming such a problem that an internal programme was launched to tackle problem behaviour during the construction.[41]

On completion of section 1 by RLE, the line was handed over to Union Railways (South), which then handed it over to London & Continental Stations and Property (LCSP), the line's long-term owners. Once section 2 of the line had been completed, it was handed over to Union Railways (North), which handed it over to LCSP. The entire line, including St Pancras, is managed, operated and maintained by Network Rail (CTRL).

In February 2006, there were rumours that a 'third party' (believed to be a consortium headed by banker Sir Adrian Montague) had expressed an interest in buying out the present partners in the project.[42] LCR shareholders rejected the proposal,[43] and the government, which could effectively overrule shareholders' decisions as a result of LCR's reclassification as a state-owned body,[44] decided that discussions with shareholders would not take place imminently, which effectively backed shareholders' views on the proposed takeover.[43]

By May 2009, LCR had become insolvent, and the government received an agreement to use state aid to purchase the line and to open it up to competition to allow other services to use it apart from Eurostar.[45] LCR's wholly owned subsidiary, HS1 Ltd, thus became the property of the Secretary of State for Transport.[46] On 12 October 2009 a proposal was announced to sell £16 billion of state assets including HS1 Ltd in the following two years to cut UK public debt.[47] The government announced on 5 November 2010 that a concession to operate the line for thirty years had been sold for £2.1 billion to a consortium of Canadian investors.[48] Under the concession, HS1 Ltd has the rights to sell access to track and to the four international stations (St Pancras, Stratford, Ebbsfleet and Ashford) on a commercial basis, under the scrutiny of the Office of Rail & Road. At the end of thirty years, ownership of the assets will revert to the government.[46]

Building cost

The cost of construction was £6.84 billion. At £51 million per mile, this was higher than other projects in many other countries.[49] The French LGV Est, a line built largely through near-flat fields (save for the Saverne Tunnel) and which terminates outside its urban centres (Vaires-sur-Marne for Paris and Vendenheim for Strasbourg) cost £22 million per mile.[49] Its phase one was completed in 2007 and phase two in 2016.[49]

Route

 
HS1 within the United Kingdom, with the Channel Tunnel and LGV Nord also shown
 
Train 3313/3314 served as a laboratory train, reaching 300 km/h (186 mph) during Section 1 testing in 2003
 
A Eurostar train on the CTRL, near Ashford

The high-speed railway operates as a "seven-day railway", with full availability on all days. Heavy maintenance is performed overnight.[50][51][52]: 21  As of 2008, track access charges were capped at approximate £71.35 per minute. In 2008, the cost of running a train along the full length of the line between St Pancras and the Channel Tunnel was £2,244; with lower costs of £2,192 for a domestic service to Ashford International, or £1,044 for St Pancras to Ebbsfleet International.[52]: 6  A discounted rate of £4.00 per kilometre was made available for night-time-only railfreight operation until 31 March 2015.[53]

Section 1

Section 1 of the Channel Tunnel Rail Link, opened on 28 September 2003, is a 74 km (46-mile) section of high-speed track from the Channel Tunnel to Fawkham Junction in north Kent with a maximum speed of 300 km/h. Its completion cut the London–Paris journey time by around 21 minutes, to 2 hours 35 minutes. The line includes the Medway Viaduct, a 1.2 km (¾ mile) bridge over the River Medway, and the North Downs Tunnel, a 3.2 km (2.0 miles) long, 12 m (39 ft) diameter tunnel. In safety testing on the section prior to opening, a new UK rail speed record of 334.7 km/h (208 mph) was set.[54] Much of the new line runs alongside the M2 and M20 motorways through Kent. After its completion, Eurostar trains continued to use suburban lines to enter London, arriving at Waterloo International.

Unlike most LGV stations in France, the through tracks for Ashford International station are off to one side rather than going through, partly because the station pre-dates the line.[55] High Speed 1 approaches Ashford International from the north in a cut-and-cover "box"; the southbound line rises out of this cutting and crosses over the main tracks to enter the station. The main tracks then rise out of the cutting and over a flyover. On leaving Ashford, southbound Eurostars return to the high-speed line by travelling under this flyover and joining from the outside. The international platforms at Ashford are supplied with both overhead 25 kV AC and third-rail 750 V DC power, avoiding the need to switch power supplies.

Section 2

Section 2 of the project opened on 14 November 2007, and is a 39.4-kilometre (24.5-mile) stretch of track from the newly built Ebbsfleet station in Kent to London St Pancras. Completion of the section cut journey times by a further 20 minutes (London–Paris in 2 hours 15 minutes; London–Brussels in 1 hour 51 minutes). The route starts with a 2.5-kilometre (1.6-mile) tunnel which dives under the Thames on the edge of Swanscombe, then runs alongside the London, Tilbury and Southend line as far as Dagenham, where it enters a 19-kilometre (12-mile) tunnel (51°31′36.9″N 0°8′13.9″E / 51.526917°N 0.137194°E / 51.526917; 0.137194), much of which is directly under the North London Line, before emerging over the East Coast Main Line near St Pancras. The tunnels are divided into London East and London West sections, between which a 1-kilometre stretch runs close to the surface to serve Stratford International and the Temple Mills Depot. The new depot, to the north of Stratford, replaced the North Pole depot in the west of London.[56] In testing, the first Eurostar train ran into St Pancras on 6 March 2007.[57] All CTRL connections are fully grade-separated.

Stations

Ashford International

This station was rebuilt as Ashford International during the early 1990s for international services from mainland Europe; this included the addition of two platforms to the north of station (the original down island platform had been taken over by international services). Unlike normal LGV stations in France, the through tracks for Ashford International railway station are off to one side rather than going through.[55] The number of services was reduced after the opening of the Ebbsfleet station. A high-speed domestic service operated by Southeastern to London St Pancras began on 29 June 2009.

Ebbsfleet International

Ebbsfleet International railway station in the borough of Dartford, Kent is 10 mi (16 km) outside the eastern boundary of Greater London and opened to the public on 19 November 2007.[58] It is now Eurostar's main station in Kent.[59][60][61] Two of the platforms are designed for international passenger trains and four for high-speed domestic services.[62]

St Pancras International

 
Eurostar trains at St Pancras International

The terminus for the high-speed line in London is St Pancras railway station. During the 2000s, towards the end of the construction of the CTRL, the entire station complex was renovated, expanded and renamed as St Pancras International,[63][64] with a new security-sealed terminal area for Eurostar trains to continental Europe.[65] In addition, it retained traditional domestic connections to the north and south of England. The new extension doubled the length of the central platforms now used for Eurostar services; new platforms have been provided for existing domestic East Midlands Trains and the Southeastern high-speed services that run along High Speed 1 to Kent.[66] New platforms on the Thameslink line across London were built beneath the western margins of the station, and the station at King's Cross Thameslink was closed.

A complex junction has been built north of St Pancras with connections to the East Coast Main Line, North London Line (for West Coast Main Line) and Midland Main Line, allowing for a wide variety of potential destinations albeit on conventional rails. As part of the works, tunnels connecting the East Coast Main Line to the Thameslink route were also built in readiness for the forthcoming Thameslink Programme.[67]

Stratford International

Stratford International railway station was not part of the original government plans for the CTRL.[68] Despite its name, no international services call there. Completed in April 2006, it opened on 30 November 2009 when the domestic preview Southeastern highspeed services started calling there.[69] An extension of the Docklands Light Railway opened to Stratford International in August 2011.[70] It forms part of the complex of railway stations for the main site where the 2012 Summer Olympics were held.[71]

Temple Mills Depot in Leyton is used for storage and servicing of Eurostar trains and off-peak berthing of Class 395 Southeastern high-speed trains.

Infrastructure

 
A high-speed tunnel and flyover take non-stopping trains past Ashford International at 270 km/h (170 mph)

The railway is maintained from Singlewell Infrastructure Maintenance Depot.[72]

The construction work of the line was complex, and many contractors were involved in delivering them.[73] The CTRL Section 2 construction works had caused considerable disruption around the Kings Cross area of London; in their wake redevelopment was stimulated.[74][75] The large redevelopment area includes the run-down areas of post-industrial and ex-railway land close to King's Cross and St Pancras, a conservation area with many listed buildings; this was promoted as one of the benefits for building the CTRL.[76] It has been postulated that this development was actually suppressed by the construction project,[77] and some affected districts were said still to be in a poor state in 2005.[78]

Track

Both track and signalling technology (TVM-430 + KVB) are based on or identical to the standards used on the French LGV high-speed lines. The areas around St Pancras and Gare du Nord use colour light and KVB signalling[79] with the whole of the high-speed route to Paris (CTRL, Channel Tunnel, LGV Nord) using TVM-430. Traffic between London and the Channel Tunnel is controlled from the Ashford signalling centre. Signalling tests before opening were performed by the SNCF-owned "Lucie" test car.[80]

The track is 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge[81] cleared to a larger modern European GC loading gauge[81] enabling GC gauge freight as far as the yards at Barking.[82][83] The line is electrified entirely using overhead lines with 25 kV AC railway electrification.

 
North Downs Tunnel, northern portal under Blue Bell Hill

Tunnels

After local protests,[84][85] early plans were modified to put more of the route into tunnels up until a point approximately 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) from St Pancras. Previously the CTRL was planned to run on an elevated section alongside the North London Line on approach into the line's terminus. The twin tunnels bored under London were driven from Stratford westwards towards St Pancras, eastwards towards Dagenham and from Dagenham westwards to connect with the tunnel from Stratford. The tunnel boring machines were 120 metres (390 ft) long and weighed 1,100 tonnes. The depth of the tunnels varies from 24 to 50 metres (79 to 164 ft). The two London tunnels are 7.5 kilometres (4.7 mi) and 10.1 kilometres (6.3 mi) in length, split by Stratford International station.[86][87]

Other major tunnels along the route include a 3.1 km tunnel underneath the River Thames at Thurrock in Essex[88] and the 3.2 km North Downs Tunnel near Maidstone in Kent.[89]

Viaducts

Several major viaducts are present on the route, with three viaducts over 1,000 metres (3,300 ft) in length. The Medway Viaduct takes the line over the River Medway adjacent to the M2 motorway,[90] the Thurrock Viaduct takes the line over the A282 Dartford Crossing[91] and the Ashford Viaduct takes the fast lines over Ashford International station.[92]

Connection line to Waterloo

A four-kilometre (2.5 mi) connecting line providing access for Waterloo International leaves High Speed 1 at Southfleet Junction using a grade-separated junction; the main CTRL tracks continue uninterrupted through to CTRL Section 2 underneath the southbound flyover. The connection joins the Chatham Main Line at Fawkham Junction with a flat crossing. The retention of Eurostar services to Waterloo after the line to St Pancras opened was ruled out on cost grounds.[93] Waterloo International closed upon opening of the section two of the CTRL in November 2007; Eurostar now serves the refurbished St Pancras as its only London terminal, so this connecting line is no longer used in regular service,[94][95] but can be used by Class 395 passenger trains.[96]

Services

International passenger services on this line are operated by Eurostar, with maximum speed 300 km/h, while domestic passenger services are operated by Southeastern as far as Ashford International, with maximum speed 225 km/h.

High Speed 1 was built to allow eight trains per hour through to the Channel Tunnel.[97] As of May 2014, Eurostar runs two to three trains per hour in each direction between London and the Channel Tunnel.[98] Southeastern runs in the high peak eight trains per hour between London and Ebbsfleet, two of these continuing to Ashford.[99] During the 2012 Olympic Games, Southeastern provided the Olympic Javelin service with up to twelve trains per hour from Stratford into London.[100]

Freight

The route was built with freight provision from the beginning. It has spurs leading to and from the freight terminal at Dollands Moor (Folkestone) and the freight depot at Barking (Ripple Lane), north of the River Thames. Long passing loops to hold freight trains while passenger trains overtake them were built at Lenham Heath and Singlewell.

Freight trains operated by EWS first ran over CTRL Section 1, on the consecutive evenings of 3–4 April 2004. Five freight trains that would have run via the classic lines were diverted to run over the Channel Tunnel Rail Link instead: three southbound intermodal trains on 3 April 2004 and two northbound intermodal trains on 4 April 2004.[101]

Ownership

In November 2010, the HS1 concession was awarded for a duration of thirty years to an investment consortium bringing together two Canadian public pension funds: Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System (through its subsidiary Borealis Infrastructure), and Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan for £2.1 billion.[48] At the time, UK pension investors had generally limited interest in such long-term, illiquid, 'infrastructure assets'.[102]

In 2017, the sale of the 30 year HS1 concession was announced to funds advised and managed by InfraRed Capital Partners and Equitix Investment Management; participants include HICL Infrastructure (35%), Equitix (35%) and South Korea's National Pension Service (30%), for an enterprise value of £3 billion.[103][104]

The private operator does not hold the freehold or rights to any of the associated land.[105]

Operators

The railway is operated on an open access basis. Trains are operated by several organisations all operating over the same track. HS1 Ltd. is the network manager for the line, stations, and other infrastructure.[106]

Network Rail (High Speed) Ltd

 
HS1 near the village of Hothfield in Kent.

HS1 Ltd is responsible for overall managing and running of the line – along with the international railway stations at St Pancras, Stratford, Ashford and Ebbsfleet[107] – with responsibility for the infrastructure itself sub-contracted to Network Rail (High Speed) Ltd (formerly known as Network Rail (CTRL) acting as the controller and infrastructure manager.[108] Network Rail (CTRL) Limited was created as a subsidiary of Network Rail on 26 September 2003 for £57 million to take over the assets of the CTRL renewal and maintenance operations.[109] Network Rail (High Speed) operates engineering, track maintenance machines, rescue locomotives, and infrastructure- and test trains.[110] Eurotunnel's subsidiary Europorte 2 operates its Eurotunnel Class 0001 (Krupp/MaK 6400) rescue locomotives on the line when required.[111]

Various track recording trains run as necessary, including visits by the New Measurement Train. On the night of 4/5 May 2011 the SNCF TGV Iris 320 laboratory train took over, being hauled from Coquelles to St Pancras and back, towed by Eurotunnel Krupp locomotives numbers 4 and 5.[112] The Iris 320 runs for Network Rail (High Speed) are an extension of the 100 km/h (62 mph) monitoring cycle already undertaken by SNCF International since December 2010 for Eurotunnel every two months.[113][114]

Eurostar

 
A Eurostar train in the original livery passing Strood, on approach to the Medway bridge

The Eurostar service uses about 40% of the capacity of High Speed 1,[115] which in November 2007 became the company's route for all its services.[116] Eurostar trains are for international traffic only, passing along the high-speed line from London St Pancras railway station to the Channel Tunnel, with the majority[117] terminating at either Paris Gare du Nord in France or Brussels-South railway station in Belgium.[118][119] A Eurostar train was used to set a new British rail speed record of 334.7 km/h (208 mph) on 30 July 2003.[120][121] Prior to the formation of Eurostar International Limited, the British component of the Eurostar grouping was owned by London & Continental Railways, which had also previously owned the High Speed 1 infrastructure.[122]

The fastest regular-service Eurostar journeys on record are 2 hours, 3 minutes and 39 seconds from Paris Gare du Nord to St Pancras, set on 4 September 2007;[123] and 1 hour 43 minutes from Brussels South to St Pancras, set on 19 September 2007.[124]

 Class  Image  Type   Top speed   Number   Routes operated   Built 
 mph  km/h 
Class 373
Eurostar e300
  EMU 186 300 28 1992-1996
Class 374
Eurostar e320
  EMU 200 320 17 2011-2018

Southeastern

 
A Southeastern Class 395 train departing from London St Pancras railway station on a preview domestic service

Domestic high-speed services on High Speed 1 are operated by Southeastern. Having been in planning since 2004,[125] a preview service of the British Rail Class 395 trains, popularly known as Javelins, started in June 2009,[62] and regular services began on 13 December 2009. The quickest journey time from Ashford to London St Pancras is 35 minutes,[126] compared with 80 minutes for the service to London Charing Cross via Tonbridge.[127] This service on Section 2 of the CTRL, known previously as CTRL-DS, was a factor in London's successful 2012 Olympic Bid, promising a seven-minute journey time from the Olympic Park at Stratford to the London terminus at St Pancras.[128]

 Class  Image  Type   Top speed   Number   Routes operated   Built 
 mph  km/h 
Class 395   Electric multiple unit 140 225 29 2007–2009

DB Cargo UK

 
DB Cargo UK Class 92s haul freights over High Speed 1

DB Cargo is a global freight operator with a large interest in freight over rail in Europe.[129] While High Speed 1 was constructed with freight loops, no freight traffic had run upon the line since opening in 2003.[130] On 16 April 2009 DB Schenker signed an agreement with HS1 Ltd, the owner of High Speed 1, for a partnership to develop TVM modifications for class 92 freight locomotives to run on the line.[131] On 25 March 2011 for the first time a modified class 92 locomotive travelled from Dollands Moor to Singlewell using the TVM430 signalling system.[132] A loaded container train ran for the first time on 27 May 2011, to Novara in Italy. Following further trials with loaded wagons[133][134] DB is to upgrade five Class 92 locomotives to allow them to run on High Speed 1.[135] From 11 November 2011 a weekly service using European-sized swap body containers has run between London and Poland using High Speed 1.

 Class  Image  Type   Top speed   Number   Built   Notes 
 mph  km/h 
Class 92   Electric locomotive 87 140 46 1993–1996

Future operations

At present, only Deutsche Bahn (DB) has applied for use of the line and in 2009, regulations were relaxed to allow its trains to use the Channel Tunnel. Other proposals are yet to be formalised.

Deutsche Bahn

 
Deutsche Bahn has planned services using Siemens Velaro D trains

In November 2007, it was reported that DB, Germany's national train company, had applied to use the Channel Tunnel and High Speed 1 into London. This was denied by Deutsche Bahn, and the bi-national Channel Tunnel Safety Authority confirmed that it had not received such an application.[136] The plan was delayed by safety regulations as Deutsche Bahn's fleet of ICE 3M high-speed trains could not be divided in the tunnel in an emergency.[137]

In December 2008, it was reported that DB was interested in buying the British share in Eurostar,[138] which in practice means buying Eurostar (UK) Ltd., the 100% subsidiary of London & Continental Railways (LCR), which the British government intends to break up and sell just as it does the other rail-related subsidiary of L&CR, HS1 Ltd.[139][140] The buyer of EUKL would become the owner of the 11 British "Three Capitals" Class 373 trainsets plus all seven "North of London" sets, and would also be responsible for the operations of Eurostar traffic within Britain once the management contract with ICRR expires in 2010. Guillaume Pépy, the president of SNCF, who held a press conference the same day, described DB's interest as "premature, presumptuous and arrogant".[141] SNCF claims to own 62% of the shares of Eurostar Group Ltd. Hartmut Mehdorn, then CEO of Deutsche Bahn, confirmed DB's interest but insisted in a letter to Pépy that DB had only informally requested information and not made any official requests to Britain's Department for Transport.[142]

In 2009, Eurotunnel (the owners of the Channel Tunnel) announced that it was prepared to start relaxing the fire safety regulations, in order to permit other operators, such as Deutsche Bahn, to transport passengers via the Tunnel using other forms of rolling stock.[143] Under the deregulation of European railway service, high-speed lines were opened up to access by other operators on 1 January 2010; the Inter-Governmental Commission on the Channel Tunnel (IGC) announced that it was considering relaxing the safety requirements concerning train splitting. LCR suggested that high-speed rail services between London and Cologne could commence before the 2012 Olympics.[144]

In March 2010, Eurotunnel, HS1 Ltd, DB and other interested train operators formed a working group to discuss changes to the safety rules, including allowing 200-metre trains. The Intergovernmental Commission currently requires trains to be 400 m long.[145] Deutsche Bahn carried out evacuation trials in the tunnel on 17 October 2010 with two 200m-long ICE3 trains, and displayed one of them at St Pancras station on 19 October.[146] The current Velaro ICE3 sets do not meet the fire safety requirements for passenger services through the tunnel, but the Siemens Velaro D sets on order include the necessary additional fire-proofing.[147] In March 2011, the European Rail Agency decided to allow trains with distributed traction to operate in the Channel Tunnel.[148] DB is planning three services a day to Frankfurt (5h from London), Rotterdam (3h) and Amsterdam (4h) via Brussels[146][149] from 2015. This had originally planned to be 2013, but has been delayed due to the availability of the Channel Tunnel version of the Siemens Velaro D trains, high rental costs of the French rail network and border controls in their stations.[150] As of 2016, nothing yet has come to fruition, but the High Speed One website continues to state that "HS1 Ltd are working with Deutsche Bahn on plans to incorporate three additional international return journeys, between Frankfurt and London via Cologne, Brussels and Lille. This will include connections from Amsterdam via Rotterdam to London."[151]

In March 2017, it was announced that Deutsche Bahn had revived plans for a London to Frankfurt train service with the service beginning as early as 2020. The service would take around five hours and could rival airlines and become the first competitor for Eurostar.[152] However, in June 2018, Deutsche Bahn stated the plans have been shelved due to a "significantly changed economic environment".[153]

Veolia

 
Veolia's planned use of the AGV train would cut journey times to London

In 2009, Veolia announced that it would begin working on new proposals in co-operation with Trenitalia to run services from Paris to Strasbourg, London and Brussels.[154]

Renfe

 
Spanish AVE train

Spanish railway operator RENFE said in 2009 that it was interested in running AVE services from Spain to London via Paris,[155] Lyon, Barcelona, Madrid and Lisbon (using the Madrid–Barcelona high-speed rail line) once its AVE network was connected to France via the Barcelona to Figueres and Perpignan to Figueres lines in 2012.[156]

In October 2021, Renfe announced that It intends to operate high-speed trains between Paris and London using the Channel Tunnel and High Speed 1. A Renfe spokesperson has said that there are possible options available on the high-speed route for additional trains to operate. “According to the demand analyses carried out, it would be viable and profitable for Renfe to compete with Eurostar.”[157] The rail company claims it had already received support from Getlink – the European company that operates the Channel tunnel – and from HS1, which owns, runs and maintains the 109 km rail line between the Channel tunnel and London.[158]

Getlink

In August 2018, Bloomberg Businessweek reported that Getlink is interested in setting up an Ouigo-style low cost high speed rail service between London and Paris, travelling between the railway stations of Stratford International and Charles-de-Gaulle.[159]

Services to Bordeaux

It was revealed in March 2020 that High Speed 1 Ltd, along with SNCF and Lisea, are looking for an operator for a future London St Pancras–Bordeaux St Jean train service.[160]

See also

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  158. ^ Jones, Sam (26 October 2021). "Spanish rail reveals plans for high-speed London to Paris link". The Guardian. from the original on 27 October 2021. Retrieved 27 October 2021.
  159. ^ "The Discount Airline Model Is Coming for Europe's Railways". Bloomberg Businessweek. 17 August 2018. from the original on 2 February 2021. Retrieved 18 February 2021.
  160. ^ "SNCF wants London - Bordeaux by 2022". 6 March 2020. from the original on 1 August 2020. Retrieved 8 March 2020.

Bibliography

  • Young, George; Alison Gorlov (1995). Channel Tunnel Rail Link. Union Railways.
  • National Audit Office (2001). Department of the Environment, Transport and the Regions: The Channel Tunnel Rail Link. The Stationery Office. ISBN 0-10-286801-8.
  • National Audit Office (2005). Progress on the Channel Tunnel Rail Link. The Stationery Office. ISBN 0-10-293343-X.
  • Montagu, Samuel; Department of Transport (1993). Channel Tunnel Rail Link. HMSO.
  • Bertolini, Luca; Tejo Spit (1998). Cities on rails: the redevelopment of railway station areas. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 0-419-22760-1.

Further reading

  • Pielow, Simon (1997). Eurostar. Ian Allan. ISBN 0-7110-2451-0.
  • Anderson, Graham; Roskrow, Ben (1994). The Channel Tunnel Story. London: E & F N Spon. ISBN 0-419-19620-X.
  • European Commission. Directorate-General for Regional Policy and Cohesion (1996). The Regional Impact of the Channel Tunnel Throughout the Community. Brussels, Belgium: Office for Official Publications of the European Communities. ISBN 978-92-826-8804-5. Volume 21 of Foundations of Peace Regional Development Studies (Brussels, Belgium), 21 Volume 21 of Regional development studies - European Commission Issue 21 of Regional development studies, COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES. Regional policy and cohesion {{cite book}}: |author1= has generic name (help)
  • Sievert, Terri (2002). The World's Fastest Trains. Capstone Press. ISBN 0-7368-1061-7.
  • Griffiths, Jeanne (1995). London to Paris in Ten Minutes: The Eurostar Story. Images. ISBN 1-897817-47-9.
  • Comfort, Nicholas (2007). The Channel Tunnel and its High Speed Links. Oakwood Press. ISBN 978-1-56554-854-1.
  • Parliament: House of Commons Transport Committee (2008). Delivering a Sustainable Railway. The Stationery Office. ISBN 978-0-215-52222-1.
  • Mitchell, Vic (1996). Ashford: From Steam to Eurostar. Middleton Press. ISBN 1-873793-67-7.
  • "Channel Tunnel route and terminals: BR reveals the possibilities". RAIL. No. 84. EMAP National Publications. September 1988. p. 7. ISSN 0953-4563. OCLC 49953699.
  • "Preferred bidders announced for Channel Tunnel Rail Link contracts". RAIL. No. 323. EMAP Apex Publications. 28 January – 10 February 1998. pp. 10–11. ISSN 0953-4563. OCLC 49953699.
  • "Prescott starts CTRL construction - the first new main line in 99 years". RAIL. No. 342. EMAP Apex Publications. 21 October – 3 November 1998. p. 15. ISSN 0953-4563. OCLC 49953699.

External links

Route map:

KML is from Wikidata
  • Official website  
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  • (European X-Channel Intermodal Transport Enhancement)

high, speed, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, second, purpose, built, high, speed, line, legally, channel, tunnel, rail, link, ctrl, mile, high, speed, railway, linking, london, with, channel, tunnel, approaching, medway, viaductsoverviewstatusope. HS1 redirects here For other uses see HS1 disambiguation For UK s second purpose built high speed line see HS2 High Speed 1 HS1 legally the Channel Tunnel Rail Link CTRL is a 67 mile 108 km high speed railway linking London with the Channel Tunnel High Speed 1High Speed 1 approaching the Medway ViaductsOverviewStatusOperationalOwnerUK Government under concession to HICL Infrastructure Equitix National Pension Service of Korea until 2040 LocaleGreater London Essex Kent South East England East of EnglandTerminiLondon St Pancras InternationalChannel Tunnel UK portal Stations4Websitehighspeed1 wbr co wbr ukServiceTypeHigh speed railSystemNational RailOperator s Eurostar InternationalSoutheasternDB Cargo UKRolling stockClass 373 Class 374 Class 395 Class 92 Network Rail MPV maintenance Eurotunnel Class 0001 rescue HistoryOpened2003 Section 1 2007 Section 2 TechnicalLine length108 km 67 mi Number of tracksDouble track throughoutTrack gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeLoading gaugeUIC GCElectrification25 kV 50 Hz AC OHLEOperating speed300 km h 186 mph 1 2 3 SignallingTVM 430 KVB AWS TPWSRoute map Click to expand vteHigh Speed 1 Channel Tunnel Rail Link LegendNorth London lineto West Coast Main LineMidland Main Line0 km0 mi London St PancrasInternationalLondon King s CrossEast Coast Main LineNorth London lineLondon Tunnel 1 7 5 km4 7 mito Lea Valley lines9 km6 mi Stratford InternationalTemple Mills Eurostar DepotLondon Tunnel 2 10 km6 miLondon Tilbury amp Southend lineto North London line21 km13 mi Ripple Lane freight connectionRainham viaduct 0 5 km0 3 mi27 km17 mi Aveley viaductover LT amp S 1 0 km0 6 mi30 km19 mi Thurrock viaduct A282 1 2 km0 7 mi32 km20 mi Thames Tunnel 2 5 km1 6 mi37 km23 mi Ebbsfleet InternationalNorth Kent LineSection 1Section 2 boundaryChatham Main Lineto London Waterloo39 km24 mi Fawkham Junction link lineSinglewell passing loopand depot50 km31 mi Medway Viaduct 1 2 km0 7 miover Chatham Main Lineover Medway Valley lineover River Medway54 km34 mi North Downs Tunnel 3 2 km2 miLenham Heath passing loop88 km55 mi Ashford cut andcover tunnel 1 5 km0 9 miMaidstone lineSouth Eastern Main Line90 km56 mi Ashford InternationalMarshlink lineAshford CTRL DS DepotAshford to Ramsgate line91 km57 mi Ashford Flyover 1 5 km0 9 miSouth Eastern Main Line106 km66 mi Dollands Moor Freight YardM20 motorway108 km67 mi High Speed 1 Network RailGetlinkCheriton Shuttle Terminal Folkestone Channel Tunnelto France amp LGV NordIt is part of a line carrying international passenger traffic between the United Kingdom and mainland Europe it also carries domestic passenger traffic to and from stations in Kent and east London and continental European loading gauge freight traffic From the Channel Tunnel the line crosses the River Medway and tunnels under the River Thames terminating at London St Pancras International station on the north side of central London It cost 5 8 billion to build and opened on 14 November 2007 4 5 Trains run at speeds of up to 300 km h 186 mph on HS1 Intermediate stations are at Stratford International in London Ebbsfleet International in northern Kent and Ashford International in southern Kent International passenger services are provided by Eurostar International with journey times from London St Pancras International to Paris Gare du Nord in 2 hours 15 minutes and London St Pancras International to Brussels South Bruxelles Midi Brussel Zuid in 1 hour and 51 minutes 6 As of November 2015 update Eurostar uses a fleet of 27 Class 373 1 multi system trains capable of 300 km h and 320 km h 199 mph Class 374 trains Domestic high speed commuter services serving the intermediate stations and beyond began on 13 December 2009 The fleet of 29 Class 395 passenger trains reach speeds of 225 km h 140 mph 7 DB Cargo UK run freight services on High Speed 1 using adapted Class 92 locomotives enabling flat wagons carrying continental size swap body containers to reach London for the first time 8 The CTRL project saw new bridges and tunnels built with a combined length nearly as long as the Channel Tunnel itself and significant archaeological research undertaken 9 In 2002 the CTRL project was awarded the Major Project Award at the British Construction Industry Awards 10 The line was transferred to government ownership in 2009 with a 30 year concession for its operation awarded to a consortium of Borealis Infrastructure part of Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System and Ontario Teachers Pension Plan in November 2010 11 Contents 1 Early history 2 Project 3 Building cost 4 Route 4 1 Section 1 4 2 Section 2 5 Stations 5 1 Ashford International 5 2 Ebbsfleet International 5 3 St Pancras International 5 4 Stratford International 6 Infrastructure 6 1 Track 6 2 Tunnels 6 3 Viaducts 6 4 Connection line to Waterloo 7 Services 7 1 Freight 8 Ownership 9 Operators 9 1 Network Rail High Speed Ltd 9 2 Eurostar 9 3 Southeastern 9 4 DB Cargo UK 9 5 Future operations 9 5 1 Deutsche Bahn 9 5 2 Veolia 9 5 3 Renfe 9 5 4 Getlink 9 5 5 Services to Bordeaux 10 See also 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 Further reading 14 External linksEarly history EditFurther information High speed rail in the United Kingdom A high speed rail line LGV Nord has been in operation between the Channel Tunnel and the outskirts of Paris since the Tunnel s opening in 1994 12 This has enabled Eurostar rail services to travel at 300 km h 186 mph for this part of their journey A similar high speed line in Belgium from the French border to Brussels HSL 1 opened in 1997 13 14 In Britain Eurostar trains had to run at a maximum of 160 km h 100 mph on existing tracks between London Waterloo International and the Channel Tunnel 15 These tracks were shared with local traffic limiting the number of services that could be run and jeopardising reliability 16 The case for a high speed line similar to the continental part of the route was recognised by policymakers 17 and the construction of the line was authorised by Parliament with the Channel Tunnel Rail Link Act 1996 18 which was amended by the Channel Tunnel Rail Link Supplementary Provisions Act 2008 19 20 An early plan conceived by British Rail in the early 1970s for a route passing through Tonbridge met considerable opposition on environmental and social grounds especially from the Leigh Action Group and Surrey amp Kent Action on Rail SKAR A committee was set up to examine the proposal under Sir Alexander Cairncross but in due course environment minister Anthony Crosland announced that the project had been cancelled 21 together with the plan for the tunnel itself The next plan for the Channel Tunnel Rail Link involved a tunnel reaching London from the south east and an underground terminus in the vicinity of London King s Cross station A late change in the plans principally driven by Deputy Prime Minister Michael Heseltine s desire for urban regeneration in East London led to a change of route with the new line approaching London from the east This opened the possibility of reusing the underused St Pancras railway station as the terminus with access via the North London Line that crosses the throat of the station 22 The idea of using the North London line proved illusory and it was rejected in 1994 by the then Transport Secretary John MacGregor as too difficult to construct and environmentally damaging 23 The idea of using St Pancras station as the core of the new terminus was retained albeit now linked by 20 kilometres 12 miles of specially built tunnels to Dagenham via Stratford 22 London amp Continental Railways LCR was chosen by the UK government in 1996 to build the line and to reconstruct St Pancras station as its terminus and to take over the British share of the Eurostar operation Eurostar UK The original LCR consortium members were National Express Virgin Group SG Warburg amp Co Bechtel and London Electric 24 25 While the project was under development by British Rail it was managed by Union Railways which became a wholly owned subsidiary of LCR On 14 November 2006 LCR adopted High Speed 1 as the brand name for the completed railway 26 Official legislation documentation and line side signage have continued to refer to CTRL Project EditAs the Channel Tunnel Act 1987 made government funding for a Channel Tunnel rail link unlawful 27 construction did not take place as it was not financially viable Construction was delayed until the passage of the Channel Tunnel Rail Link Act 1996 18 which provided construction powers that would run for ten years The chief executive Rob Holden stated that it was the largest land acquisition programme since the Second World War 28 The whole route was to have been built as a single project but in 1998 serious financial difficulties arose and extensive changes came with a British government rescue plan 29 To reduce risk the line was split into two separate phases 30 to be managed by Union Railways South and Union Railways North A recovery programme was agreed whereby LCR sold government backed bonds worth 1 6 billion to pay for the construction of section 1 with the future of section 2 still not settled The original intention had been for the new railway once completed to be run by Union Railways as a separate line from the rest of the British railway network As part of the 1998 rescue it was agreed that following completion section 1 would be purchased by Railtrack with an option to purchase section 2 In return Railtrack was committed to operate the whole route as well as London St Pancras International which unlike all other former British Rail stations had been transferred to LCR Union Railways in 1996 31 In 2001 Railtrack announced that because of its own financial problems it would not undertake to purchase section 2 32 33 34 triggering a second restructuring 35 The 2002 plan agreed that the two sections would have different owners Railtrack for section 1 LCR for section 2 but with common Railtrack management Following further financial problems at Railtrack 36 its interest was sold back to LCR which then sold the operating rights for the completed line to Network Rail Railtrack s successor Under this arrangement LCR became the sole owner of both sections of the CTRL and the St Pancras property as per the original 1996 plan citation needed Amendments were made in 2001 for the new station at Stratford International and connections to the West Coast Main Line As a consequence of the restructuring the LCR consortium in 2001 consisted of engineering consultants and construction firms Arup Bechtel Halcrow and Systra which form Rail Link Engineering RLE transport operators National Express and SNCF which operates the Eurostar UK share of the Eurostar service with the National Railway Company of Belgium and British Airways the electricity company EDF and UBS There were several deaths of employees working on the CTRL over the construction period One occurred on 28 March 2003 near Folkestone when a worker came into contact with the energised power supply 37 Another death occurred two months later in May 2003 when a scaffolder fell seven metres at Thurrock Essex 38 Three companies were found guilty of breaching health and safety legislation by omitting to provide barriers resulting in Deverson Direct Ltd being ordered to pay a fine of 50 000 J Murphy amp Sons Ltd 25 000 and Hochtief AG 25 000 38 Two more deaths resulted from a fire on board a train carrying wires one mile 1 6 km inside a tunnel under the Thames between Swanscombe Kent and Thurrock Essex on 16 August 2005 The train shunter died at the scene 39 and the train driver later died in hospital 40 It has been suggested that a large amount of blame for accidents throughout the project lay with individual behaviour becoming such a problem that an internal programme was launched to tackle problem behaviour during the construction 41 On completion of section 1 by RLE the line was handed over to Union Railways South which then handed it over to London amp Continental Stations and Property LCSP the line s long term owners Once section 2 of the line had been completed it was handed over to Union Railways North which handed it over to LCSP The entire line including St Pancras is managed operated and maintained by Network Rail CTRL In February 2006 there were rumours that a third party believed to be a consortium headed by banker Sir Adrian Montague had expressed an interest in buying out the present partners in the project 42 LCR shareholders rejected the proposal 43 and the government which could effectively overrule shareholders decisions as a result of LCR s reclassification as a state owned body 44 decided that discussions with shareholders would not take place imminently which effectively backed shareholders views on the proposed takeover 43 By May 2009 LCR had become insolvent and the government received an agreement to use state aid to purchase the line and to open it up to competition to allow other services to use it apart from Eurostar 45 LCR s wholly owned subsidiary HS1 Ltd thus became the property of the Secretary of State for Transport 46 On 12 October 2009 a proposal was announced to sell 16 billion of state assets including HS1 Ltd in the following two years to cut UK public debt 47 The government announced on 5 November 2010 that a concession to operate the line for thirty years had been sold for 2 1 billion to a consortium of Canadian investors 48 Under the concession HS1 Ltd has the rights to sell access to track and to the four international stations St Pancras Stratford Ebbsfleet and Ashford on a commercial basis under the scrutiny of the Office of Rail amp Road At the end of thirty years ownership of the assets will revert to the government 46 Building cost EditThe cost of construction was 6 84 billion At 51 million per mile this was higher than other projects in many other countries 49 The French LGV Est a line built largely through near flat fields save for the Saverne Tunnel and which terminates outside its urban centres Vaires sur Marne for Paris and Vendenheim for Strasbourg cost 22 million per mile 49 Its phase one was completed in 2007 and phase two in 2016 49 Route Edit HS1 within the United Kingdom with the Channel Tunnel and LGV Nord also shown Train 3313 3314 served as a laboratory train reaching 300 km h 186 mph during Section 1 testing in 2003 A Eurostar train on the CTRL near Ashford See also Geographic data related to the geographical Route of HS1 CTRL at OpenStreetMap The high speed railway operates as a seven day railway with full availability on all days Heavy maintenance is performed overnight 50 51 52 21 As of 2008 update track access charges were capped at approximate 71 35 per minute In 2008 the cost of running a train along the full length of the line between St Pancras and the Channel Tunnel was 2 244 with lower costs of 2 192 for a domestic service to Ashford International or 1 044 for St Pancras to Ebbsfleet International 52 6 A discounted rate of 4 00 per kilometre was made available for night time only railfreight operation until 31 March 2015 53 Section 1 Edit Section 1 of the Channel Tunnel Rail Link opened on 28 September 2003 is a 74 km 46 mile section of high speed track from the Channel Tunnel to Fawkham Junction in north Kent with a maximum speed of 300 km h Its completion cut the London Paris journey time by around 21 minutes to 2 hours 35 minutes The line includes the Medway Viaduct a 1 2 km mile bridge over the River Medway and the North Downs Tunnel a 3 2 km 2 0 miles long 12 m 39 ft diameter tunnel In safety testing on the section prior to opening a new UK rail speed record of 334 7 km h 208 mph was set 54 Much of the new line runs alongside the M2 and M20 motorways through Kent After its completion Eurostar trains continued to use suburban lines to enter London arriving at Waterloo International Unlike most LGV stations in France the through tracks for Ashford International station are off to one side rather than going through partly because the station pre dates the line 55 High Speed 1 approaches Ashford International from the north in a cut and cover box the southbound line rises out of this cutting and crosses over the main tracks to enter the station The main tracks then rise out of the cutting and over a flyover On leaving Ashford southbound Eurostars return to the high speed line by travelling under this flyover and joining from the outside The international platforms at Ashford are supplied with both overhead 25 kV AC and third rail 750 V DC power avoiding the need to switch power supplies Section 2 Edit Section 2 of the project opened on 14 November 2007 and is a 39 4 kilometre 24 5 mile stretch of track from the newly built Ebbsfleet station in Kent to London St Pancras Completion of the section cut journey times by a further 20 minutes London Paris in 2 hours 15 minutes London Brussels in 1 hour 51 minutes The route starts with a 2 5 kilometre 1 6 mile tunnel which dives under the Thames on the edge of Swanscombe then runs alongside the London Tilbury and Southend line as far as Dagenham where it enters a 19 kilometre 12 mile tunnel 51 31 36 9 N 0 8 13 9 E 51 526917 N 0 137194 E 51 526917 0 137194 much of which is directly under the North London Line before emerging over the East Coast Main Line near St Pancras The tunnels are divided into London East and London West sections between which a 1 kilometre stretch runs close to the surface to serve Stratford International and the Temple Mills Depot The new depot to the north of Stratford replaced the North Pole depot in the west of London 56 In testing the first Eurostar train ran into St Pancras on 6 March 2007 57 All CTRL connections are fully grade separated Stations EditAshford International Edit Main article Ashford International railway station This station was rebuilt as Ashford International during the early 1990s for international services from mainland Europe this included the addition of two platforms to the north of station the original down island platform had been taken over by international services Unlike normal LGV stations in France the through tracks for Ashford International railway station are off to one side rather than going through 55 The number of services was reduced after the opening of the Ebbsfleet station A high speed domestic service operated by Southeastern to London St Pancras began on 29 June 2009 Ebbsfleet International Edit Main article Ebbsfleet International railway station Ebbsfleet International railway station in the borough of Dartford Kent is 10 mi 16 km outside the eastern boundary of Greater London and opened to the public on 19 November 2007 58 It is now Eurostar s main station in Kent 59 60 61 Two of the platforms are designed for international passenger trains and four for high speed domestic services 62 St Pancras International Edit Main article St Pancras railway station Eurostar trains at St Pancras International The terminus for the high speed line in London is St Pancras railway station During the 2000s towards the end of the construction of the CTRL the entire station complex was renovated expanded and renamed as St Pancras International 63 64 with a new security sealed terminal area for Eurostar trains to continental Europe 65 In addition it retained traditional domestic connections to the north and south of England The new extension doubled the length of the central platforms now used for Eurostar services new platforms have been provided for existing domestic East Midlands Trains and the Southeastern high speed services that run along High Speed 1 to Kent 66 New platforms on the Thameslink line across London were built beneath the western margins of the station and the station at King s Cross Thameslink was closed A complex junction has been built north of St Pancras with connections to the East Coast Main Line North London Line for West Coast Main Line and Midland Main Line allowing for a wide variety of potential destinations albeit on conventional rails As part of the works tunnels connecting the East Coast Main Line to the Thameslink route were also built in readiness for the forthcoming Thameslink Programme 67 Stratford International Edit Main article Stratford International railway station Stratford International railway station was not part of the original government plans for the CTRL 68 Despite its name no international services call there Completed in April 2006 it opened on 30 November 2009 when the domestic preview Southeastern highspeed services started calling there 69 An extension of the Docklands Light Railway opened to Stratford International in August 2011 70 It forms part of the complex of railway stations for the main site where the 2012 Summer Olympics were held 71 Temple Mills Depot in Leyton is used for storage and servicing of Eurostar trains and off peak berthing of Class 395 Southeastern high speed trains Infrastructure Edit A high speed tunnel and flyover take non stopping trains past Ashford International at 270 km h 170 mph The railway is maintained from Singlewell Infrastructure Maintenance Depot 72 The construction work of the line was complex and many contractors were involved in delivering them 73 The CTRL Section 2 construction works had caused considerable disruption around the Kings Cross area of London in their wake redevelopment was stimulated 74 75 The large redevelopment area includes the run down areas of post industrial and ex railway land close to King s Cross and St Pancras a conservation area with many listed buildings this was promoted as one of the benefits for building the CTRL 76 It has been postulated that this development was actually suppressed by the construction project 77 and some affected districts were said still to be in a poor state in 2005 78 Track Edit Both track and signalling technology TVM 430 KVB are based on or identical to the standards used on the French LGV high speed lines The areas around St Pancras and Gare du Nord use colour light and KVB signalling 79 with the whole of the high speed route to Paris CTRL Channel Tunnel LGV Nord using TVM 430 Traffic between London and the Channel Tunnel is controlled from the Ashford signalling centre Signalling tests before opening were performed by the SNCF owned Lucie test car 80 The track is 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gauge 81 cleared to a larger modern European GC loading gauge 81 enabling GC gauge freight as far as the yards at Barking 82 83 The line is electrified entirely using overhead lines with 25 kV AC railway electrification North Downs Tunnel northern portal under Blue Bell Hill Tunnels Edit After local protests 84 85 early plans were modified to put more of the route into tunnels up until a point approximately 2 kilometres 1 2 mi from St Pancras Previously the CTRL was planned to run on an elevated section alongside the North London Line on approach into the line s terminus The twin tunnels bored under London were driven from Stratford westwards towards St Pancras eastwards towards Dagenham and from Dagenham westwards to connect with the tunnel from Stratford The tunnel boring machines were 120 metres 390 ft long and weighed 1 100 tonnes The depth of the tunnels varies from 24 to 50 metres 79 to 164 ft The two London tunnels are 7 5 kilometres 4 7 mi and 10 1 kilometres 6 3 mi in length split by Stratford International station 86 87 Other major tunnels along the route include a 3 1 km tunnel underneath the River Thames at Thurrock in Essex 88 and the 3 2 km North Downs Tunnel near Maidstone in Kent 89 Viaducts Edit Several major viaducts are present on the route with three viaducts over 1 000 metres 3 300 ft in length The Medway Viaduct takes the line over the River Medway adjacent to the M2 motorway 90 the Thurrock Viaduct takes the line over the A282 Dartford Crossing 91 and the Ashford Viaduct takes the fast lines over Ashford International station 92 Connection line to Waterloo Edit A four kilometre 2 5 mi connecting line providing access for Waterloo International leaves High Speed 1 at Southfleet Junction using a grade separated junction the main CTRL tracks continue uninterrupted through to CTRL Section 2 underneath the southbound flyover The connection joins the Chatham Main Line at Fawkham Junction with a flat crossing The retention of Eurostar services to Waterloo after the line to St Pancras opened was ruled out on cost grounds 93 Waterloo International closed upon opening of the section two of the CTRL in November 2007 Eurostar now serves the refurbished St Pancras as its only London terminal so this connecting line is no longer used in regular service 94 95 but can be used by Class 395 passenger trains 96 Services EditInternational passenger services on this line are operated by Eurostar with maximum speed 300 km h while domestic passenger services are operated by Southeastern as far as Ashford International with maximum speed 225 km h High Speed 1 was built to allow eight trains per hour through to the Channel Tunnel 97 As of May 2014 Eurostar runs two to three trains per hour in each direction between London and the Channel Tunnel 98 Southeastern runs in the high peak eight trains per hour between London and Ebbsfleet two of these continuing to Ashford 99 During the 2012 Olympic Games Southeastern provided the Olympic Javelin service with up to twelve trains per hour from Stratford into London 100 Freight Edit The route was built with freight provision from the beginning It has spurs leading to and from the freight terminal at Dollands Moor Folkestone and the freight depot at Barking Ripple Lane north of the River Thames Long passing loops to hold freight trains while passenger trains overtake them were built at Lenham Heath and Singlewell Freight trains operated by EWS first ran over CTRL Section 1 on the consecutive evenings of 3 4 April 2004 Five freight trains that would have run via the classic lines were diverted to run over the Channel Tunnel Rail Link instead three southbound intermodal trains on 3 April 2004 and two northbound intermodal trains on 4 April 2004 101 Ownership EditIn November 2010 the HS1 concession was awarded for a duration of thirty years to an investment consortium bringing together two Canadian public pension funds Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System through its subsidiary Borealis Infrastructure and Ontario Teachers Pension Plan for 2 1 billion 48 At the time UK pension investors had generally limited interest in such long term illiquid infrastructure assets 102 In 2017 the sale of the 30 year HS1 concession was announced to funds advised and managed by InfraRed Capital Partners and Equitix Investment Management participants include HICL Infrastructure 35 Equitix 35 and South Korea s National Pension Service 30 for an enterprise value of 3 billion 103 104 The private operator does not hold the freehold or rights to any of the associated land 105 Operators EditThe railway is operated on an open access basis Trains are operated by several organisations all operating over the same track HS1 Ltd is the network manager for the line stations and other infrastructure 106 Network Rail High Speed Ltd Edit HS1 near the village of Hothfield in Kent HS1 Ltd is responsible for overall managing and running of the line along with the international railway stations at St Pancras Stratford Ashford and Ebbsfleet 107 with responsibility for the infrastructure itself sub contracted to Network Rail High Speed Ltd formerly known as Network Rail CTRL acting as the controller and infrastructure manager 108 Network Rail CTRL Limited was created as a subsidiary of Network Rail on 26 September 2003 for 57 million to take over the assets of the CTRL renewal and maintenance operations 109 Network Rail High Speed operates engineering track maintenance machines rescue locomotives and infrastructure and test trains 110 Eurotunnel s subsidiary Europorte 2 operates its Eurotunnel Class 0001 Krupp MaK 6400 rescue locomotives on the line when required 111 Various track recording trains run as necessary including visits by the New Measurement Train On the night of 4 5 May 2011 the SNCF TGV Iris 320 laboratory train took over being hauled from Coquelles to St Pancras and back towed by Eurotunnel Krupp locomotives numbers 4 and 5 112 The Iris 320 runs for Network Rail High Speed are an extension of the 100 km h 62 mph monitoring cycle already undertaken by SNCF International since December 2010 for Eurotunnel every two months 113 114 Eurostar Edit Main article Eurostar A Eurostar train in the original livery passing Strood on approach to the Medway bridge The Eurostar service uses about 40 of the capacity of High Speed 1 115 which in November 2007 became the company s route for all its services 116 Eurostar trains are for international traffic only passing along the high speed line from London St Pancras railway station to the Channel Tunnel with the majority 117 terminating at either Paris Gare du Nord in France or Brussels South railway station in Belgium 118 119 A Eurostar train was used to set a new British rail speed record of 334 7 km h 208 mph on 30 July 2003 120 121 Prior to the formation of Eurostar International Limited the British component of the Eurostar grouping was owned by London amp Continental Railways which had also previously owned the High Speed 1 infrastructure 122 The fastest regular service Eurostar journeys on record are 2 hours 3 minutes and 39 seconds from Paris Gare du Nord to St Pancras set on 4 September 2007 123 and 1 hour 43 minutes from Brussels South to St Pancras set on 19 September 2007 124 Class Image Type Top speed Number Routes operated Built mph km h Class 373 Eurostar e300 EMU 186 300 28 London Paris London Brussels London Marne la Vallee Chessy London Bourg Saint Maurice London Marseille Saint Charles 1992 1996Class 374 Eurostar e320 EMU 200 320 17 London Paris London Marne la Vallee Chessy London Amsterdam Centraal 2011 2018Southeastern Edit Main article Southeastern train operating company A Southeastern Class 395 train departing from London St Pancras railway station on a preview domestic service Domestic high speed services on High Speed 1 are operated by Southeastern Having been in planning since 2004 125 a preview service of the British Rail Class 395 trains popularly known as Javelins started in June 2009 62 and regular services began on 13 December 2009 The quickest journey time from Ashford to London St Pancras is 35 minutes 126 compared with 80 minutes for the service to London Charing Cross via Tonbridge 127 This service on Section 2 of the CTRL known previously as CTRL DS was a factor in London s successful 2012 Olympic Bid promising a seven minute journey time from the Olympic Park at Stratford to the London terminus at St Pancras 128 Class Image Type Top speed Number Routes operated Built mph km h Class 395 Electric multiple unit 140 225 29 London Dover via Ashford International London Ramsgate via Faversham London Margate via Ashford International 2007 2009DB Cargo UK Edit Main article DB Cargo UK DB Cargo UK Class 92s haul freights over High Speed 1 DB Cargo is a global freight operator with a large interest in freight over rail in Europe 129 While High Speed 1 was constructed with freight loops no freight traffic had run upon the line since opening in 2003 130 On 16 April 2009 DB Schenker signed an agreement with HS1 Ltd the owner of High Speed 1 for a partnership to develop TVM modifications for class 92 freight locomotives to run on the line 131 On 25 March 2011 for the first time a modified class 92 locomotive travelled from Dollands Moor to Singlewell using the TVM430 signalling system 132 A loaded container train ran for the first time on 27 May 2011 to Novara in Italy Following further trials with loaded wagons 133 134 DB is to upgrade five Class 92 locomotives to allow them to run on High Speed 1 135 From 11 November 2011 a weekly service using European sized swap body containers has run between London and Poland using High Speed 1 Class Image Type Top speed Number Built Notes mph km h Class 92 Electric locomotive 87 140 46 1993 1996Future operations Edit At present only Deutsche Bahn DB has applied for use of the line and in 2009 regulations were relaxed to allow its trains to use the Channel Tunnel Other proposals are yet to be formalised Deutsche Bahn Edit Deutsche Bahn has planned services using Siemens Velaro D trains In November 2007 it was reported that DB Germany s national train company had applied to use the Channel Tunnel and High Speed 1 into London This was denied by Deutsche Bahn and the bi national Channel Tunnel Safety Authority confirmed that it had not received such an application 136 The plan was delayed by safety regulations as Deutsche Bahn s fleet of ICE 3M high speed trains could not be divided in the tunnel in an emergency 137 In December 2008 it was reported that DB was interested in buying the British share in Eurostar 138 which in practice means buying Eurostar UK Ltd the 100 subsidiary of London amp Continental Railways LCR which the British government intends to break up and sell just as it does the other rail related subsidiary of L amp CR HS1 Ltd 139 140 The buyer of EUKL would become the owner of the 11 British Three Capitals Class 373 trainsets plus all seven North of London sets and would also be responsible for the operations of Eurostar traffic within Britain once the management contract with ICRR expires in 2010 Guillaume Pepy the president of SNCF who held a press conference the same day described DB s interest as premature presumptuous and arrogant 141 SNCF claims to own 62 of the shares of Eurostar Group Ltd Hartmut Mehdorn then CEO of Deutsche Bahn confirmed DB s interest but insisted in a letter to Pepy that DB had only informally requested information and not made any official requests to Britain s Department for Transport 142 In 2009 Eurotunnel the owners of the Channel Tunnel announced that it was prepared to start relaxing the fire safety regulations in order to permit other operators such as Deutsche Bahn to transport passengers via the Tunnel using other forms of rolling stock 143 Under the deregulation of European railway service high speed lines were opened up to access by other operators on 1 January 2010 the Inter Governmental Commission on the Channel Tunnel IGC announced that it was considering relaxing the safety requirements concerning train splitting LCR suggested that high speed rail services between London and Cologne could commence before the 2012 Olympics 144 In March 2010 Eurotunnel HS1 Ltd DB and other interested train operators formed a working group to discuss changes to the safety rules including allowing 200 metre trains The Intergovernmental Commission currently requires trains to be 400 m long 145 Deutsche Bahn carried out evacuation trials in the tunnel on 17 October 2010 with two 200m long ICE3 trains and displayed one of them at St Pancras station on 19 October 146 The current Velaro ICE3 sets do not meet the fire safety requirements for passenger services through the tunnel but the Siemens Velaro D sets on order include the necessary additional fire proofing 147 In March 2011 the European Rail Agency decided to allow trains with distributed traction to operate in the Channel Tunnel 148 DB is planning three services a day to Frankfurt 5h from London Rotterdam 3h and Amsterdam 4h via Brussels 146 149 from 2015 This had originally planned to be 2013 but has been delayed due to the availability of the Channel Tunnel version of the Siemens Velaro D trains high rental costs of the French rail network and border controls in their stations 150 As of 2016 nothing yet has come to fruition but the High Speed One website continues to state that HS1 Ltd are working with Deutsche Bahn on plans to incorporate three additional international return journeys between Frankfurt and London via Cologne Brussels and Lille This will include connections from Amsterdam via Rotterdam to London 151 In March 2017 it was announced that Deutsche Bahn had revived plans for a London to Frankfurt train service with the service beginning as early as 2020 The service would take around five hours and could rival airlines and become the first competitor for Eurostar 152 However in June 2018 Deutsche Bahn stated the plans have been shelved due to a significantly changed economic environment 153 Veolia Edit Veolia s planned use of the AGV train would cut journey times to London In 2009 Veolia announced that it would begin working on new proposals in co operation with Trenitalia to run services from Paris to Strasbourg London and Brussels 154 Renfe Edit Spanish AVE train Spanish railway operator RENFE said in 2009 that it was interested in running AVE services from Spain to London via Paris 155 Lyon Barcelona Madrid and Lisbon using the Madrid Barcelona high speed rail line once its AVE network was connected to France via the Barcelona to Figueres and Perpignan to Figueres lines in 2012 156 In October 2021 Renfe announced that It intends to operate high speed trains between Paris and London using the Channel Tunnel and High Speed 1 A Renfe spokesperson has said that there are possible options available on the high speed route for additional trains to operate According to the demand analyses carried out it would be viable and profitable for Renfe to compete with Eurostar 157 The rail company claims it had already received support from Getlink the European company that operates the Channel tunnel and from HS1 which owns runs and maintains the 109 km rail line between the Channel tunnel and London 158 Getlink Edit In August 2018 Bloomberg Businessweek reported that Getlink is interested in setting up an Ouigo style low cost high speed rail service between London and Paris travelling between the railway stations of Stratford International and Charles de Gaulle 159 Services to Bordeaux Edit It was revealed in March 2020 that High Speed 1 Ltd along with SNCF and Lisea are looking for an operator for a future London St Pancras Bordeaux St Jean train service 160 See also EditHigh Speed 2 Northern Powerhouse Rail previously called High Speed 3 HS4Air High speed rail in the United Kingdom Megaproject Rail transport in the United Kingdom Shortlands railway station dive under at Shortlands Junction built in conjunction with HS1 Transport in London UK Ultraspeed Crossings of the River Thames Tunnels underneath the River ThamesReferences Edit Channel Tunnel Rail Link Visit PDF Institute of Sound and Vibration Research University of Southampton Archived from the original PDF on 10 July 2004 Retrieved 18 February 2013 Section 2 which has a line speed of 225 km h Building Britain s first high speed line Railway Gazette International London 1 May 1999 Archived from the original on 11 July 2017 Retrieved 26 December 2011 Speed will be reduced to 225 km h 140 mph between 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mount rival Eurostar service Archived 27 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine Breaking Travel News 24 December 2009 Deutsche Bahn Push for U K Rail Supremacy Upset by Failed Bids Bloomberg New York 9 March 2010 Archived from the original on 15 August 2021 Retrieved 15 August 2021 Renfe said it s looking for opportunities to expand through the Channel tunnel Keeley Graham 27 November 2009 Rail offers London to Madrid in eight hours The Times London Archived from the original on 15 August 2021 Retrieved 15 August 2021 Clinnick Richard 26 October 2021 Renfe wants to operate trains to London International Rail Journal Archived from the original on 26 October 2021 Retrieved 27 October 2021 Jones Sam 26 October 2021 Spanish rail reveals plans for high speed London to Paris link The Guardian Archived from the original on 27 October 2021 Retrieved 27 October 2021 The Discount Airline Model Is Coming for Europe s Railways Bloomberg Businessweek 17 August 2018 Archived from the original on 2 February 2021 Retrieved 18 February 2021 SNCF wants London Bordeaux by 2022 6 March 2020 Archived from the original on 1 August 2020 Retrieved 8 March 2020 Bibliography EditYoung George Alison Gorlov 1995 Channel Tunnel Rail Link Union Railways National Audit Office 2001 Department of the Environment Transport and the Regions The Channel Tunnel Rail Link The Stationery Office ISBN 0 10 286801 8 National Audit Office 2005 Progress on the Channel Tunnel Rail Link The Stationery Office ISBN 0 10 293343 X Montagu Samuel Department of Transport 1993 Channel Tunnel Rail Link HMSO Bertolini Luca Tejo Spit 1998 Cities on rails the redevelopment of railway station areas Taylor amp Francis ISBN 0 419 22760 1 Further reading EditPielow Simon 1997 Eurostar Ian Allan ISBN 0 7110 2451 0 Anderson Graham Roskrow Ben 1994 The Channel Tunnel Story London E amp F N Spon ISBN 0 419 19620 X European Commission Directorate General for Regional Policy and Cohesion 1996 The Regional Impact of the Channel Tunnel Throughout the Community Brussels Belgium Office for Official Publications of the European Communities ISBN 978 92 826 8804 5 Volume 21 of Foundations of Peace Regional Development Studies Brussels Belgium 21 Volume 21 of Regional development studies European Commission Issue 21 of Regional development studies COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES Regional policy and cohesion a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author1 has generic name help Sievert Terri 2002 The World s Fastest Trains Capstone Press ISBN 0 7368 1061 7 Griffiths Jeanne 1995 London to Paris in Ten Minutes The Eurostar Story Images ISBN 1 897817 47 9 Comfort Nicholas 2007 The Channel Tunnel and its High Speed Links Oakwood Press ISBN 978 1 56554 854 1 Parliament House of Commons Transport Committee 2008 Delivering a Sustainable Railway The Stationery Office ISBN 978 0 215 52222 1 Mitchell Vic 1996 Ashford From Steam to Eurostar Middleton Press ISBN 1 873793 67 7 Channel Tunnel route and terminals BR reveals the possibilities RAIL No 84 EMAP National Publications September 1988 p 7 ISSN 0953 4563 OCLC 49953699 Preferred bidders announced for Channel Tunnel Rail Link contracts RAIL No 323 EMAP Apex Publications 28 January 10 February 1998 pp 10 11 ISSN 0953 4563 OCLC 49953699 Prescott starts CTRL construction the first new main line in 99 years RAIL No 342 EMAP Apex Publications 21 October 3 November 1998 p 15 ISSN 0953 4563 OCLC 49953699 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to High Speed 1 Route map KML file edit help Template Attached KML High Speed 1KML is from Wikidata Official website Trade article Marco Polo Excite European X Channel Intermodal Transport Enhancement Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title High Speed 1 amp oldid 1155361022, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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