North Wales Coast Line

The North Wales Coast Line (Welsh: Rheilffordd Arfordir Gogledd Cymru), also known as the North Wales Main Line,[1] is a major railway line in the north of Wales, running from Crewe on the West Coast Main Line to Holyhead on the Isle of Anglesey.

North Wales Coast Line
Overview
TypeHeavy Rail
SystemNational Rail
LocaleAnglesey
Gwynedd
Conwy
Denbighshire
Flintshire
Cheshire
TerminiCrewe
Holyhead
Stations21
Operation
Opened1850
OwnerNetwork Rail
Operator(s)Avanti West Coast
Transport for Wales Rail
CharacterCoastal
Rolling stockClass 67
Class 150 "Sprinter"
Class 153 "Super Sprinter"
Class 158 "Express Sprinter"
Class 175 "Coradia"
Class 221 "SuperVoyagers"
Technical
Line length84.38 miles (135.80 km)
Number of tracksDouble track mostly (except on the Britannia Bridge where there is single track)
Track gauge4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Operating speed90 mph (140 km/h) maximum
Route map
North Wales Coast Line
Holyhead
Valley
Rhosneigr
Tŷ Croes
Bodorgan
Gaerwen
Llanfairpwll
Britannia Bridge
Menai Bridge
Bangor
A5
Aber
Llanfairfechan
Penmaenmawr
Conway Marsh
Conwy
Llandudno
Deganwy
Llandudno Junction
Mochdre & Pabo
Colwyn Bay
Old Colwyn
Llysfaen
Llandulas
Abergele & Pensarn
Foryd
Rhyl
Prestatyn
Talacre
Mostyn
Holywell Junction
Bagillt
Flint
Connah's Quay
Shotton
Queensferry
Sandycroft
Saltney Ferry
(Mold Railway services only)
Dee Bridge
over River Dee
Roodee Viaduct
Northgate Tunnel
Chester
Waverton
Tattenhall Road
Beeston Castle and Tarporley
Calveley
Worleston
Crewe

The line is not currently electrified, so Avanti West Coast, the current operator of the West Coast Partnership franchise, currently uses Class 221 Super Voyagers, which they have done since December 2007, on routes to Holyhead.

The line contains several notable engineering structures, namely Conwy railway bridge across the River Conwy, and Britannia Bridge across the Menai Strait.

History

The first section from Crewe to Chester was built by the Chester and Crewe Railway and absorbed by the Grand Junction Railway shortly before opening in 1840. The remainder was built between 1844 and 1850 by the Chester and Holyhead Railway Company as the route of the Irish Mail services to Dublin. The line was later incorporated in the London and North Western Railway. Between Chester and Saltney Junction, the line was, from the start, used by trains of the Shrewsbury and Chester Railway later to be incorporated in the Great Western Railway.

So important was the line in the 19th and early 20th centuries to passenger, mail and freight traffic between Britain and Ireland that the world's first experimental and operational water troughs were installed at Mochdre between Colwyn Bay and Llandudno Junction. Their purpose was to enable steam engines (especially on the Irish Mail) to collect water without stopping. Later, considerable stretches of line between Chester and Colwyn Bay were quadrupled to increase line capacity but these sections have now been reduced to two tracks.

Main calling points

The main towns served by the route are listed below:

Services

Principal through passenger services are London Euston to Holyhead, Bangor, Chester and Wrexham General operated by Avanti West Coast and Crewe to Holyhead, Cardiff to Holyhead and Manchester to Llandudno currently operated by Transport for Wales Rail. A revised timetable has operated since December 2005 incorporating a new service to and from Cardiff Central every two hours. The line still provides the UK railway part of the through passenger service to Dublin using fast car ferries from Holyhead to Dublin Port.

Future

North Wales Coast Line between Chester and Saltney, showing the two tracks over the River Dee. The path of the other two tracks which were removed can also be seen.

The Welsh Government would like the line to be electrified, especially if Crewe becomes a rail hub due to HS2 in 2026.[2] Chancellor George Osborne said in July 2015 that there was a "really strong case" for electrification of the line.[3] The Electrification Task Force said that the Chester to Crewe line was a Tier 2 priority for being electrified in the CP6 period (2019-2024).[4] A £50 million signalling upgrade programme is currently being carried out between Shotton and Colwyn Bay, which will see modular colour lights supervised from the South Wales Rail Operating Centre in Cardiff replace the manual signal boxes and mixture of semaphore and older colour lights currently in use, in March 2018.[5]

References

  1. "Route Utilisation Strategy - Wales" (PDF). Network Rail. 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 June 2011. Retrieved 7 February 2012.
  2. Williamson, David (21 March 2014). "HS2 report has pushed electrification of North Wales rail line forward, Welsh Secretary claims". Wales Online. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  3. "'Strong case' for north Wales rail electrification". BBC News. 17 July 2015. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  4. "Electrification Task Force Final Report Revealed". Rail North. 5 March 2015. Archived from the original on 14 June 2017. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  5. £50m North Wales Railway Upgrade Project underway Network Rail Media Centre; Retrieved 4 August 2017

Further reading

KML is from Wikidata
  • Allen, David (18 June – 1 July 1997). "Sun, sea, sand...and semaphores". RAIL. No. 307. EMAP Apex Publications. pp. 40–45. ISSN 0953-4563. OCLC 49953699.
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