Peterborough to Lincoln Line

Peterborough to Lincoln Line

The line heads away from Lincoln toward Sleaford
Overview
Type Heavy rail
System National Rail
Status Operational
Locale East Midlands
Termini Peterborough
Lincoln
Stations 6
Operation
Owner Network Rail
Operator(s) East Midlands Trains
Rolling stock Class 153 Super Sprinter
Class 156 Super Sprinter
Technical
Line length ~24 mi (39 km)
Number of tracks Two
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Electrification 25 kV AC OHLE (part of the ECML at Peterborough)

Peterborough to Lincoln Line

Legend
Doncaster to Lincoln Line
& Sheffield to Lincoln Line
to
Doncaster
& Retford
Nottingham to Lincoln Line
to Newark North Gate and Nottingham
Lincoln Central
Sheffield to Lincoln Line
to Grimsby Town and Cleethorpes
Branston and Heighington
Potter Hanworth
Nocton and Dunston
Metheringham
Scopwick and Timberland
Digby
Ruskington

Poacher Line
to Grantham and Nottingham
Sleaford
Poacher Line
to Boston and Skegness

Sleaford avoiding line
Helpringham
Donington Road
Gosberton
Pinchbeck
Spalding
Littleworth
St James Deeping
Peakirk
East Coast Main Line
to Grantham and Doncaster

Peterborough
East Coast Main Line
to Stevenage and London King's Cross
All minor stations closed on Sundays

The Peterborough to Lincoln Line is a railway line linking Peterborough and Lincoln Central, via Sleaford and Spalding.[1]

History

The section between Peterborough and Spalding closed to passengers on 5 October 1970 and re-opened on 7 June 1971. North of Spalding, Ruskington re-opened on 5 May 1975. Metheringham followed on 6 October 1975.

Intermediate stations south of Sleaford did not re-open; See Diagram. There has been agitation by local communities to re-open Littleworth on a park-and-ride basis for Peterborough.

Description

The towns and villages served by the route are listed below.

The route has a regular role as a diversionary route for trains from the East Coast Main Line.

The route is now open 24 hours per day.

Infrastructure

The line is not electrified. The line is controlled by Lincoln signalling centre from Werrington Junction to Lincoln, worked under track circuit block regulations (TCB). However, Sleaford East box remains for now: resignalling is due around 2019/2020, when the whole area will switch to York Rail Operating Centre (ROC) along with Lincoln signalling centre.

Linespeeds

Incidents

One person died and 30 people were injured in the Nocton rail accident when a train hit a vehicle on the tracks at the site of a removed bridge, on 28 December 2002.

On 6 December 2004 two people died in a collision between a car and a class 153 DMU on a user operated crossing south east of Helpringham.[2]

Proposed developments

A new grade separated junction at Werrington is to be built around 2019 to allow freight and passenger serves to cross the East Coast Main line.[3]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/18/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.