Durham Coast Line

Durham Coast Line

Looking southwards towards Hartlepool from the site of the former Hart Station, March 2016
Overview
System National Rail
Locale North East England
Operation
Owner Network Rail
Operator(s) Northern Rail, Grand Central Railway, Virgin Trains East Coast, Tyne and Wear Metro
Technical
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm)
Electrification 1,500 V DC (Pelaw Junction to Sunderland South Junction)
Route map
Legend
East Coast Main Line to Edinburgh

Newcastle Central Tyne and Wear Metro
River Tyne King Edward VII Bridge or High Level Bridge

Gateshead (closed 1981)
East Coast Main Line to Darlington and Tyne Valley Line to Carlisle

Tyne and Wear Metro to Newcastle Airport or St James

Gateshead Stadium Tyne and Wear Metro
Felling Tyne and Wear Metro
Heworth Tyne and Wear Metro
Pelaw Tyne and Wear Metro

Leamside branch to East Coast Main Line (non-operational)

Tyne and Wear Metro to South Shields and freight to Jarrow

Metro trains join main line

Fellgate Tyne and Wear Metro

Brockley Whins Tyne and Wear Metro Boldon Junctions - freight line to Tyne Dock

East Boldon Tyne and Wear Metro

Seaburn Tyne and Wear Metro

Stadium of Light Tyne and Wear Metro
Monkwearmouth (closed 1967)

St Peter's Tyne and Wear Metro
River Wear Wearmouth Rail Bridge

Sunderland Tyne and Wear Metro
Tyne and Wear Metro to South Hylton
Freight line to Sunderland docks
Seaham Colliery
Seaham
Easington
Horden
Blackhall Rocks
Freight line to Middleton
Hartlepool
Seaton Carew
Freight line to Hartlepool Nuclear Power Station
Delivery depot
Greatham (closed 24 November 1991)[1]
Billingham
Freight line to Seal Sands
Norton Junction - Stillington branch freight line to ECML
Norton-on-Tees (closed 1960)
Stockton
Tees Valley Line to Darlington
River Tees
Thornaby
Newport (closed 1915)
Middlesbrough
Esk Valley Line to Whitby
Tees Valley Line to Saltburn

The Durham Coast Line (DCL) is the name given to the railway line which links Newcastle upon Tyne with Middlesbrough, via Sunderland and Hartlepool. The services are operated by Northern Rail and the majority continue on from Newcastle to the MetroCentre and a few to Carlisle. It is an important diversionary route during closures on the East Coast Main Line.

The lines which make up the route were originally part of the North Eastern Railway, which became part the London and North Eastern Railway at the 1923 Grouping. The DCL comes under the aegis of the Tees Valley Rail Strategy, whose aims are to enhance services in the region. Under that scheme, Phase 1 undertaken on DCL resulted in an hourly service between Newcastle and Hartlepool from 2000; a half-hourly service was later to come into operation. Plans for Phase 2, including opening new stations, has been on hold since the Strategic Rail Authority came into being, when funding for the scheme was brought to a virtual standstill.

A halt at Greatham was downgraded to a partial service during the early 1980s and was closed on the 24 November 1991.

The section between the junction just south of Sunderland and Pelaw Junction (just south of Pelaw Metro station) is the only Network Rail route electrified at 1500V DC overhead for use by the Tyne and Wear Metro, which shares this section of the line.

As of Autumn 2014 a Facebook Group has been set up in honour of the route and its surroundings. The Durham Coast Line Official Group has chat discussions and nostalgic photography past and present.

Route

Passenger Services

Grand Central offer 5 daily out and back workings between Sunderland and London King's Cross. These trains only call at Hartlepool and Sunderland on the DCL but good connections can be made at Eaglescliffe (for Darlington) and York for onward travel. Sunday sees a 4 train service in both directions.[2]

Northern Rail services over the DCL see trains hourly in both directions between Middlesbrough and Newcastle with some trains starting at Saltburn (on the Tees Valley line) and some starting/finishing at Metro Centre, Hexham or Carlisle.[3]

On 14 December 2015 Virgin Trains East Coast introduced a daily return service running along the northern section of the DCL from Sunderland to London King's Cross via Newcastle that the operator has named the 'Spirit of Sunderland'. The outward working departs from Sunderland at 5:40 and calls at Newcastle, Durham , Darlington , York and Peterborough before arriving into King's Cross shortly after 9:00.[4] The return service departs from King's Cross at 20:00 and arrives into Sunderland at 23:22.[5]

Until 2004 a small number of TransPennine Express services operated along the northern section of the DCL as part of their service from Sunderland to Liverpool Lime Street via Newcastle, Durham, Darlington, York, Leeds and Manchester. This service was operated by Northern Spirit and subsequently Arriva Trains Northern from 1998. However, when management of the franchise was taken over by First TransPennine Express, all Transpennine services beyond Newcastle were withdrawn.

Freight Services

Despite the decline in the heavy industry of the North East, the DCL still retains a healthy freight service over the line, including several flows that are generated on the line in addition to several through services. Steel coil is railed into the Tata plant at Hartlepool and pipes are then taken out to Leith and the Far North of Scotland for the North Sea gas and oil industry. Spent nuclear rods are railed out for re-processing at Sellafield from Hartlepool Nuclear Power Station, Cement is delivered to Seaham docks, scrap metal is forwarded from Stockton-On-Tees to Celsa EAF works in Cardiff and Tyne Dock has a trailing connection in both directions at Boldon.[6]

The docks at Sunderland were recently reconnected by Network Rail in anticipation of a return to rail borne traffic - this has yet to come to fruition.[7] Despite the plethora of industrial complexes at Seal Sands, just one customer rails out hydrocarbons from Port Clarence to Cardiff.

Future Developments

It has been a long held ambition of Durham County Council to reopen a station on the DCL between Seaham and Hartlepool to serve the communities of the south east of the county. The council investigated seven potential sites in the area but it was decided that a site adjacent to the Sea View Industrial Estate in Horden was the most suitable location for the new station.[8] One of the key benefits of this location is its close proximity to the major town of Peterlee which means that, if constructed, it could allow 61,000 residents to gain access to employment opportunities across the region.

In September 2014 DCC said that they hoped to begin the planning process by the end of the year with the aim of starting construction in 2015 and a potential opening date in spring 2016.[9] However, on 1 June 2015 the MP for Easington, Graham Morris asked a question in parliament regarding the expected date of completion for the new station and was informed that permission to open the station had not yet been sought from the Department for Transport.[10]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, March 22, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.