Romford to Upminster Line
Romford to Upminster Line | |
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Overview | |
Type | Suburban rail; heavy rail |
System | London Overground |
Status | Operational |
Locale | Greater London |
Termini |
Romford Upminster |
Stations | 3 |
Services | 1 |
Operation | |
Opened | 7 June 1893 |
Owner | Network Rail |
Operator(s) | London Overground |
Character | Branch line |
Depot(s) | Ilford |
Rolling stock | Class 315, Class 317, Class 321 |
Technical | |
Line length | 3 miles 30 chains (5.4 km) |
Number of tracks | 1 |
Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 1⁄2 in) standard gauge |
Electrification | 25 kV AC |
Operating speed | 30 mph (48 km/h) |
The Romford to Upminster Line is a railway branch line in Greater London that connects Romford on the Great Eastern Main Line to Upminster on the London, Tilbury and Southend Line. The route is 3 miles 30 chains (5.4 km) in length and there is one intermediate station at Emerson Park. The line is part of Network Rail Strategic Route 7, SRS 07.09, and is classified as a rural line.[1]
The line is single-track throughout, electrified at 25 kV AC, has a loading gauge of W6, and a maximum speed of 30 miles per hour (48 km/h).[1]
Services are currently operated by London Overground.
History
The line was originally built as a branch of the London, Tilbury and Southend Railway (LT&SR) and opened on 7 June 1893 providing the LT&SR with a link to the Great Eastern Railway at Romford and a small goods yard where the branch joins the Great Eastern Main Line. At Romford the branch had a separate station entrance in a three-storey building opposite the Great Eastern station entrance and a cast-iron footbridge was constructed over South Street which opened when a LT&SR train was due. When in April 1934 the LT&SR building ceased use as a station and the ground floor was rented as a shop, the then London and North Eastern Railway took control of the whole station.
Emerson Park Halt was opened on 1 October 1909. A run-round loop was constructed 500 yards to the west to enable extra trains to run between Emerson Park and Upminster. When push-pull working began in 1934 the loop was no longer required and was removed in circa 1936.[2]
From 17 September 1956 a diesel multiple unit from Stratford replaced the steam service and from 20 April 1957 a new bay platform, numbered six, opened at Upminster effectively making it part of the Great Eastern route.
There were some attempts to close the line in the 1960s, but these failed. It was later electrified, and electric trains began operating on 17 April 1986.[3]
The line transferred to become part of the London Overground network in May 2015.[4]
Infrastructure
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The branch is known colloquially as the "Romford Push and Pull" as it is single-track throughout. It is electrified at 25 kV AC. Electrification of the line saw an end to years of speculation about its future. There is only one intermediate station, at Emerson Park. At Upminster the connection west of the station to the main line was severed in 1968.[5]
The branch is not signalled. There were plans to link the line from platform six at Upminster to the reception tracks of the London Underground depot there. This would have allowed the transfer of London Underground D78 Stock units onto the main line to be hauled away by diesel locomotive for refurbishment at Ilford depot. These plans were scrapped when the refurbishment work was transferred to Wakefield in Yorkshire and the transfer was done by road.[6] The point-work which was half installed is still visible from the eastern end of platform five at Upminster.
Services
The line is entirely within Travelcard Zone 6.
Services are currently operated by London Overground, which replaced the previous operator, Abellio Greater Anglia, in May 2015.[7] Trains are typically formed by a Class 315, Class 317 or Class 321.
As of December 2015, the service pattern on the route is one train every 30 minutes between approximately 6:15 am and 10 pm Mondays to Saturdays, and approximately 8:30 am and 8 pm on Sundays. The journey time from one terminus to the other is approximately nine minutes.[7]
Geology
During the construction of the railway in 1892, the geologist T. V. Holmes discovered a five-metre layer of boulder clay underlying the gravel and sand in a section just north of St. Andrew's Park. This is now the Hornchurch Cutting Site of Special Scientific Interest, which exhibits the southernmost limit of the Anglian ice sheet 450,000 years ago, the furthest south that any ice sheet reached.[8]
References
- 1 2 "Route 7 - Great Eastern" (PDF). Network Rail. Retrieved 2009-05-22.
- ↑ Kay, Peter (1997). The London Tilbury and Southend Railway Vol 2. p. 83. ISBN 1-899890-19-X.
- ↑ Kay 1997, p. 80
- ↑ "More EMUs for London Overground". Railway Gazette. 9 April 2014. Retrieved 9 April 2014.
- ↑ Kay 1997, p. 81
- ↑ "D78 Stock Programme". Retrieved 28 June 2011.
- 1 2 "London Overground timetable - Romford to Upminster - 31 May to 12 December 2015" (pdf). Transport for London. April 2015. Retrieved 2015-05-31.
- ↑ "Geology Site Account, Hornchurch Railway Cutting". The Essex Field Club. Retrieved 2012-06-03.
Further reading
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Romford to Upminster Line. |
- Holmes, T. V. (1892), "The New Railway from Grays Thurrock to Romford: Sections between Upminster and Romford", Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society (The Geological Society) 48 (1-4), doi:10.1144/GSL.JGS.1892.048.01-04.21
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