North Pole depot

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File:North Pole Train Maintenance Centre 2015.jpg
The exterior of Hitachi Rail's North Pole Train Maintenance Centre, West London, in August 2014

North Pole Train Maintenance Centre is a train maintenance site in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham, West London partially redeveloped by Hitachi Rail Europe from 2013 as a maintenance site for Intercity Express Programme trains.[1]

The depot was formerly known as North Pole International, used by Eurostar as the London depot for their fleet of British Rail Class 373 trains from 1994 until 2007 during the period when Eurostar trains ran from Waterloo International railway station.

Location

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North Pole depot is located at two sites on either side of the West London Line, just north of North Pole junction. The western site is located adjacent to, and on the south side of the Great Western Main Line (GWML) opposite Old Oak Common depot. The eastern site is accessed by rail via the western site passing under the West London line and the A219 (Scrubs Lane) at Mitre bridge.[2][3]

History

Background

Historically the land at the western site was undeveloped, most of it lying on the northern part of the open land known as Wormwood Scrubs; a limited amount of land was used for sidings south of the Great Western Main Line (GWML).[4]

The eastern part was developed for railway use in the last quarter part of the 19th century.[5] By 1870 a burrowing junction chord had been built,[note 1] connecting the West London Line (WLL) and the GWML by veering east off the WLL at North Pole Junction, then turning west passing under the WLL and connected to the GWML at West London Junction.[5] In 1870 land in the northwestern corner of Little Wormwood Scrubs including Red House Farm and a gasworks was exchanged for 5 acres (2.0 ha) in the south east corner;[6] much of the land was taken up by the establishment of a railway works; the West London Works.[5][6] Track also connected the loop chord and works onto the GWML to the east.[5] The works continued until after the second world war, the majority of the works had been closed and demolished by the early 1970s, leaving undeveloped ground.[7]

North Pole International depot

File:North Pole Maintenance Depot - geograph.org.uk - 444580.jpg
Maintenance building at western site of the North Pole International depot, view SW across GWML track (2007)
File:Eurostar at North Pole Maintenance Depot - geograph.org.uk - 543922.jpg
Eurostar at sidings of eastern site of North Pole depot, GWML on far side (2007)

A depot at North Pole, West London formed part of the 1970s aborted Channel Tunnel scheme.[8] The Channel Tunnel Act 1987 sanctioned the construction of a train depot in the Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham and the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea;[9] the depot construction cost was £76 million;[10] in addition to the construction the line from Waterloo International railway station to the depot (West London Line) was electrified.[11] The designers were Mott MacDonald, the British Rail civil engineer, and YRM.[12]

The depot opened in 1994.[13] The main facilities were a 6 track 400 m (1,300 ft) shed used for light servicing and cleaning the trains, and a 4 track 200 m (660 ft) used for heavy overhaul, other facilities included a wheel lathe shed, a bogie repair shed, train washing and toilet and water changing facilities and a staff accommodation building.[14]

In 2005 the closure of the depot was announced, to be replaced by a new depot directly linked to the Channel Tunnel Rail Link.[15] On 14 November 2007 Eurostar moved its London terminus from Waterloo International station to St Pancras railway station, and maintenance simultaneously moved to a new site at Temple Mills near Stratford International.[16][17]

Potential re-use by conventional UK rail operators was limited by the specialised equipment designed for electrical trains being unsuitable for general operations; the site lacked an overhead crane, turning facilities, fuelling facilities; additionally it was not designed for vehicles creating emission (combustion products) and lacked a connection to the GWML.[18]

Intercity Express Programme

In 2009 Agility Trains was listed as the preferred bidder for the Intercity Express Programme high speed train procurement; the North Pole depot was given as a site to be used for the train's maintenance depots.[19]

Hitachi submitted planning documents in 2011;[20] the main large maintenance shed was planned to be re-used with the addition of an inspection pit. Carriage wash facilities were to be replaced, and oil, fuelling, toilet emptying and other train service facilities installed. The remainder of the site was to have minor modifications.[21] The former heavy maintenance shed was outside the scope of the redevelopment; most of the works were in the western part of the site.[22]

The main contracted for the conversion was Volker Fitzpatrick. The conversion work was practically complete by late 2015. The remodelled six road 400m main building included : new inspection pits; a complete trainlift jack set for two five car trains on road 3, a bogie drop on road 4; an overhead crane on road 5; and a wheel lathe on road 6. Three of the six roads had overhead electrification.[23]

Future plans

Part of the eastern section of the site was included in re-development plans for the Kensal gasworks in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. In one option a bridge would be created to provide a link between the existing communities to the south of the existing depot and a proposed Kensal Portobello Crossrail Station to the north of the railway lines on the former gasworks site.[24]

London and Continental Railways is seeking to use the remainder of the site not used by the Intercity Express Programme for housing or commercial use.[13]

References

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  2. Rail Atlas Great Britain & Ireland, S.K. Baker ISBN 0-86093-553-1
  3. Ordnance Survey, 1:10000, 1996
  4. Ordnance Survey. 1:2500; 1871, 1874, 1896, 1915, 1935. 1:10560; 1950-1, 1957, 1967. 1:10000; 1975-6, 1984
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Ordnance Survey. 1:2500. 1870-1, 1896
  6. 6.0 6.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  7. Ordnance Survey. 1:10560; 1920, 1938, 1951, 1957, 1967, 1975
  8. Gourvish 2006, p. 306.
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  10. Gourvish 2006, p. 325.
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  13. 13.0 13.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  14. Indigo Planning Ltd. & Jacobs Engineering Group Inc. 2011, 1.6-1.11, p.1.
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  21. Indigo Planning Ltd. & Jacobs Engineering Group Inc. 2011, 2.1-2.4, p.3; 2.8-2.17 pp.3-4.
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Notes

  1. The West London loop (GWR) (OS. 1:2500. 1896), later Victoria Branch (OS. 1:2500. 1915-6, 1935)

Sources

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External links