West Coast Main Line

From Freepedia

The West Coast Main Line (WCML) is one of the most important intercity railway lines in the United Kingdom, part of the British railway system. It begins at Euston station in London and ends 400 miles north-west at Central station in Glasgow. It also links several of the UK's largest cities and towns on the way, including Milton Keynes, Northampton, Rugby, Nuneaton, Coventry, Birmingham, Wolverhampton, Stafford, Stoke-on-Trent, Crewe, Manchester, Liverpool, Lancaster and Carlisle.


Contents

History

The line was built in parts between the 1830s and the 1860s, with the first parts being the Grand Junction Railway (Warrington - Birmingham) and the London and Birmingham Railway, both completed in the 1830s.

Because of the need to appease the concerns and anger of landowners along the route, very often the line was built so that it dodged huge swathes of farmland, resulting in many curves and bends. The WCML also passes through some of the more hilly areas of the British mainland, such as the Trent Valley, the mountains of Cumbria and the Leadhills area of southern Lanarkshire. This has left a legacy of lower maximum speeds on the line compared to the East Coast route, and the principal solution to the problem has been the adoption of tilting trains, formerly British Rail's ill-fated APT, and latterly the Pendolino trains introduced by Virgin in 2003.

The WCML is not a single railway; although its main "spine" runs between Glasgow and London, the WCML includes loops which branch off it to serve Manchester, one via Stoke-on-Trent and one via Crewe, then back to the main line at Preston. There is also a loop which serves Northampton. There are also branches from Crewe to Liverpool and Rugby to Birmingham and Wolverhampton, and then back to the WCML at Stafford. Image:WCML near Ansty.jpg The line was modernised and electrified in stages between 1959 and 1974 - initial electrification was in 1959 between Crewe and Manchester and Liverpool, with the rest of the southern section of the line following a few years later; the line from Weaver Junction (where the route to Liverpool diverges) to Glasgow was electrified in 1974. It is currently undergoing a major upgrade along almost its entire length. The original plans estimated that this upgrade would cost £2bn, be ready by 2005, and cut journey times London to Birmingham to 1hr (currently 1hr 40mins) and 1hr 45mins London to Manchester. After a series of setbacks, in particular the bankruptcy of Railtrack, the revised estimates indicate that the cost will £10bn, be ready by 2008 with a maximum speed for tilting trains of 125 mph instead of the originally planned 140 mph, in place of the previous maximum of 110 mph. The first phase of the upgrade, south of Manchester, opened on 27 September 2004 with London to Birmingham journey times of 1hr 21mins and London to Manchester 2 hours.

The route in detail

The cities and towns served by the WCML are listed below. Those stations in italics are not part of the main-line services run by Virgin Trains, receiving only local trains. They are located, however, on the line itself.

London-Rugby

Town/City Station

Northampton Loop

Town/City Station

Trent Valley Line

Town/City Station

Rugby-Birmingham-Stafford

Town/City Station

Stafford-Stoke-Manchester

Town/City Station

Stafford-Crewe

Town/City Station

Crewe-Liverpool

Town/City Station

Crewe-Holyhead (North Wales Coast Line)

Town/City Station

Crewe-Manchester-Preston

Town/City Station

Crewe-Scotland

Town/City Station

either

or

either

or

See also

External links

Rail Industry www page which monitors the progress of the project


Main line railways in Great Britain:
High-speed main lines:  Channel Tunnel Rail Link   Channel Tunnel 
'Classic' main lines:  Cross-Country Route   East Coast Main Line   Great Eastern Main Line  
 Great Western Main Line   Midland Main Line   West Coast Main Line


Railway lines in Central England:
Main lines:  Cross-Country Route   Midland Main Line   West Coast Main Line
 Birmingham-Peterborough via Leicester Line   Birmingham-Worcester via Bromsgrove Line  
 Birmingham-Worcester via Kidderminster Line   Chiltern Main Line   Robin Hood Line  
 Welsh Marches Line   Wolverhampton-Shrewsbury Line
Commuter lines:  Birmingham-Rugeley "Chase" Line   Birmingham-Stratford Line   Birmingham-Walsall Line  
 Coventry-Nuneaton Line   Cross-City Line   Leicester-Loughborough "Ivanhoe" Line  
 Stourbridge Junction-Stourbridge Town Line   Walsall-Wolverhampton Line 
Rural lines:  Cotswold Line   Derwent Valley Line   Marston Vale Line   Shrewsbury-Chester Line


Railway lines in Scotland:
Main lines:  East Coast Main Line   West Coast Main Line
 Ayrshire Coast Line   Glasgow-Edinburgh via Carstairs Line   Glasgow-Edinburgh via Falkirk Line  
 Glasgow South Western Line   Highland Main Line 
Glasgow commuter lines:  Argyle Line   Ayrshire Coast Line   Cathcart Circle Lines   Croy Line   Cumbernauld Line 
 Inverclyde Line   Maryhill Line   Motherwell-Cumbernauld Line   North Clyde Line 
 Paisley Canal Line   Shotts Line   South Western Lines   Whifflet Line 
Edinburgh commuter lines:  Cross-City Line   Edinburgh-Bathgate Line   Fife Circle Line   North Berwick Line   Shotts Line  
 Waverley Line
Rural lines:  Aberdeen-Inverness Line   Far North Line   Kyle of Lochalsh Line    West Highland Line 


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