Medway Valley line | |||
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![]() The line being crossed by theMaidstone East line nearMaidstone Barracks. There is no direct rail connection between the two lines. | |||
Overview | |||
Status | Operational | ||
Owner | Network Rail | ||
Locale | Kent South East England | ||
Termini | |||
Stations | 13 | ||
Service | |||
Type | Suburban rail,Heavy rail | ||
System | National Rail | ||
Route number | 01 | ||
Operator(s) | SE Trains | ||
Rolling stock | Class 375 "Electrostar" Class 395 "Javelin" | ||
History | |||
Opened | 1856 | ||
Technical | |||
Line length | 21 miles 19 chains (34.18 km) | ||
Number of tracks | 2 | ||
Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in)standard gauge | ||
Electrification | Third rail, 750 V DC | ||
Operating speed | 70 mph (110 km/h) | ||
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TheMedway Valley line is the name given to the railway line linkingStrood in theMedway Towns viaMaidstone West toTonbridge. High Speed services also link between Maidstone West, Snodland, Strood andLondon St Pancras International (peak only). The section from Maidstone West to Paddock Wood passes through some of Kent's most picturesque countryside along the narrower sections of the River Medway.
The line was built in two stages by theSouth Eastern Railway (SER). The first stage opened on 24 September 1844[1] and was a branch off the SER's firstmain line that crossed Kent between the coast ports of Dover and Folkestone and theLBSCR'smain line at Redhill. According to a contemporary report inThe Times newspaper, the opening of the branch line was an attempt to conveyhops and fruit traffic back toMaidstone, which was losing trade to various points along the Dover line.[1] The junction was at Paddock Wood and followed the Medway Valley down to the county town of Maidstone that had been by-passed by the new main line. Twelve years later, on 18 June 1856 the extension of the line further down the Medway Valley was opened, to join theNorth Kent Line at Strood (which had opened in 1847). The extension was built by the railway contractorEdward Betts, who lived locally atPreston Hall and through whose estate the line partially passed. Betts arranged for his local station atAylesford to be built in a much grander style than the other country stations along the line.
The SER started joint working with local rivalLondon, Chatham and Dover Railway (LCDR) on 1 January 1899 under the name theSouth Eastern and Chatham Railway (SECR).[2] Post World War One, the railways were "grouped" and the SECR became part ofSouthern Railway.
For a brief period in the 1990s some services were extended toGillingham (Kent) viaRochester andChatham. This involved reversing trains and switching tracks at Strood.
It was designated by theDepartment for Transport as acommunity rail service in September 2007.[3]
The line served many rail connected industries,Aveling and Porter just south of Strood, cement works in the Cuxton, Halling and Snodland areas, a newsprint at New Hythe, Lafarge between Aylesford and Maidstone Barracks, Lockmeadow sidings at Maidstone West, Tovil goods depot and sand pits at Beltring
The line is double track throughout, apart from a short single-track section on approach to Paddock Wood station, with a maximum speed of 70 miles per hour (110 km/h). Between Paddock Wood and Tonbridge the maximum speed is 100 miles per hour (160 km/h).
The line serves the following stations:Strood,Cuxton,Halling,Snodland,New Hythe,Aylesford,Maidstone Barracks,Maidstone West,East Farleigh,Wateringbury,Yalding,Beltring,Paddock Wood andTonbridge
During 2005, thesignalling systems were upgraded, replacing the traditionalsemaphore signals with coloured light signals. Further modifications have since been made with the expansion of the North Kent Signalling Centre. The level crossing at Yalding has the only signal on the Southeastern network to display a flashing white light as the proceed aspect.
The line from Strood to Maidstone West waselectrified (at 750 V DCthird rail) by theSouthern Railway, opening on 2 July 1939. The rest of the line from Paddock Wood to Maidstone West was electrified under Stage 2 of Kent Coast electrification byBR's1955 Modernisation Plan, opening to traffic on 18 June 1962.
Services are operated bySE Trains.
Trains typically run at off-peak half-hourly (hourly on Sundays) service between Strood and Paddock Wood with some peak services being extended to Tonbridge. There is also a special service at 22:34 every night from Tonbridge to Gillingham (Kent).[4]
On 18 March 2011,Southeastern announced the start of a new high-speed service from Maidstone to St Pancras International via Strood on a trial basis. During the morning rush hour, there are 2 trains from Maidstone West to St Pancras International, and 1 train heading in the opposite direction. In the evening rush hour, the services are reversed (2 trains to Maidstone West, and 1 trains to St Pancras International). Services in the opposite direction to the main flow do not call at Snodland and instead run non-stop from Maidstone West to Strood.
A trial service commenced on 23 May 2011[5] and comes as a result of changes on the North Kent line to improve punctuality of existing services. This service has since been made permanent.
The main rolling stock used on the line is 3 carClass 375/3Electrostars.[6]
Class 395Javelins serve the line during Monday to Friday peak hours with high speed services fromSt. Pancras International to Maidstone West, with Snodland the only intermediate station it serves on the line.[7]
Class | Image | Type | Cars per set | Top speed | Number | Operator | Notes | Built | |
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mph | km/h | ||||||||
Class 395Javelin | EMU | 6 | 140 (HS1) 100 (Mainline) | 225 (HS1) 160 (Mainline) | 29 | SE Trains | Peak time high speed services between Maidstone West and St.Pancras International | 2007–2009 | |
Class 375 | ![]() | 3 or 4 | 100 | 160 | 140 | All services on the Medway Valley line are usually operated by 375/3s but 375/6/7/8/9s may occasionally appear. | 1999–2005 |
A variety of freight and other services frequent the line, including through traffic fromHoo Junction and Tonbridge yard.[citation needed]
Aggregates traffic also features, with destinations including Allington and Aylesford aggregates sidings.[citation needed]
Class | Image | Type |
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Class 59 | Diesel Electric | |
Class 66 | ![]() | Diesel Electric |
Class 73 | ![]() | Electro-Diesel |
MPV |