Northern Rail
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Franchise(s): | Northern 12 December 2004 – September 2013 |
Main Region(s): | North West, North East, Yorkshire and the Humber |
Other Region(s): | Derbyshire, Lincolnshire and Staffordshire. |
Fleet size: | 281 |
Stations called at: | 529 |
Stations operated: | 471 |
National Rail abbreviation: | NT [1] |
Parent company: | Serco Group / NedRailways |
Web site: | www.northernrail.org |
Northern Rail (often referred to simply as Northern) is a train operating company that has operated local passenger services in the north of England since 2004. Northern Rail's owner, Serco-NedRailways, is a consortium formed of NedRailways (the British unit of Nederlandse Spoorwegen) and Serco, an international operator of public transport systems. When it won the Northern England franchise, the consortium had already secured the contract to operate north-west England's Merseyrail network in 2003.
Contents |
[edit] Introduction
Serco-NedRailways was announced as the 'preferred bidder' for the Northern franchise by the Strategic Rail Authority on 1 July 2004, and signed the agreement to operate the franchise on 19 October. However, the new operators did not actually take over from the previous operators (First North Western and Arriva Trains Northern) until 12 December 2004. The reason for the delay was because Serco NedRailways assumed that some Class 142 Pacer trains would be freed up in the near future when Manchester Metrolink services started between Manchester and Oldham. Due to a substantial delay in extending the Metrolink, it was clear that this was not going to be the case. [2]
Northern run a mix of commuter routes, rural routes and some longer distance services around Cheshire, Co. Durham, Cumbria, Greater Manchester, Lancashire, Merseyside, Northumberland, Tyne and Wear and Yorkshire. Northern’s services also extend to the north Midland counties of Derbyshire, Lincolnshire, Nottinghamshire and Staffordshire. Some services are supported by Passenger Transport Executives.
The franchise is planned to run for a maximum of 9 years and 9 months,[3] depending on how well Serco-NedRailways perform. The franchise does not require them to purchase or lease new trains.
Northern Rail won public transport operator of the year 2007 at the National Transport Awards and was praised by the judges for attracting 20% more passengers since 2004.[4]
[edit] Performance
In the period 6 December 2007 to 5 January 2008 Northern’s punctuality varied between 86.7% (for trains going south from Manchester) to 94.2% (for services in the Tyne and Wear area).[5] Figures released by the Office of Rail Regulation rate Northern Rail's Public Performance Measure (PPM) at 85% for the third quarter of the 2007/8 financial year (up from 82.7% the previous year). The PPM Moving Annual Average (MAA) for the year to 31 December 2007 was 88.3%.[6]
One reason for the trains south of Manchester to have poor punctuality is problems between Stockport and Manchester. One such problem is when Northern started the franchise they re-timetabled the Chester to Manchester trains to run 8 minutes later (to increase the turnaround time at Chester.[7] However, this means they frequently get in the way of the Buxton to Blackpool/Bolton trains which depart Stockport at around the same time and both services must switch tracks between Stockport and Manchester to arrive at the correct platforms at Manchester Piccadilly.
The franchise agreement commits to a 15% reduction in delays before 2009 and to a new 'incentive/penalty régime' and 'local focus on performance'.[citation needed]
[edit] Routes
Timetable | Route | |
---|---|---|
1 | Chathill and Morpeth to Newcastle and MetroCentre | |
2 | Middlesbrough to Newcastle and MetroCentre (Durham Coast Line) | |
3 | Newcastle and Bishop Auckland to Saltburn (Tees Valley Line) | |
4 | Sunderland and Newcastle to Carlisle (Tyne Valley Line) | |
5 | Middlesbrough to Whitby (Esk Valley Line) | |
6 | Carlisle and Barrow-in-Furness to Preston and Manchester (Cumbrian Coast Line and Furness Line) | |
8 | Preston to Blackpool composite | |
9 | Colne, Burnley and Blackburn to Preston and Blackpool | |
10 | Liverpool to Wigan, Preston and Blackpool and Preston to Ormskirk | |
11 | Bolton to Manchester and Manchester Airport | |
12 | Manchester to Blackburn and Clitheroe | |
14 | Manchester Airport and Manchester to Southport and Kirkby | |
15 | Liverpool to Manchester Airport and Warrington Bank Quay via Earlestown | |
16 | Liverpool to Manchester Piccadilly via Warrington Central | |
17 | Manchester to Chester via Altrincham | |
18 | Manchester, Manchester Airport and Stockport to Crewe | |
19 | Manchester to Macclesfield and Stoke-on-Trent | |
20 | Manchester to Buxton | |
22 | Manchester to New Mills Central and Rose Hill Marple | |
23 | Manchester to Sheffield (The Hope Valley Line) | |
24 | Manchester to Hadfield and Glossop | |
25 | Manchester to Wakefield and Huddersfield | |
26 | Manchester to Rochdale via Oldham and Moston | |
27 | Leeds to Carlisle (Settle-Carlisle Railway) and Morecambe and Lancaster to Heysham | |
28 | Leeds to Manchester Victoria, Selby to Huddersfield and York to Blackpool | |
29 | Leeds to York via Harrogate (Harrogate Line) | |
30 | Hull to York, Leeds, Doncaster & Sheffield and York to Sheffield via Pontefract Baghill | |
31 | Barton-upon-Humber to Cleethorpes | |
32 | Hull to Scarborough (Yorkshire Coast Line) | |
33 | Sheffield to Lincoln | |
WY | Leeds to Skipton (Airedale Line) | |
WY | Leeds to Sheffield via Wakefield Kirkgate and Barnsley (Hallam Line) | |
WY | Leeds to Huddersfield via Dewsbury (Huddersfield Line) | |
WY | Bradford Forster Square and Leeds to Ilkley (Wharfedale Line) | |
WY | Leeds to Bradford Forster Square | |
WY | Leeds and Wakefield to Knottingley (Pontefract Line) | |
WY | Leeds to Doncaster and Sheffield via Wakefield Westgate (Wakefield Line) | |
WY | Sheffield to Huddersfield via Penistone and Barnsley (Penistone Line) |
Timetable booklets for routes marked WY are only produced by Metro, the West Yorkshire Passenger Transport Executive.
Northern Rail also run some parliamentary trains. These include:
- Chester to Runcorn (Weekly in one direction only. Does not run during the winter)
- Ellesmere Port to Helsby (5 from Ellesmere Port per day, 4 to Ellesmere Port, with one journey extending to Warrington and one extending to Liverpool)
- Sheffield to York via Pontefract Baghill (3 journeys per day)
- Stockport to Stalybridge (Weekly in one direction only)
[edit] Depots
The Traincare depots for Northern Rail are located in:
- Hull Botanic Gardens (BG)
- Blackpool South Sidings (BP)
- Barrow-in-Furness (BW)
- Heaton (Newcastle upon Tyne) (HT)
- Longsight (Manchester) (LO)
- Neville Hill (Leeds) (NL)
- Newton Heath (Manchester) (NH)
- Sheffield Station (SM)
Trains are also stabled at Edge Hill CS near Liverpool.
[edit] December 2008 service changes
In December 2008 there are set to be significant changes to certain Northern Rail routes these include:
- The Buxton to Blackpool North will be replaced by a Buxton to Manchester Piccadilly service and a Manchester Victoria to Blackpool North service.[8]
- The Hazel Grove to Manchester Piccadilly service will have two trains per hour, with one of these extended to Bolton nnd possibly to Preston.[8]
- An additional hourly all-stations Manchester Piccadilly to Manchester Airport service. (Transpennine Express services will not continue to serve stations between Manchester Piccadilly and Manchester Airport except Heald Green.)[8]
- Constraints on the West Coast Main Line caused by extra London to Manchester trains will result in an hourly peak service from Manchester Piccadilly to Chester via Altrincham, rather than half-hourly, causing anger among rail groups and rail passengers[9] It will also result in one less peak local train from Crewe to Manchester (although a Cross Country service will run via Crewe rather than Macclesfield.)
- Virtually all Deansgate to Macclesfield services are to be extended to Stoke-on-Trent calling at Congleton, Kidsgrove and Longport.[8]
- Half of the current Manchester Piccadilly to Marple services to be extended to New Mills Central.[8]
- New hourly Express Service from Leeds to Nottingham calling at Wakefield Kirkgate, Barnsley, Meadowhall, Sheffield, Dronfield, Chesterfield, Alfreton and Langley Mill.[10] Class 158 units have been seen route learning between Sheffield and Nottingham in preparation for this service.[11]
- Major changes on the Caldervale Line, with the introduction of a limited-stop service between Leeds, Bradford Interchange and Manchester Victoria, and a Leeds-Manchester Victoria stopping service via Dewsbury and Brighouse[12]
[edit] Rolling Stock
Northern Rail leases a fleet comprised of diesel and electric multiple units and has not continued First and Arriva's practice of hiring locomotive-hauled trains. With the exception of the 16 Class 333s, all Northern Rails's units are former British Rail units.
[edit] Current fleet
Class | Image | Type | Top speed | Number | Unit numbers | Routes operated | Built | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
mph | km/h | |||||||
Class 142 Pacer | Diesel multiple unit | 75 | 120 | 68 | 142003, 005, 007, 011–027, 031-058, 060, 061, 065, 066, 071, 078, 079, 084, 086–096. | Stopping Services Across Cheshire, Greater Manchester, Lancashire, Merseyside, Teesside, Tyne and Wear, Yorkshire | 1985 - 1987 | |
Class 144 Pacer | Diesel multiple unit | 75 | 120 | 23 | 144001–023 | Found on Metro services mostly in West Yorkshire, also in South Yorkshire | 1986 - 1987 | |
Class 150/1 Sprinter | Diesel multiple unit | 75 | 120 | 17 | 150133–150 | Found on local and longer distance services around Cheshire, Derbyshire, Greater Manchester, Lancashire, Merseyside, West Yorkshire (specifically Huddersfield) | 1985 - 1987 | |
Class 150/2 Sprinter | Diesel multiple unit | 75 | 120 | 23 | 150201, 203, 205, 207, 208, 211, 215, 218, 222-225, 228, 268–277 | Found on local and longer distance services around Cheshire, Derbyshire, Greater Manchester, Lancashire, Merseyside, West Yorkshire (specifically Huddersfield) | 1985 - 1987 | |
Class 153 Super Sprinter | Diesel multiple unit | 75 | 120 | 18 | 153301, 304, 307, 315–317, 324, 328, 330–332, 351–352, 358–360, 363, 378 | Preston - Ormskirk, Leeds - Knottingley, Wakefield Kirkgate - Knottingley | 1987 - 1988 | |
Class 155 Super Sprinter | Diesel multiple unit | 75 | 120 | 7 | 155341–347 | Caldervale Line Leeds - Manchester Victoria |
1987 | |
Class 156 Super Sprinter | Diesel multiple unit | 75 | 120 | 46 | 156420, 421, 423–429, 438, 440, 441, 443, 444, 448, 451, 452, 454, 455, 459-462, 464, 466, 468–473, 475, 479–484, 486–491, 497, 498 | Various Longer Distance Services and increasingly on shorter services across Northern’s network | 1987 - 1989 | |
Class 158 Express Sprinter | Diesel multiple unit | 90 | 145 | 46 | 158752-759, 784, 787, 790-797, 815-817, 842-845, 848-851, 853, 855, 859-861, 871, 872, 901-910 | Express services including York - Blackpool North, Sheffield - Leeds via Barnsley, Sheffield -Bridlington/Scarborough, Leeds - Carlisle, Leeds-Bradford-Manchester Victoria | 1989 - 1992 | |
Class 321 | Electric multiple unit | 100 | 160 | 3 | 321901–903 | Wakefield Line Leeds - Doncaster |
1988 - 1991 | |
Class 323 | Electric multiple unit | 100 | 160 | 17 | 323223–239 | Electrified routes in and out of Manchester Piccadilly: Manchester Piccadilly - Alderley Edge/Crewe/Glossop/Hadfield/Hazel Grove/Macclesfield/Stoke-on-Trent |
1992 - 1993 | |
Class 333 | Electric multiple unit | 100 | 160 | 16 | 333001–016 | Wharfedale Line Leeds and Bradford - Shipley - Ilkley
|
2000 |
[edit] Future fleet
In January 2008, as part of the Government's rolling stock plan, the Department for Transport announced that the current fleet of Class 323's currently in operation on services in South and East Manchester would be cascaded to London Midland (where the rest of the 323's are based) in order to form a uniform fleet. In return, Northern are due to receive 24 new build EMU vehicles.[13] The plan also states that further DMU stock is due to be cascaded from London Midland and London Overground
As part of a two-year trial into the feasibility of the tram-train concept, Northern will operate five newly built tram units on the Penistone Line from 2010.[14] Because the Penistone Line is unelectrified, the new units will require diesel propulsion. However, the plan is a two-phase trial, with the proposed second phase seeing services operating over both the railway and the Sheffield Supertram network.
[edit] References
- ^ http://www.networkrail.co.uk/browse%20documents/eNRT/May08/Commercial%20Information.pdf
- ^ http://www.mcrua.org.uk/mcrr61.pdf
- ^ http://www.mcrua.org.uk/mcrr62.pdf
- ^ Northern Rail (2007-08-16). "Northern Rail Wins Public Transport Operator of the Year". Press release. Retrieved on 2008-05-31. “Northern Rail has been voted public transport operator of the year in the National Transport Awards 2007. The judges praised the company, which runs local and regional trains across the north of England, for its success in attracting 20% more passengers since it started in 2004.”
- ^ >Four week period ending 5 January 2008 (PDF). Northern Rail.
- ^ National Rail Trends 2007-2008 Quarter Three (PDF) p 24. Office of Rail Regulation. “PPM is therefore the percentage of trains ‘on time’ compared to the total number of trains planned. PPM for the year is expressed as a moving annual average (MAA).”
- ^ http://www.mcrua.org.uk/mcrr67.htm
- ^ a b c d e The development of the December 2008 rail timetable within Greater Manchester (PDF). Greater Manchester Passenger Transport Executive (2008-02-01). Retrieved on 2008-05-01.
- ^ Adam Morson (2008-03-10). Rush-hour trains may be scrapped. Knutsford Guardian. Retrieved on 2008-05-01.
- ^ Northern Rail (2006-11-22). "Extra Leeds Nottingham Train Services Announced". Press release. Retrieved on 2008-05-31. “A four-fold increase in Leeds - Nottingham train services was announced by the Department for Transport today. From December 2008 the cities will receive 28 daily services. Passengers will receive a more regular service throughout the day, with extra trains operating at morning and evening peak times.”
- ^ Picture of Northern Rail Class 158 Route Learning at Chesterfield. Paul Greenwood.
- ^ Northern's Proposed December 2008 Timetable (PDF). Agenda and papers for meeting of WYPTA Rail Working Group held on 16 May 2008 5. West Yorkshire Passenger Transport Authority (2008-05-16). Retrieved on 2008-05-26.
- ^ Appendix B - Indicative Number of Additional Vehicles required by English TOCs by 2014. Rolling stock plan. Department for Transport (2008-01-30). Retrieved on 2008-05-31.
- ^ "Britain announces tram-train trials", Railway Gazette International, Railway Gazette Group, 2008-03-18. Retrieved on 2008-05-31. "The project is a partnership between DfT, train operator Northern Rail and infrastructure manager Network Rail, and will look at the environmental benefits, operating costs and technical suitability of the tram-trains. Industry watchdog Passenger Focus will lead research into user perception of tram-trains, which will replace conventional rolling stock on the 60 km unelectrified route linking Huddersfield, Barnsley and Sheffield."
[edit] External links
Preceded by Arriva Trains Northern Regional Railways North East franchise |
Operator of Northern franchise 2004 - present |
Incumbent |
Preceded by First North Western North West Regional Railways franchise |
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