Ipswich to Ely Line

Ipswich to Ely Line
Overview
Type Heavy rail
System National Rail
Status Operational
Locale Suffolk
Cambridgeshire
East of England
Termini Ipswich
Ely
Operation
Opened 26 November 1846
Owner Network Rail
Operator(s) National Express East Anglia
Character Rural
Rolling stock Class 153 "Sprinter"
Class 156 "Sprinter"
Class 170 "Turbostar"
Technical
Line length ~24 mi (39 km)
No. of tracks Two
Track gauge Standard gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Ipswich-Cambridge/Ely Line
Legend
Fen Line
Ely
Ely and St Ives Railway
Waterbeach
River Great Ouse
Cambridge and
Soham
Huntingdon railway
Coldham Lane Jn
River Cam
Soham Lode
Chesterton (proposed)
Fen Ditton Halt
Barnwell Junction
Quy
Bottisham and Lode
Cambridge
Swaffham Prior
Varsity Line
Burwell
Cambridge Line
Exning Road Halt
West Anglia Main Line
to Mildenhall
Cherryhinton
Fulbourn
Fordham
A11
Cambridge to
Newmarket and
Mildenhall railway
Chesterford Railway
A14
Six Mile Bottom
Dullingham
Newmarket
Newmarket (High Level)
Warren Hill
Warren Hill tunnel
Newmarket Warren Hill
Snailwell Junction
A14
Kennett
A14
Higham
Saxham & Risby
Bury St Edmunds
Long Melford to Bury
Thetford to Bury
St Edmunds line
St Edmunds line
River Lark
A14
Thurston
Elmswell
Haughley Road
Great Eastern
Main Line
Haughley
Mid-Suffolk
A14
Light Railway
Stowmarket
River Gipping
Needham Market
Claydon
River Gipping
A14
Bramford
East Suffolk Line
Ipswich
Great Eastern Main Line

The Ipswich to Ely Line is a railway line linking East Anglia to the English Midlands via Ely. There is also a branch line to Cambridge. Passenger services are operated by National Express East Anglia. It is a part of Network Rail Strategic Route 5, SRS 05.07, 05.08 and part of SRS 07.03.[1]

Contents

History

The Eastern Union Railway had built a line from Colchester to Ipswich and they formed a new company, Ipswich and Bury Railway Company, chaired by John Chevallier Cobbold to build an extension from Ipswich to Bury St Edmunds which was known as the "Bury extension". It was granted parliamentary approval by Royal Assent on 21 July 1845 and the first train ran on ran on 26 November 1846. The Ipswich and Bury Railway Company was formally merged with the Eastern Union Railway Company on 9 July 1847.[2]

The 'Newmarket Railway' was built by the Newmarket and Chesterford Railway with the first section from Newmarket to Six Mile Bottom (and on to meet the West Anglia Main Line at Great Chesterford) opened in 1848,[3] followed by a section from Six Mile Bottom to Cambridge in 1851.[4]

The Great Eastern Railway was formed in 1862 acquiring both the Newmarket and Chesterford Railway and the Eastern Union Railway. They opened the final section of the route from Newmarket to Ely and also to Bury St Edmunds in 1879.[5]

Infrastructure

The line shares the route between Ipswich and Haughley junction with the Great Eastern Main Line which is classified as primary line. The section between Haughley junction and Ely is classified as secondary line with the Cambridge branch being classified as rural.

The line from Ipswich to part way between Kennett and Ely is double track with the remainder, plus the Cambridge branch, being single track (with a passing loop at Dullingham). Where the line is separate from the Great Eastern Main Line it is not electrified and has a line speed of between 40-75 mph. It has a loading gauge of W10 between Ipswich and Ely with the Cambridge branch being W8.[1]

Proposed developments

Track dualing between Kennet and Ely

The line between Kennett and Ely will dualed by 2014 as part of the Felixstowe and Nuneaton freight capacity scheme.[6]

Incidents

Freight train derailment June 2007

All traffic on the line was suspended for six months following a freight train derailed on the bridge over the River Great Ouse between Ely and Soham on 22 June 2007. The bridge was severely damaged and closed to all traffic[7] while it was rebuilt. Rail replacement buses operated between Bury St Edmunds, Ely, March, Whittlesey and Peterborough for the duration until the section of line re-opened on 21 December 2007. (See also Railways in Ely)

References