Caledonian Sleeper
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Overview | |
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Franchise(s) |
Part of ScotRail (National Express) 31 March 1997 - 16 October 2004 Part of First ScotRail 17 October 2004 - 30 March 2015 Standalone franchise operated by Serco (31 March 2015 - 31 March 2030) |
Main (s) |
West Coast Main Line Edinburgh to Aberdeen Line Highland Main Line West Highland Line |
Fleet size | 22 × Mark 2, 53 × Mark 3 |
Stations called at | 46 |
Parent company | Serco |
Website | www.sleeper.scot |
Caledonian Sleeper is the collective name for overnight sleeper train services between London and Scotland, in the United Kingdom.
It is one of only two sleeper services on the railway in the United Kingdom (the other being the Night Riviera between London and Penzance). Two services depart London each night from Sunday to Friday and travel via the West Coast Main Line to Scotland. The earlier departure divides at Edinburgh into portions for Aberdeen, Fort William and Inverness. The later departure serves Edinburgh and Glasgow splitting at Carstairs. Five London bound portions depart from these destinations each night, combining into two trains at Edinburgh and Carstairs.
Since April 2015, the Caledonian Sleeper has been a standalone franchise operated by Serco. Prior to this it was part of the ScotRail franchise.
Background
Sleeper trains had operated between London and Scotland since the completion of the line in the 1850s. Services operated from both London Euston via the West Coast Main Line including the Royal Highlander and London King's Cross via the East Coast Main Line until the latter were withdrawn in May 1988.[1] InterCity planned to remove all seating accommodation on the remaining services from May 1992, however it instead concluded a deal with Stagecoach to retain the Mark 2 sitting carriages.[2][3] After 12 months the Stagecoach carriages were withdrawn.[4]
On 5 March 1995, responsibility for operation of the Anglo-Scottish services passed within British Rail from InterCity West Coast to ScotRail.[5] British Rail had proposed to cease operating the Fort William portion, however the Highland Regional Council successfully sought a stay pending a formal consultation, after the Scottish Court of Session ruled that the correct service closure process had not been followed.[6][7][8] Eventually British Rail agreed to retain the Fort William portion, but it was reduced from four sleeping carriages to one.[9] The motorail service was withdrawn in 1995.[10]
Caledonian Sleeper
On 4 June 1996, the service was relaunched as the Caledonian Sleeper with the Night Caledonian (to Glasgow), Night Scotsman (to Edinburgh), Night Aberdonian (to Aberdeen), Royal Highlander (to Inverness) and West Highlander (to Fort William) sub-brands.[11][12] On 31 March 1997, as part of the ScotRail franchise it was taken over by National Express.[13] In March 1998, the West Coast Main Line portions which had been hauled by Virgin Trains Class 87s, were taken over by English Welsh & Scottish Class 90s.[14][15]
In January 2000, sitting carriages were introduced with 11 ex Virgin Trains Mark 2 carriages refurbished at Wolverton railway works with first class recliners.[16][17][18] At the same time the Mark 3 sleeping carriages were refurbished with a purple and blue livery applied.[19][20]
From June 2001, Class 67s began to replace Class 47s on the Aberdeen and Inverness portions.[21] In June 2006, they replaced Class 37s on the Fort William portion.
On 17 October 2004, the Caledonian Sleeper along with the rest of the ScotRail franchise was taken over by First ScotRail.[22] The rolling stock remained unchanged. The carriages were painted in FirstGroup's corporate blue, pink and white livery as were three Class 90s.[23][24][25][26]
Serco
In 2012 the Scottish Government announced that as part of the reletting of the ScotRail franchise from April 2015, the Caledonian Sleeper would be operated by a separate franchise. It was stated that a total of £100 million would be invested in new and additional rolling stock.[27][28] In June 2013, Transport Scotland announced Arriva, FirstGroup and Serco had been shortlisted to bid for the new franchise.[29] In May 2014, the franchise was awarded to Serco with a commitment to replace the Mark 2 and Mark 3 coaching stock by 2018.[30] On 31 March 2015, Serco Caledonian Sleepers Limited,[31] took over the operation of the Caledonian Sleeper.
The Caledonian Sleepers headquarters and customer call centre are located opposite Inverness station at 1 Union Street. Some terminus station have lounges and ticketing/customer service desks.
The 'Nighthawk' plan
In 2017, Highland and Islands Strategic Transport Partnership (HITRANS) discussed with Caledonian Sleeper the possibility of establishing a rail sleeper service between Wick and Thurso to Edinburgh and Glasgow. The journey would take about seven hours and would connect with sailings from Orkney, improving connections between Kirkwall and the Scottish Capital. Under current plans the service would use Mark 3 carriages which are already in use on other services.[32][33]
Route
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Two trains depart London Euston on six nights per week, Sunday to Friday, heading north on the West Coast Main Line. The trains normally operate at a maximum speed of 80 miles per hour (130 km/h), but are authorised to travel at 100 miles per hour (160 km/h) where line speeds permit if the train has been delayed by more than 20 minutes.
Highland Sleeper
Departs London Euston at 21:15 (20:57 Sunday), calling at Watford Junction, Crewe and Preston to pick up passengers only, and arrives at Edinburgh Waverley approximately six-and-a-half hours after leaving London. The electric Class 92 (sometimes Class 90) locomotive is uncoupled and replaced by a Class 73/9 (formerly a Class 67) diesel locomotive for each of the three portions, to Aberdeen, Inverness and Fort William.
The front two sleeping carriages are for Fort William, being combined at Edinburgh with a further two sitting carriages to make a four-vehicle formation. The middle portion of either six carriages is for Aberdeen, and the rear portion of eight carriages is for Inverness. Both the Aberdeen and Inverness portions usually convey one sitting and one lounge carriage each, with the rest being sleeping cars, all working through to/from London.
Heading south, the Aberdeen, Fort William and Inverness portions join at Edinburgh to form one train calling at Preston, Crewe and London Euston (alighting only).
As of September 2014, the Fort William Sleeper no longer serves Westerton, instead serving Glasgow Queen Street Low Level, alighting only southbound/boarding only northbound.[34]
Lowland Sleeper
Departs London Euston at 23:50 (23:27 Sunday), calling at Watford Junction to pick up only. Passengers can alight at Carlisle and at Carstairs (on the Glasgow section only), where the train divides, the rear portion continuing to Edinburgh, the front portion to Glasgow Central additionally calling at Motherwell.
Southbound the portions from Glasgow (calling at Motherwell) and Edinburgh join at Carstairs (where passengers can board the Glasgow section), then call at Carlisle to pick up only, setting down at Watford Junction and London Euston the following morning.
Sunday services are sometimes diverted via the East Coast Main Line when the West Coast Main Line is closed for engineering work. Services diverted via the East Coast Main Line still depart from London Euston.
Rolling stock
Since its 1996 inception, the service has been operated by Mark 2 and Mark 3 carriages. These are scheduled to be replaced by Mark 5 carriages in 2018.[35][36]
Motive power was initially provided by InterCity West Coast Class 87s on the electrified West Coast Main Line and Class 37s and Class 47s north of Edinburgh. In March 1998, the Class 87s were replaced by English Welsh & Scottish Class 90s.[14][15]
From June 2001, Class 67s began to replace Class 47s on the Aberdeen and Inverness portions.[21] In June 2006, they replaced Class 37s on the Fort William portion. To operate the latter, the 67s were fitted with cast iron brakes and restricted to 80 mph.
When Serco were awarded the franchise, it contracted GB Railfreight to provide drivers and traction for the services.[37][38] It was planned that the electric services be operated by Class 92s and the diesel services by rebuilt Class 73/9s.[39] However mechanical problems with the former and the first of the latter not debuting until February 2016, have seen locomotives hired in from a number of sources including AC Locomotive Group, DB Cargo UK, Freightliner and Harry Needle Railroad Company.[40][41][42] DB Cargo UK Class 67s ceased being used in June 2016.[43]
AC Locomotive Group heritage Class 86 and Class 87s haul the empty carriage movements between Euston and Wembley depot and have on occasions operated services to Scotland.[44] A midnight teal livery was adopted.[45][46]
Heavy maintenance on the carriage stock was performed at Inverness until April 2015, when the work was contracted out to Alstom and transferred to Polmadie.[47]
From 30 June 2016, the newly rebuilt Class 73s replaced the Class 67s. The 73s are currently used alongside a Class 66 due to continuous alternator issues with the rebuilt Class 73s. As of March 2017, the sets continue to operate with a Class 66/73 combo with the 73 providing the electric train supply and the 66 providing traction until such time that the alternator issues have been rectified.
Following an incident at Craigentinny depot in 2017 which caused severe damage to a Class 73, a Class 67 has been hired to provide traction until repairs have been completed.
Current
Class | Image | Type | Top speed | Numbers | Nos. | Usage | Built | Hired From | |
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mph | km/h | ||||||||
73/9 | Electro-diesel locomotive | 90 | 145 | 6 | 73966–73971 | Edinburgh - Inverness/Aberdeen/Fort William | 1962, 1965-1967 (Rebuilt 2014-2016) |
GB Railfreight | |
66 | Diesel locomotive | 75 | 121 | - | - | Edinburgh - Inverness/Aberdeen/Fort William | 1998-2015 | GB Railfreight | |
86 | Electric Locomotive | 110 | 177 | 1 | 86101 | Empty Coaching Stock (London - Wembley) | 1965-1966 | AC Locomotive Group | |
100 | 161 | 1 | 86401 | ||||||
87 | 110 | 177 | 1 | 87002 | London - Edinburgh / Glasgow Sleeper Portions. Empty Coaching Stock (London - Wembley) Rescue Locomotive |
1973-1975 | AC Locomotive Group | ||
90 | 110 | 177 | - | Varying Locos from both Freightliner and DBS Fleets. | London - Glasgow/Edinburgh | 1987–1990 | Freightliner & DB Cargo UK | ||
92 | 87 | 140 | 6 | 92010, 92014, 92018, 92023, 92033, 92038 | London - Glasgow/Edinburgh | 1993-1996 | GB Railfreight | ||
Mark 2 | Lounge car Seated Sleeper |
100 | 160 | 22 | Full Network | 1969-1974 | N/A | ||
Mark 3 | Sleeping car | 125 | 200 | 53 | Full Network | 1975-1988 | Porterbrook |
Future
Class | Image | Type | Top speed | Number | Nos. | Usage | Built | Hired From | Operated From | |
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mph | km/h | |||||||||
Mark 5 | Carriage | 75 | Full Network | 2016-2018 | N/A | 2018 | ||||
References
- ↑ "No sleepers on ECML" The Railway Magazine issue 1039 November 1987 page 690
- ↑ "Stagecoach, InterCity Launch Trend-setting Marketing Deal" The Railway Magazine issue 1093 May 1992 page 6
- ↑ "Stagecoach Rail Livery Unveiled" The Railway Magazine issue 1094 June 1992 page 10
- ↑ "The Stagecoach Story" Rail Magazine issue 286 28 August 1996 pages 34-37
- ↑ "Inverness depot to remain open" The Railway Magazine issue 1128 April 1995 page 31
- ↑ "Sleeper cuts to go ahead" Rail Privatisation News issue 23 March 1995 page 4
- ↑ "Court rules on Fort William Sleeper" Rail Magazine issue 253 24 May 1995 page 6
- ↑ "BR loses appeal over W Highlands sleeper" Rail Magazine issue 255 21 June 1995 page 8
- ↑ "Fort William sleeper reprieved" Rail Magazine issue 262 27 September 1995 page 6
- ↑ "Thirty years of the Mk 3 sleepers" Rail Express issue 190 March 2012 pages 14-21
- ↑ "Caledonian Sleepers relaunched" Rail Privatisation News issue 33 27 June 1996 page 4
- ↑ "Sleeper service relaunch" Rail Magazine issue 283 17 July 1996 page 11
- ↑ "ScotRail prize goes to National Express" The Railway Magazine issue 1152 April 1997 page 9
- 1 2 "EWS to power ScotRail sleepers" The Railway Magazine issue 1164 April 1998 page 60
- 1 2 "EWS starts electric Sleeper operations" Rail Magazine issue 328 8 April 1998 page 59
- ↑ "ScotRail sleepers - seats for all at £7m" Rail Magazine issue 356 5 May 1999 page 8
- ↑ "Scotrail refurbishes day coaches for sleepers" Rail Magazine issue 371 1 December 1999 page 11
- ↑ "Seat back on sleeper trains for ScotRail" Rail Magazine issue 377 23 February 2000 page 11
- ↑ "ScotRail's Caledonian Sleepers go purple" Rail Express issue 41 October 1999 page 54
- ↑ "ScotRail sleeper upgrade" The Railway Magazine issue 1182 October 1999 page 63
- 1 2 "EWS and ScotRail agree Class 67s for sleepers" The Railway Magazine issue 1219 November 2002 page 71
- ↑ FirstGroup clinches Scottish rail franchise The Daily Telegraph 12 June 2004
- ↑ Operating enhancements for First Scotrail sleeper to be delivered by EWS and Axiom Rail English Welsh & Scottish 26 May 2006
- ↑ "Hybrid identity for Scottish Class 90s" Rail Magazine issue 541 7 June 2006 page 7
- ↑ "EWS paints first Class 90 for ScotRail" Today's Railways issue 55 July 2006 page 51
- ↑ "Class 90 gets First Group livery" The Railway Magazine issue 1266 October 2006 page 7
- ↑ Scottish rail services plan outlined by government BBC News 21 June 2012
- ↑ "Scotland to split Sleepers from next ScotRail franchise" Rail Magazine issue 700 11 July 2012 page 8
- ↑ Caledonian sleeper train service bidders named BBC News 28 June 2013
- ↑ Serco wins franchise for Caledonian sleeper train service BBC News 28 May 2014
- ↑ Companies House extract company no SC477821 Serco Caledonian Sleepers Limited
- ↑ Rail sleeper plan between Caithness and Edinburgh
- ↑ "THURSO - GLASGOW SLEEPER PLAN" Modern Railways Volume 74 Number 822 March 2017 page 16
- ↑ GB NRT December 2015-May 2016, Tables 227 (Network Rail)
- ↑ Brand new Caledonian Sleeper trains from 2018 Serco 17 February 2015
- ↑ "Autumn target for mock-up of CAF's new Mk 5 carriages" Rail Magazine issue 775 27 May 2015 page 30
- ↑ GB Railfreight boosts rail services business with Serco Caledonian Sleeper contract Europorte 17 February 2015
- ↑ Serco signs GB Railfreight to run Scots sleeper services BBC News 17 February 2015
- ↑ "Final GBRf rebuilt Class 92 delivered for Sleeper service" Rail Magazine issue 774 13 May 2015 page 28
- ↑ "The Sleepers are stirring" Rail Magazine issue 756 3 September 2014 page 70
- ↑ "Class 90s for Sleepers until 92s prove their reliability Rail Magazine issue 783 16 September 2015 page 10
- ↑ "Caledonian Sleeper uses Class 86s" Railway Magazine issue 797 30 March 2016 page 28
- ↑ "Rebuilt 73/9s take over all Caledonian Sleeper work" Rail Magazine issue 805 20 July 2016 page 32
- ↑ Preservation 2015 AC Locomotive Group
- ↑ "Repaint into Midnight Teal livery" Rail Magazine issue 771 1 April 2015 page 29
- ↑ "86/4 to receive Sleeper livery" Rail Magazine issue 776 10 June 2015 page 27
- ↑ Alstom to maintain sleeper trains in the UK Alstom 12 February 2015
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Caledonian Sleeper. |
Preceded by ScotRail As part of British Rail |
Sub-brand of ScotRail franchise 1997 - 2004 |
Succeeded by First ScotRail ScotRail franchise |
Preceded by ScotRail (National Express) ScotRail franchise |
Sub-brand of ScotRail franchise 2004 - 2015 |
Succeeded by Caledonian Sleeper Caledonian Sleeper franchise |
Preceded by First ScotRail ScotRail franchise |
Operator of Caledonian Sleeper franchise 2015 - present |
Incumbent |