New track taking shape to boost the freight link to the Port of Felixstowe


Network Rail engineers have started laying new track in the Trimley area to increase the capacity of the line to Felixstowe port. Picture: NETWORK RAIL

Network Rail has started laying a second track beside the existing line at Trimley to help increase the capacity of the line to the Port of Felixstowe.


The company’s army of engineers are working every weekend to double the track along part of the line which will allow more trains to use the route to the port – hopefully taking more lorries off the A14.
Just under a mile of extra track will be laid – and this will allow an extra 10 freight trains a day in each direction to use the line to the port. Each train can take up to 76 lorries off the road.
Meliha Duymaz, Network Rail’s route managing director for Anglia, said: “We are making huge progress on this new section of track which will improve the strategic freight network as part of our Railway Upgrade Plan.

“This work is essential to increase the number of freight services using the railway while also improving reliability for passengers.”


Network Rail engineers have installed 2,300 sleepers along with ballast, the stones that form the track bed, ready for the start of the installation of track in the coming months.
This will form the 1.4km extra railway line between Trimley and the level crossing at Gun Lane. The work will support up to 10 additional freight trains in each direction per day, moving goods to and from the Port of Felixstowe. Passengers will also benefit from improved reliability for existing services between Felixstowe and Ipswich.
With each additional freight train taking the equivalent of up to 76 lorries off the roads, the upgrade works will help to reduce congestion and pollution for the local community and the wider region. The work also includes upgrades to four road level crossings between Trimley and Westerfield which will improve public safety while allowing more trains to run on the line.
In August, permission was granted for a new Bridleway bridge, to be built on the site of the existing Gun Lane level crossing, which will provide an alternative safe route across the railway for walkers, horse riders and cyclists to access the local countryside. This will allow Network Rail to permanently close six pedestrian level crossings in the area including Gun Lane to improve public safety and enable more trains to run on the branch line.
Meliha Duymaz, Network Rail’s route managing director for Anglia, said: “We are making huge progress on this new section of track which will improve the strategic freight network as part of our Railway Upgrade Plan. This work is essential to increase the number of freight services using the railway while also improving reliability for passengers.”
Guy Bates, head of freight development at Network Rail said: “We’re now a matter of months from being able to realise the benefits of the Felixstowe capacity enhancement scheme, it will provide line capacity for more trains conveying more goods by rail and so fewer lorries on the road – this scheme is a critical step in developing rail capacity between the UK’s number one Port and the Midlands and the North.
“It is part of our wider Strategic Freight Network programme that over the past decade has laid the foundations for a progressive realisation of a set of freight capable corridors linking the nations key ports, centres of production, distribution and consumption – enabling rail freight to play an increasingly effective role in delivering for the UK economy and environment.”

Comments