CAMBRIAN LINE

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The 'Cambrian Line' is a railway from Shrewsbury (in Shropshire, England) to Welshpool, Aberystwyth and Pwllheli. The railway runs first through the central part of Wales and then along the coast of Cardigan Bay.
The railway is very scenic, with parts travelling through the Cambrian Mountains or along the Cambrian Coast. This latter section travels over the spectacular Barmouth Bridge, which crosses the River Mawddach.

Contents
Route
Cambrian Line
Cambrian Coast Line
History
Closed Stations
Performance
Line upgrade
External links
See also
Footnotes

Route


The line diverges at Dovey Junction, just after Machynlleth, to serve either Aberystwyth, or Pwllheli via the 'Cambrian Coast Line'. The stations on these routes are listed below.
Cambrian Line


Shrewsbury


★ Connection with the Shrewsbury-Wolverhampton line, Shrewsbury-Chester line and Welsh Marches Line.

Welshpool


★ Connection with Welshpool and Llanfair Light Railway

Newtown

Caersws

Carno - closed station with strong local movement to reopen[1]

Machynlleth

Dovey Junction


★ 'Cambrian Coast Line' diverges to Pwllheli (see below)

Borth

Aberystwyth


★ Connection with Vale of Rheidol Railway


★ Former connection with the Carmarthen-Lampeter-Aberystwyth line
Cambrian Coast Line


Machynlleth

Dovey Junction

Penhelig

Aberdyfi

Tywyn


★ Connection with Talyllyn Railway

Tonfanau

Llwyngwril

Fairbourne


★ Connection with Fairbourne Railway

Morfa Mawddach

Barmouth

Llanaber

Talybont

Dyffryn Ardudwy (Morfa Dyffryn)

Llanbedr

Pensarn

Llandanwg

Harlech

Tygwyn

Talsarnau

Llandecwyn

Penrhyndeudraeth

Minffordd


★ Connection with Ffestiniog Railway

Porthmadog


★ Connections with Ffestiniog Railway and Welsh Highland Railway

Criccieth

Penychain

Abererch

Pwllheli

History


The lines from Welshpool to Aberystwyth and from Dovey Junction to Pwllheli make up the surviving sections of the Cambrian Railways main line (constructed between 1855 and 1869).
The Cambrian Railways became part of the Great Western Railway and on nationalisation these lines were operated first by the Western Region of British Railways and later by the London Midland Region. In a later reorganisation, passenger services were operated by the Regional Railways Central sector. Following privatisation in the mid 1990s, passenger services were first operated by Central Trains, then by Wales & Borders Trains from 2001 and, since late 2003, by Arriva Trains Wales.
Closed Stations

Although the line survived the Beeching Axe, the number of stations on the lines was heavily rationalised in the 1960s onwards. The stations closed include the following:
Shrewsbury to Dovey Junction:

Buttington Junction (connection with the Cambrian Railways line to Oswestry)

Montgomery

Abermule

Moat Lane Junction (connection with Mid Wales Railway to Cardiff)

Pontdolgoch

Carno

Talerddig

Llanbrynmair

Commins Coch Halt

Cemmaes Road (connection with the branch line to Dinas Mawddwy)
Dovey Junction to Aberystwyth:

Glandyfi

Ynyslas

Llandre

Bow Street
Dovey Junction to Pwllheli:

Gogarth

Abertafol

Llangelynin

Black Rock Halt

Afon Wen (connection with the Afon Wen - Caernarfon line)

★ The Ruabon bound platforms at Barmouth Junction were also closed in 1965 and the station renamed Morfa Mawddach.

Performance


With long sections of single line, limited passing points and tightly-diagrammed rolling stock, minor disruptions on the Cambrian Line quickly lead to compound delays and partial cancellations. While the coast line is generally a good performer, services between Aberystwyth and Birmingham New Street have deteriorated hugely since the early 2000s and are now the least punctual in Britain [2].
In Arriva Trains Wales' monthly performance statistics, the Cambrian Line is routinely the worst-performing service group.
Cambrian Line Performance [1]
Period Ending Punctuality
10 December 2005 76.6%
7 January 2006 85.9%
4 February 2006 86.4%
5 March 2006 84.1%
31 March 2006 82.6%
29 April 2006 80.8%
27 May 2006 85.7%
24 June 2006 79.5%
22 July 2006 82.8%
19 August 2006 79.6%
16 September 2006 86.2%
14 October 2006 86.7%
11 November 2006 84.2%
9 December 2006 81.8%

Line upgrade


In October 2006, it was announced that Network Rail would pilot the European Rail Traffic Management System on the Cambrian Line. The ERTMS will allow the "safety gap" between trains using the same track to be reduced, meaning services will be more frequent. Should the pilot scheme be successful, the system is expected to be rolled out across Britain's busiest routes (notably the East Coast Main Line).
The upgrade is expected to cost £59 million and be completed by December 2008.[2]

External links



The Cambrian Line

Shrewsbury to Aberystwyth Rail Passengers' Association

Usage statistics for stations on the line

See also



Railways of Shropshire

Heart of Wales Line

Footnotes


1. Trains arriving at destination within 10 minutes of schedule. Source: [[3]]
2. Webster, Ben (2006-10-17) "Digital sensors will reduce gap between trains during rush hour". ''The Times'', p. 23.


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