Business case to be prepared for wires to temple meads

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Network

Contributing Writer rail@bauermedia.co.uk

A proposal to extend electrification from Bristol Parkway to the Temple Meads station in the city centre has taken its first step, although there are no timescales yet.

The section was curtailed from the previous Great Western Main Line electrification scheme, as one of a series of cuts after costs significantly overran.

Members of the West of England Combined Authority (WECA) have now agreed to part-fund the £575,000 cost of progression of the Filton Bank electrification project to outline business case (OBC) stage.

WECA recommended that £200,000 is contributed to the OBC cost, using Mayoral funding. This leaves £375,000 “required from others” to enable Network Rail to progress the project to OBC stage. No work will be undertaken until the full funding requirement is met.

Electrification would enable the existing bi-mode Hitachi IEP trains that work on London-Bristol services to be used elsewhere, with conversion of the route to electric-only IEP trains.

The project will include working with NR (the project lead) to reduce the cost of electrification from between £3 million and £4m per single track km (estimated in 2016) to £1m-£2m. This work is initially focused on Filton Bank, where it would reduce the electrification cost to £30m-£50m.

The work to prepare the OBC includes surveys to prove that an innovative bridge coating, adopted from projects in South Wales, will enable overhead wires to pass below Church Road bridge (at Lawrence Hill station). The alternative is to reconstruct the bridge at significant cost.

It will also revisit the foundation design and ground conditions information, to establish at which locations the current proposed higher-cost rock anchors can be changed for a more conventional piled solution.

One aspect of the previous project - the high cost of the over-engineered massive electrification structures - is to be tackled by demonstrating the constructability of NR’s novel ‘push out’ cantilever system for the overhead stanchions.

Should its feasibility be demonstrated, this would allow construction to take place on a four-track railway with a two-track railway still running. This would “dramatically reduce track access costs”, said WECA.

Bristo

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