New services for Cambrian and Heart of Wales lines
An hourly peak-time service
between Shrewsbury and Aberystwyth will start in 2015
New peak hourly trains between
Aberystwyth and Shrewsbury will be among extra services to be funded by the
Welsh government on the Cambrian and Heart of Wales rail lines.
Transport Minister Edwina Hart has announced the new services will create 20
new train crew and depot jobs.
Arriva 158 unit at Aberystwyth |
The changes, which will be on an initial three-year trial basis, will come
into place from May 2015.
Rail users welcomed the move, saying both lines provide "vital services".
On the Cambrian line, four new return services will operate between
Aberystwyth and Shrewsbury from Monday to Saturday, with hourly services for
peak morning and afternoon times.
There will also be two new return Sunday services and an improvement to
evening services on the Cambrian coast between Barmouth and Pwllheli.
On the Heart of Wales line there will be extra journeys between Llandovery,
Gowerton and Swansea, and between Llandrindod, Shrewsbury and Crewe from Monday
to Friday.
Other return services will become more conveniently timed, and the Heart of
Wales Line Forum will get £150,000 to explore the possibility of further
improvements to the line.
Announcing the new services, Mrs Hart said: "I am very pleased that we have
been able to secure the extra train services on these two popular lines.
Arriva 158830 at Aberystwyth Raliway Station showing how the station has been simplified to one platform making it more difficult to further increase future train services. |
"I recently commissioned a survey which clearly demonstrated the benefits to
commuters, local businesses and university students of an hourly service on the
Cambrian line."
The Cambrian Rail Implementation Group was formed by Mrs Hart to look into
new services in mid Wales last November.
It included representatives of Network Rail, Arriva Trains Wales and
Aberystwyth University.
It followed a report by The Shrewsbury Aberystwyth Railway Liaison Committee
which said hourly services could boost employment and tourism.
Its report included 6,570 responses from residents, students and businesses
in mid Wales, and also called for more trains on the coast line in the summer
months.
The Welsh government announcement was welcomed by Mansel Williams, chair of
the Shrewsbury Aberystwyth Railway Liaison Committee and Heart of Wales Line
Forum.
He said: "Both the Cambrian and Heart of Wales lines provide a vital service
for residents, commuters, tourists and students in the area.
"We received a very strong response to our survey about services on the
Cambrian main and the coast railway lines, which backed up the support there has
been locally for an hourly service, particularly in the commuting peaks.
"The Heart of Wales Line survey also highlighted the impracticality of
commuting with the current timetable, particularly southwards into Swansea."
Hopes for an hourly service along the Cambrian line received a boost in
February when Powys planners gave the go-ahead to close five crossings on the network between Carno and Talerddig.
The Network Rail project will also include replacing the crossings with two
road bridges over the Aberystwyth to Shrewsbury line.