Great Western Coffee Shop

Journey by Journey => London to Didcot, Oxford and Banbury => Topic started by: onthecushions on July 04, 2021, 00:19:10



Title: Oxford Rail Corridor
Post by: onthecushions on July 04, 2021, 00:19:10

https://www.networkrail.co.uk/running-the-railway/our-routes/western/oxfordshire/oxford-corridor-phase-2/

So another £69M investment. Glad I don't have to go under or over Botley Road bridge very often.

In FAQ, (pdf) mentions electrification for the future....

OTC


Title: Re: Oxford Rail Corridor
Post by: grahame on July 04, 2021, 06:51:10
In FAQ, (pdf) mentions electrification for the future....

I have added the public engagement and FAQ documents to our member's mirror for posterity:
http://www.firstgreatwestern.info/mirror/Oxford-Corridor-Phase-2-Public-Engagement.pdf
http://www.firstgreatwestern.info/mirror/Oxford-Corridor-Phase-2-frequently-asked-questions.pdf

As an aside - our member's mirror now contains just over 1900 documents, the text of which can be searched via the search box near the top of this page (this is search will also, by default, give you results in recent public threads).

Back to Oxford ... as a passenger user of Oxford station, and the road out to the west there too, as a management summary I read:
* An extra platform at the far side from the city centre (allowing trains from the Didcot direction to turn back at what is currently the northbound platform without blocking through northbound trains that call while doing so
* Extra capacity in the junction with the line to(wards) Marylebone and Bedford to avoid it becoming a bottleneck
* A wider, deeper and longer bridge on the main road west - allowing full height buses and much better capacity for cycling and walking
* An additional station building where the Youth Hostel currently is, replacing the "hole in the wall" there at present

Have I missed any key bullet points?


Title: Re: Oxford Rail Corridor
Post by: stuving on July 04, 2021, 12:04:25
We already have two threads covering this: on Oxford Corridor Capacity Improvements (http://www.firstgreatwestern.info/coffeeshop/index.php?topic=23033.msg283761#msg283761) and on Oxford Station (http://www.firstgreatwestern.info/coffeeshop/index.php?topic=593.240). It was hard to separate the work at Oxford station (both passenger and railway aspects) from the wider railway improvements, even before someone decided a study was needed into a corridor. That gives scope for the government-approved practice of multiply announcing the same funding, and no doubt gives as these LEPs and suchlike something to do so they can feel useful. Otherwise it just confuses.

The study - ORCS phase 2 - is referred to in reporting as "published", though I can't find it nor anything answering to ORCS (or its new name of Oxfordsshire Connect). Most of what is available is from Network rail, and of course what they are interested in is what they should build and where they money's coming from. The funding that has been announced is for Oxford station; the rest of the corridor is alleged to take the total to £161M.

NR's presentation on the ORCS (https://www.networkrail.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Oxfordshire-Rail-Corridor-Study-.pdf) ties it into their long-term planning process, including the RNEP. One side effect is that they identify Stage 1, 2, 3 etc. that are quite different from the Phases used for the work at Oxford. Having noted that the study is complete, it goes on:
Quote
Oxfordshire Connect will be the vehicle used to take forward the recommendations from ORCS, into the Rail Network Enhancements Pipeline (RNEP) to seek funding. Strategic interventions will need to be prioritised; development and delivery strategically phased and co-ordinated to enable project synergies to be utilised to maximise benefits and minimise impacts on passengers and customers.

The Oxfordshire Connect programme formally entered RNEP in March 2021. Development work will continue to progress the priority interventions identified to the next stage of business case development, subject to funding.

The station layout has certainly been known for some time, and I think most of the the new track layout to the north was done some time ago. Network Rail's summary of their aspirations for the southward corridor (to and at Didcot) are hinted at rather than stated in their documents: four tracking to Radley certainly, and an extra platform at Didcot, and grade separation probably - but no details.

There is a TWAO (see NR's web page (https://www.networkrail.co.uk/running-the-railway/our-routes/western/oxfordshire/oxford-corridor-phase-2/)) for the land take at Oxford station, and this is from the statement of aims (https://sacuksprodnrdigital0001.blob.core.windows.net/twao-oxford-corridor-phase-2/Oxford%20Corridor%20Phase%202%20TWAO/NR04%20Oxford%20TWAO%20-%20Statement%20of%20Aims.pdf) in those documents:
Quote
The works at Oxford Station requiring the proposed Order are summarised as follows:
• A new through platform on the west side of Oxford station to form a second face to the existing Platform 4, including additional waiting facilities, toilets, retail units and construction of a new canopy along the platform length.
• New track connections to the line from Platform 5, which will allow trains to leave both Platform 4 and 5 at the same time.
• A new western station entrance from Roger Dudman Way, off Botley Road.
• A new span over Botley Road to accommodate the additional downside platform. This will incorporate highways improvements to provide a dedicated cycleway and footpaths and improve the road gradient and clearances below the bridge to allow the use of normal height double decker buses, as well as passive provision for an additional span to the east.
• Re-routing of Roger Dudman Way, removing the junction where it joins Botley Road and creating a new access onto Cripley Road.
• Replacement of road span of Sheepwash Bridge and adjoining footbridge structure on a new alignment.



This page is printed from the "Coffee Shop" forum at http://gwr.passenger.chat which is provided by a customer of Great Western Railway. Views expressed are those of the individual posters concerned. Visit www.gwr.com for the official Great Western Railway website. Please contact the administrators of this site if you feel that content provided contravenes our posting rules ( see http://railcustomer.info/1761 ). The forum is hosted by Well House Consultants - http://www.wellho.net