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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
National
Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent

Network Rail warns of Easter disruption due to engineering works

Avanti West Coast train
Avanti West Coast trains will not be going as far as the Lakes or Glasgow over the Easter weekend because of engineering works near Carlisle. Photograph: Luciana Guerra/PA

Rail passengers have been advised to plan ahead for Easter, with engineering works expected to close the west coast main line between some of Britain’s biggest cities.

No trains will run between London Euston and Milton Keynes throughout the four-day holiday weekend from Good Friday on 7 April, until Easter Monday, on 10 April, meaning replacement buses or alternative routes will be needed to travel between the capital and towns and cities including Birmingham, Manchester and Liverpool.

Avanti West Coast trains will go no farther north than Lancaster from 8-11 April, with track work further up the line towards Carlisle halting trains to the Lakes and Glasgow.

Elsewhere, passengers will face disruption to services around the major rail interchange of Crewe, because of work for HS2. London’s Charing Cross and Victoria stations will also be largely out of action owing to engineering works, with some services cut and others diverted to other stations.

Network Rail, which manages Britain’s railway track and infrastructure, has told passengers to check ahead before travel, but said 95% of the railway would be open.

More than 12,000 metres of new rail and 33,000 tonnes of ballast will be laid over the four days of the Easter weekend.

Andrew Haines, Network Rail chief executive, said: “Our Easter engineering programme has been carefully planned so the majority of the rail network will remain open for business.

“Colleagues from Network Rail and our rail partners will be working hard to deliver £88m worth of investment during the course of the weekend. These vital projects will upgrade the railway so that we can provide a better and more reliable service for our passengers and freight users in the future.”

Rail strikes that could have disrupted the first weekend of most school holidays, scheduled for 30 March and 1 April, have been suspended by the RMT.

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