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Island Line, Isle of Wight

Coordinates: 50°41′01″N 1°08′17″W / 50.6835°N 1.1380°W / 50.6835; -1.1380
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Island Line
A pair of Island Line Class 483s in London Underground livery entering the Ryde tunnel.
Overview
OwnerNetwork Rail
LocaleIsle of Wight
Termini
Service
TypeCommunity railway
Operator(s)Island Line Trains
Depot(s)Ryde depot
Rolling stockBritish Rail Class 483
Technical
Line length8+12 miles (13.7 km)
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Operating speed45 mph (72.4 km/h)
Island Line, Isle of Wight
0-00
Ryde Pier Head
0-32
Ryde Esplanade
Hovercraft to Southsea
tunnel under Ryde
396 yd
362 m
B3330 St John's Road
1-19
Ryde St John's Road
2-17
Smallbrook Junction
4-55
Brading
Sandown Road
A3055
to Newport and Cowes
Sandown sidings
6-42
Sandown
A3055
7-24
Lake
A3055
8-29
Shanklin
Down arrow closed 1966
Wroxall
tunnel under
St Boniface Down
Ventnor
A Class 483 unit currently in service in London Transport livery at Ryde Esplanade
British Rail Class 485 485045 at Shanklin, in the late 1980s Network SouthEast livery with Ryde Rail branding

The Island Line is a railway line on the Isle of Wight, running some 8+12 miles (13.7 km) from Ryde Pier Head to Shanklin down the eastern side of the island. The line was electrified (630 V DC third rail) in 1967.[1][2] Trains connect with passenger ferries to Portsmouth Harbour at Ryde Pier Head, and these ferries in turn connect with the rest of the National Rail network. The line also connects to the Isle of Wight Steam Railway, a steam-operated heritage railway at Smallbrook Junction. For much of its length the line runs alongside the A3055, criss-crossing this road by means of the Ryde Tunnel and bridges at Rowborough, Morton Common, Lake Hill and Littlestairs.

History

The line from Ryde St John's Road to Shanklin was opened on 23 August 1864, having been built by the Isle of Wight Railway. In 1866 the line was extended through to Ventnor. The line was originally built as single track throughout, with passing loops provided at Brading, Sandown and Shanklin stations.

In 1880 the London and South Western Railway (LSWR) and London, Brighton and South Coast Railway (LBSCR) opened a jointly-owned line north from Ryde St John's Road. Under the direction of LBSCR Chief Engineer Frederick Banister,[3] the building of the extension included a new tunnel and a third Ryde Pier to enable the line to reach Ryde Pier Head, which provided a connection with the companies' ferry services. When the LBSC/LSWR joint line opened, it was as a double track section from Ryde St John's Road station through to Ryde Pier Head. There was a scissors crossover situated on Ryde Pier to allow trains to access all platforms. Sets of crossovers were installed at St John's Road to enable trains to change from the joint line's left-hand running to the single-track sections on the Isle of Wight Central Railway's Newport line and the Isle of Wight Railway's Shanklin line (now known as the Island Line).[4]

Southern Railway

Following the Railways Act 1921, the Island Line and the other railways on the Isle of Wight became part of the Southern Railway. In 1926, crossovers and a signalbox were installed at Smallbrook Junction to extend double track operation from St John's Road. However, the signalbox was used only in the summer when traffic levels were high. In winter, the two lines from Smallbrook to St. John's Road reverted to independent single track operation.[4]

In 1927,[4] the passing loops at Brading and Sandown were connected to form a second section of double track.

British Rail (1948–96)

In 1948, the Southern Railway was nationalised, as part of British Railways, later British Rail. The line from Shanklin to Ventnor closed in April 1966. Steam trains were withdrawn from Ryde Pier on 17 September, and the whole line on 31 December 1966. While the line was closed, the trackbed in Ryde Tunnel was raised to reduce flooding and decrease gradients,[5] the rebuilding of Ryde Pier Head station was completed and Ryde Esplanade station was also substantially modified. The line reopened in March 1967 following its electrification.[6] In the 1980s, British Rail was sectorised and the line became part of the Network SouthEast sector. Services on the line were branded as Ryde Rail.

British Rail opened two new stations on the line. Lake station opened in 1987. Smallbrook Junction station opened in 1991, in co-operation with the Isle of Wight Steam Railway.

The double track between Sandown and Brading, along with the Brading passing loop, were removed in 1988. In 1989 the passenger service was branded as Island Line for the first time, as the name and logo was included on the "new" Class 483 trains' livery. However, this rebranding did not officially occur until 1994.[7]

Island Line franchise (1996–2007)

Following the privatisation of British Rail, the rights to run services on the line were put out to tender as a franchise. Uniquely on the National Rail network, the franchise agreement also required the successful bidder to maintain the railway line in addition to the stations and trains. Stagecoach Group were announced as the winner of the franchise and from October 1996 they operated passenger services under the name Island Line.

In 2002 a form of Automatic Train Protection was installed on the line. This involved the refitting of tripcocks on trains and the associated train stop trackside equipment at signals. This system is almost identical to the one originally fitted to the trains when in service on the London Underground, although it is in use only at signals protecting single-track sections of the route.[8]

The Department for Transport designated the line as a community railway in March 2006, under reforms to help boost use of rural and branch lines in the UK rail network.[9]

South Western franchise (since 2007)

From February 2007 the Island Line franchise was merged with the South Western franchise on the mainland. Stagecoach were announced as the winner of the expanded franchise, and they now operate Island Line under their South West Trains subsidiary.[10] However, the Island Line name has been retained, styled as Island Line Trains, promoted as a separate division on the South West Trains website.

Island Line Trains have also repainted stations in a heritage scheme of cream and green, as part of a general station improvement package.[11]

Future

Proposals 1990s

In the mid-1990s it was planned to reopen the line south of Shanklin, to the original terminus at Ventnor.[citation needed] However, this now seems unlikely to happen, due in part to the high costs involved.

Various other proposals have been put forward for the future of the railway line. These have included:

Proposals 2000s

It has previously been mentioned in the Isle of Wight Council's Local Transport Plan that any improvements to the railway should be made to ensure compatibility with the currently shelved South Hampshire Rapid Transit scheme. A more recent suggestion (early 2009) has been to reinstate the loop at Brading, thus allowing a 'Clock Face' timetable to encourage greater use. The outcome of this is still awaited.

The book Tube Trains on the Isle Of Wight listed several interesting earlier considerations to the future of the line being considered during its publication date of 2004. These included

  • Replacement of the current stock with discarded London Transport stock of later builds, such as the 1972 stock and 1967 stock.
  • De-electrification of the whole line and replacement of current stock with a new build of diesel units.
  • Rebuilding the line into a light rapid-transit system (i.e. trams), enabling an extension into Shanklin town centre.

Proposals 2010s

The Railway Magazine (RM) reports that a meeting took place on 11 February 2015 which covered a relaxation of public railway regulation and safety standards as well as transferring the line to a Social Enterprise Company. According to RM, people present at the meeting included Claire Perry (Rail Minister), Andrew Turner MP, Nick Finney (Andrew Turner's transport advisor) and local councillors. News of the meeting has given rise to local controversy. [14]

In February 2016, a report into the future of the line, by transport expert Christopher Garnett, who was brought in by the Isle of Wight Council to take a look at the options available, unveiled proposals to convert the Island Line into a tram line. Under these proposals the line would be singled, with passing places, in order to reduce costs, and the third rail replaced by overhead lines. It was reported that ten T-69 trams which were built in 1999, and had previously operated on the Midland Metro, could be purchased second hand and re-used for this scheme.[15]

Stations

In order from north to south:

Station Dist. Opened Closed Notes
Ryde Pier Head 0m 0ch 12 July 1880
Ryde Esplanade 0m 32ch 5 April 1880
Ryde St John's Road 1m 19ch 23 August 1864
Smallbrook Junction 2m 15ch 20 July 1991 served on steam operating days only
Brading 4m 55ch 23 August 1864
Sandown 6m 41ch 23 August 1864
Lake 7m 27ch 11 May 1987
Shanklin 8m 29ch 23 August 1864
Wroxall 15 September 1866 17 April 1966
Ventnor 15 September 1866 17 April 1966

Rolling stock

Due to the isolated and rural nature of the Isle of Wight's railways, rolling stock has tended to be made up from displaced older vehicles, rebuilt or modified as required. Following the work undertaken during the line's closure during the winter of 1966–67, the ceiling of Ryde Tunnel is 10 inches too low for standard National Rail vehicle types to clear.[5]

Since the reopening of the line in 1967, former London Underground Tube stock has been used. The initial trains were formed of so-called Standard Stock, made up into four and three-coach sets (with one spare vehicle, normally kept at Ryde depot), designated "4-VEC" and "3-TIS" in the British Rail Southern Region electric multiple unit classification system. (The classification letters were a pun on the Roman name for the island - Vectis, also reflected in the name of the island's nationalised bus company, Southern Vectis, which was once partially railway-owned.) Under the British Railways TOPS rolling stock classification system (introduced in 1968 for locomotives and later extended to multiple unit vehicles), these units eventually became Class 485 and Class 486. The cars transferred to the island were built at various dates between 1923 and 1934, and thus maintained a somewhat unwelcome tradition of providing the island's railways with among the oldest rolling stock running anywhere on the British railway system. By 1992[16] these units had been replaced by newly refurbished London Underground 1938 Stock, designated Class 483 by British Rail. The stock is maintained at Ryde St John's Road depot.

Annual season tickets

Because the Isle of Wight is within the Network Southeast area, annual season tickets issued to and from its stations are issued as Gold Cards. A ticket from Ryde Pier Head to Ryde Esplanade was for many years the cheapest annual ticket in the area, and even though many holders of such tickets never use them for the intended journey, the discount obtained over the year may amply repay the cost of the ticket.[dubiousdiscuss] Since the Gold Card area was extended to include the West Midlands in January 2015,[17] the Ryde ticket has been undercut by a similar short-distance ticket between Lichfield City and Lichfield Trent Valley.[dubiousdiscuss]

Passenger numbers

Bar chart of ORR annual passenger estimates from 1997–98 to 2014–15

After privatisation, passenger numbers rose steadily from an estimated 1.21 million in 1997–98 to an estimated 1.61 million in 2006–07.[18]

After the merger of the Island Line and South West Trains franchises in 2007, Island Line passenger numbers fell slightly from an estimated 1.61 million in 2006–07 to an estimated 1.53 million in 2009–10. They peaked again at an estimated record 1.67 million in 2011–12, but since then have fallen rapidly to an estimated 1.31 million in 2014–15. This is the lowest annual estimate since 1998–99, and suggests passenger numbers have fallen by 22% in the last four years.[18]

The figures below are the number of passengers on the line from the year beginning April 2002 to the year beginning April 2013.

Smallbrook Junction has no road or footpath access and is normally open only on days when the connecting Isle of Wight Steam Railway is operating.

Station usage
Station name 2002–03 2004–05 2005–06 2006–07 2007–08 2008–09 2009–10 2010–11 2011–12 2012–13 2013–14 2014–15 2015–16 2016–17 2017–18 2018–19 2019–20 2020–21 2021–22 2022–23
Ryde Pier Head 116,652 121,387 116,812 149,226 193,714 210,604 210,604 235,156 223,542 217,272 209,734
Ryde Esplanade 431,636 453,314 456,944 489,372 442,861 396,358 360,650 392,020 364,780 328,366 301,660
Ryde St John's Road 140,242 160,891 175,208 178,869 178,914 190,796 200,976 240,046 251,694 229,450 202,188
Smallbrook Junction 2,995 3,087 2,716 2,965 4,363 9,672 10,170 11,472 11,478 10,832 11,408
Brading 73,546 66,932 69,074 68,841 60,680 65,794 61,406 63,872 67,840 60,540 55,594
Sandown 244,876 242,564 254,040 265,499 264,784 264,126 256,890 271,282 297,722 273,118 240,766
Lake 78,279 77,995 76,364 71,465 69,350 67,162 67,584 67,656 77,772 71,566 61,840
Shanklin 329,887 341,826 345,020 382,842 368,776 358,658 338,612 345,844 373,006 352,134 318,410
The annual passenger usage is based on sales of tickets in stated financial years from Office of Rail and Road estimates of station usage. The statistics are for passengers arriving and departing from each station and cover twelve-month periods that start in April. Methodology may vary year on year. Usage from the periods 2019-20 and especially 2020-21 onwards have been affected by the Covid-19 pandemic

See also

Sources

  • Hardy, Brian (2003). Tube Trains on the Isle of Wight. Harrow Weald, Middlesex: Capital Transport. ISBN 1-85414-276-3. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)

References

  1. ^ Southern Electric Group Historical Features Index "Southern Electric Fleet Review Summer 2004". Southern Electric Group. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  2. ^ "Southern Electric History and Infrastructure (Part 4)". Southern Electric Group.
  3. ^ "Federick Dale Banister". Grace's Guide. Retrieved 10 February 2013.
  4. ^ a b c Hardy 2003, p. 9.
  5. ^ a b "1938 tube stock on the Isle of Wight". squarewheels.org.uk. Retrieved 26 August 2007.
  6. ^ Hardy 2003, pp. 19–20, 23.
  7. ^ Hardy 2003, p. 75.
  8. ^ Hardy 2003, p. 79.
  9. ^ "Island's new community rail route". BBC News. 24 March 2006.
  10. ^ "Stagecoach wins railway franchise". BBC News. 22 September 2006. Retrieved 25 September 2007.
  11. ^ "Spruce up for Island Line stations". South West Trains. Retrieved 3 September 2007.
  12. ^ "Buses on Rail Lines No Easy Answer". Isle of Wight County Press. 22 April 2005. Retrieved 22 July 2008.
  13. ^ "Tram Link Idea Wins Poll Approval". Isle of Wight County Press. 11 April 2008. Retrieved 22 July 2008.
  14. ^ Marsh, Phil (November 2015). "Controversy raging over proposals for Island Line". The Railway Magazine. 161 (1376): 8. {{cite journal}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  15. ^ "IS THE FUTURE TRAMS AND STEAM TRAINS INTO RYDE?". islandecho.co.uk. Island Echo. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
  16. ^ Hardy 2003, p. 46.
  17. ^ "Gold Card Benefits extended". Modern Railways. Retrieved 30 January 2015.
  18. ^ a b Office of Rail and Road data: see bar chart

50°41′01″N 1°08′17″W / 50.6835°N 1.1380°W / 50.6835; -1.1380