Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Severn Bridge Junction

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Type
  
Signal box

Owner
  
Network Rail

Opened
  
1904

Construction started
  
1903

Country
  
England

Height
  
12 m

Town or city
  
Shrewsbury

Designation
  
Listed building

Severn Bridge Junction httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
South of Shrewsbury railway station

Client
  
Shrewsbury and Hereford Railway

Diameter
  
95 by 11 feet (29.0 m × 3.4 m)

Architecture firm
  
London and North Western Railway

Similar
  
Shrewsbury railway station, English Bridge, Lord Hill's Column, Welsh Bridge, Shrewsbury Abbey

Severn bridge junction


Severn Bridge Junction is the area of railway lines just south of Shrewsbury railway station, in Shropshire, England. It is controlled by a mechanical interlocked signal box of the same name, which is now the largest operational mechanical signal box in the world. The Network Rail signalling area code is 'SBJ.'

Contents

Map of Severn Bridge Junction, Shrewsbury, UK

Background

The complexity of the railway system in the area is brought about by the convergence of five major lines at Shrewsbury, built in the Victoria era by two competing and yet also co-operating railway companies, the Great Western Railway and the London and North Western Railway. They were competing to connect the coal and raw material supplies of South Wales with the industrialised Midlands and Northwest; and secondly to transport passengers to and from London to the port of Liverpool. After the GWR amalgamated with the Cambrian Railways in 1921, it was also a major point of accessing GWR services into Mid and West Wales:

  • Cambrian Line (GWR)
  • Shrewsbury to Chester Line (GWR)
  • Wolverhampton to Shrewsbury Line (GWR)
  • Welsh Marches Line:
  • North to Crewe via Crewe and Shrewsbury Railway (LNWR)
  • South to Newport via Shrewsbury and Hereford Railway (Joint)
  • Lines formerly converging in the area also include the regionally important Severn Valley Railway (GWR), and the Stafford to Shrewsbury Line (LNWR).

    Junction

    The railway junction lies directly south of the railway station. It was constructed jointly by the GWR/LNWR after the completion of improvements to their jointly owned Shrewsbury and Hereford Railway, which at this location junctioned with the Wolverhampton to Shrewsbury Line. To allow freight trains to move to/from South Wales direct to the Midlands and hence avoid the passenger railway station, the junction was constructed in a tight triangular form south of the River Severn.

    Signal box

    Jointly constructed from 1902 to an enlarged standard LNWR design of 1876, the three storey structure is built of two storeys of red brick and cement, with a third floor mainly of wooden weather board pin-panel containing the glass windows, all topped by a Welsh slate pitched roof. Access is via a door on the rear, with the lower two floors housing interlocking signalling equipment accessed via two internal wooden staircases. The main operational floor houses a 180 lever interlocked frame, divided into two sections: Abbey Foregate to Sutton Bridge; Shrewsbury station to Crewe Junction.

    The frame scale makes it the largest remaining mechanical signal box on the British network, and from 2011 it became the largest mechanical signalbox in the world, following the closure of the 191 lever box at Spencer Street in Melbourne, Australia.

    Today only approximately half of the levers are in operational use, although it still takes two signal men to operate the complete system on a 24/7 basis, allowing 300 train movements per day.

    Future

    Although there have been line closures in the Shrewsbury area, and the closure of the joint Motive Power Depot at the end of the steam era in the 1960s, there is still a complex residual converging rail system in the area. Within 1 mile (1.6 km) of the junction, there are another five interlocked mechanical signal boxes:

  • Abbey Foregate Junction: located on the Wolverhampton line to allow access to the adjacent Abbey Foregate yard; its code is 'AF'.
  • Crewe Bank: closed 8 December 2012.
  • Crewe Junction
  • English Bridge: controlled the southside of the triangular junction through Coleham to Sutton Bridge Junction. Closed in 1953, its controls were transferred to Severn Bridge.
  • Harlescott Crossing: closed 8 December 2012.
  • Network Rail currently believe that to simplify this system to allow it to be remotely controlled through coloured-light signals would not be economic. Hence the current mechanical signalling system in the area is presently envisaged to remain in operation until at least 2030, and possibly as long as 2050 on current plans.

    References

    Severn Bridge Junction Wikipedia


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