Blackburn King Street TMD

Blackburn King Street TMD is a railway traction maintenance depot (TMD) located in Blackburn, England. Opened and commissioned in late 2017, Blackburn King Street is a stabling, cleaning and maintenance point for diesel multiple units operated by Northern, which is the largest train operator in Northern England.

Blackburn King Street TMD
Location
LocationBlackburn, Lancashire
Characteristics
Owner(s)Network Rail
Operator(s)Northern
Depot code(s)??
TypeDMU
Rolling stockClass 150
Class 156
Class 195
History
Opened2017[1]

History

Construction of Blackburn King Street TMD, which was then provisionally known as "King Street depot", was given the go ahead to commence by Blackburn with Darwen Council in September 2016, as part of a wider investment package in the area's rail infrastructure.[2] The location selected for the new depot, which was known as "The Wrangling", was the site of disused coal sidings near to Blackburn station on the East Lancashire line.

Built by the Stowe-based Buckingham Group at a cost of £23 million, construction of Blackburn King Street was completed on schedule in August 2017, with official opening taking place in October. The depot became operational in November 2017.[3].

Allocation

Up to thirty diesel powered units can be stabled across Blackburn King Street's six sidings.[4].

Unit classes which are currently stabled at Blackburn King Street are the Class 150, Class 156 and Class 195.

gollark: Some would say it's due to the whole "monopoly on force" thing.
gollark: Central planning tends to reduce innovation.
gollark: Decay of humanity meaning...?
gollark: The planned system splits responsibility across a million bureaucrats, who are just going to resist change and rubberstamp things.
gollark: The market system, by giving *each individual participant* a direct incentive to improve things, is more efficient.

References

  1. "Northern opens £23m Blackburn depot as part of Great North Rail Project". Rail Technology Magazine. Rail Technology Magazine. Retrieved 29 December 2017.
  2. "Multi-million pound train depot set for Blackburn". Lancashire Telegraph. Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 30 December 2017.
  3. "Constructing Blackburn's new train depot". Rail Engineer. Rail Engineer. Retrieved 30 December 2017.
  4. "Constructing Blackburn's new train depot". Rail Engineer. Rail Engineer. Retrieved 30 December 2017.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.