UK Transport Wiki
Register
Advertisement
South West Trains
File:South West Trains logo.png
Template:Px

Info
Franchise(s):South Western
4 February 1996 - 31 January 2004
1 February 2004 - 3 February 2007
4 February 2007 - 3 February 2017
Main region(s):Greater London, Hampshire, Surrey & Dorset
Other region(s):Berkshire, Wiltshire, Somerset, Devon
Fleet size:337 (343 including Island Line)
11 Class 158 Express Sprinter sets
30 Class 159 South Western Turbo sets
45 Class 444 Desiro sets
127 Class 450 Desiro sets
91 Class 455 sets
30 Class 458 Juniper sets
1 Class 73 Rescue electro-diesel locomotive
(6 Class 483 - Island line sets)
Stations called at:213 (177 operated)
National Rail abbreviation:SW
Parent company:Stagecoach
Web site:www.southwesttrains.co.uk
Route map

Route map

South West Trains[1] (SWT) was a train operating company in the United Kingdom owned by Stagecoach Group operating the South Western franchise.

It operated passenger services, mostly out of London Waterloo station, to the South West of London and in the counties of Surrey, Hampshire, Dorset, Devon, Somerset, Berkshire, and Wiltshire and on the Isle of Wight. The area of operation, essentially the former South Western division of Network SouthEast, was also roughly that of the pre-1923 London and South Western Railway (excluding everything west of Exeter). The Stagecoach Group took over the franchise on the privatisation of British Rail in 1996 and retained it in 2004 and again in 2007 making it, along with First Great Western, the longest-running franchise. It was the largest passenger franchise in the UK[2] and is a particularly complex operation due to the large number and variety of services. South Western Railway took over SWT on 20 August 2017.

History[]

File:Island Line Trains logo.png

The logo for Island Line Trains. The South Western franchise now includes Island Line

In 1995 the Director of Passenger Rail Franchising awarded the South West Trains franchise to Stagecoach.[3] Operations started on 4 February 1996. South West Trains first train, the 0510 Twickenham to London Waterloo, was the first privatised train to operate for 48 years.

On 2 April 2001 the Strategic Rail Authority awarded Stagecoach a new franchise after it beat bids from First/NedRailways and Sea Containers.[4] The franchise was originally to run for twenty years, but in 2002 the Strategic Rail Authority changed the way it wanted investment funded, and South West Trains was awarded a three-year franchise starting on 1 February 2004.[5]

On 20 December 2005 the Department for Transport announced that Arriva, First, MTR/Sea Containers, National Express and Stagecoach had been shortlisted to tender for the new South Western franchise, which combined the South West Trains and Island Line Trains franchises, National Express later pulling out.[6][7] On 22 September 2006 the Department for Transport awarded the franchise to Stagecoach, the new franchise starting on 4 February 2007 for a period of ten years.[8][9]

In the early days of its franchise, SWT gained notoriety for severe service cuts owing to driver shortages[10] but it later made significant improvements to the network, including replacing much of the rolling stock, refurbishing stations, making stations accessible to disabled passengers, and improving customer information. During the early 2000s, improvements included the introduction of new rail services and the reopening of Chandler's Ford station in Hampshire.

On 12 December 2004 the company completely recast its timetable for the first time since 1967, in an attempt to bring service provision into line with changing demand and to take into account the different characteristics of modern rolling stock, with the intention that this would improve reliability and punctuality across the network.

A smoking ban on all SWT services was introduced from May 2004, partly in response to a fire caused by a cigarette left near a heater under a seat, and also pre-empting the public smoking ban introduced two years later.[11]

Train services[]

South West Trains is the key operator for Surrey, Hampshire and Dorset, and also serves London, Berkshire, Wiltshire, Somerset and Devon. Its services are described below.

Most SWT services are on electrified lines using the 750 V DC third-rail system. There is a diesel fleet for services on the West of England line to Salisbury, Exeter and Bristol, which is unelectrified beyond Worting Jn, and for Salisbury - Romsey via Southampton services which operate over unelectrified lines between Salisbury and Redbridge and Eastleigh and Romsey. SWT operates almost 1,700 trains per day. The intense service and past chronic under-investmentTemplate:Cn led to many delays, but performance has improved in part due to a completely restructured timetable from December 2004, and the commissioning of a unified Network Rail and SWT control centre at Waterloo which improves communication between the two organisations.

From Waterloo, SWT's London terminus, long-distance trains ran to southern England, including the major coastal population centres of Portsmouth, Southampton, Bournemouth, Poole and Weymouth; the company also operates many local services on suburban commuter lines in south-west London and Surrey. There are also trains to Reading, Exeter and Bristol, but these are not the principal fast services from London to those cities, which are operated from London Paddington by First Great Western.

As with most rail companies, non-folding bicycles were banned from peak-time trains to and from London Waterloo. However, these restrictions[12] apply only to cyclists boarding or alighting in the area bounded by Hook, Alton, Guildford, Reading and Dorking. The policy is designed to maximise available passenger space on the most crowded trains.

South West Trains also had Quiet Zones, similar to certain other Train Operating Companies. Quiet Zones are available on certain outer suburban services and are recognised by the notices in the windows and the signs on the doors. Passengers are advised to respect others using the Quiet Zones by not using mobile phones and not playing music out loud.

Routes[]

South West Trains off-peak Monday to Saturday routes, with numbers of trains per hour, include:

Main lines[]

File:444023 at Clapham Junction.JPG

A Class 444 Desiro unit used on longer-distance services on the electrified railway lines.

File:Gb-emudc-455732-2.jpg

A Class 455 suburban unit at Wimbledon. These are used on inner suburban services.

The six main lines operated by SWT are:

Suburban services[]

Suburban services diverge from the above routes. Taken in order westwards from Waterloo, travelling down the SWML, they are:

Other services[]

Former Routes[]

Exeter St Davids to Paignton (via Dawlish)

Ticketing[]

Tickets[]

Travelcards are available for journeys into London. They are valid on London buses, Tramlink, Docklands Light Railway, London Underground and national rail services within the London travelcard area.

Season tickets and Travelcards are also available to cover multi-day regular journeys. They are available in weekly, monthly and annual periods.

In May 2007, South West Trains introduced a new fare structure for all routes. The original peak prices and times were retained, with "off-peak" being redefined at a higher fare for services leaving after 11am for stations closer to London or arriving in Waterloo at or before mid-day for stations further away from London. Services after this period are now referred to as "Super Off-Peak" and attract similar prices to the old Off-Peak tickets.[13]

In January 2008 SWT fares increased on average by 4.3%.[14]

In 2009, ticket gates were installed at Waterloo Station in order to improve revenue protection.

The smartcard scheme for season tickets on the national rail system was extended from spring 2010 to cover the lines from Weymouth to Basingstoke, Staines-upon-Thames to Wokingham and the Isle of Wight in addition to the current trial area between Staines-upon-Thames and Windsor. It was also announced that SWT proposes to reduce the operating hours at 24 of its ticket offices.[15]

In May 2010 posters started to appear at stations advertising that the extended smartcard scheme is now available for stations between Weymouth and Basingstoke. The smart cards which South West Trains is using are branded StagecoachSmart in common with those being introduced on Stagecoach buses in Cambridgeshire and which Stagecoach plans to provide across its rail and bus operations.

Oyster pay-as-you-go, Travelcards and season tickets[]

Oyster pay-as-you-go is now available on all South West Trains routes within the Greater London area.[16] Oyster cards holding season tickets have always been valid within the London Travelcard area, the same way as normal paper Travelcards and season tickets.

In November 2010 the Department for Transport announced an agreement between government and SWT that passengers will be able to top up Oyster cards at all stations operated by South West Trains in the London Travelcard area from May 2011. SWT was the last rail company franchise not to offer this facility (except at Wimbledon and Richmond stations) for passengers using suburban rail services within the London Travelcard area.[17]

Penalty fares[]

South West Trains currently issues penalty fares for passengers travelling by train without a valid ticket. However, the company has planned to install at least one self-service ticket machine at each of its served stations in the bid to stop fare evasion.

The penalty fare is either £20 or double the travelled fare, whichever is greater. This does not apply at Chandler's Ford, the stations west of Salisbury (e.g. Axminster). Revenue Protection Officers employed by SWT travel the network and are visible at stations to enforce penalty fares and issue some tickets; aside from station ticket barriers and permit-to-travel machines, CCTV is used to combat ticketless travel and prevent assaults on members of staff and customers.

From August 2007, South West Trains has reinforced the penalty fares policy with announcements at stations prompting travellers to buy tickets before boarding. This clamp-down has been criticised due to the lack of "self-service" ticketing machines and the long queues at booking offices due to a lack of staff, which impedes the ability to buy tickets.[citation needed]

Route changes[]

The South West Trains network has changed considerably since privatisation in 1996. It no longer serves West Croydon, Sutton, stations between Chichester and Brighton, or the mainline portion of Reading. South West Trains does now serve stations to Bristol (introduced in 2004 to replace withdrawn Arriva Trains Wales services), Mottisfont and Dunbridge and Dean. Services beyond Exeter to Paignton, Plymouth and Penzance ceased in December 2009 to release stock for the hourly Waterloo - Exeter service.[18]

Megatrain[]

Main article: Megatrain

Stagecoach, SWT's parent company, currently sells seats on some off-peak services under the Megatrain brand from Mondays to Saturdays. This uses a similar low-cost model to its Megabus service. Megatrain tickets are available on certain services expected to be lightly loaded. Tickets are generally between London Waterloo and other principal stations, and ticket-holders are assigned to a specific carriage (normally the second from the front) in the train.

Performance[]

Latest performance figures released by NR (Network Rail) as of period 10 (2012/2013) were 89.5% (PPM) and 91.7% (MAA).[19]

Rolling stock details[]

In the early days of the franchise, South West Trains operated rolling stock inherited from British Rail. It applied its brand to the trains by modifying the Network SouthEast livery with an orange stripe, taking advantage of the similarity between the Network SouthEast livery and that of parent company Stagecoach.

The company later introduced new or refurbished trains, and has standardised on a set of three distinct liveries - mainly white for long-distance services, mainly blue for outer-suburban services, and mainly red for London commuter rail services. There are exceptions to this: most notably, the trains operating suburban rail services to Hounslow, Windsor and Weybridge via Staines-upon-Thames are in the blue livery as opposed to the red livery used on other services.

London Underground fleet[]

File:Isle of Wight Inselbahn.jpg

Class 483 train at Ryde Esplanade

On the Island Line, the clearances of a tunnel under Ryde are insufficient for standard trains. As a consequence, former London Underground rolling stock has been used since the line was electrified. Since 1992, Class 483 trains have been used, of which five two-car units remain in service. They date from 1938. SWT took on this fleet when it was awarded the combined South West/Island Line franchise in 2007 (though Island Line as a separate franchise was also previously operated by a separate Stagecoach owned company.[20]

Desiro fleet[]

The introduction of Desiro rolling stock built by Siemens was to replace the old Class 423 slam-door trains which were coming to the end of their useful lives, and which did not meet modern health and safety requirements. The introduction was delayed because of the additional power needs of this type of stock: Network Rail spent £1 billion upgrading the power supply to take account of this.[citation needed]

The new trains have on-board information systems and full air-conditioning. Their faster acceleration is counterbalanced by the need to dwell longer at each station, since they have fewer doors. In addition, the Desiros have many more components: all are computerised and subject to the possibility of breakdowns. It is estimated that the slam-door trains could achieve 60,000 miles (96,000 km) without breakdown; the Desiros an estimated 13,000 miles (20,800 km) but this is gradually improving.

The Desiro stock comes in two variants - Class 450 units which have four 20 m cars and are mainly used on suburban and outer-suburban services, and Class 444 units which have five 23 m cars as well as intercity-style door layouts and are used on longer-distance services to Weymouth.

  • The 450 Desiro Fleet includes 450001-127.
  • The 444 Desiro Fleet includes 444001-045.

British Rail EMUs (Class 455)[]

South West Trains operated a fleet of Class 455 metro-style commuter trains. These were built for British Rail.[21]

A full refurbishment program started in 2004 on the fleet of 91 four-car units and was completed in March 2008.[22] Modifications included a new 2+2 seating layout with high-back seats, CCTV, cycle storage, wheelchair space, doors that open further to allow for faster alighting, and additional passenger information systems. All units are now painted in a new red "Metro" version of the SWT livery.

Juniper fleet (Class 458)[]

File:Class 458 railway DC Unit - South West Trains livery - Virginia Water station - England - 280404.jpg

A Class 458 Juniper at Virginia Water in April 2004

Thirty of these four-car units were ordered by South West Trains in 1998, to create extra capacity and to replace some of the ageing 4Cep units, which at the time were on short-term lease. Deliveries of these units began in 1998.

The class suffered major technical problems, so in the event none of the older units was withdrawn from service at that time. It was six more years, in 2004, before the full fleet was in service. In 2003 and 2004, reliability was so poor that, although they were only six years old, South West Trains decided that the units should be replaced by 2005 with the newer Class 450 Desiro units.[23] Only a handful of units is required each day to help maintain services from Waterloo to Reading, and these had been expected to cease after 31 July 2006, when the lease with the rolling stock company expired. An application by SWT to extend this by six months was refused, as the class does not meet all the requirements of disability legislation.

However, later it was decided that, on or before the start of the new franchise in February 2007, the class would be reinstated and take over all operations on the Waterloo to Reading line, indirectly covering the loss of the Class 442s. They have been fitted with new, larger destination screens that comply with the disability legislation, but the trains still fall foul in some other areas, such as the height of the door-open buttons.

All 30 Class 458 trains are to be split up and the 120 vehicles reconfigured into 36 x 5-car sets, incorporating 60 extra vehicles from the mechanically similar Template:Brc (former Gatwick Express) fleet.[24] [25] The "new" 5-car sets will be designated Class 458/5 and coupled together to form 10-car trains to provide extra peak-time capacity on suburban services, starting in 2014.[26][27] The project is part of SWT's aspiration to become a "10-car railway".[25] The first trains are scheduled to arrive in May 2013.[24][27]

Diesel fleet[]

File:Salisbury TMD 159003 159017 159022 158887 960012.jpg

Line of 3 Class 159s, 1 Class 158 and the former route learning Class 960. The units in service are used for journeys where the line is not electrified.

South West Trains currently has 11 two-carriage Class 158s and 30 three-carriage Class 159s (22 159/0s and 8 159/1s).

The 159/1s were converted at Wabtec, Doncaster from Class 158s, received from First TransPennine Express in exchange for Class 170s. Eleven further two-carriage 158s were received from First TransPennine Express, which were also refurbished at Wabtec.

Two Class 158s transferred from Central Trains entered service in July 2005 on the new Bristol Temple Meads service, moving to First ScotRail in February 2007.[28]

Locomotives[]

Although South West Trains does not operate locomotive-hauled services, up until 2009 it maintained three Class 73 locomotives for "Thunderbird" (recovery) duties. Locomotive 73109 had been in service with SWT since the start of the franchise, while the other two, 73201 and 73235, were acquired from Gatwick Express in 2005. 73235 is now the only one of the three locomotives to be owned by South West Trains.

Rolling stock[]

Fleet at end of franchise[]

Class Image Type Top speed Number Routes operated Built
mph km/h
Class 73 File:73201 at Woking.jpg Electro-diesel locomotive 90 145 1 Thunderbird Locomotive 1962
Class 158 Express Sprinter File:South West Trains 158786 at Bristol Temple Meads 03.jpg Diesel multiple unit 90 145 11 London Waterloo - Salisbury / Bristol Temple Meads
Romsey - Salisbury via Southampton Central
Brockenhurst - Lymington Pier (Weekday services)
1989-1992
Class 159 South Western Turbo File:159013 at Trowbridge.JPG Diesel multiple unit 90 145 30 West of England / Wessex Main Lines:
London Waterloo - Salisbury / Bristol Temple Meads / Exeter St Davids
Portsmouth Harbour - Basingstoke (Morning Service)
Portsmouth Harbour - Southampton Central (Occasionally)
159/0 1992 - 1993
159/1 Converted 2006 - 2007
Class 444 Desiro File:444026 at Waterloo.jpg Electric multiple unit 100 160 45 Main Line Routes:
London Waterloo - Poole / Weymouth

London Waterloo - Portsmouth Harbour (Shared with Class 450s Weekdays and Sundays)
Limited Outer Suburban Routes

2003–2004
Class 450 Desiro File:Unit 450565 at Feltham.JPG Electric multiple unit 100 160 127 Outer Suburban Routes:

450/0
London Waterloo - Portsmouth Harbour (Shared with Class 444s weekdays and Sundays)/ Alton / Basingstoke / Poole (Occasionally) / Reading (Occasionally)
Southampton Central - Portsmouth & Southsea
Brockenhurst - Lymington Pier (Weekend services)
450/5
London Waterloo - Windsor & Eton Riverside / Weybridge via Staines-upon-Thames / London Waterloo via Hounslow
Ascot - Guildford
Limited Express and Inner suburban services

2002–2006
Class 455 File:SWT Class 455 refurbished.jpg Electric multiple unit 75 120 91 Inner Suburban Routes:
London Waterloo - Shepperton / Hampton Court / Woking / London Waterloo via Hounslow /London Waterloo via Strawberry Hill / Dorking / Guildford via Oxshott or Epsom / Chessington South / Windsor & Eton Riverside
1982 - 1985
2004 - 2007 (refurbished)
Class 458 (4Jop) Juniper File:8030 at London Waterloo.JPG Electric multiple unit 100 160 30 Outer Suburban Services:London Waterloo - Reading /

Ascot - Guildford

1998-2002
Class 483 File:Isle of Wight Inselbahn.jpg Electric multiple unit 45 72.5 6 Ryde Pier Head - Shanklin 1938
1989 - 1992 (refurbished)

Past fleet[]

 Class   Image   Type   Number   Withdrawn   Notes 
Class 170 Turbostar File:Stdenys 170392.jpg Diesel multiple unit 9 July 2007 8 transferred to First TransPennine Express, 1 to Southern where it was converted to a Class 171
Class 411 (4Cep) File:1586 at London Victoria.jpg Electric multiple unit 29 May 2005 Some preserved
Class 412 (4Bep) File:2325 departing London Waterloo.jpg Electric multiple unit 7 May 2005 Some preserved
Class 421 (4Cig) File:1313 at London Waterloo.JPG Electric multiple unit 32 May 2005 Two were retained for heritage operations on the Lymington Branch Line until May 2010, as 3Cig units. Most of the remainder preserved due to historic significance, as have the two retained until 2010. Very few have been scrapped.
Class 421 (3Cig) File:1498 at Lymington Pier.JPG Electric multiple unit 2 May 2010 421497 preserved to the Mid Norfolk Railway.
421498 preserved by the Epping Ongar Railway.
Class 423 (4Vep) File:3414 and 3419 at London Waterloo.JPG Electric multiple unit 66 May 2005 Some preserved
Class 442 (5Wes) Wessex Electric File:2407 at Moreton, Dorset.JPG Electric multiple unit 24 February 2007 Withdrawn in favour of Class 444 Desiro units. Now operating Gatwick Express/Southern services.
Class 960 File:960012.jpg Diesel multiple unit 1 March 2009 Preserved on Swanage Railway

Future fleet[]

 Class   Image   Type   Number   Notes 
Class 456 File:Southern456015-WandsworthRoad-20040927.JPG Electric Multiple Unit 24 Due to be transferred from Southern in 2014
Class 458/5 File:460003 at Victoria 2.jpg Electric Multiple Unit 36 120 x Class 458 & 60 x Class 460 carriages to form 36 x 5 car sets
from 2013 allowing SWT to run 10-carriage trains

Wessex Electrics Fleet[]

These units (Template:BRC) were initially dedicated to the Weymouth line but, through the 1990s, began to be diagrammed on the London to Portsmouth direct line. In preparation for the Class 444 and Class 450 "Desiro" units taking over from the slam-door fleet, the Wessex Electrics were withdrawn from Portsmouth line services and were again wholly dedicated to the Weymouth line.

South West Trains announced that it would be withdrawing these units, and the last operated SWT service was on 3 February 2007. This move also coincided with SWT reinstating all Class 458s for the Waterloo-Reading line. As a result, the Class 444s inherited the Waterloo - Weymouth route and the Class 450s took over some of the Portsmouth Harbour services, while the 442s went into storage at Eastleigh. In 2008, Southern went on to lease these trains for its Gatwick Express service, and is now operating services from London Victoria to Gatwick Airport and Brighton.[29]

Turbostar Fleet[]

In 2000, South West Trains acquired a fleet of eight 2-carriage Class 170/3 units, to supplement its existing Class 159 fleet. Units were deployed on London Waterloo to Salisbury as well as a new Southampton local train, and Reading to Basingstoke trains. They were sometimes pressed into use on Exeter St Davids railway station services, but as they were not fitted with end gangways for catering or selective door opening for the short platforms at some stations, this was not a regular route.

From late 2006 to mid-2007, the Class 170s were gradually transferred to First TransPennine Express in exchange for a larger number of Class 158 units, to expand and standardise the fleet. One, 170392, which was originally built to Southern specifications, but taken over by SWT soon after its construction, went to Southern and was converted to a Class 171.

Greyhound Fleet[]

The final slam-door train on regular passenger services ran from London Waterloo to Bournemouth on 26 May 2005 with units 421396, 423536 and 421398. Some slam-door units have been preserved on heritage railways and three were retained by SWT for operations on the Lymington Branch Line and for special duties.

Services on the Lymington branch were operated as a "heritage" operation using one of two refurbished 3Cig units, nos. 421497 and 421498. The two units were repainted in their original liveries, one in classic Southern Region green and the other in British Rail blue and grey, and went into service on 12 May 2005. Following the May 2010 timetable change, these have now been replaced on the Lymington branch by Class 158 units during the week and Class 450 units at the weekend.[30]

Preserved SWT trains[]

File:3417 Eastleigh 100.JPG

423417 on display at an Open Day at Eastleigh Works in May 2009, alongside one of the operational 3CIG units.

Of the Classes 411, 412, 421 and 423 slam-door trains, several complete former SWT units have been preserved.

  • Class 411 411198 at Dartmoor Railway
  • Class 412 412311 and 422315 at Eden Valley Railway
  • Class 412 412325 at East Kent Railway (heritage)
  • Class 421 421392 and 421499 at Dean Forest Railway
  • Class 421 421393 at Great Central Railway
  • Class 421 421399 at Dartmoor Railway
  • Class 421 421497 at Mid-Norfolk Railway
  • Class 421 421498 at Epping Ongar Railway
  • Class 423 423417 at Bluebell Railway, stored at East Grinstead station.

In contrast, just two former Southern units have been preserved - one Class 421 and one Class 423. No complete units from South Eastern Trains have been preserved.

Diagrams[]

Diagrams of operational trains

File:Class 159 South West Trains Diagram.PNG File:Class 444 South West Trains Diagram.PNG File:Class 450 South West Trains Diagram.PNG File:Class 455 South West Trains Diagram.PNG

Depots[]

Wimbledon Traincare depot[]

Main article: Wimbledon Traincare depot

Wimbledon Traincare depot is one of Europe's most advanced train servicing complexes. It is located between Wimbledon and Earlsfield stations, on the main line to Waterloo, and is, coincidentally, situated next to South West Trains' other iconic landmark, the Wimbledon Train Viaduct.

Bournemouth Traincare Depot[]

Bournemouth train care depot is South West of Bournemouth railway station, occupying the approach to the former Bournemouth West Station. Up until their withdrawal in February 2007, the depot was home to the Class 442 (5Wes) Wessex Electrics. The branch turns off at Branksome railway station and trains can be seen stopping at platform 2 and reversing into the depot.

Clapham Traincare depot[]

Clapham Junction depot provides stabling for the fleet. It does not carry out any maintenance but does have a carriage washer that is regularly used.

Northam Traincare Depot[]

Northam Traincare Depot was built by Siemens in 2002 as the home depot for the Desiro fleet as part of a 20-year maintenance contract.[31] It is located south of St Denys railway station and is near Southampton Football Club's St Mary's Stadium.

Salisbury Traincare Depot[]

Salisbury depot provides servicing for South West Trains' diesel fleet.

Fratton Traincare Depot[]

Fratton Traincare Depot sits on the South Coast in Portsmouth. The Depot occupies the site alongside Fratton station, with two of the sidings right next to Goldsmith Avenue. It has a carriage washer and is the fuelling point for the 158s and 159s. The Depot has a Train Shed with two pitted roads for maintenance of rolling stock. Class 444 and 450 units berth overnight there, and there are stabling sidings and bay platforms at Portsmouth & Southsea station all of which come under the control of the Depot at Night.

Farnham Traincare Depot[]

Farnham depot, in Weydon Lane, was opened by the Southern Railway at the time of the electrification of the Portsmouth and Alton lines in 1937.[32] It was refurbished for the introduction of modern units when slam-door trains were replaced circa 2005. At the same time, disused quarry and ballast dump sidings behind the carriage shed were removed and a number of outdoor sidings were laid for overnight storage and servicing of units.

Criticism of South West Trains[]

Template:Outdated In May 2011, the train company faced media attention after dismissing a ticket clerk for carrying out unauthorised work on the track of an active, electrified railway line in Hampshire. As the clerk claimed to be removing an obstacle from the track, the press supported him and a 7,000-name petition was collected.[33] The case was heard at an Industrial Tribunal in Southampton on 1 November 2011, where South West Trains presented its side of the story. The ticket clerk did not contest his dismissal when his barrister was presented with the full facts of the case by SWT.[34]

See also[]

Template:Portal

External links[]

Template:Commons category

References[]

  1. Companies House extract company no 5599788 Stagecoach South Western Trains Limited
  2. Template:Cite press release
  3. Companies House extract company no 2938995. South Western Trains Limited.
  4. Template:Cite press release
  5. Rail Magazine Issue 448 13 November 2002 Page 4
  6. Template:Cite press release
  7. South Western stakeholder briefing. Department for Transport. 4 April 2006.
  8. Template:Cite news
  9. Template:Cite news
  10. Template:Cite news
  11. Template:Cite news
  12. Cycle policy. South West Trains.
  13. Buying tickets on the day. South West Trains.
  14. Template:Cite news
  15. South West Trains proposes new ticket office opening hours. South West Trains.
  16. Passengers to benefit from roll-out of Oyster pay as you go to South West Trains services. South West Trains. Retrieved on 19 November 2010.
  17. Template:Cite press release
  18. Template:Citation/core
  19. Performance by train operator. Network Rail.
  20. Companies House extract company no 3007942 Island Line Limited)
  21. Our trains. South West Trains. Retrieved on 19 November 2010.
  22. South West Trains' last class 455 returns from refurbishment. Rail Technology Magazine (28 March 2008). Retrieved on 19 November 2010.
  23. Template:Cite news
  24. 24.0 24.1 Template:Cite news
  25. 25.0 25.1 Template:Cite news
  26. Template:Cite news
  27. 27.0 27.1 Template:Cite press release
  28. Class 158 scot-rail.co.uk
  29. More trains arriving on busy rail routes (Note 5). Department for Transport (4 April 2007).
  30. New South West Trains timetables. South West Trains. Retrieved on 29 May 2010.
  31. "Desiro UK demands a pit stop approach". Railway Gazette. 1 March 2002.
  32. Railway Gazette, 1937
  33. Template:Cite news
  34. Template:Cite news
Preceded by
Network SouthEast
As part of British Rail
Operator of South West franchise
1996 - 2007
Succeeded by
South West Trains
South Western franchise
Preceded by
Island Line
Island Line franchise
Operator of South Western franchise
2007 - present
Incumbent
Preceded by
South West Trains
South West franchise

Template:Use dmy dates

Advertisement