Sie sehen gerade die Germany Version der Website.
Möchten Sie zu Ihrer lokalen Seite wechseln?
Neueste Ausgabe

Railnews Magazine January 2024 Zurück Ausgabe

English
10 Bewertungen   •  English   •   Aviation & Transport (Rail)
Only €4,99
Railnews for January leads with the news that HS2 Ltd is preparing for a ‘critical new phase’ as work on the surviving section of Phase 1 between Old Oak Common in west London and Birmingham Curzon Street is stepped up, with an investment of £5 billion in new contracts for 2024, while a council on the route of HS2 to Crewe says cancellation could force it into bankruptcy

Strikes on the Underground were expected to go ahead when Railnews closed for press, but it was later announced by the RMT that they were being called off.

Winter storms disrupted train services in many areas in December and January, and we have pictures of flooded railways in Scotland.

The regional managing director at Network Rail Wales & Western Michelle Handforth resigned in mid-December, after a prolonged delay on the approaches to London Paddington. Network Rail chief executive Andrew Haines was among the trapped passengers, and said: ‘We have gone backwards on customer service.’

In other news, FirstGroup has applied to run an open access service between London and Sheffield, the Rail Delivery Group has named Arriva’s David Brown as its new chair, new stations have opened at Brent Cross West and East Linton, engineers have continued to install digital signalling between Peterborough and Grantham, the final sections of track have been installed to relieve a bottleneck on the Hope Valley line, and Network Rail completed upgrades worth £127 million over Christmas and New Year.

In London, the Government has agreed to provide £250 million to TfL for 2024, but there is growing concern in Derby after Alstom MD Nick Crossfield warned that the Litchurch Lane works have only a few weeks left. In Cornwall, the council has approved Mid Cornwall Metro between Newquay and Falmouth.

Railnews for January is out now.
read more read less
Railnews Preview Pages Railnews Preview Pages Railnews Preview Pages Railnews Preview Pages Railnews Preview Pages Railnews Preview Pages Railnews Preview Pages Railnews Preview Pages

Railnews

January 2024 Railnews for January leads with the news that HS2 Ltd is preparing for a ‘critical new phase’ as work on the surviving section of Phase 1 between Old Oak Common in west London and Birmingham Curzon Street is stepped up, with an investment of £5 billion in new contracts for 2024, while a council on the route of HS2 to Crewe says cancellation could force it into bankruptcy Strikes on the Underground were expected to go ahead when Railnews closed for press, but it was later announced by the RMT that they were being called off. Winter storms disrupted train services in many areas in December and January, and we have pictures of flooded railways in Scotland. The regional managing director at Network Rail Wales & Western Michelle Handforth resigned in mid-December, after a prolonged delay on the approaches to London Paddington. Network Rail chief executive Andrew Haines was among the trapped passengers, and said: ‘We have gone backwards on customer service.’ In other news, FirstGroup has applied to run an open access service between London and Sheffield, the Rail Delivery Group has named Arriva’s David Brown as its new chair, new stations have opened at Brent Cross West and East Linton, engineers have continued to install digital signalling between Peterborough and Grantham, the final sections of track have been installed to relieve a bottleneck on the Hope Valley line, and Network Rail completed upgrades worth £127 million over Christmas and New Year. In London, the Government has agreed to provide £250 million to TfL for 2024, but there is growing concern in Derby after Alstom MD Nick Crossfield warned that the Litchurch Lane works have only a few weeks left. In Cornwall, the council has approved Mid Cornwall Metro between Newquay and Falmouth. Railnews for January is out now.


FORMAT AUSWÄHLEN:
Sofortiger Zugang

Verfügbare digitale Angebote:

Einzelne digitale Back Issue January 2024
 
4,99 / issue
Diese Ausgabe und andere ältere Ausgaben sind nicht in einem Railnews Abonnement. Das Abonnement enthält die letzte reguläre Ausgabe und die während des Abonnements erscheinenden neuen Ausgaben und ist bereits ab einem Betrag von €2,00 pro Ausgabe . Wenn Sie ein Abonnement abschließen möchten, sehen Sie sich bitte unsere Abonnement-Optionen
Die Ersparnisse werden auf der Grundlage eines vergleichbaren Kaufs von Einzelausgaben über einen annualisierten Abonnementzeitraum berechnet und können von den angegebenen Beträgen abweichen. Die Berechnungen dienen nur zu Illustrationszwecken. Digitale Abonnements beinhalten die letzte Ausgabe und alle regulären Ausgaben, die während Ihres Abonnements erscheinen, sofern nicht anders angegeben. Das von Ihnen gewählte Abonnement verlängert sich automatisch, wenn es nicht bis zu 24 Stunden vor Ablauf des laufenden Abonnements im Bereich Mein Konto gekündigt wird.

Issue Cover

Railnews  |  January 2024  


Railnews for January leads with the news that HS2 Ltd is preparing for a ‘critical new phase’ as work on the surviving section of Phase 1 between Old Oak Common in west London and Birmingham Curzon Street is stepped up, with an investment of £5 billion in new contracts for 2024, while a council on the route of HS2 to Crewe says cancellation could force it into bankruptcy

Strikes on the Underground were expected to go ahead when Railnews closed for press, but it was later announced by the RMT that they were being called off.

Winter storms disrupted train services in many areas in December and January, and we have pictures of flooded railways in Scotland.

The regional managing director at Network Rail Wales & Western Michelle Handforth resigned in mid-December, after a prolonged delay on the approaches to London Paddington. Network Rail chief executive Andrew Haines was among the trapped passengers, and said: ‘We have gone backwards on customer service.’

In other news, FirstGroup has applied to run an open access service between London and Sheffield, the Rail Delivery Group has named Arriva’s David Brown as its new chair, new stations have opened at Brent Cross West and East Linton, engineers have continued to install digital signalling between Peterborough and Grantham, the final sections of track have been installed to relieve a bottleneck on the Hope Valley line, and Network Rail completed upgrades worth £127 million over Christmas and New Year.

In London, the Government has agreed to provide £250 million to TfL for 2024, but there is growing concern in Derby after Alstom MD Nick Crossfield warned that the Litchurch Lane works have only a few weeks left. In Cornwall, the council has approved Mid Cornwall Metro between Newquay and Falmouth.

Railnews for January is out now.
mehr lesen weniger lesen
Railnews is the number one publication for the rail industry, focusing on the people and business that keep today’s railway running. Originally produced in 1963 as the house newspaper for British Rail, Railnews continues to inform and impress in the modern industry. As well as in-depth editorial, the newspaper features views and opinions from readers and industry insiders alike.

Als Abonnent erhalten Sie die folgenden Vorteile:


•  Ein Rabatt auf den UVP Ihrer Zeitschrift
•  Ihr Magazin wird jeden Monat auf Ihr Gerät geliefert
•  Sie werden keine Ausgabe verpassen
•  Sie sind vor Preiserhöhungen geschützt, die später im Jahr eintreten können

Sie erhalten 12 Ausgaben während eines 1-Jahres Railnews Zeitschriftenabonnement.

Hinweis: Die digitalen Ausgaben enthalten nicht die in den gedruckten Exemplaren enthaltenen Umschlagseiten oder Beilagen.

Ihr Kauf hier bei Pocketmags.com kann auf jeder der folgenden Plattformen gelesen werden.


Sie können hier auf der Website lesen oder die App für Ihre Plattform herunterladen. Vergessen Sie nicht, sich mit Ihrem Pocketmags-Benutzernamen und Passwort anzumelden.

Apple Pocketmags Online Pocketmags Google Pocketmags
Die Pocketmags App läuft auf allen iPad und iPhone Geräten mit iOS 13.0 oder höher, Android 8.0 oder höher und Fire Tablet (Gen 3) oder höher. Unser Webreader funktioniert mit jedem HTML5-kompatiblen Browser, für PC und Mac empfehlen wir Chrome oder Firefox.

Für iOS empfehlen wir jedes Gerät, auf dem das neueste iOS für bessere Leistung und Stabilität läuft. Bei älteren Modellen mit niedrigeren Prozessor- und RAM-Spezifikationen kann es zu einer langsameren Seitenwiedergabe und gelegentlichen App-Abstürzen kommen, die außerhalb unserer Kontrolle liegen.
4,5
/5
Basierend auf 10 Kundenrezensionen
5
7
4
2
3
0
2
1
1
0
Rezensionen ansehen

Really interesting

Great for all those trainspotters out there Überprüft 25 April 2022

Always contemporary

The most up-to-date information on all with regard to the railway network Überprüft 09 April 2022

Railnews

I had a lot of trouble getting Railnews online so I've had to go back to getting it delivered. now we're in this pandemic, I'm having to go back to reading it online again. Überprüft 08 Mai 2020

Artikel in dieser Ausgabe


Im Folgenden finden Sie eine Auswahl von Artikeln aus Railnews January 2024.