Rail lines reopen after fire near Stevenage caused travel disruption for Biggleswade passengers

The scene of the fire yesterday. Images: Network Rail.placeholder image
The scene of the fire yesterday. Images: Network Rail.
Rail lines have reopened after a fire at Stevenage caused travel disruption for passengers.

The blaze beside the railway was first reported by a train driver at 12.30pm yesterday (Wednesday 9 October) with Hertfordshire Fire and Rescue Service putting out the flames by 2pm.

But significant damage was caused to fibre-optic cables which caused major disruption to trains in and out of London King's Cross.

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Network Rail engineers worked throughout the night to restore railway signalling with the majority of trains running on the East Coast Main Line as normal this morning.

However, teams needed longer to repair the cabling which controls signals between Gordon Hill and Stevenage.

Engineers finished work at around 2pm today (Thursday) allowing the route to reopen for Thameslink and Great Northern rail services.

But passengers are still being encouraged to check National Rail Enquiries for the latest travel information as timetables return to normal.

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The fire caused damage to 25 individual telecommunications and signalling cables along a 20-metre-long section of railway.

Work will continue over the weekend to renew the protective casing the cables sit in – known as troughing – which was also badly damaged in the blaze.

But this won't impact train services and will be carried out to cause minimum disruption to passengers.

Paul Rutter, Network Rail’s East Coast route director, said: “I’d like to thank passengers for their patience after many had really challenging journeys due to the major signalling fire in Stevenage which badly damaged fibre-optic cabling yesterday.

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“Our engineers have now carried out repairs so the signalling systems are working for trains to run again on all routes. While timetables get back to normal we’d advise people to check National Rail Enquiries for the latest travel information.”

It’s not yet clear how the fire started, with investigations ongoing into the cause.

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