Disused since July 1985, Lea Bridge station was re-opened in May 2016 after a 5-year Railfuture campaign.
In 2012 Railfuture and the Chingford Line Users Association (CLUA) commissioned a report by JR Consulting, to be used in specialist lobbying of key rail industry and political decision-makers for improving access from Waltham Forest to the rail network, in three ways:
- reopening Lea Bridge station (closed July 1985) by the end of Network Rail's Control Period 4 in March 2014;
- doubling local Lea Valley line services in and out of Stratford to four trains per hour, and on seven days a week, during Control Period 5 2014-19;
- improving direct links between Chingford/Walthamstow and Stratford, with its multi-modal interchange, by the end of Control Period 6 in 2024 eg reopening Hall Farm curve.
Lea Valley line
We have campaigned for changes to achieve a regular all-day/every-day four trains per hour clock-face service for the Lower Lea Valley line, as well as ensure the success of Lea Bridge Station now that it has reopened.Timeline
- May 2017. Network Rail announce start of works which will deliver an additional 2tph between Stratford and Angel Road/Meridian Water.
- June 2017. Network Rail announce local information sessions about works at Northumberland Park.
- July 2017. Network Rail announce Tottenham level crossing closed to make way for major railway improvements.
- August 2017. Network Rail announce extra track to be installed in Lee Valley this autumn for a bigger and better railway.
- November 2017. Network Rail show bridge removal, for replacement as part of project for the 2 extra trains per hour in 2019.
- January 2018. Network Rail show replacement new bridge installed.
- February 2018. Two videos of Meridian Water station under construction, due to open May 2019.
- March 2018. Video of new Lea Valley third track installed.
- April 2018. Video of installation of connection between third track and Lea Valley main line.
- June 2018. Video of Meridian Water station build.
- June 2018. Video of installation of new Northumberland Park footbridge.
- August 2018. Video of trackworks 80% complete.
- November 2018. Video of new step-free Northumberland Park footbridge.
- January 2019. Video of progress towards completion of Meridian Water station ready for transfer of services from Angel Road station, which will close, in May.
- May 2019. Anticipated closure of Angel Road station on Friday 17 May/opening of Meridian Water station on Monday 20 May with timetable change deferred to Friday 31 May/Monday 3 June.
- June 2019. New station for Meridian Water opened Monday 3 June 2019, replacing London's least-used station Angel Road. Added to film series All the stations. Greater Anglia's timetable for Bishop's Stortford to Stratford from 19 May 2019 confirmed all-day/every-day half-hourly services to be added to the opening 'preview' weekdays peak periods-only services from Monday 9 September 2019.
- September 2019. Meridian Water station now served by all-day/every day half-hourly services.
- October 2019. Network Rail's Lee Valley Rail Programme in numbers (and videos).
Lea Bridge station
Our parallel campaign to reopen Lea Bridge station began to really take off in 2011, as described in this newsletter article. Then we received some encouraging news from Waltham Forest Council on 29 January 2013.On 26 March 2013 the Secretary of State for Transport confirmed Lea Bridge as one of just three stations in the country to benefit from the £20m New Stations Fund. Read more about the new stations fund launch in late-January, new stations fund bids in mid-March, and the Transport Secretary's Commons statement in late-March 2013.
On 15 May 2013 the Department for Transport finally confirmed the funding for Lea Bridge station, now planned to re-open by the end of 2015 - 30 years after closure in July 1985. See local press coverage.
On 10 July 2015 new Transport Minister Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon visited the site to mark the start of works and confirm Spring 2016 as the opening date. Read more from the DfT: Lea Bridge works start, and articles in July station campaign success and in August: London station to re-open.
Then in February 2016: Lea Bridge station reopening draws near.
The reopening was confirmed for May 2016 timetable change. See Railfuture's press release and article Party time! Also Network Rail's press release and news feature.
Within weeks, a developer confirmed plans for a new 300-homes development close to the re-opened station. See also "New Zone 3 homes for first-time buyers", "New east London hot-spot" and more at June 2016, March 2017 and January 2019.
Now see Lea Bridge masterplan and images.
JRC report
Extracted summary of the 2012 Lea Valley Rail - Better Access to Jobs and Homes report below:This report shows how much more the existing railways can achieve and contribute to the Lea Valley’s future economic, social and environmental goals.
The Lea Valley requires better connectivity, to help the creation of new jobs and homes and to enable the area’s economic structure to strengthen and grow, with catchments accessible by public transport. This requires smart thinking, better use of existing infrastructure and a few new elements.
The Chingford Line Users Association (CLUA) and Railfuture looked particularly at the Waltham Forest catchments. Waltham Forest is the ‘borough across the Valley’ and needs better integration into the main Lea Valley transport corridors.
JRC was commissioned in March 2012 by CLUA and Railfuture (whose Fighting Fund funded the report) to write an appraisal of three significant rail projects in the Lea Valley, and to set out their merits.
This report responds to that commission. It describes each scheme sequentially, the rationales and merits of the proposals, present status, service plans, foreseeable demand and costs, funding matters and next steps. The report’s structure is:
Part 1: The Lea Valley’s economic, planning and transport context
Part 2: Reopening Lea Bridge station
Part 3: Better Lea Valley rail services
Part 4: Chingford Line access to Stratford.
Practitioners and campaigners will appreciate that securing even small changes in railway services and infrastructure can be a lengthy challenge that needs the best arguments and clarity about the project purpose, and to set out these points to stakeholders, funders and decision-makers. JRC hopes that this report will help the advocates of these rail projects to make the case successfully.
The desired forward timetable for the main projects offers the prospect of continuing improvements in Lea Valley Rail over the next decade, which is in keeping with the wider regeneration and economic growth agenda for the Lea Valley:
2012 Inclusion of an improved local Lea Valley rail service in 2014-19 spending
2013 Go ahead for Lea Bridge station reopening, final planning for Lea Valley locals
2014 Lea Bridge reopened, start of work on Lea Valley locals, Hackney Interchange
2015 Completion of initial works and roll-out of first improved local services
2016 Initial stance on project priorities in 2019-24, including the case for Chingford-Stratford.
(Extracted page 3 from JRC (Jonathan Roberts Consulting) June 2012 Report ‘Lea Valley Rail - Better Access to Jobs and Homes’ commissioned by Railfuture and Chingford Line Users’ Association, with minor edits.)
View or download a presentation about the JRC Report to the CLUA 2012 AGM.
View or download the full 25-page JRC Report
View or download Jonathan Roberts' presentation at Waltham Forest Town Hall to Lea Bridge businesses and developers.
Chingford Line Users' Association
CLUA is the local rail user group which exists to help improve train services between Chingford through Walthamstow and London Liverpool Street, and between the Lea Valley line and Stratford.We also have a long-term campaign to provide a direct Chingford-Walthamstow-Stratford rail link, by reopening the Hall Farm Curve.
You can contact CLUA to help our campaigning: email roger.gillham at geo2.poptel.org.uk or telephone him on 0845 456 4977.