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Donington Road

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  1. OK, OK, I'll grant you an exclusive pass to the private viewing platform Morgan Sindall are installing for me next week.
  2. Thank you for posting that Richard. Lot of heads on the A15, brave souls. Caught Mrs Trackside ECML videoing us from Lincoln Road.
  3. Coming back the other way over the ladder at Glinton Junction was so smooth you couldn't feel any movement. The only indication it is there are all the lineside boxes. The only way to avoid the squished up view of telephoto lenses would be to allow us me access to that nice tarmaced area adjacent to Glinton Junction.
  4. Perhaps we will be put out to grass like those horses at Hurn Road before going off to the knackers yard. Meanwhile, I'll take the redundancy money for a better video camera. Thank you for the recognition Jonathan. I must say from my point of view it has been a pleasure being out and about to keep everyone up to date with what has been an excellent project in our back yard. Thanks also go to everyone here who has followed this thread, joined in numerous conversations with expert knowledge and observations, humorous anecdotes and other trivia. I must say I have learned a lot more about railway workings and operations and above all constructional engineering from following this thread and engaging with those contractors around the site. As they say, you are never to old to learn.
  5. It might not be the best video in the world but it was taking part in the event that counted. I, along with Richard Elms and Trackside ECML were privilaged to be invited by LNER to be on the first official passenger train to traverse the Werrington dive under in both directions. We had known about this event for awhile and LNER explicitly asked all invitees not to reveal any details on social media until after the event had taken place. As you can image it has been hard to resist joining in with all the speculation that has abounded in recent posts.
  6. Oh dear, whether intentional or not, Hull Trains have usurped another operator whose service was to be the first passenger train through the dive under. I think someone may be on the naughty step tomorrow trying to explain why it was routed that way.
  7. I don't put my Trains Around Werrington Junction videos on here as they are a bit off topic to the subject under discussion. But on the latest one I have done there are a couple of clips mid way through the video of freight using the new lines at Glinton Junction to Lincoln Road on Tuesday if anyone is interested. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qQB4DHBxbQw
  8. Just a few additions to todays photos from Crun. The wide way has been cleared of rubbish and is being checked over. The entrance the the dive under access from Hurn Road has gained some Armco and the north side bank of Brook Drain has been given a haircut. The topsoil in the centre of the field is being transported to the old car park, from where topsoil was taken to cover the old haul road last week, which is behind it. Some of the topsoil was also being taken to cover the old haul road that runs alonside the new Hurn Road. A larger expandable version of this image can be downloaded from here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1vNLWcEeCJUfS2vKdl3sFt0_W67A0ckU-/view?usp=sharing Concrete barriers were being removed from the top of the railway embankment adjacent to the Hurn Road entrance. The gap were the concrete barriers are being removed so that the green fencing can be completed. It is a bit odd that the railway is not secured while trains are now running on the new line. A larger downloadable image can be had from here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/18mxjzNGtjNZdpjR0f_oZhnzyFYBgMSjL/view?usp=sharing .....and finally, our friendly security chap was doing a spot of gardening around his office. At least he has not been left out in the open with just a chair like his colleague was at Stirling Way.
  9. Trackside ECML went to Lincoln Road about 3:00pm to check if the sleepers and red flags had been removed while I went home frozen. He saw nothing and went home then five minutes later this happened! Totally unexpected. The first train going north 66726. 4E21 1120 Felixstowe South Gbrf to Tinsley Yard Gbrf caught by Andrew Winch at 15:05. The second train to use the dive under 66065, 456N 1127 Bow Depot to Heck Plasmor P S approaching from Marholm Junction.
  10. In addition to the two (plastic?) plates shown glued on the public side of the bridge span, which I don't see surviving for very long there is one on the concrete parapet railway side which should survive for much longer. I couldn't see either, my hands were too cold to be changing lenses. There are new signs, mile markers as we now know along the Down Stamford.
  11. The three signs I photographed are in the northern section. If there is a one zero marker that would put it somewhere in the entrance to the north portal of the tunnel. I don't know off hand the exact distance from Marholm Junction to Glinton Junction but it is the region of 1.5 to 1.75 miles.
  12. Can anyone shed any light on what these new signs are? I have had a look on the Railway Signs http://www.railsigns.uk/ site but cannot see anything that they could be. Look at all the photos first. They are triangular in shape so facing both directions. Also permanently fixed not temporary. The middle one is obscured by the foliage which leads me to think that they are not that important to the running of trains otherwise I would have expected them to be lineside of the conduit channel. The far one is 1 - III, the near one is 1 - II ? and the one under the A15 is 1 - I
  13. This is the post you are referring to Phil. https://www.rmweb.co.uk/community/index.php?/topic/110286-east-coast-mainline-blockade-for-werrington-junction-diveunder/&do=findComment&comment=4573957
  14. This shows how a telephoto lens works the other way round and can make the ungainly overhead view above seem rather neat, even though it is far from it in real life. I suspect Glinton Junction is far neater on the ground than all the views we get from afar.
  15. The haul road that connected the Hurn Road site to Waterworks Lane alongside the new Hurn Road is being removed. To the left of the hedge is the A15 dual carraigeway, centre is the new Hurn Road with passing places and the excavator ripping up the haul road. This is the entrance off Waterworks Lane where the haul road went through the fields to the Hurn Road site. Looking towards Glinton, this is about half way between the Hurn road site and Waterworks Lane. The Gas distribution centre is on the left
  16. Nothing has changed at the main site since last week, the bridges are still in place and the topsoil is still in a heap ready to be spread across the field. On to Hurn Road. Topsoil is being spread over the severed haul road next to the green fence. The soil is coming from a pile on what was the old car park next to the bungalow. All vehicles are now using the new access off Hurn Road to get to and from the dive under area next to the ECML. On the south side of the dive under embankment Armco fencing has been installed on the Joint Line side and they are presently boring post holes on the dive under side.
  17. Very sad news from you Mike. Please accept my condolences. Keep Strong.
  18. Still no changes at the access entrance next to Walton footbridge. Surprised the local scrotes have not had those cables away, although they do look to be steel rather than copper.
  19. Also spotted were these signs positioned about every 100 yards along the west bank of the new Brook Drain. Those who do not understand the concept of water and a deep drain probably cannot read either so who are the signs aimed at? Then there is some Armco which has been installed just west of the Stamford Line. Unsure whether it will continue along to Cock Lane as there was no sign of further pieces laying around. There is quite a bit already erected in the background and a length to the right (between the blue bowser and chap in orange) which also protects Brook Drain as well. Access to the maintenance tunnel is the green area just behind and to the right of the right of the van in the centre. Someone has been having a clear up. Can only presume that the rail has been cleared from here to Werrington Junction. No idea where the temporary crossing has come from. The one across the main line which joined that one still on the Up Slow (top left) was removed months ago, must have been hiding in the undergrowth.
  20. What is left of the main site viewed from Cock Lane 19th November 2021. A larger image can be downloaded from here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/17AhEoOXG--rROmhhwVhMg8JMXdcmOppi/view?usp=sharing View across the Marholm Brook spillway. The vehicle exit bridge to the left and the small pedestrian bridge over Marholm Brook that connect with Stirling Way have now been severed. The entrance bridge (centre) has had the concrete ramps removed from either side and a temporary hardcore ramp is being installed presumably for the dozer to access the field for spreading the topsoil which is still in a mound.
  21. Now for something completely off topic. Or could it be the start of a new adventure. There is something happening just north of the Foxcovert Road footbridge and it will 'dive under' the Joint Line. Looking west from Foxcovert Road, the houses are in the village of Glinton. The staggered trenches are about 100ft long, 6ft wide and 3ft deep. Looking in the opposite direction, east, the Joint Line runs across the centre of the photo just beyond the mound of earth behind the red poles. Peakirk to the left, Foxcovert Road footbridge to the right. Here is the explanation: https://www.anglianwater.co.uk/contentassets/1d01f1b64baa4aa9803f99c4265813f3/grantham-to-bexwell-pipeline-newsletter-august-2021.pdf https://www.peterboroughtoday.co.uk/news/environment/new-peterborough-pipelines-proposed-with-area-vulnerable-to-climate-change-3080778 https://www.anglianwater.co.uk/about-us/our-strategies-and-plans/new-water-pipelines/
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