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Tributes to Chiltern Railways founder Adrian Shooter

Engineer was a pioneer and one of the first to lead a rail operator as a private venture following the Government's 1990s privatisation programme

Chiltern Railways founder Adrian Shooter, who has died aged 74, with a statue unveiled in his honour at London Marylebone station in August(Image: Chiltern Railways)

Tributes have flooded in following the death of railway pioneer and the founder of Chiltern Railways Adrian Shooter. Mr Shooter is famed for launching the operator in the 1990s which still exists today, connecting Birmingham, Solihull, Warwickshire and Oxfordshire with London Marylebone.

He died on December 13 at the age of 74 after revealing last year that he had been diagnosed with motor neurone disease.

Mr Shooter was an engineer by trade and began his career with British Rail in 1970, leading maintenance depots, managing London St Pancras and holding various other senior positions within the industry.

He led the creation of Chiltern Railways as it started operating the Chiltern franchise in 1996 and worked as both its managing director and chairman following the Government's programme of privatisation.

Mr Shooter later chaired London Overground, Tyne & Wear Metro, DB Regio º£½ÇÊÓÆµ (later known as Arriva Rail), Laing Rail and the West Midlands CBI Council among other bodies.

After retiring from Chiltern Railways, he set up green rail transport company Vivarail in Warwickshire in 2012 to develop sustainable, battery-powered trains and introduced the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's first diesel/battery hybrids in North Wales.

In 2010, he was awarded a CBE for his contribution to the rail industry and was a fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering, Institution of Mechanical Engineers and Chartered Institute of Transport.