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PRIVACY
Opinion

The new HS2 station that will add up to 10 minutes to south Wales to London train times

The Old Oak Common station close to Paddington will wipe out much of the speed benefits from electrification of the south Wales to London rail line

What HS2's new Old Oak Common station will look like(Image: HS2)

Next month a HS2 rail construction project is planned to begin a few miles west of Paddington station and alongside the main railway line from south Wales. HS2 has been previously criticised in this column, not for its clear advantages to north west England and Scotland, but for its economic disadvantages to Wales.

The other major (£2.9bn) railway investment, electrifying the south Wales to London main line with brand new high-capacity trains reduced journey times by fifteen minutes on that route resulting in positive economic benefits for south Wales.

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The HS2 engineering project and its operational consequences will neutralise some of that time saving. The consequence of this decision is further economic disadvantage to south Wales as predicted in this column back in November last year

Surely, one might argue, the remnants of the HS2 plan - the section between Birmingham and London - would not affect the railway service from and to south Wales. However, these northern England trains are planned to terminate at Old Oak Common, a few miles west of Paddington station, and not at their traditional London Euston destination.

The engineering works site alongside the main line is the location for an underground HS2 station serving the new Birmingham to London service with six 450 metre (one-third of a mile) HS2 underground platforms and eight new realigned east –west platforms. This requires a new four track route into Paddington to replace the existing line with consequent service disruption. Looking from the south Wales to London train it is currently the stabling (parking) area for the Elizabeth Line, Heathrow Express and Great Western Railway (GWR) trains along with some derelict land.

Unfortunately, the construction phase will be inconvenient for passengers and costly for both operating companies and the Department for Transport (DfT) during the building of a new interchange station to link the main line and Elizabeth Line trains to HS2 services. Consequently, the main line and Paddington Station will be closed every Christmas and many weekends (starting 19 November) over the next eight years according to HS2 Ltd. That will cause most of the disruption during the construction phase.