Rail defences to be completed by 2023
Network Rail says sea wall will protect vital connection for next 100 years
WORK to complete the sea wall protecting the West’s main-line railway through Dawlish is expected to be completed by 2023.
On the seventh anniversary of the devastating storm that swept away the line, leaving the South West cut off for eight weeks, Network Rail says the sea wall is already protecting the line from high seas and good progress is being made on the second phase of the work.
Chris Pearce, Network Rail’s interim Western route director, said: “The work we are continuing to do in Dawlish will protect the town and region for at least the next 100 years.”
The first section of the £80 million sea wall project at Marine Parade was completed in July and has already proved itself in stormy weather. Work on the second section of wall began last November and is expected to take around two years to complete. It has involved the massive eight-legged Wave-walker (pictured) delivering the piling for the new coastal structure.
WORK to complete the sea wall protecting the main line railway through Dawlish is expected to be completed by 2023.
On the seventh anniversary of the devastating storm that swept away the line leaving the South West cut off for eight weeks, Network Rail has revealed how the sea wall is already protecting the line from high seas and updated on progress on the second phase of the work.
Chris Pearce, Network Rail’s interim Western route director, said: “We are really pleased with the progress we have made in Dawlish. Many will remember the significant damage to the railway in 2014 and the impact it had on Dawlish and the wider South West, and the work we are continuing to do in Dawlish will protect the town and region for at least the next 100 years.
“It has been great to see the interest of the local community in our project – particularly the presence of the Wavewalker – which has ensured we’ve managed to continue with the piling at the sea wall despite some of the stormy weather we’ve recently experienced.”
The first section of the £80million sea wall project at Marine Parade was completed in July and has already proved itself against high seas and stormy weather.
Work on the second section of the new sea wall began last November and has involved the innovative eight-legged Wavewalker – one of its kind in Europe – delivering the piling at the sea wall.
The Wavewalker is due to complete its work by February 20 and once all the piles have been installed, the next stage of the work will involve ‘scouring’ the piles, to protect against erosion, followed by the start of the installation of the wall
panels and concrete backfill.
This second section of sea wall is expected to take around two years to complete and once finished, this 415 metre section which stretches from Coastguard breakwater east of Dawlish station to Colonnade breakwater, will link up with the already completed first section of sea wall at Marine Parade.
By the start of 2023, the completion of this work should increase the resilience of the railway in the South West for at least the next 100 years and ensure communities remain connected via the railway network.
While this phase of the work has been welcomed, South West economic leaders have raised concern about the outstanding start date for the part of the wider resilience project to build part of the railway ‘out to sea’ between Parsons Tunnel and Teignmouth.
Network Rail paused the work last year amid huge opposition to plans that would result in the loss of part of the beach at Holcombe. They are due to come back to public consultation this year with revised plans.
But with no start date or funding confirmed, economic bosses fear that the future of the rail line is far from secured.
Tim Jones, chairman of the South West Business Council, said the scheme so far was like a ‘half-baked cake’ He said: “There is no point in doing half of the job. The line is still vulnerable from cliff falls and we are at risk of being cut off in the future.
“How can we even start thinking of ‘levelling up’ without a 21st century infrastructure that will get us there?”
The new sea wall at Dawlish is part of Network Rail’s ongoing efforts since 2014 to improve the resilience of the railway between Dawlish and Teignmouth in Devon, known as the South West Rail Resilience Programme.
Chris Heaton-Harris, Rail Minister gave reassurances to South West Devon MP Gary Streeter in January that he remained committed to “improving the resilience of this vital transport artery”.
He praised the “huge feat of engineering to get the new structure to where it is today”.
And Anne Marie Morris, MP for Newton Abbot, reiterated that the “project is mission critical, not just for Dawlish but for the wider communities across the South West”.
She said: “The progress Network Rail has made is phenomenal and I’ve been incredibly impressed.”
Cllr Andrea Davis is chairman of Peninsula Rail Task Force. It published Closing The Gap, its 20-year plan for the region’s railway in 2016, which put the resilience of the coastal railway as a top priority.
She said: “For the people of Dawlish, the completed first section of new sea wall and work that is ongoing really does enhance the area, gives that reassurance about protection for the next 100 years and means Dawlish can continue to be a vibrant community.
“There are two million people across the South West peninsula who would be adversely affected if the railway was damaged again by extreme weather, and this is why the work Network Rail is doing is so important.”
It was over 4 and 5 February 2014 that a ferocious storm battered the south Devon coastline in Dawlish causing significant damage to the railway track, leaving thousands of people without power and forcing many local residents to abandon their homes. The damage to the railway meant communities in 50 towns and cities across the South West peninsula were cut off from the rest of the UK by rail and it would cost £35m to rebuild.
The track reopened in April – just eight weeks after the storm damage – following what the then Prime Minister David Cameron described as a Herculean effort when an ‘orange army’ of 300 Network Rail engineers worked day and night to rebuild the track and restore the railway.
Alison Foden, Mayor of Dawlish, said: “This work is vitally important for Dawlish. We are a seaside town and the railway is one of our unique selling points and is in our history from when Isambard Kingdom Brunel built this beautiful railway.
“The progress Network Rail has made, particularly with the completion of the first section of new sea wall, is brilliant. We now have a real sea wall promenade and people love coming down here.”