Penzance TMD

Penzance TMD, also known as Long Rock TMD, is a railway Traction Maintenance Depot situated in the village of Long Rock east of Penzance, Cornwall, England, and is the most westerly and southerly rail depot in the country. The depot operator is Great Western Railway. The depot code is PZ.

Penzance
Traction Maintenance Depot
Location
LocationPenzance, United Kingdom
Coordinates50.1279°N 5.5107°W / 50.1279; -5.5107
OS gridSW491312
Characteristics
Owner(s)Great Western Railway
Depot code(s)PZ (1973-present)[1]
TypeDiesel, HST, DMU
History
Opened1914 (Rebuilt)
Pre-groupingGreat Western Railway
Post-groupingBritish Railways
Former depot code(s)
  • PZ (to 1950)
  • 83G (1948-1963)
  • 84D (1963-1973)[1]

Description

08410 and 57605 Totnes Castle in the sidings at Long Rock

The depot is beside the Cornish Main Line, where it runs as a single track on the southern side and terminates at Penzance railway station, half a mile west of the depot.

The depot is small, with six long sidings to store High Speed Trains and Voyagers, and four smaller sidings. If the longer sidings are all used up, trains are stored at Laira TMD, Plymouth, and then make their way to Penzance railway station in the morning. The depot also has a fuel lane, a single-tracked modern maintenance shed, and a small carriage washer. A few years ago, facilities at Penzance TMD were expanded to cater for the new fleet of Voyagers used by CrossCountry.

The main line and depot lie near the sea, with just Long Rock beach and the embankment that carries the South West Coast Path separating them, which means this depot and the main line sometimes have problems due to the sea.

The fuel storage tanks at the depot are located behind the maintenance shed and are replenished on a daily basis by road deliveries.

History

Steam shed

A four-road engine shed was built at Long Rock in 1914. As well as the engine shed there was a turntable built to fit all size locomotives which ran on the route. The depot had watering facilities and coal stored for the locomotives, as well as sidings around the depot. The turntable was removed in 1966 and two of the four shed roads were removed in 1968.

From 1958 Long Rock serviced diesel locomotives, which continued after steam traction had ended in 1962. The steam depot was closed in June 1976.

Diesel shed

The east end of 1977 shed (and Class 57 57604)

A new depot was constructed on the same site as the steam shed, designed for British Rail's fleet of new Intercity 125 fleet (now referred to as High Speed Trains or HSTs). The depot consisted of a 750 ft long maintenance shed, long enough to fit a full IC125 set, along with a fueling lane on the southern side of the shed. Six long sidings were built to the east of the maintenance shed for stabling IC125's when not in use, which also have overhead gantry lights. The mainline next to the depot was also singled at the same time. In total the new depot cost £1.5 million to build, and was ready for use in October 1977.

Capacity at the depot was increased in a project that started in 2017 to cater for additional rolling stock maintenance such as additional cars for the Night Riviera sleeper service. The work cost £20m.[2] On 13 April 2019, after the work was completed, an open day was held at the depot in aid of Penlee Lifeboat station and the RNLI.[3][4]

Trains serviced

08410 with a sleeping car from the Night Riviera

Allocated to the depot:

The following visit the depot but are based eleswhere:

References

  1. "The all-time guide to UK Shed and Depot Codes" (PDF). TheRailwayCentre.com. 5 May 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 December 2013. Retrieved 26 August 2016.
  2. Vergnault, Oli (27 April 2017). "GWR set to improve sleeper train service to London with new £20m Penzance depot". Cornwall Live. Retrieved 26 May 2017.
  3. "GWR celebrates nearly 170 years of Cornwalls railway with Long Rock Depot Open Day". www.gwr.com. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  4. Long Rock TMD Open Day Saturday 13th April 2019. Swindon: Great Western Railway. 2019.
  • Rail Atlas Great Britain & Ireland, S.K. Baker ISBN 0-86093-553-1
  • An illustrated history of the Cornish Main Line, John Vaughan, 2009, ISBN 978-0-86093-625-1
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