Maidstone line


The Maidstone line is a railway line in Kent, England. It diverges from the Chatham main line at Swanley Junction and proceeds down the Darenth valley to Otford junction. It continues via Borough Green & Wrotham and Maidstone East to Ashford, where it joins the South Eastern Main Line.

History

The line was built by the London, Chatham and Dover Railway from their first line. Upon the creation of the South Eastern and Chatham Railway the original Ashford terminus was closed in 1899 and services diverted to the South Eastern Railway's Ashford station. The line was electrified in 1939 to Maidstone East by the Southern Railway prior to World War Two. Electrification between Maidstone East and Ashford was completed in 1961 under the BR 1955 Modernisation Plan.

Infrastructure

Traction current is supplied at 750 volts DC via the Third Rail. The supply for this is overseen by Paddock Wood Electrical Control Room. Signalling is Track Circuit Block with multiple aspect colour light signals throughout, controlled by Ashford IECC. The line is double track throughout.

Services

Services on the line are run by Southeastern.
Services run to London Victoria and Ashford, or Canterbury West with some peak services to London Blackfriars.
In the off-peak, there are two trains per hour to Ashford International from London Victoria via Bromley South and Swanley with one train per hour continuing to Cantebury West via the Ashford to Ramsgate line. These services are done using either Class 375 or Class 377 trains.
Thameslink utilizes the route between Swanley and Otford on their London Blackfriars to Sevenoaks metro services via the Catford Loop and Elephant and Castle with two trains per hour running. Additional services through London will be introduced as part of the Thameslink Programme between Cambridge and Maidstone East. As of September 2019, these services haven't been introduced with no news about its future.