Major railway line in Kent reopens after landslip

A stretch of railway line in Kent that was closed for a week after a landslip

Author: Grace O'HarePublished 4th Mar 2024

A stretch of railway line in Kent that was closed for a week after a landslip has reopened.

Network Rail said heavy rainfall created a crack in the track embankment at Newington.

The landslip occurred on the afternoon of Friday 23 February.

Upon visiting the site, Network Rail’s geotechnical and structures experts discovered a crack 40 metres long and material that had slipped around five metres down the embankment, resulting in the railway through this area needing to be closed for safety reasons.

A repair plan was developed and began on 26 February, with engineers working around the clock to stabilise the embankment with the aspiration to reopen this stretch of railway on Monday morning (4 March).

To do this, the embankment was rebuilt, involving the excavation of the slipped material before creating a new profile for the embankment. Steps were cut into the slope before being backfilled with 3,000 tonnes of stone, helping to reduce the gradient and strengthen the embankment.

The new stone was transported to site by an engineering train in 50 wagons, with a rail-mounted digger used to deposit the stone onto the embankment. The old slipped material was removed and transported away by road.

Noise and vibration sensors were installed so that Network Rail was able to continually monitor, and, where possible, reduce disruption to residents living nearby.

'Normal services can now resume'

Kevin Warn, general manager south at Southeastern, said:

“On behalf of everyone at Southeastern, I’d like to sincerely thank our customers for their patience and our colleagues at Network Rail for their work to get this important stretch of railway reopened and on time.

“Normal services can now resume between Sittingbourne and Rainham in the morning and we look forward to welcoming our customers back.

"I’d also encourage customers who were disrupted but haven’t yet claimed their compensation, to do so.

"We recognise this was a majorly disruptive event and we are keen to help customers wherever possible”.

Anyone delayed by an additional 15 minutes on their journey as a result of last week’s disruption can claim Delay Repay compensation on Southeastern’s website.

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