logo
Channel Tunnel train services to be increased in huge boost for London travellers

Channel Tunnel train services to be increased in huge boost for London travellers

Yahoo3 days ago

London passengers could soon be able to choose from a variety of international train services through the Channel Tunnel, following an announcement from the Office of Rail and Road (ORR).
The regulator said it will allocate spare capacity at Eurostar's Temple Mills depot in north London to either a new operator or Eurostar itself, which has plans to grow.
Eurostar currently has a monopoly on Channel Tunnel passenger services.
However, other organisations are now looking to launch rival services between London and the continent.
These include Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Group, Italy's state-owned railway company FS Italiane Group and Gemini Trains, chaired by Labour peer Lord Berkeley.
Last month, the UK and Switzerland signed an agreement which could see direct trains from London to Geneva, taking just five hours.
Access to space at Temple Mills for maintaining and storing trains is a critical requirement for new operators or Eurostar to boost services.
It is the only UK site able to support trains that can be used in the Channel Tunnel and on tracks in continental Europe.
From London St Pancras, Eurostar serves Paris, Brussels and Amsterdam, as well as running seasonal ski trains to the French Alps.
Getlink – the French owner of the Channel Tunnel – believes there is potential for services between London and destinations including Bordeaux, Cologne, Frankfurt, Geneva, Marseille and Zurich.
The ORR's deputy director for access and international, Martin Jones, said: 'The growing appetite to provide international rail services is great news for passengers.
'We now need operators to set out more detail on their proposals at pace, and will work quickly and as thoroughly as possible to determine the best use of capacity at Temple Mills.'
The ORR said it will consider several factors, such as how proposed new services will impact performance, the financial and operational 'readiness' of operators, and the 'economic and societal benefits'.
We've written this morning to Eurostar and applicants seeking to run cross-channel train services to set out next steps for access to Temple Mills International depot.Access to depot capacity is crucial for providing more international services ⬇https://t.co/88XRiB4iTv pic.twitter.com/rpWL8uTFFS
— ORR (@railandroad) June 5, 2025
It expects to reach a conclusion later this year.
Initial findings from an independent assessment of Temple Mills commissioned by the regulator were published in March.
The review found there is some capacity available for more trains without any changes to current practices, and more capacity could be created through further investment.
The ORR said it has reviewed evidence submitted in response to this by stakeholders such as Eurostar, and concluded the assessment is 'an accurate reflection' and 'suggests there is room for at most one new operator, or for Eurostar to grow'.
The regulator said it will be 'some time' until services from a new operator would be able to start even after access to Temple Mills is secured.
That is because they would need to receive regulatory approval in France, access to the High Speed 1 line between London and the Channel Tunnel, and procure trains.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Capitol Hill steakhouse to temporarily close while owner shuts down multiple café locations
Capitol Hill steakhouse to temporarily close while owner shuts down multiple café locations

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Capitol Hill steakhouse to temporarily close while owner shuts down multiple café locations

This story was originally published on A collection of restaurants and eateries run by James Beard Award-winning Seattle chef Renee Erickson is set to close, with some locations closing either temporarily or permanently. Bateau, a contemporary steakhouse, and Boat Bar, a French-inspired oyster bar, are shutting down temporarily on June 19. Both restaurants are expected to reopen in the next three to six months. 'We're incredibly proud of what Bateau and Boat Bar have brought to Seattle's dining scene,' Erickson said in a prepared statement. 'This closure will allow us the time and space to refresh and retool these restaurants after a long 10 years, so they can evolve and continue to inspire.' However, Beataeu's next-door neighbor, The General Porpoise café, also owned and operated by Erickson, is set to close permanently in order to be converted into a private dining room. The General Porpoise location in Laurelhurst is also closing permanently by June 24. These restaurants fall under the umbrella of Sea Creatures Restaurants, a network of eateries locally owned and operated by Erickson and partners. Sea Creatures Restaurants also owns Willmott's Ghost, The Whale Wins, The Walrus and the Carpenter, Barnacle Bar, Deep Dive, Westward, and Lioness. The closures, both permanent and temporary, came after a unionization effort led by some Sea Creatures employees earlier this year, according to The Seattle Times. 'We are comfortable with the union,' Sea Creatures Restaurants co-owner Jeremy Price told The Seattle Times. 'That's an employee's right, and we are all good with that.' Erickson and Price's goal is to relocate all doughnut shop employees working at the now-permanently closed General Porpoise cafés to the remaining locations.

Why Casablanca is the best Moroccan city for architecture fans
Why Casablanca is the best Moroccan city for architecture fans

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Why Casablanca is the best Moroccan city for architecture fans

This article was produced by National Geographic Traveller (UK). Casablanca is well versed in transformation. Anfa, the Amazigh settlement that once stood here, was obliterated by the Portuguese in 1468. When they returned to rebuild the town half a century later, they renamed it 'Casa Branca' (White House). An earthquake then levelled the region in 1755, prompting Moroccan ruler Sultan Mohammed ben Abdallah to build the whitewashed Medina. Earning itself the local name Dar al-Baida — literally 'House of the White' — it came to be known as Casablanca among the Spanish, who added touches of their own, including the 19th-century Church of San Buenaventura. Art nouveau and neo-Moorish buildings were then erected by the French, who established Casablanca as a business hub after their arrival in 1907. It went on to become a French protectorate in 1912 and remained so until 1956, with Assunna Mosque and Rue d'Agadir Market — futuristic constructions designed by Franco-Moroccan architect Jean-François Zevaco — marking a new era of independence. Visitors now flock to the city to explore its varied architecture. Neo-Moorish buildings merging Islamic and art deco elements can be found around Boulevard Rachidi, with highlights including La Poste Centrale, the Palais de Justice and L'Église du Sacré Coeur, an ivory-white cathedral built in 1930. The Quartier Habbous is equally charming. Constructed predominantly between the 1920s and '30s to accommodate an influx of Moroccan merchants, the southern district has an artisanal edge, with plenty of craft and leather stalls. Keep an eye out for the ornate wooden doorway leading to Pâtisserie Bennis Habous, which serves almond-filled kaab el ghazal (gazelle horns) and other delectable Moroccan pastries. To discover Casablanca's more recent urban developments, head to Boulevard de la Corniche, where the emerald-tiled Hassan II Mosque juts out over the ocean. You can organise a guided tour with Casamémoire, a non-profit that's been working to preserve the city's 20th-century architecture since 1995. A few historic art deco establishments have been transformed in the city's Petit Paris district. Opened in April 2024, the Royal Mansour Casablanca hotel has been revamped in the style of its 1950s predecessor, while Ciné-théâtre Lutetia and Cinema Rialto offer a window into the city's fabled cinematic history. Young locals tend to gather on the clipped lawns of Arab League Park and Anfa Park. The latter is often used to host Casablanca's annual summer music festivals: Jazzablanca and Alif Festival both draw in large crowds, while L'Boulevard, held at the nearby Stade RUC, is well known for hosting artists from Morocco's blossoming rap scene. Contemporary dance styles are also a big draw; onlookers often gather along the palm-shaded steps of the Villa des Arts gallery to watch breakdancers from the local BIM Breaking association. Casablanca's creative spirit seeps into its street art, too, with avant-garde designs depicting extraterrestrial life forms lining the Corniche promenade. Nevada Skatepark, one of the biggest in Africa, also has a number of bold pieces, including A Glitch In The Skatepark by local artist Abidwane. A little quieter than those of Fez or Marrakech, the medina's snaking, cobbled streets are full of vendors serving fresh fish sandwiches and syrup-coated sweets stuffed with dates. Plastic tables and chairs fill the larger squares, where visitors while away the hours sipping coffee from miniature glass cups. Dar DaDa, a courtyard restaurant, offers more substantial meals, including hearty chicken tagine. Typical Moroccan dishes are also available from Saveurs du Palais, an intimate restaurant further west in the Maârif district, where guests settle on low cushioned seating to enjoy chicken pastilla and slow-cooked lamb tagine. If you'd like to learn how to make Moroccan dishes yourself, Taste of Casablanca hosts a tour of the city's markets, where you'll roam in search of ingredients for your guided cookery class. Published in the June 2025 issue of National Geographic Traveller (UK).To subscribe to National Geographic Traveller (UK) magazine click here. (Available in select countries only).

Why Casablanca is the best Moroccan city for architecture fans
Why Casablanca is the best Moroccan city for architecture fans

National Geographic

time6 hours ago

  • National Geographic

Why Casablanca is the best Moroccan city for architecture fans

Located on the Atlantic coast of Morocco, the nation's most populous city is a layer cake of soaring mosques, art deco cinemas and technicolour murals. This article was produced by National Geographic Traveller (UK). Casablanca is well versed in transformation. Anfa, the Amazigh settlement that once stood here, was obliterated by the Portuguese in 1468. When they returned to rebuild the town half a century later, they renamed it 'Casa Branca' (White House). An earthquake then levelled the region in 1755, prompting Moroccan ruler Sultan Mohammed ben Abdallah to build the whitewashed Medina. Earning itself the local name Dar al-Baida — literally 'House of the White' — it came to be known as Casablanca among the Spanish, who added touches of their own, including the 19th-century Church of San Buenaventura. Art nouveau and neo-Moorish buildings were then erected by the French, who established Casablanca as a business hub after their arrival in 1907. It went on to become a French protectorate in 1912 and remained so until 1956, with Assunna Mosque and Rue d'Agadir Market — futuristic constructions designed by Franco-Moroccan architect Jean-François Zevaco — marking a new era of independence. Visitors now flock to the city to explore its varied architecture. Neo-Moorish buildings merging Islamic and art deco elements can be found around Boulevard Rachidi, with highlights including La Poste Centrale, the Palais de Justice and L'Église du Sacré Coeur, an ivory-white cathedral built in 1930. The Quartier Habbous is equally charming. Constructed predominantly between the 1920s and '30s to accommodate an influx of Moroccan merchants, the southern district has an artisanal edge, with plenty of craft and leather stalls. Keep an eye out for the ornate wooden doorway leading to Pâtisserie Bennis Habous, which serves almond-filled kaab el ghazal (gazelle horns) and other delectable Moroccan pastries. To discover Casablanca's more recent urban developments, head to Boulevard de la Corniche, where the emerald-tiled Hassan II Mosque juts out over the ocean. You can organise a guided tour with Casamémoire, a non-profit that's been working to preserve the city's 20th-century architecture since 1995. A few historic art deco establishments have been transformed in the city's Petit Paris district. Opened in April 2024, the Royal Mansour Casablanca hotel has been revamped in the style of its 1950s predecessor, while Ciné-théâtre Lutetia and Cinema Rialto offer a window into the city's fabled cinematic history. Young locals tend to gather on the clipped lawns of Arab League Park and Anfa Park. The latter is often used to host Casablanca's annual summer music festivals: Jazzablanca and Alif Festival both draw in large crowds, while L'Boulevard, held at the nearby Stade RUC, is well known for hosting artists from Morocco's blossoming rap scene. Contemporary dance styles are also a big draw; onlookers often gather along the palm-shaded steps of the Villa des Arts gallery to watch breakdancers from the local BIM Breaking association. Casablanca's creative spirit seeps into its street art, too, with avant-garde designs depicting extraterrestrial life forms lining the Corniche promenade. Nevada Skatepark, one of the biggest in Africa, also has a number of bold pieces, including A Glitch In The Skatepark by local artist Abidwane. A little quieter than those of Fez or Marrakech, the medina's snaking, cobbled streets are full of vendors serving fresh fish sandwiches and syrup-coated sweets stuffed with dates. Plastic tables and chairs fill the larger squares, where visitors while away the hours sipping coffee from miniature glass cups. Dar DaDa, a courtyard restaurant, offers more substantial meals, including hearty chicken tagine. Typical Moroccan dishes are also available from Saveurs du Palais, an intimate restaurant further west in the Maârif district, where guests settle on low cushioned seating to enjoy chicken pastilla and slow-cooked lamb tagine. If you'd like to learn how to make Moroccan dishes yourself, Taste of Casablanca hosts a tour of the city's markets, where you'll roam in search of ingredients for your guided cookery class. Royal Air Maroc flies direct from London. Royal Mansour Casablanca is a 40-minute drive from Mohammed V International Airport and has double rooms from 5,655 MAD (£460), B&B. This story was created with the support of Royal Mansour Casablanca. Published in the June 2025 issue of National Geographic Traveller (UK). To subscribe to National Geographic Traveller (UK) magazine click here. (Available in select countries only).

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store