SU2705 : Warwickslade Cutting: moving the railway

near to Bank, Hampshire, Great Britain

Warwickslade Cutting: moving the railway
Warwickslade Cutting: moving the railway
At this point the railway had pushed south about 960 metres from the original railhead. The longer the line, the longer the haul time, and the greater the imbalance between the rate at which two trains can deliver hoggin and the rate at which the hydraulic excavators can dispose of it. It was therefore decided to take up the line and lay it again from a new railhead further south. Only two trucks were needed for transporting the lengths of rail, so the other trucks were unloaded here, and taken off the rails so that they weren't in the way (there being no sidings to put them in). The filled-in Cutting runs parallel to the railway line on its right.

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Warwickslade Cutting
Warwickslade Cutting was a long, straight drainage ditch dug around 1850. In 2009, The Forestry Commission decided to fill it in and replace it by a more natural, meandering stream. The Forestry Commission was carrying out the works as part of its "Final 4000" programme - a joint effort with Natural England, The Environment Agency and the National Park Authority - which aims to restore the last 4,000 hectares of SSSI in the New Forest that are deemed to be in an unfavourable condition.

The reason for the works was that Warwickslade Lawn SSSI was "in an unfavourable declining condition because the artificially deepened cutting meant that there was no seasonal inundation of the grassland and woodland habitats" (FC restoration plan).

Surprisingly, much of the course of the original, pre-1850s, stream could still be seen on the ground. The aim of the works was to reinstate the original stream as closely as possible, whilst filling in the Cutting. It was necessary to bring in 10,000 tonnes of hoggin to fill in the cutting, plus some clay to make plugs to ensure that water followed the desired course.

The contractors were Alaska Environmental Contracting ( LinkExternal link ). They used 8, 13 and 18 tonne hydraulic excavators, 10 tonne rubber tracked dumper trucks and an innovative light railway.

Other related sequences of pictures:-
SU2705 : Warwickslade Cutting: a planned meander (start of sequence)
SU2606 : Warwickslade Cutting: original stream bed, Knightwood end (start of sequence)
SU2606 : Warwickslade Cutting: the new stream takes shape (start of dequence)
SU2705 : Warwickslade Cutting: original stream bed, Vinney Ridge part (start of sequence)
SU2606 : Warwickslade Cutting: filling it in, Knightwood end (start of sequence)
SU2705 : Warwickslade Cutting: filling it in, Vinney Ridge part (start of sequence)
SU2705 : Warwickslade Cutting: infilling of minor drain (start of sequence)
SU2705 : Warwickslade Cutting: laying the railway (start of sequence)
SU2705 : Warwickslade Cutting: running the railway (start of sequence)
SU2704 : Warwickslade Cutting: repositioned railway (start of sequence)
SU2705 : Warwickslade Cutting: refencing Poundhill Inclosure (start of sequence)
SU2705 : Warwickslade Cutting: flood plain (start of sequence)
SU2705 : Warwickslade Cutting: the end of the project
The above sequences have Previous/Next or Upstream/Downstream links that take you to a different place. They also have Earlier/Later links that take you to the same place at a different time.
Creative Commons Licence [Some Rights Reserved]   © Copyright Peter Facey and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.
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SU2705, 173 images   (more nearby)
Photographer
Peter Facey   (find more nearby)
Image classification
Geograph
Date Taken
Thursday, 29 October, 2009   (more nearby)
Submitted
Thursday, 29 October, 2009
Category
Railway   (more nearby)
Subject Location
OSGB36: geotagged! SU 2777 0511 [10m precision]
WGS84: 50:50.6911N 1:36.4163W
Photographer Location
OSGB36: geotagged! SU 2777 0511
View Direction
West-northwest (about 292 degrees)
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