Eurostar orders first double-decker trains


In the €2bn (£1.74bn) deal, confirmed on Wednesday, Eurostar has ordered 30 “Celestia” trains, with the option for 20 more.

Eurostar expects to start using the first six trains in 2031.

Each train would be 200m long. If two were run together, as happens currently, the resulting 400m service would have about 1,080 seats.

These would be the first double-decker high-speed trains to run through the Channel Tunnel.

The only other double-decker passenger service to ever appear on Britain’s railways was an experiment that began in 1949.

Eurostar’s chief executive Gwendoline Cazenave said she was “particularly proud to bring double-decker trains to the UK for the very first time”, adding they would bring “exceptional comfort”.

Eurostar carried 19.5 million passengers last year. Ms Cazenove said the company aimed to grow this number to 30 million.

The firm said a fleet of new trains, some of which will replace older ones, will lead to a 30% increase in trains that service London.

The double-decker train deal comes after Eurostar announced an expansion plan in June that includes new routes to Geneva and Frankfurt from London.

The new trains will need to go through a years-long certification process for use in the Channel Tunnel, in all the countries where Eurostar operates.

They will be 4.33metres high, just 16cm higher than the E320 models currently in use.

However, double-deckers becoming the norm across the Britain’s rail network seems unlikely.

Pete Waterman, music producer and train enthusiast, told the BBC’s Today programme because Britain’s railways were built so long ago, most the routes would not be able to cater for such large trains due to obstructions such as tunnels and overhead lines.

Such costs to adapt the network would be “absolutely astronomical,” he said.

“Although Eurostar is to be applauded for announcing this, you can only get into St Pancras because most of British railways you can’t put double deckers on because our railways were built 200 years ago, not just after the Second World War,” he added.


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