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Extra trains planned for King’s coronation

Hundreds of thousands of well-wishers are expected to travel to the centre of London for the ceremony on May 6.

Neil Lancefield
Tuesday 18 April 2023 10:04 EDT
Extra train services are being laid on for the King’s coronation weekend but the transport operation will not match what happened for the late Queen’s funeral (Andrew Matthews/PA)
Extra train services are being laid on for the King’s coronation weekend but the transport operation will not match what happened for the late Queen’s funeral (Andrew Matthews/PA) (PA Archive)

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Extra train services are being laid on for the King’s coronation weekend, but the transport operation will not match what happened for the late Queen’s funeral.

Hundreds of thousands of well-wishers are expected to travel to the centre of London on the day of the ceremony, May 6, and around 10,000 people will attend the coronation concert at Windsor Castle on the following day.

Great Western Railway said it will run some “very early” additional services to London Paddington from major stations in south Wales, south-west England and the Thames Valley area on May 6.

It will also operate an “enhanced service” between Windsor and Slough on May 7 and the early hours of May 8 for concertgoers.

South Western Railway said it will run its usual timetable on the day of the coronation service, but there will be additional trains between London Waterloo and Windsor for the concert.

On May 6, Southeastern will run additional trains between Dartford and London Charing Cross, and longer trains on the Maidstone East Line and between London Victoria and Gillingham.

Govia Thameslink Railway – which operates Gatwick Express, Great Northern, Southern and Thameslink – said some of its services will have more carriages than normal.

There is no planned engineering work affecting lines serving London on May 6.

Transport for London said its services may be “very busy” at “key transport interchanges” such as Tube stations around Westminster and those with connections to mainline trains.

Many train companies are not planning to enhance their operations for the weekend as much of the additional passenger demand is expected to come from within the South East.

That means the transport operation will be slimmed down compared with the late Queen’s funeral in September last year, when around 250 extra train services ran, including some overnight.

Major stations in London were kept open overnight to provide shelter for mourners waiting for trains home.

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