Got something to say or just want fewer pesky ads? Join us... 😊

[Travel] Hotels on Rails



zefarelly

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 7, 2003
22,789
Sussex, by the sea
jaws.jpg
 


















Pinkie Brown

Wir Sind das Volk
Sep 5, 2007
3,637
Neues Zeitalter DDR 🇩🇪
Had a chat with a friend recently on this topic who comes from a rail engineering background and well versed in the technicalities of cross border and European train travel in general. (I know jack all about the subject)

His opinion on sleeper trains through the tunnel - not happening. Aside apparent logistical issues with the rolling stock for the tunnel, there is the issue of UK border control. Imagine turfing a train load of passengers out their beds at Calais or Lille in the early hours. When I responded with "why not carry out border controls in London" his response was; "have you seen who the home secretary is." He has a point there.
 




Aug 13, 2020
1,482
Darlington
Had a chat with a friend recently on this topic who comes from a rail engineering background and well versed in the technicalities of cross border and European train travel in general. (I know jack all about the subject)

His opinion on sleeper trains through the tunnel - not happening. Aside apparent logistical issues with the rolling stock for the tunnel, there is the issue of UK border control. Imagine turfing a train load of passengers out their beds at Calais or Lille in the early hours. When I responded with "why not carry out border controls in London" his response was; "have you seen who the home secretary is." He has a point there.

I don't see any fundamental reason a sleeper train couldn't run through the tunnel, my understanding is that the loading gauge is larger than most of the GB network, but there might be some channel tunnel specific safety requirements that push the cost of rolling stock beyond what can be justified.

Don't they already have border controls at one or another end of the tunnel? I've never tried it but I thought I'd heard of people being outraged when it turned out they need their passports checked when they hadn't realised it was needed.

It was interesting when I crossed the Turkey/Bulgaria border, that on the Turkish side they dragged everybody off the train to have their passports checked, while on the Bulgarian side they just went along the train and checked it while we were still in bed.

The main issue I would see with it would be the journey from Paris to London being to short to justify a sleeper service.
 








Uter

Well-known member
Aug 5, 2008
1,507
The land of chocolate
Had a chat with a friend recently on this topic who comes from a rail engineering background and well versed in the technicalities of cross border and European train travel in general. (I know jack all about the subject)

His opinion on sleeper trains through the tunnel - not happening. Aside apparent logistical issues with the rolling stock for the tunnel, there is the issue of UK border control. Imagine turfing a train load of passengers out their beds at Calais or Lille in the early hours. When I responded with "why not carry out border controls in London" his response was; "have you seen who the home secretary is." He has a point there.

As you suggest, technical issues aside, border control is a big reason why sleeper services through the tunnel are unlikely to happen any time soon. UK Govt insists these are done prior to entry and this position is unlikely to change soon, if ever.

Doing them at Lille would be a massive disincentive for passengers, so that's not a realistic option.

So this means they have to happen at the point of boarding, which means large investments to create the facilities to do so that would make a major dent in the business case. It also means that any such trains would be very limited as to where they could stop en-route.

I'd never say never though.

Barcelona, Madrid, Rome, Milan are the right sort of distance and big enough cities to imagine there could be a market for this. Running mainly on high speed lines on bespoke stock should ensure a smooth ride.

I've never been on a sleeper train, but it's always had a draw for me. I'd love to see this happen. There's a growing market for people who want to travel by more sustainable means. I'd include myself in that bracket.
 


GT49er

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Feb 1, 2009
49,186
Gloucester
great song but to naughty to play anymore - sorry if it offends

The Lost Prophets - yes I know. Got to be the unluckiest band around (well three quarters of them). The best band I've ever heard not of my generation (yes, I'm an oldie), only for them to find out that their mate, the lead singer, was a nonce of the worst possible kind and that now their band name was toxic and their career as a band was dead in the water.
 


Albion and Premier League latest from Sky Sports


Top
Link Here