FACTOID # 142: Americans consume the sixth-most spirits, the eighth-most beer and the 18th-most wine. They’re also likely to view heavy drinkers as undesirable neighbors.
 
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Encyclopedia > CTRL
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Model showing the current redevelopment of the King's Cross area with the Channel Tunnel Rail Link terminal behind the barrel vaulted St Pancras Station on the left.

The Channel Tunnel Rail Link (or CTRL) is a project to construct a 108 km high-speed rail line from London to the British end of the Channel Tunnel. When it is completed in 2007, it will be possible to reach Paris from St Pancras in 2hrs 15mins and Brussels in 2hrs.

Contents

Background

A high-speed rail track has been in operation on the French and Belgian sections of the Eurostar rail link since the Channel Tunnel's opening, carrying trains at 300km/h. In Britain, trains have had to share existing standard track with local traffic, limiting average speeds to 100km/h. In addition, the generally poor state of Britain's rail infrastructure has caused frequent and unpredictable delays, reducing the appeal of the Eurostar service.


The project

Section 1 of the CTRL, a 74km section of high-speed track from the Channel Tunnel to Fawkham Junction in north Kent, was opened in September 2003. This cut the London-Paris journey time by around 20 minutes, to 2hrs 35mins. The section includes a 1.2km bridge over the River Medway and 3.2km-long, 12m-diameter tunnel through the North Downs. In safety testing on the section prior to opening, a new UK rail speed record of 334.7km/h was set. Trains continue to use existing suburban lines to enter London, and terminate at Waterloo station, on the south side of central London.


Section 2 of the project, due to open in 2007, is a 34km stretch of track from Ebbsfleet (near Northfleet) to London St Pancras. It includes two new stations (at Ebbsfleet and London Stratford), a 3km tunnel under the Thames near Dartford, and a 19km twin tunnel running into central London. When the second phase of the CTRL is opened, all Eurostar trains will run to St Pancras International instead of Waterloo.


Engineering notes

  • The CTRL project is one of Britain's largest civil engineering projects, encompassing new bridges and tunnels as well as many kilometres of track.
  • The track itself is essentially a product of the engineering expertise of the French railway company SNCF, operator of existing TGV high-speed lines in France.
  • The twin tunnel being bored under London is being driven from Stratford (westwards towards St Pancras and eastwards towards Dagenham) and from Dagenham (westwards to connect with the tunnel from Stratford). The tunnel boring machines are 120m long and weigh 1,100 tonnes. The depth of the tunnel varies from 24m to 50m.
  • At St Pancras station a new extension will double the length and number of platforms to accommodate the Eurostar trains.

Additional information

After local protests, early plans were modified to put much more of the track in tunnel where it nears St Pancras. For example, the Link will now pass underneath, rather than along with, the North London Line, before running into St Pancras still in tunnel, rather than the previously-expected elevated section. The CTRL building works are causing considerable disruption, but bringing in their wake much redevelopment of the run-down area of post-industrial and ex-railway land close to King's Cross and St Pancras.


The project is due to be completed in 2007.


See also

External links

  • CTRL company site (http://www.ctrl.co.uk) with photos, progress reports etc.
  • Trade Article (http://www.railway-technology.com/projects/chunnel/)
  • Guardian Unlimited Interactive Guide to the CTRL (http://www.guardian.co.uk/flash/0,5860,1048071,00.html) (requires Flash)
  • Route map (http://www.ctrl.co.uk/english/route/default.htm) with vertical profiles


Major railway lines in the United Kingdom:
'Modern' high speed main lines:

Channel Tunnel Rail Link | Channel Tunnel

'Classic' main lines:

East Coast | Great Eastern | Great Western | Midland | West Coast

Other main lines:

Brighton | Chiltern | Glasgow South Western | Hastings | Highland | North Wales
Portsmouth Direct | Settle-Carlisle | South Wales | South Western | Welsh Marches
Wessex | West Highland | West of England

Secondary lines:

Aire Valley | Argyle | Arun Valley | Atlantic Coast | Avocet | Ayrshire Coast
Birmingham Cross-City | Bittern | Cambrian | Chase | Cotswold | Cumbrian
Conwy Valley | East Coastway | East Suffolk | Esk Valley | Far North | Golden Valley
Gospel Oak-Barking | Heart of Wales | Heart of Wessex | Honeybourne | Hope Valley
Kyle of Lochalsh | Looe Valley | Lymington | Maritime | Marsh Link | North Clyde
North London | Oxted | Riviera | St Ives Bay | Sudbury | Tamar Valley | Tarka
Tyne Valley | Walsall | West Coastway | West London | Wherry


  Results from FactBites:
 
CTRL: The Conspiracy Theory Research List (419 words)
My personal take is that there is a definite group of "baddies" that move through various organizations at differing times and locales, similar to the plans which Adam Wieshaupt outlined in the Illuminati papers, which were seized by the Bavarian Government.
Hopefully CTRL can pull on the resources of the many to help us all understand and make use of that understanding to meet the future head on.
I believe that we are in a time when all shall be made known, and I believe it behooves us to understand the methods of propaganda that are being used against our body politic.
Control key - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (586 words)
In computing, a Control key is a key which, when pressed in conjunction with another key, will perform a special operation.
Under Mac OS X, the Control key allows the use of Emacs-style key combinations in most text entry fields.
For example, Ctrl-A moves the caret to the start of the paragraph, Ctrl-L vertically centers the current line in the editing field, Ctrl-K cuts text to the end of the line to a kill-ring separate from the normal clipboard, etc.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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