London to Madrid in seven hours. By train
Well, not quite yet. But over the next
20 years, new rail networks will revolutionise travel to Europe 's
major cities.
Last Sunday, for the first time, a
train ran from central London
direct to the French Alps. Although this was only a trial run, the journey from
Waterloo to Bourg St Maurice will enter the regular Eurostar schedules from
early December, to coincide with the start of the next skiing season.
Passengers leaving London
just before 8am
will be in Bourg St Maurice by 5pm
local time, after an uninterrupted journey of only eight hours. With return
fares starting from pounds 199, the trip will certainly be competitive with
equivalent flights.
It is easy to forget how far rail
travel has come on in the last 20 years. While the speed of air travel has
remained static, high-speed European trains have slashed journey times.
In 1980, a trip to the French Alps from
London would normally have involved an eight-hour trip to Paris by train and
boat, followed by a tiresome trek across the French capital to the Gare de
Lyon, followed by another gruelling seven or eight hours to the mountains. As
for countries such as Spain, scheduled train services felt more like crossing
continents than countries, with journey times from Barcelona to Granada running
to an absurd 18 hours. Rail seemed like a dying means of transport.
But things have changed. The
renaissance of European rail travel began in 1981, with the introduction of TGV
services from Paris to
Lyons .
Today a network of fast trains is spreading across western Europe.
Forthcoming developments for British
travellers include the much delayed arrival of straight-through services from Scotland
and the north of England to
the Continent. "We are not yet setting a date," says Roger Harrison
of Eurostar, "but Eurostar is definitely committed to running trains from Edinburgh , Birmingham
and Manchester to
Paris
some time this summer, cutting journey times between the French and Scottish
capitals to eight hours."
When the high-speed line into central London
(St Pancras) is finally completed in 2003, allowing TGV-style speeds into the UK
for the first time, a further half hour will be chopped off all channel tunnel
services.
Before this, though - certainly by the
end of the century - it is expected that Eurostar will commence direct services
from London to
Amsterdam ,
cutting the journey time there to around five hours.
Within France ,
part of the programmed extension of the high-speed track network includes the
completion of the Paris to
Marseilles
line. "When the TGV track is in place, allowing trains to run at their
maximum speed, you will be able to get from London to
the Mediterranean by
train in just six hours, or five and a half after 2003," says Peter Mills
of French Railways. "That project is concrete and has been approved by the
French government."
Another concrete development is the
approval of the TGV-Est, the high- speed line from Paris to
Strasbourg ,
aimed at cutting the journey time to eastern France to
two hours. This will also slash times to Germany : Paris to
Berlin
for example will take just six and a half hours. Already, trains are running
from Paris to
Turin in
just over five hours. Spain
and Germany
already have their own high-speed trains, though technical problems will delay
a seamless tying together of the various national networks for a decade or two.
When the networks are finally
connected, however, at speeds of between 300 and 350 km per hour - say, 20
years from now - European trains will be a fantastic pleasure. Barcelona
and Madrid
will be six or seven hours away from London , Rome
perhaps 10, and Munich
and Berlin
about seven or eight.
Looking into the more distant future -
if one dare postulate a world with TGV tracks extending into Russia
and Asia - it is possible to
foresee trains linking London
with destinations such as Moscow or
Istanbul in
around 15 hours. The age of the train is definitely back.
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