National Express East Anglia
National Express East Anglia was a train operating company and brand name of London Eastern Railway Ltd in the United Kingdom. It is part of the National Express Group and was branded as ‘one’ from 1 April 2004 to 26 February 2008.[1] It provides local, suburban and express services from Liverpool Street station in the City of London to destinations in the railway franchise known as the Greater Anglia network, stretching from north and east Greater London to Essex, Hertfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Suffolk and Norfolk in East Anglia. After February 2012 the trains were run by Greater Anglia, a subsidiary of Nederlandse Spoorwegen.
| 250px | |
| Franchise(s): | Greater Anglia 1 April 2004 - 5 February 2012 |
|---|---|
| Main region(s): | East of England |
| Other region(s): | London |
| Fleet size: | 267 |
| Stations called at: | 167 |
| National Rail abbreviation: | LE |
| Parent company: | National Express Group |
| Web site: | www.nationalexpresseastanglia.com |
National Express East Anglia Media
- National Express East Anglia route map 2010.svg
Map showing railway routes operated by National Express East Anglia in 2010. The background map shows the coast of England and major urban areas. Equirectangular map projection on WGS 84 datum, with N/S stretched 160%
- 90001 Liverpool Street.jpg
One liveried Class 90 at Liverpool Street station in March 2007
- Hugh llewelyn 315 820 (6311840566).jpg
One liveried Class 315 at Hackney Downs station in August 2007
- 321311 NatEx East Anglia LST.JPG
- 47818 at Cambridge.JPG
BR Class 47, no. 47818 at Cambridge. This locomotive is owned by Cotswold Rail but hired to 'one'. Over the summer of 2004, it was used extensively to haul diverted passenger trains from London Liverpool St to Norwich, due to engineering works at Ipswich.
References
- ↑ "'one' Railway to vanish as National Express begins major rebranding exercise" (PDF). Railway Herald. 2007-11-17. p. Page 9. Retrieved 2008-02-13.[dead link]