Bluebell Railway on track to come to Haywards Heath

Bluebell Railway steamed into East Grinstead last year - picture by John SandysBluebell Railway steamed into East Grinstead last year - picture by John Sandys
Bluebell Railway steamed into East Grinstead last year - picture by John Sandys
Plans are on track for steam trains to roll regularly into Haywards Heath railway station for the first time since the 1960s - although not for ten years or so yet.

The Bluebell Railway, which a year ago extended its preserved steam service from Sheffield Park in East Sussex through to East Grinstead, has now set its sights on Haywards Heath.

Land has been set aside for the Bluebell Railway to build a station in the town, said Chris White, the railway’s infrastructure director, speaking to the Mid Sussex Times.

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Mr White, who has volunteered with the preservation organisation since 1975, said: “What we have negotiated with the developers of the station site where there is a new Waitrose going is an agreement with them, Network Rail and the local authority, that at the point at which we can run trains to Haywards Heath there is a plot of land allocated for us to build a station which sits between the Network Rail station and the new Waitrose.”

Cllr Norman Webster, cabinet member for planning said: “As a council we would love to see the Bluebell Railway service extend to Haywards Heath, and we have ensured that a piece of land is safeguarded for a platform by making it a condition of the planning permission granted for the Haywards Heath station redevelopment.”

However, Mr White added that while they view the project as a ‘very desirable long term preservation and commercial opportunity’, they are yet to work out the costs of the project.

He said: “We are putting together the bones of a project to extend the railway from Horsted Keynes to Ardingly, and once we’ve got to Ardingly the plan is then to negotiate running rights with Network rail through to Haywards Heath.”

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This section of track is still in use commercially by a daily freight train carrying stone.

Once the railway reaches Haywards Heath the effects are likely to be far-reaching. Last March, East Grinstead became the northern terminus of Bluebell’s operation and the town promotions manager Simon Kerr told the Middy it ‘certainly put us on the national tourist map’.