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National Express East Anglia [2] (NXEA) was a train operating company in England owned by National Express that operated the Greater Anglia franchise from April 2004 until February 2012. Originally trading as One , it was rebranded National Express East Anglia in February 2008.
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%: Date: 30 January 2011: Source: Ordnance Survey OpenData. Great Britain coastline and boundary data from Boundary-Line product.
The franchise was originally branded as One before being rebranded as National Express East Anglia in February 2008 as part of a company-wide rebranding programme. [6] In November 2009, the Department for Transport announced that National Express was to lose the Greater Anglia franchise in March 2011 rather than be granted an extension until ...
Interior of the Stansted Express Class 379. In 1986, British Rail (BR) extended the electrification of the West Anglia Main Line from Bishop's Stortford to Cambridge.Included in this plan was the construction of a new branch line—diverging from a triangular junction at Stansted Mountfitchet—to serve Stansted Airport, at which a new terminal was to open in 1991 providing for a large ...
National Express: 28 February 1996: 10 November 2007: East Midlands Trains: ML National Express East Anglia: Greater Anglia: 1 April 2004: 5 February 2012: Greater Anglia: LE National Express East Coast: InterCity East Coast: 9 December 2007: 13 November 2009: East Coast: GR Northern Rail: Northern Rail Serco-Abellio: 12 December 2004: 31 March ...
In June 1998, Anglia Railways unveiled a turquoise and white livery. [3] [4] [5] Prior to 1997, the trains were run by British Rail sectors of InterCity, Regional Railways and Network SouthEast. After March 2004, the trains were run by National Express East Anglia.
Still, East Anglia is a region of great natural beauty and cultural richness, and it’s something of a mystery why the region has remained so firmly off the tourist radar for so long.
All the stations and services on the line are currently operated by Greater Anglia. The company took over from National Express East Anglia in 2012, which in turn had replaced the previous operator First Great Eastern in 2004, when all the operators in East Anglia were merged into one new franchise. First Great Eastern (owned by FirstGroup) had ...