top of page
Logo for website2.jpg
Former InterCity 125 Buffet Car to become community arts café on the Weardale Railway
Richard McDougall.jpg
unnamed.jpg

Citizen Songwriters are delighted to receive the donation of a High Speed Train buffet car from Porterbrook, for a community arts project on the Weardale Railway.

​

The coach is part of the famous InterCity 125 High Speed Train that revolutionised rail travel in the UK, once serving the East Coast Main Line and the route of the Flying Scotsman. The former first-class LNER Mk3 Buffet Car (no. 40701) retired from 43 years of public passenger service last month, finishing on the East Midland Railway where it had been in operation since retiring from the East Coast Main Line in 2019.

 

Citizen Songwriters - a North East arts-based social enterprise - plan to use the buffet car as a community arts café to inspire and engage communities in the rich story of the railways in the North East along the Weardale Railway, an 18 mile heritage railway line in the Durham Dales. It comes at a time of social, cultural and economic transformation with The Auckland Project purchasing the Heritage Railway out of administration last year.

​

The North East’s railway history is already a core focus of Citizen Songwriters’ community arts engagement, through storytelling projects with the Friends of the Stockton & Darlington Railway in Shildon. The buffet car will further their scope of activities in the run up to the bi-centenary celebrations in 2025 of the birth of the passenger railway; a significant cultural and heritage event for the North East.  

Workshop 1.jpg
51218457438_859dbdea89_k.jpg
Buffet car.jpg
DSC01045.JPG

Citizen Songwriters plan to curate unique experiences on board the buffet car, inviting schools and community groups to experience the social and mental health benefits of art, led by a host of local creative practitioners in music, theatre, poetry, painting and photography etc.

 

On their plans, musician and Citizen Songwriters founder Sam Slatcher says:

 

“We’re absolutely delighted to acquire this buffet car and can’t wait to see it alive with food, arts and community spirit. We look forward to working with the Weardale Railway and The Auckland Project” 

Laura Emerson-Roberts, Head of Community Engagement for The Auckland Project, a partner in the buffet car project, says:

 

“We’re excited to be working with Sam and Citizen Songwriters on this innovative project and can’t wait to engage with communities in new ways up and down the Weardale line”.

 

Nigel Yule, Fleet manager of East Midland Railway, who oversaw the last renovation of the coach remarked:  

“I’ve spent the last 32 years in some form associated with these trains. I don’t think this country will ever have another train quite like this one. They’re probably more reliable now than when they were built. I’m really glad to hear this coach is being saved”  

 

The directors of Citizen Songwriters would like to extend their sincere thanks to Porterbrook for the donation, as well as Reid Freight and the staff at the Weardale Railway for assisting the move of the coach which arrived at the Weardale Railway on Tuesday 8th June 2021

​

1.jpg
Press release still 4.jpg

Next Steps

​

The Weardale Railway is currently awaiting reopen after two years of restrictions due to the Covid-19 pandemic. 

​

Once the railway is up and running later in the year, Citizen Songwriters hope to host a number of 'open café' days to invite volunteers of the Weardale Railway Trust, local residents as well as various artists and creative practitioners to begin developing ideas for the project. 

​

bottom of page