ENGINEERS who usually work on the Tyne and Wear Metro have been to Beamish Museum to help keep its tramway running smoothly.

The Metro staff conducted a safety critical inspection of the tramway – a crowd-pleasing feature of the famous open-air museum in County Durham.

Their knowledge and expertise were a big boost for the team at Beamish, who look after a fleet of street running trams and trolley buses.

Nexus, the public body which owns and manages Metro, stepped in to carry out the checks in the wake of Storm Arwen which caused significant damage to property across the region last month.

Its workers attended as part of a scheme enabling them to do a day’s voluntary work in the community.

They brought in advanced equipment, normally used on the Metro system for nightly maintenance tasks, to undertake the detailed inspection work.

A special road rail vehicle, known as an RRV, was deployed so that they could safely work at height to inspect the overhead lines on the Beamish Tramway, which transports visitors around the museum, including The 1900s Town. Drone technology was also used.

Railway engineers from the Tyne and Wear Metro have stepped back in time at Beamish Museum to help ensure its iconic Tramway is in tip top condition

Railway engineers from the Tyne and Wear Metro have stepped back in time at Beamish Museum to help ensure its iconic Tramway is in tip top condition

Railway engineers from the Tyne and Wear Metro stepped back in time at Beamish Museum to help ensure its iconic Tramway is in tip top condition

Railway engineers from the Tyne and Wear Metro stepped back in time at Beamish Museum to help ensure its iconic Tramway is in tip top condition

Principal Engineer at Nexus, Malcolm Irving, said: “It’s been a fantastic experience for our staff carry out such vital work on the Beamish tram system. We were more than happy to help out, and we really enjoyed the day.

“The work we did was of some extra importance given the recent ravages of Storm Arwen, and it was certainly a big help to the team at Beamish.

“We undertook a full safety critical inspection of the tramway’s overhead lines. It’s a working transport system so the equipment needs to be checked in accordance with the modern-day safety regulations just like any other railway network.

“We have the expertise and the equipment to do this sort of work, which is a daily occurrence on the Tyne and Wear Metro system.

“We have been able to ensure that the famous tramway at Beamish is reliable and safe for many years to come.

“Nexus has a specific policy that allows staff to do a day’s voluntary work every year, and everyone was keen that we should devote that to helping out a not-for-profit organisation like Beamish, a museum that has helped to put our region on the map.”

Principal Engineer at Nexus, Malcolm Irving, with Matt Ellis, Keeper of Transport at Beamish Museum

Principal Engineer at Nexus, Malcolm Irving, with Matt Ellis, Keeper of Transport at Beamish Museum

Matt Ellis, Keeper of Transport at Beamish Museum, said: “We’d like to thank Nexus very much for coming in and helping us with this work, it’s very much appreciated.

“Nexus supplied their equipment for their staff to use and the team inspected the entire overhead line equipment and fittings, for any degradation due to weather, age, storm damage and any long-term wear, particularly to the contact wire. It’s a routine thing, we would have to get round to each bit eventually ourselves, but the fact that we can do the entire system in one day makes it quite an easy thing.

“Thank you to Nexus, we’re very grateful.”

Beamish Tramway, opened in 1973, serves to re-create the experience and atmosphere of tramway operation of an earlier generation, whilst providing an essential means of transport for visitors around the site.

The original 1973 route comprised a single track from the Depot at Foulbridge to the boundary of the Town site.

It has been extended over the years and is now one and a half miles in length, with four passing loops.

For more visit beamish.org.uk

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