STEAM 组
The Zone of Come TheCZone
STEAM 组
The Zone of Come TheCZone
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成立于
2021 年 8 月 5 日
语言
英语
国家/地区
United Kingdom (Great Britain) 
9 条留言
cw_315 2023 年 11 月 22 日 上午 9:42 
the bocvasion
Northern Fail 2023 年 11 月 22 日 上午 9:27 
boc
DevonHalstonDreadle 2022 年 5 月 13 日 下午 2:35 
sus
DevonHalstonDreadle 2022 年 5 月 13 日 下午 2:35 
Network SouthEast, like each other sector, was given primary responsibility for various assets (rolling stock, tracks, stations), and control resided with the primary user. Other sectors could negotiate access rights and rent facilities, using their own resources. NSE was able to exert much greater control and accountability over both its operating budget and service quality than BR could under its Regions. Relations were generally good between NSE and other sectors, although operating pressures sometimes forced staff to use equipment and assets belonging to other sectors to meet immediate needs.

On 1 April 1994, Network SouthEast was disbanded with its operations transferred to train operating units ready for privatisation.
DevonHalstonDreadle 2022 年 5 月 13 日 下午 2:35 
Although NSE did not originally own or maintain infrastructure, it exercised control over almost all carrier core functions. NSE set its own goals and service standards in consultation with BR, and created its own management structure and oversight. BR allowed NSE to decide about scheduling, marketing, infrastructure enhancements, and rolling stock specifications on NSE-assigned lines and services.

In April 1990, British Rail Chairman Bob Reid announced that sectorisation would be made complete, with regions disbanded by 1991/92 and the individual sectors becoming directly responsible for all operations other than a few core long-term planning and standards functions. Network SouthEast thus went from a business unit of around 300 staff to a major business operation with 38,000 staff and a £4.7bn asset value – large enough to be ranked as the 15th-biggest business in the UK.[3]
DevonHalstonDreadle 2022 年 5 月 13 日 下午 2:35 
Upon sectorisation, the London & South Eastern sector took over responsibility for passenger services in the south-east of England,[2] working with the existing BR business units of Regions and Functions to deliver the overall service. Day-to-day operation, staffing and timetabling continued to be delivered by the Regions – and the sector came into existence with barely thirty staff based at Waterloo.[3]

On 10 June 1986, L&SE was relaunched as Network SouthEast, along with a new red, white and blue livery.[2][4][5] The relaunch was intended to be more than a superficial rebranding and was underpinned by considerable investment in the presentation of stations and trains, as well as efforts to improve service standards.[3] This approach was largely brought about by a new director, Chris Green, who had presided over similar transformation and rebranding of ScotRail.
DevonHalstonDreadle 2022 年 5 月 13 日 下午 2:34 
Before the sectorisation of British Rail (BR) in 1982 the system was split into largely autonomous regional operations: those operating around London were the London Midland Region, Southern Region, Western Region and Eastern Region. Sectorisation of BR changed this setup by instead organising by the traffic type: commuter services in the south-east of England, long-distance intercity services, local services in the UK regions, parcels and freight. The aim was to introduce greater budgetary efficiency and managerial accountability by building a more market-focused and responsive business, rather than privatising BR completely. It was expected that the London and South East sector would cover most of its operating costs from revenues, in contrast to heavily subsidised rural services.[1]
DevonHalstonDreadle 2022 年 5 月 13 日 下午 2:34 
Contents
1 History
2 Network Railcard
3 Rolling stock
4 Subdivisions
5 Modernisation
5.1 Chiltern Lines
5.2 New trains
6 Privatisation
7 Legacy
8 References
9 Further reading
10 External links
History

Two Class 309 (AM9) units; one in NSE livery, the other in Jaffa Cake livery

Class 411 (4CEP) in modified NSE livery with rounded corners

Transitional scene from BR Blue (the train) to NSE (the signage, train label) at Farnborough North station
DevonHalstonDreadle 2022 年 5 月 13 日 下午 2:33 
Network SouthEast
Network southeast logo.svg
465034 at Waterloo East.JPG
A Class 465 Networker at Waterloo East in 2003
Overview
Franchise(s) Not subject to franchising
Main region(s) London, South East
Other region(s) East of England, South West, Thames Valley
Fleet size Carriages: 6,700 (1986)
Stations called at 930 (1986)
Parent company British Rail
Headquarters London
Dates of operation 1986–1994
Successors
Thames Trains
Connex South Eastern
South West Trains
InterCity Great Western
Network SouthCentral
Anglia Railways
First Great Eastern
Thameslink
Silverlink
LTS Rail (C2C)
West Anglia Great Northern
Network SouthEast (NSE) was one of the three passenger sectors of British Rail created in 1982. NSE mainly operated commuter rail trains within Greater London and inter-urban services in densely populated South East England, although the network went as far west as Exeter. Before 1986, the sector was originally known as London & South Eastern.