Aynho Junction


Aynho Junction is a railway junction in Northamptonshire, England, five miles south of. The junction is a flying junction, with the down line from grade separated from the up and down lines from. The junction is the point where the Great Western Railway's New North Main Line of 1910 joins the original Didcot and Chester Line via Oxford. The former line is also known as the Bicester cut-off line.

Location and former stations

Aynho Junction is located at the distances from the locations shown.
Aynho Junction from:Engineer's Line ReferenceDistance
London Paddington via Didcot StationMLN1, DCL81 miles 12 chains
London Paddington via Northolt Jn and High WycombeMLN1, ANL, NAJ2, NAJ362 miles 33 chains
London Marylebone via Neasden Jn, Northolt Jn and High WycombeMCJ, NAJ1, NAJ2, NAJ363 miles 60 chains
Former Ashendon JnNAJ318 miles 29 chains
Banbury StationDCL5 miles 6 chains

Aynho junction is 2 chains south of the down junction.

Former stations

There were two stations south of Aynho Junction, one on each line.
Today it is the point where Chiltern Railways' services to join the same route used by Great Western Railway's services to Banbury, CrossCountry services between and and freight traffic.

Signalling

Until the resignalling scheme in 1992, which transferred control to Banbury South signal box, the junction was controlled by Aynho Junction signal box. This was located between the down lines from Oxford and Bicester North. The signal box was decommissioned in 1992 and eventually demolished ten years later.
As part of Chiltern's Evergreen 3, the junction was relaid and upgraded for higher speeds and a new panel was fitted to Banbury South signal box.
In January 2015 a £40m contract was signed between Siemens Rail Automation and Network Rail to renew the signalling in the Banbury area. The work involves developing a new layout at Banbury and new signalling in the area, including Ayhno. This was completed in August 2016.
The Aynho/Banbury/Leamington is now controlled from a workstation at West Midlands Signalling centre in Birmingham, via a Trackguard Westlock computer-based interlocking.