Several EWL stations to be closed on Sundays to facilitate cable replacement

    Published Tue, Mar 2, 2021 · 01:05 PM

    [SINGAPORE] Several stations along the East-West MRT Line will be closed on Sundays to facilitate the replacement of electrical power cables along the Tuas West Extension (TWE), rail operator SMRT said on Tuesday (March 2).

    On Sundays, between March 14 and April 18, six stations between Pioneer MRT station and Tuas Link station will be closed. Subsequently, on Sundays between April 25 and May 23, four stations between Gul Circle and Tuas Link stations will be shut.

    During the full-day closures, a shuttle bus service will serve designated bus stops near the affected stations, SMRT said.

    Train services will operate as usual on the Mondays following these closures.

    Advising commuters to plan their journeys ahead of time and to cater for additional travel time, SMRT said it will post updates about changes in train operation hours and alternative transport arrangements on its website, Facebook and Twitter pages, as well as its mobile application.

    The replacement of cables along the TWE is part of a set of precautionary measures taken by SMRT and systems supplier Alstom to prevent power cable faults and potential service disruptions.

    BT in your inbox

    Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.

    This is after a massive three-line rail breakdown on Oct 14 last year left more than 6,700 passengers stranded on trains for up to three hours and affected about 123,000 commuters.

    The disruption was eventually traced to a burnt section of cable between Tuas Link and Tuas West Road stations along the TWE.

    Alstom later committed to replacing all 150km of cables along the TWE with higher-specification ones, and to pay for the costs.

    Said SMRT on Tuesday: "The full Sunday closures will provide more engineering hours and accelerate the cable replacement works, which are expected to be completed by end-2021." Besides the power cables, Alstom also committed to replacing all 113 trip coils along the 7.5km-long TWE as a faulty trip coil failed to isolate the initial cable fault that led to the Oct 14 disruption.

    Stations along the TWE were closed early in November to facilitate the trip coil replacement, which was completed in December.

    THE STRAITS TIMES

    Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services