Train passengers have been warned major delays are likely this weekend as sections of both the East Coast and West Coast main lines close on Saturday and Sunday.
The West Coast main line runs between London and Glasgow, with branches to Birmingham, North Wales, Liverpool, Manchester and Edinburgh.
It will be closed between Wigan North Western railway station and Lancaster during the next three weekends and on Sunday March 12 to enable track upgrades at Preston station.
When there is engineering work on that route a full service usually operates on the East Coast main line, which stretches between London and Edinburgh via locations such as Peterborough, Doncaster, York and Newcastle.
But there are no trains between London and St Neots, Cambridgeshire, this weekend while a new signalling system is brought into use.
It means there will be no direct services running between London and Scotland while Network Rail carries out the engineering work on the two major routes simultaneously.
Network Rail said a 'congested work programme' means it must close the sections of both main lines on Saturday and Sunday. Journeys between London and Scotland will be significantly slower than usual and require at least one change.
An itinerary suggested by National Rail Enquiries for passengers travelling from London to Edinburgh on Saturday morning involves three trains and one bus. That journey is expected to take a total of six hours and 12 minutes, nearly two hours longer than the normal direct service.
Among the operators affected by the closures are Avanti West Coast, LNER and Lumo.
Transport Focus chief executive Anthony Smith said: "Passengers will be disappointed to see both East and West Coast lines closed due to engineering works this coming weekend. This situation should not happen.
"One line should be kept open so that passengers from Scotland and the north of England have access to a direct train service to London. Both train operators and Network Rail must ensure that there is effective communication to support passengers.”
A Network Rail spokeswoman said: “We always try to have a direct cross-border route open, but that has not been possible on this occasion. The industry – both Network Rail and train operators – have looked at the alternatives, all of which cause more disruption for passengers.
"We also have a congested work programme caused by landslips, floods and strikes, severely limiting those alternatives. We understand the inconvenience this will cause to some of our customers and wish to reassure them that this will be a one-off."
Further strikes
It comes as further strikes have been announced next month in the long-running dispute over pay, jobs and conditions.
On Thursday evening, members of the Rail, Martine and Transport union (RMT) said they will walk out on March 16, 18 and 30, and April 1, at 14 train operators. The union’s members at Network Rail will strike on March 16 and will then launch a ban on overtime.
The RMT accused employers of refusing to put any new offers on the table. The union, which represents 40,000 workers across Network Rail and 14 train operators, rejected offers from employers last week.
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