
The Office of Rail and Road (ORR) ruled on 30 Oct 2025 that Virgin Trains must be granted access to the Temple Mills maintenance depot in east London, removing the final obstacle to the company’s £700 million plan to run high-speed services from London to Paris, Brussels and Amsterdam by 2030. Eurostar had opposed the move, arguing the depot was needed for its own new €2 billion fleet, but ministers favoured opening the market to spur competition.
Virgin—backed by Alstom, Equitix and Italian operator Azzurra—will order 12 next-generation Avelia trainsets and expects to create 400 U.K. jobs. For business travellers, a rival operator could translate into lower fares and more peak-hour seat availability, especially on the lucrative London–Paris corridor. Travel-policy teams may wish to revisit rail-air comparative-cost models once schedules are announced.
The decision also raises broader border-control questions: Virgin will need to reach pre-clearance agreements with French and Belgian authorities and secure Home Office approval for additional juxtaposed-controls capacity at St Pancras. Mobility advisers should track whether the rollout dovetails with the EU’s new Entry/Exit System, due to apply to U.K. nationals from 2026.
Analysts see the ruling as a vote of confidence in Britain’s post-Brexit rail open-access regime and a potential catalyst for other entrants, including Spanish operator Renfe, to revive dormant Channel-Tunnel proposals.
Virgin—backed by Alstom, Equitix and Italian operator Azzurra—will order 12 next-generation Avelia trainsets and expects to create 400 U.K. jobs. For business travellers, a rival operator could translate into lower fares and more peak-hour seat availability, especially on the lucrative London–Paris corridor. Travel-policy teams may wish to revisit rail-air comparative-cost models once schedules are announced.
The decision also raises broader border-control questions: Virgin will need to reach pre-clearance agreements with French and Belgian authorities and secure Home Office approval for additional juxtaposed-controls capacity at St Pancras. Mobility advisers should track whether the rollout dovetails with the EU’s new Entry/Exit System, due to apply to U.K. nationals from 2026.
Analysts see the ruling as a vote of confidence in Britain’s post-Brexit rail open-access regime and a potential catalyst for other entrants, including Spanish operator Renfe, to revive dormant Channel-Tunnel proposals.








