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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
National
Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent

Never mind the gap: rubber safety device could fill void at railway stations

The rubber gap-fillers were tested at Heathrow Terminal 5 and could be rolled out at stations nationwide.
The rubber gap-fillers were tested at Heathrow Terminal 5 and could be rolled out at stations nationwide. Photograph: Handout

The famous gap that rail passengers have been told to mind for decades could be in jeopardy after successful trials of a safety device to fill the gaps on London platforms.

The rubber devices, appropriately known as gap-fillers, are fixed to the sides of platforms near the doors and have apparently eradicated accidents during a year-long trial.

Heathrow Express, which runs trains between the west London airport and Paddington station, said the rubber strips that had been tested in Terminal 5 would be installed across its network at a cost of £58,000, and could be rolled out nationwide on other lines.

Accidents from passengers slipping between the train and the platform accounted for almost half of the fatality risk on modern trains, the firm said, while less serious incidents caused delays while passengers were being cut free or treated.

There have been 65 such incidents on Heathrow Express in the past three years, but none in the past year when the bespoke gap-fillers were installed. A spokeswoman said passengers carrying baggage and stressed through air travel could be particularly prone to getting trapped in the small gap: “It’s almost impossible to fathom how it happens, but it does happen and it can be really nasty. It seems crazy but that little bit of rubber makes a real difference.”

The gap-fillers, designed by an Australian company, should also make boarding easier for disabled passengers.

Heathrow Express said it was working with the Rail Safety and Standards Board and other train operating companies in developing a national platform gap-filler strategy.

However, London Underground’s dimensions could prove a challenge. “Mind the gap” announcements have long been a feature of the capital’s travel network since the first Tannoy warnings in 1969, and the phrase has become a staple of tourist merchandise.

Fortunately for traditionalists, if not for safety or access considerations, the curved shape of many tube station platforms, as well as the variety of trains in operation, means similar devices might not necessarily work, leaving the Underground’s gap unfilled.

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