Background During the early 1950s, Gatwick Airport expanded substantially, leading to
Gatwick railway station being rebuilt and integrated into the airport's terminal via an upper level concourse designed by
British Rail Southern Region. On 27 May 1958, the rebuilt station,
Gatwick Airport, opened with a regular train service. Initially, the rail service was provided entirely by standard London to
Brighton stopping services; however, more trains began to call with the introduction of the summer timetable in June 1958. One of the key elements of this expanded service was the extension of
Three Bridges to
Bognor Regis stopping services to start and terminate at
London Victoria. These trains would run through a reversible platform at Gatwick where a portion would detach and wait in the platform for passengers until the next up train from Bognor Regis was attached and the train would depart for Victoria. For this service
British Rail used a small batch of seven
Class 402 2HALs in order to work with the trains used on the Bognor Regis services, suitable for airport link use because of their larger luggage space. This situation lasted until the early 1970s when increased passenger and luggage travel to the station was rendering the old system obsolete. British Rail therefore decided to adapt a number of
Class 423 4VEPs with increased luggage capacity (at the expense of fewer second class seats) and were redesignated as
Class 427 4VEGs. The service however remained much the same, with the units attaching and detaching from Bognor Regis bound services running via
Redhill. This led to somewhat extended journey times which meant the service lacked any real purpose, as the faster services began calling at Gatwick Airport from the early 1970s, and made the option of travelling to Gatwick from London on the service lack appeal to those who knew better. At first the service from Bognor Regis, which by this stage only stopped at
East Croydon, was branded
Rapid City Link. During 1975,
British Airports Authority airport director John Mulkern,
British Caledonian Airways chairman Adam Thomson and British Rail's
Southern Region regional manager Bob Reid, formed the
Gatwick Liaison Group to discuss matters of mutual interest. A subsidiary of this entity, the Gatwick Promotion Group, under the chairmanship of the airport's public relations manager David Hurst, was formed to market the airport. It was a long-term aim of the group to have a non-stop service between the airport and central London in order to counter the perceived distance from the capital, for both domestic and overseas passengers. One of the first successes of the group was to persuade the British Rail board to redevelop Gatwick station by building a raft over the platforms, and this was opened by British Rail chairman
Peter Parker in 1980.
Express service In May 1984, the non-stop Gatwick Express service began, using
Class 73s with
Mark 2 carriages. Later, the duties were taken over by
Class 488 and
Class 489. A 30-minute journey time was advertised, although some journeys would take nearer 35 minutes, especially during peak hours.
Privatisation Gatwick Express was the first portion of
British Rail's InterCity sector to be converted into a separate train operating unit, ready for franchising as a private business with the assets transferred to Gatwick Express Limited in March 1994. The Gatwick Express franchise was awarded by the
Director of Passenger Rail Franchising to
National Express with the franchise starting on 28 April 1996. on 22 June 2008. This reorganisation was part of a plan to use Gatwick Express services to provide extra capacity on the
Brighton Main Line south of Gatwick Airport. On 20 August 2008, the Department for Transport announced that
Abellio,
Govia,
National Express and
Stagecoach had been shortlisted to bid for the new South Central franchise. On 9 June 2009, the Department for Transport announced that Govia had retained the franchise, beginning on 20 September 2009.
Operated by Govia Thameslink Railway The Department for Transport confirmed prior to the awarding of the new franchise that the Southern franchise would be merged at its conclusion in July 2015 into the proposed
Thameslink, Southern and Great Northern franchise. In March 2012, the Department for Transport announced that
Abellio,
FirstGroup,
Govia,
MTR and
Stagecoach had been shortlisted to bid for the new franchise. The Invitation to Tender was to have been issued in October 2012, and the successful bidder announced in spring 2013. However, in the wake of the
InterCity West Coast refranchising process collapsing, the
Secretary of State for Transport announced in October 2012 that the process would be put on hold pending the results of a review. With the last franchise expiring on 25 July 2015, the South Central franchise merged with the Thameslink Great Northern franchise to create
Thameslink, Southern and Great Northern. This is operated by
Govia Thameslink Railway, which is also owned by Southern's parent company,
Govia. The Gatwick Express brand identity has been retained.
Oyster cards and
contactless payment cards have been accepted for travel between London Victoria and Gatwick Airport since January 2016.
Suspension On 30 March 2020, all Gatwick Express services were suspended until further notice under a reduced timetable rapidly adopted in response to the
COVID-19 pandemic. Some of Gatwick Express's
Class 387/2 trains have been used by Southern on its
East Coastway services between and , and , on some
Brighton Main Line services between Brighton and , and on some
West Coastway services between
Brighton and
West Worthing. During May 2021, nine Class 387/2s were transferred to
Great Northern as replacements for
Class 365s on services between and , , and ; six of these trains were then leased to
Great Western Railway to cover for
Class 800s on services between and . During December 2021, the Gatwick Express briefly resumed on weekdays only, but was suspended after only two weeks due to engineering works and COVID-related developments. On 3 April 2022, Gatwick Express services restarted under a seven-day timetable; however, only two services per hour were initially ran between London and Gatwick instead of four per hour as they were prior to the pandemic. Govia Thameslink Railway attributed the work to redevelop Gatwick Airport station for this cutback. == Services ==