Between 2007 and 2010, work was undertaken to reinstate the original level crossing across the road to allow trains from Norwich to run onto the North Norfolk Railway (NNR) heritage line tracks. In December 2007, the
BBC reported that
Network Rail supported the plans to allow occasional crossing of the tracks for trains onto the heritage route. Work began in January 2010, with the moving of the NNR headshunt to slew into line with the
National Rail section. The link was reinstated in March 2010, when the first passenger train over the new crossing was hauled by steam locomotive
Oliver Cromwell from . Occasional uses by charter trains and visiting
rolling stock are anticipated not to exceed 12 times a year. The NNR also operate a number of dining trains over the entire surviving section of the M&GN, between
Holt and Cromer, during summer months. Services began in 2016, working in partnership with the
North Yorkshire Moors Railway, which was already a licensed operator with Network Rail; these trains do not stop at the national railway station. ==References==