RAIL passengers planning a bank holiday getaway are being urged to avoid the East Coast Main Line this weekend.

Train operator London North Eastern Railway (LNER) issued a “do not travel” warning for the route between London and Scotland via York on Saturday and Sunday.

This is because King’s Cross will be closed due to Network Rail engineering work, meaning there are no trains between London and Peterborough.

LNER will run a severely restricted service from Scotland and the north of England to Peterborough.

Trains will be extremely busy and passengers are advised to reserve a seat or risk having to stand for the entire journey.

All Grand Central services are cancelled and Hull Trains services will be diverted to run to and from London St Pancras.

The closure of King’s Cross is due to Network Rail continuing a multi-million pound programme renewing track, signalling and overhead line equipment on the approach to the station.

LNEr said it will run a reduced service across the East Coast route on Monday but trains will be “very busy all day”.

The disruption will affect people returning to England from the Edinburgh Fringe festival, which closes on Monday.

There are many other events and sporting fixtures taking place near rail routes affected by engineering work this weekend.

These include the Edinburgh Fringe festival, York racecourse’s Ebor Festival, Creamfields near Warrington, Manchester Pride, the Ashes Test match in Leeds, rugby league’s Challenge Cup final at Wembley, Leeds Festival and a full round of football fixtures.

Network Rail chief executive Andrew Haines said: “There is never a convenient time to close parts of the railway.

“We are very aware that bank holiday engineering work affects many people who will have wanted to make the most of the long weekend.

“But the only reasons we do the work then is because it affects far fewer people than a closure on a normal working day.

“We plan to use every minute of the closures to work towards delivering a service that our passengers deserve and most of the railway network will be open as usual. Only some routes will be closed, so if you are thinking about travelling please plan ahead.”

Network Rail is carrying out 448 projects over the weekend.

Roads are also expected to be busy, with AA research suggesting around 14 million drivers are embarking on leisure journeys between Friday and Monday.

Congestion on holiday routes is expected to build from Friday.

AA patrol of the year George Flinton said: “Routes to coastal resorts and countryside beauty spots are usually among the busiest and there will be localised congestion around events.”