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View Full Version : £16bn Crossrail go-ahead threatens to shunt Tube upgrade into sidings


Ardent
Sep 14, 2007, 10:00 AM
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/img/global/tol-logo.gif

September 14, 2007

£16bn Crossrail go-ahead threatens to shunt Tube upgrade into sidings

Ben Webster
The Times (London)

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article2449154.ece

Crossrail, the plan to build mainline rail tunnels under the heart of London, is set to be approved after an 18-year wait, but an upgrade of the Tube network may be sacrificed to pay for it.

The Government is preparing to announce that it will fund a third of the £16 billion cost of the scheme, with passengers and businesses contributing the other two thirds.

Journey times would fall dramatically for tens of thousands of commuters because trains that normally terminate at Paddington and Liverpool Street would continue in deep tunnels connecting the two stations.


The Right Platform

Heathrow would be linked directly with the West End, the City and Docklands, with trains carrying 1,500 people taking only 43 minutes to travel from the airport to Canary Wharf.

The scheme would be the biggest expansion of the capital’s transport network for 40 years but could result in long delays to the plans to relieve congestion on London Underground.

Crossrail would not open until 2015 at the earliest, but the Tube is already struggling to cope with passenger numbers, which have risen by a third in the past decade to just over a billion a year.

The collapse in July of Metronet, which maintains nine of the twelve Tube lines, has left a £2 billion hole in the budget for upgrading the network.

Transport for London (TfL) has given the administrators a £900 million loan to keep work going until Christmas. It now fears that it will not be able to recoup this money from the Government and will have to cancel or delay much of the upgrade work, including plans for modernising more than 100 stations.

Some of the projects for adding capacity through new signalling systems and new trains may also be completed years later than planned.

Crossrail would alleviate some of the pressure on the Central Line – and run underneath it – but would do little to ease overcrowding on other lines. A senior TfL source said: “While we are delighted that Crossrail is now very close to being approved, it will be cold comfort if the Tube is then starved of the money it needs.

“It should not be a case of one or the other because London desperately needs both to cope with the growth in population and jobs. But we are receiving worrying signals from the Treasury.”

The Government is concerned that rescuing Metronet and funding Crossrail at the same time would consume the majority of the public money available for investing in Britain’s transport system. There would be little left over for cities such as Birmingham, Manchester and Newcastle, which also need funding to upgrade and expand their rail and tram networks.

Gordon Brown is understood to be keen to demonstrate that a prime minister from Scotland recognises the importance of investing in London’s infrastructure. Crossrail has been estimated to deliver economic benefits worth £30 billion over 60 years, double what it would cost to build.

But Mr Brown is also determined to keep to his fiscal rule on limiting public sector borrowing, and will expect larger companies in London to cover a third of the costs of Crossrail via a supplement on the business rate. The remaining third would come from borrowing against future fare income.

A Bill that would grant powers to build Crossrail is currently passing through Parliament and is expected to gain Royal Assent in the Spring. Construction could start late next year.

More than £300 million has been spent planning Crossrail, and 400 people are currently working on the project, though only a single preparatory shaft has been dug at Moorgate.

London First, the business lobby group, said that its 300 members supported Crossrail but were worried about how much they would have to pay towards it. A spokesman said: “We won’t know whether to cheer or grimace when they make the announcement because we don’t yet know the figures. We would be willing to go back to our membership to sell them the idea of a 3 per cent supplement on the business rate.”

Getting the project on track

1989 A study funded by the Government proposes three projects: Crossrail, a new Tube line to link Wimbledon and Hackney and a Jubilee Line extension

1991 A Crossrail Bill is submitted to Parliament, predicting a cost of £1.4 billion

1994 The Bill is rejected after three Tory MPs, none of whom represents London constituencies, vote against it in a Commons committee

1995 Attempts to revive Crossrail fail because of concerns it would interfere with the privatisation of British Rail

1999 The City Corporation, which supported Crossrail from early on, plans a £2.8 billion bond issue to help pay for it

2000 The Government asks the Strategic Rail Authority to study the requirements for extra passenger capacity to and through London. The resulting London East West Study recommends that both Crossrail and the route from Hackney to southwest London be resurrected

2001 Cross London Rail Links Ltd is formed to plan Crossrail and the Hackney route. The company is now jointly owned by Transport for London and the Department for Transport

2003 Tony Blair says he is “confident” that Crossrail will be built but says it is important to work out how it will be funded

2005 A plan for a Crossrail Bill is included in the Queen's Speech. The Government admits that the line cannot be ready in time for the Olympics

Ardent
Sep 14, 2007, 10:16 AM
If this is true then it is rather sad, although I am happy that Crossrail
is to go ahead.

Sadly the Tube upgraded looks like being delayed, at a time
when London Commuters are being asked to pay a congestion charge,
expensive rail fare rise and rises in the cost of travelling by Tube. It
also seems that Commuters may have to pay for Crossrail, with only a
third of the money coming from Government.

Surely the expect better services all round including the Tube.

nito
Sep 15, 2007, 10:24 AM
This is a big project, £16bn/$30bn will link Heathrow Airport, and City Airport to the 3 main CBD's of London (West End, City and Canary Wharf). The map has since been updated to include another underground station at Woolwich (mid-way between Abbey Wood and Custom House)


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/60/CrossrailLine1Map.svg/825px-CrossrailLine1Map.svg.png


This is the inital route, but once built further extensions would be built to the rail hub at Reading in the west, while a southern extension from Abbey Wood to the new HSR Ebsfleet International would be on the board. Naturally its all about getting the core network built first.

nito
Oct 5, 2007, 4:08 PM
£16bn [$32bn] Crossrail project gets green light from PM
Filed 05/10/07

London's long-awaited, multi-billion pound, east-west rail link has finally been given the go-ahead by the government.

After weeks of high level funding talks, the Prime Minster today (5 October) gave Crossrail the green light and announced a £16bn funding deal to secure its construction.

Exact details of the funding arrangements will be made public in next week's Comprehensive Spending Review. The total project cost for Crossrail is expected to be up to £16bn in outturn prices - that is prices allowing for inflation during construction and fully inclusive of all project costs such as land acquisition, compulsory purchase and contingencies. Government, Crossrail passengers and the private sector will each contribute approximately a third of the scheme's cost. Individual contributions will be made by businesses in the City of London, Canary Wharf developers, Transport for London, Greenwich Council, Berkeley Homes and BAA, which owns London Heathrow Airport. The Crossrail routes are expected to be commercially self-sustaining once operational.

Crossrail will link Maidenhead and Heathrow west of London with Shenfield and Abbey Wood in Essex and Kent. It will include new stations at key city locations including Bond Street, Farringdon and Canary Wharf. The infrastructure is expected to bring an additional one and a half million people to within 60 minutes of London's key business areas and is expected to carry 200m passenger a year.

Work on the £16bn project will begin in earnest in 2010 and the first trains are expected to run in 2017. It will be Europe's largest civil engineering project and will provide London with a modern railway that supports its growth as a world-leading finance centre. The government says it will help add at least £20bn to the UK's economy. The Parliamentary Bill to secure the necessary powers to begin construction of the link is expected to receive Royal Assent in summer 2008.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown said: "I believe this is a project of enormous importance not just for London but for the whole country. By generating an additional 30,000 jobs and helping London retain its position as the world's pre-eminent financial centre, it will support Britain's economic growth and maintain Britain's position as a leading world economy. And by delivering quicker journeys from some of the most economically disadvantaged parts of the city to the most economically important, it will support regeneration particularly in the most deprived parts of our country."

Transport secretary Ruth Kelly said: "Incredible work has gone into securing a Crossrail funding deal that has eluded all previous governments. Today's announcement paves the way for a rail link that will give a lasting transport legacy to London for centuries to come."

The total length of the Crossrail routes will be 118.5km, including 41.5km in tunnels. Thirty eight stations will be served by the lines and 24 trains an hour will run through the central section in each direction at peak times. New rolling stock for the route will be fitted with the ERTMS in-cab signalling system currently being tested in Wales.


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