Burton Mail

HS2 boss heralds ‘incredible momentum’ for 2022

- By NEIL LANCFIELD

HS2 has “incredible momentum” entering 2022 following a “year of major moments”, according to the boss of the high-speed railway project.

Mark Thurston, chief executive of HS2 Ltd, said significan­t constructi­on events, contract awards – including a £2 billion deal shared by Alstom in Derby and Hitachi – and jobs milestones were achieved in 2021.

The year began with legislatio­n for Phase 2a of the railway – extending the line from Birmingham to Crewe – passing its final hurdle, opening the way for constructi­on to begin.

This was described as a “landmark moment” by Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

In May, a £570 million contract to build HS2’S Curzon Street station in Birmingham was awarded to a joint venture between engineerin­g firms Mace and Dragados. It is being built to run as net-zero carbon once open, incorporat­ing eco-friendly design and sustainabl­e technologi­es like rainwater capture.

Also in May, HS2 launched its first giant tunnelling machine from a site in Buckingham­shire near the M25 motorway.

The 558ft (170m) long contraptio­n is one of two machines digging a pair of 10-mile (16km) tunnels under the Chiltern Hills.

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps gave the go ahead for permanent constructi­on work to begin at the site of Old Oak Common station, west London, in June.

This will be the UK’S largest railway station built in a single stage.

In September,

HS2 celebrated hitting the landmark of 20,000 jobs being supported by the project.

The following month, archaeolog­ists digging on the HS2 route uncovered a set of Roman sculptures at an abandoned medieval church in Stoke Mandeville, Buckingham­shire.

HS2’S final milestone of 2021 saw contracts worth around £2 billion handed to a joint bid between Alstom, in Derby, Hitachi and to design, build and maintain a fleet of 54 HS2 trains. Mr Thurston said: “It has been a year of major

moments for HS2. From the start of tunnelling, to hitting 20,000 jobs, to awarding the contract to build our trains, 2021 really showed the incredible momentum on Britain’s biggest infrastruc­ture project.

“HS2 is moving forward, creating jobs, enhancing skills, benefiting UK businesses and building a lowcarbon, high-capacity railway that will change the way we travel in Britain.”

But the project, which will see its Phase 2b eastern route pass from Birmingham to East Midlands Parkway running close to Ashby and Measham, also experience­d significan­t difficulti­es.

Environmen­tal activists caused disruption at several sites on Phase 1 of the line between London and Birmingham.

This included a group digging a network of tunnels in London’s Euston Square Gardens, which required an expensive operation in January and February to remove them. The Government announced in November that HS2’S eastern leg between Leeds and the East Midlands had been scrapped. Ministers insisted similar journey time improvemen­ts could be achieved more quickly by running HS2 trains on existing lines. Plans for 2022 include the start of constructi­on of the Colne Valley Viaduct on the northwest outskirts of London in the spring.

It will be the UK’S longest railway bridge at 2.1 miles. Work on the country’s first major green tunnel – which involves digging a tunnel and then restoring land on top of it so it blends into the landscape – begins in March.

Separately, machines will start digging tunnels in London during 2022, while the movement of earth in the central section of Phase 1 will be ramped up from the summer.

HS2 is moving forward, creating jobs, enhancing skills, benefiting UK businesses.

Mark Thurston

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 ?? ?? HS2 CEO Mark Thurston, left (and inset) is shown around HS2’S tunnel boring machine under Long Itchington Wood in Warwickshi­re
HS2 CEO Mark Thurston, left (and inset) is shown around HS2’S tunnel boring machine under Long Itchington Wood in Warwickshi­re

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