The Guardian (USA)

Crossrail 2: more than £115m spent before project mothballed

- Gwyn Topham

More than £115m was spent on Crossrail 2 before work on the scheme for a new north-south rail line through London was suspended in November.

The costs for the developmen­t and design of the line, which was once hoped to be operationa­l in the early 2030s, were shared between the Department for Transport and Transport for London.

However, work was officially paused as part of the emergency financial agreement between the government and TfL to fund the capital’s transport network after passenger revenues dried up due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Around a quarter of the money spent went to Network Rail, the stateowned railway infrastruc­ture manager, according to figures revealed by New Civil Engineer.

The biggest private sector beneficiar­ies were Arup, whose design consultanc­y work on the tunnels and southern section totalled almost £12m, and Arcadis, which was paid £11.4m for engineerin­g consultanc­y.

The line would have linked stations in the home counties to the north and south-west of the capital via new tunnels underneath central London, roughly along the route of the Chelsea-Hackney undergroun­d line first discussed in the 1970s.

Central developmen­t funding was allotted from 2015-16 when constructi­on of the original Crossrail line appeared to be on time and on budget, and when Crossrail 2 was regarded as an essential part of the plan for handling HS2 passengers arriving in London Euston – a prospect that is in doubt.

The division within TfL that was working on Crossrail 2 was seconded to other work after Covid-19 hit London last year. TfL said that while the project was mothballed, land would remain safeguarde­d and the design work would remain relevant.

A TfL spokespers­on said: “The pandemic, and subsequent impact on our finances, has meant that we have to be realistic about what is currently affordable.”

A planned Bakerloo line extension for the undergroun­d is also on ice.

The spokespers­on added: “Our immediate priority for these schemes is progressin­g safeguardi­ng as they are still likely to be needed in the future to support long-term growth and modal shift in London. The work developing proposals for these schemes will still be used when we are in a position to confirm funding in future.”

 ?? Photograph: Justin Tallis/AFP/Getty Images ?? The division within TfL that was working on Crossrail 2 was seconded to other work after Covid-19 hit London last year.
Photograph: Justin Tallis/AFP/Getty Images The division within TfL that was working on Crossrail 2 was seconded to other work after Covid-19 hit London last year.

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