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Sunday, 22 October 2017

Consultation on two new proposed stations for the London Overground at Old Oak and my quick thoughts on HS2

TfL has opened up a consultation on the proposed London Overground stations at Old Oak serving the future High Speed 2 (HS2) railway line.


Transport for London (TfL) has today begun a five week consultation on plans for two potential new London Overground stations that would provide a link to the Elizabeth line and High Speed 2 (HS2) and support the regeneration at Old Oak and Park Royal in west London

Old Oak and Park Royal represents one of London's largest Opportunity Areas and one of the UK's biggest development sites. It is being managed by Old Oak and Park Royal Development Corporation (OPDC), with the potential to deliver 25,500 new homes and 65,000 jobs. At the centre of these plans is a new station at Old Oak on the HS2 route providing connections between London, the Midlands and the North.

Improved local transport infrastructure, including connections to the London Overground network, would help support this level of regeneration and bring up to 250,000 more people and 150,000 additional jobs within an hour's journey of Old Oak. The potential new London Overground stations would improve local rail connections and provide links to the future Elizabeth line and HS2 services.

Alex Williams, TfL's Director for City Planning, said: `These two potential new London Overground stations would improve connectivity to HS2 and support the regeneration at Old Oak and Park Royal. Delivering these would further build on the regeneration benefits of HS2 and the Elizabeth line and would help support new homes, jobs and opportunities for thousands of Londoners.'

Following on from the 2014 consultation, working with Network Rail and the OPDC and co-funded by the European Commission (EC), TfL has undertaken work to develop an initial design for potential stations at Hythe Road and Old Oak Common Lane.

TfL is now seeking views on these two potential new London Overground stations:

Hythe Road station - This potential new station would be situated about 700 metres from the HS2 and Elizabeth line station within one of the largest development sites called Old Oak Park within the OPDC area.

Old Oak Common Lane station - This potential new station would be situated about 350 metres to the west of HS2 and Elizabeth line station between Old Oak Common and Midland Terrace.

Further information about the station designs and details of how to respond to the consultation, which closes on 17 November, are available here http://www.tfl.gov.uk/old-oak-common

The outcome of this consultation will help determine the next steps for the potential stations. Responses will be considered alongside the overall business case, supplementary feasibility studies, the availability of funding and determining operational requirements.

Should these potential stations be taken forward, powers to deliver them would need to be secured through a Transport & Works Act Order (TWAO). Further consultation would be carried out on the proposals prior to any TWAO submission.

TfL is also holding drop-in sessions to answer questions and provide more information to the public. These will be taking place at;

The Nadi Park Royal
260 Old Oak Common Lane
White City, London NW10 6DX
Monday 30 October 12:30 - 19:30
Saturday 4 November 10:30 - 16:00
Monday 6 November 12:30 - 19:30

You can view the consultation here and take part in the survey here. The consultation closes on 17th November 2017.

I understand there’s opposition to the High Speed 2 project, and I’m showing this news from a neutral perspective. As I’ve stated before, this is not a political blog.

My personal view is that they should upgrade the signalling system for the West Coast Main Line because the design speed for the Class 390 Pendolino is 145 mph (225 km/h). Plus the Class 390 trains tilt around curves at speed on the West Coast Main Line.

By upgrading the West Coast Main Line speed to 145 mph (225 km/h) it could make the High Speed 2 project obsolete. Currently the maximum speed for the West Coast Main Line is 125 mph (200 km/h) for tilting trains, and the maximum speed for standard trains is 110 mph (177 km/h).

Regarding the future High Speed 2 project, the design operating speed
could go up to 250mph (400 km/h). Not to mention, some of the conventional high speed railway lines in China go up to 217 mph (350 km/h). You can view the list of the high speed railway lines from around the world here.

Looking through the consultation page for the new Old Oak stations, it’s interesting to see the Enviro400H City used on the artwork of the proposed Old Oak stations.

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