23 Nov Major Transport Projects

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transcript

Priorities for Transport in a Growing London

Workshop 1: Major ProjectsWednesday, 23 November 2016

#FoLMTS

9:00 Welcome (Jo Wilson, Head of Policy, Future of London)

9:05 Panel presentations

Matthew Yates, Head of Planning Projects, TfL

Tim Chapman, Director, Infrastructure, Arup

Paula Hirst, Director, Strategy & Programmes, OPDC

9:40 Q&A

9:50 Workshop

10:40 Networking & close

Agenda

Matthew YatesHead of Planning Projects, TfL

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Tim ChapmanDirector, Infrastructure, Arup

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Supporting London growth……………..Major Projects

Tim Chapman FREng

Leader, Infrastructure London

tim.chapman@arup.com

Characteristics of a successful City

[After Professor Brian Collins ]

1. Courteous

2. Active and inclusive

3. Public space

4. Healthy

5. Evolving

Governance and Infrastructure

Creating the future of our society

Citizens want to be:

• Safe

• Fit

• Prosperous

• Housed

• Close to jobs

• In proximity to education,

entertainment

• Productive

Transport shapes cities

World’s first

underground

railway

World’s

first

railway

Henry Beck’s

Tube map

First

Tube railway

DLR JLE Croydon Tramlink HS1 St Pancras London Overground Rebuilt Kings Cross Elizabeth Line (Crossrail 1)

Impact on society

UK needs London productivity!

• London is most productive part of the UK (and EU!)

• London’s economy is also the most robust

• London fiscal transfers power services throughout UK

Infrastructure “bakes in” societal behaviour for centuries

How big infrastructure happens

Air quality - 21st Century scourge (and 19th, 20th !)

Impact to Health

CO2Impact to Climate

Mitigation

Non-fossil

energy use

Adaptation

Increase resilience

Resource scarcity, security

Burning fossil fuels

Air quality (NO2, PM etc)

£ €$

Great Stink, 1858 Great Smog, 1952

Creating the future of our society

Great ……, 2016

Joseph Bazalgette Clean Air Act 1956

One cause –

two effects –

same answer

Infrastructure takes decades from conception to fruition…

Crossrail

• Conceived: 1943 / 1944 / 1948 / 1974 / 1989

• Tim’s first involvement: 1992 – bill failed in

1994

• CRL 2001; Bill 2005; Act 2008; start of

construction 2009 / 2010 (thank you Canary

Wharf)

• To open: 2019 ?

How big infrastructure happens

Conception to service 76 / 30 / 18 years; far longer than standard political cycle

London needs very long-term planning to remain successful

Shape the City we want

Fix long-term issues

Conundrum of housing and transport!

Have to be considered together

Ongoing population growth?

Migration versus BREXIT

Most PRODUCTIVE parts of UK have high MIGRATION

Migration is a consequence of success… For less migration, do you have to be less

successful?!

What new transport does London need?

What can LAs do?

What changed on

Crossrail…?

Must be deal on houses

All new rail / or roads too?

More radial?

More orbital – eg river crossings

Transport for the wider city region?

NIC?

And who pays?

Paula HirstDirector, Strategy & Programmes, OPDC

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Old Oak Common:

The largest train station to be built in

the UK for over a century?

Paula Hirst

Director of Strategy & Programmes

23 November 2016

LOCATIONLocation as the crow flies…

• 2026 Old Oak station opens with: HS2,

Crossrail and the Great Western Mainline

• 250,000 passengers per day

• 90% the size of Waterloo station

• £1bn Government investment at Old Oak

• 3 new & 2 improved stations

• 202 trains at peak across Old Oak

• 10 rail lines

• 8 min from central London

• 10 min from Heathrow

• 38 min from Birmingham

A super hub station

Introducing OPDC

Stations and our boundary area

Commitment to growth

• OAPF adopted by Mayor

November 2015

• First draft Local Plan

consultation completed

• First CIL public

consultation approved

• A huge amount of

supporting evidence

gathered

Existing site: challenges and opportunities

Utilising the Grand Union Canal

Protecting and enhancing Wormwood Scrubs

New bridges and connections

High quality new public realm

New high quality homes for Londoners

Connecting with surrounding neighbourhoods

• 140 hectares core site

• 97 hectares public sector

• 20 hectares Car Giant

• Mixed ownerships at the

edges

Public land

Old Oak today

Old Oak tomorrow

@oldoakparkroyal

www.london.gov.uk/opdc

info@opdc.london.gov.uk

020 7983 5732

Q&A

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9:50 Briefing and review of materials

9:55 Group discussion

• What are the main benefits/opportunities the Bakerloo

Line will bring to the proposed route in relation to your

table’s assigned theme?

• What are the challenges to a) accelerating these benefits

and b) maximising the return on investment?

• How can these challenges be overcome?

10:20 Findings from each table

Workshop

Next steps

1 Dec: Workspace matching event

6 Dec: MTS Workshop, Community Projects

6 Dec: Fizz ‘n’ Chips Christmas Party

19 Jan: Build to Rent report launch

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Thank you

futureoflondon.org.uk

@futureofldn

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