FROM his offices high above Victoria station, Glenn Keelan, an
engineer, looks down on a hive of activity. Huge diggers chew up and
spit out earth just outside the 19th-century façade of the original
station. Nearby, workers are lowered in boxy metal cages to work on an
emergency entrance. By the time the extension is finished in 2018, the
Tube station will be three times bigger. It needs to be:
Victoria now
has more people going through it than Heathrow airport, and its traffic
has increased more quickly over the past four years.
#
#
Whereas the number of people driving in London is falling, Tube and
bus use is surging (see chart).
Each day 3.7m people use the
Underground while 6.4m take a bus. Once-quiet routes are crammed.
The
London Overground, a rebranded and improved railway line, carries 120m
passengers a year, up from just 33m in 2008. The Docklands Light Railway
carried 66m passengers in 2008. It now carries 100m.
#
#
For years transport in London lacked investment and a high-profile
champion. The creation in 1999 of an elected mayor and Transport for
London (TfL), the authority behind the city’s networks, changed this.
The two men who have represented London, Ken Livingstone and Boris
Johnson, have few responsibilities beyond transport, so they have been
able to focus on coaxing money out of the Treasury. TfL has been
compared to an occupying army—frequently unpopular, but ruthlessly
efficient at getting the job done.
Still the system groans. Several parts of the Tube network are
congested: Victoria station routinely closes because of overcrowding,
and the Northern line is packed. More supply seems to create more
demand. The eastern part of the London Overground was meant to take 6m
people a year off the bus network. But new passengers came and took
those places instead. The pressure is bound to grow quickly. London’s
population, currently 8.2m, is expected to exceed 10m by 2030.
Fast, cheap and out of control
The changing character of the capital makes things trickier. Much of
the city’s population growth over the past decade has been in east
London, which is poorly served by the Tube. Parts of inner London such
as Kensington and Chelsea have lost people. In future, thinks Sir Peter
Hendy, TfL’s boss, most population growth will be in the suburbs. Yet
jobs are becoming increasingly clustered in the middle—in the City,
Canary Wharf and the West End. “If you’re an insurance company, you
don’t look at a map and settle on Enfield,” says Sir Peter. London will
not just have more people: it will have more people travelling farther
to their jobs.
Projects are already underway to deal with this. Automatic signalling
is being introduced on the Northern line so that more trains can run
more frequently. There are plans to extend the line to Nine Elms in
Battersea. Antediluvian rolling stock on most of the other routes will
be replaced by air-conditioned trains; signalling will be improved too.
The first section of Crossrail, a new east-west train service, will open
by 2016. The mayor and TfL are lobbying hard for Crossrail 2, a mooted
north-south line that would cut through London either as a metropolitan
system or as part of a longer railway network.
#
Grand projects help, at huge cost. But there is a simpler, cheaper
way of adding capacity, insists Sir Peter: make much better use of
London’s huge existing commuter railway network. Which means giving him
more control.
TfL has been granted the West Anglia route, which runs from Liverpool
Street through east London. As with the Overground, it will run under a
concession rather than a more complex rail franchise.
This means TfL
taking on most of the financial risk, and with luck making it efficient.
If the mayor gets his wish, other lines may join West Anglia in TfL’s
embrace. “We need to start thinking about rail as a supplementary link
to the Tube,” says Isabel Dedring, the deputy mayor for transport.
This power grab worries some. Members of Kent County Council
initially bristled at the idea of London-run lines slinking through
their county. Surely the city would cut back on trains beyond its
boundary, they said. But such anxiety is misplaced, thinks Christian
Wolmar, a transport expert. If commuters are travelling to London, the
city and passengers would benefit if TfL had control over those lines.
Stations blighted by lack of investment would be refurbished; auxiliary
routes would be connected to the busier central lines.
London’s transport could be improved even more if the mayor were
given control over local taxes. Crossrail is being financed through a
combination of government cash, fares and an increase in land values. A
business-rate supplement on non-domestic properties with a rateable
value of £55,000 ($80,000) or more has supplied £4 billion for the
project. This arrangement could be extended for Crossrail 2, and more
widely.
As elsewhere, but even more so, investment in London transport helps
the economy. The city accounts for nearly a fifth of Britain’s economic
output. But the benefits are local, too. Since the London Overground
came to Hackney, house prices have jumped by 25%. Only parts of central
London have seen faster rises.
Hackney Central, a shiny new Overground station, is surrounded by
chic bars and organic coffee shops. Down the road is Hackney Downs—a
decrepit, little-used train station currently run by a rail operator. By
2015 it will be part of TfL, however. When it reopens it will be a test
of TfL’s powers and its ability to change London for the better.
#Πηγή:
Underground, overground
http://www.economist.com/news/britain/21588072-london-has-built-about-good-transport-network-it-could-given-its-constraints-time
Oct 19th 2013
#
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου