The Canonbury Cross-Over
The picture shows two London Overground trains at Canonbury station.
I have just alighted at the station on a train from Willesden Junction, that was going to Stratford along the North London Line and have crossed to the wide centre platform on the footbridge.
The train on the right is going between Stratford and Richmond along the North London Line, in the opposite direction to my journey. The train has just called at the right hand face of this pair of platforms.
The train approaching on the left, is an East London Line train going from Highbury and Islington station to East and South London.
The frequency on the North London Line is about eight trains per hour between Stratford and Willesden and four trains per hour between Willesden and Richmond.
On this section of the East London Line, the frequency is eight trains per hour.
This means that if you are travelling either way along the North London Line and then want to travel on the East London Line, even if you just miss a connection, you have a maximum of about seven minutes to wait.
To ease matters often a North London Line train will call at Canonbury at or just before an East London Line train arrives.
Canonbury is a station with plenty of shelter and a coffee stall, so waiting isn’t the worst of experiences even on a day like today.
The original layout of this station was more complicated and you didn’t need to change trains between Stratford and Dalston Junction, as you do now!
But now, we design stations and track layouts, so that all passengers have an easy and fast journey.
It doesn’t always please everybody, as the direct train a commuter has taken for years, might have been replaced with a faster service, that has a cross-platform change in the middle.
Network Rail have published a report, where they may be reorganising the Cambridge and Peterborough to Ipswich services, by building a new platform at Newmarket.
An hourly Cambridge to Ipswich service would meet an hourly Newmarket to Peterborough service at Newmarket, where passengers between Ipswich and Peterborough would walk across the platform to get the other train to continue their journey.
We shall be seeing this type of train organisation a lot more in the future. But the passenger will get more and better services, whilst the train operator will be using the same number of trains.
Canonbury was one of the first stations, where simple cross-platform interchange was built into the design.
We shall see a lot more innovative station layouts.
Improving Imperial Wharf Station
In the June 2016 Edition of Modern Railways, there was an article entitled Turning South London Orange.
One of the proposals is to create a walkway across Battersea Railway Bridge to give access to Imperial Wharf station from the South Bank of the River Thames.
This Google Map shows the station, the river and the South Bank.
Just to look at this map, shows that the scheme has potential.
- I estimate that the distance is probably about five hundred metres.
- The walkway would also give access to the Thames Clippers at Chelsea Harbour Pier.
- The walkway would give better walking routes in the area and across the river.
Unfortunately, the design of the station is possibly not one, that could accept passengers walking in and out at track level, so without a lot of work at the station, passengers might have to climb down and up to get between the walkway and the platforms.
Battersea Railway Bridge is also a Listed structure and it may be difficult to add a walkway.
These pictures show the station and the bridge.
However, it would appear that help is at hand. There are plans for a new footbride called the Diamond Jubilee Footbridge, which will be directly upstream of the railway bridge. This page from the Diamond Jubilee Footbridge web site has a picture and the reasons, why it should be built.
Incidentally, there used to be a Battersea station on the South bank of the River, in the area of Battersea High Street.
This Google Map shows the area.
Although, it looks like the station, which was destroyed in 1940s by German bombing, could be rebuilt, I feel that the Diamond Jubilee Footbridge, is a much better way to spend the money.
Sorting Out The Late Great Western Electrification
I could have added something like And Other Issues to the title of this post.
An article in the June 2016 Edition of Modern Railways entitled GWR To Order More ‘387s’ starts with the statement.
Govia Thameslink Railway’s fleet of 29 Class 387/1 EMUs is to be retained by the operator and will not be transferred to Great Western Railway, according to industry sources.
It seems that not only do GTR have trouble with their staff and the new Class 700 trains, but also with other train operators too.
So GWR have snapped up the other fourteen ordered by Porterbrook and supplemented this with an order for fifteen new build units.
This means they have got their required 29 trains to go with the eight they ordered some time ago.
Unfortunately, building more Class 387 trains, which would probably help the rolling stock shortage caused by the non-working Class 700 trains, especially as it appears Bombardier has spare capacity, is not on, as changes to crashworthiness regulations mean that these trains can’t be produced after September 2016.
So it’s probably very lucky, that the Great Western doesn’t have much working electrification.
One paragraph in the article gives some news about the progress of Bombardier’s IPEMU technology. Thios is said.
Industry sources confirm that options for some of the GWR order to be produced as independently powered EMU (IPEMU) variants fitted with batteries for operation away from electrified routes are still being explored. This would enable GWR services to Gatwick Airport and on some of the Thames Valley branches to be worked by ‘387s’ prior to electrification. Any decision to look seriously at this proposal will depend on final electrification timescales being confirmed by Network Rail.
Using IPEMUs on the routes mentioned would be a sensible move.
It would also appear from the article that GWR is going to order more Class 800 bi-mode trains from Hitachi.
There is also this article in Rail Technology Magazine entitled Perry Confirms New GWR Class 801 Will Be Bi-Mode.
As the Class 801 electric train and the Class 800 bi-mode train are more of less identical except for the diesel engines, conversion between the two types is possible.
A South London Metro
Some of my recent posts including.
- An Improved South London Line Is Proposed
- A New Station For Battersea
- The Lines At Battersea Power Station On the Way Into Victoria
- A Tunnel Under Brixton
Are leading me to the conclusion that it would be possible to create a South London Metro, that worked under similar principles to the East London Line.
The East London Line
If anybody doesn’t believe that the East London Line is one of the best creations on the world’s railways in recent years, then they should go and read something else now.
Consider.
- There is a core section between Dalston Junction and Surrey Quays stations, where sixteen trains per hour (tph) shuttle passengers under the river in modern trains.
- In Increased Frequencies On The East London Line, I indicated that TfL are planning to increase this frequency to 20 tph.
- At the Northern end four dedicated platforms at two different termini; Dalston Junction and Highbury and Islington give passengers choices of onward routes.
- At the Southern end, there are four separate termini; Clapham Junction, Crystal Palace, New Cross and West Croydon.
- Three of the southern termini have excellent onward connections and if the Tramlink is sorted at West Croydon, then that would be improved.
- The line has excellent connections to the Victoria and Jubilee Lines of the Underground and other rail lines.
It has been a marvellous success.
The North London Line
The North London Line is not as radical in its design as the East London Line, as it effectively just a a simple line across North London, that carries up to eight trains per hour and a lot of freight.
It has been successful, but not as successful as the East London Line.
The Future Of The Overground In North And East London
The success of removing, third-rate trains on the North and East London Lines is now being repeated on the Gospel Oak to Barking Line, where two-car diesel trains are being replaced with four-car electric ones.
But this is only the start, as other plans are being put together in North London.
- Will electrification be completed in North London by wiring the Dudding Hill Line?
- New stations like Brent Cross Thameslink, Old Oak Common and Angel Road are being created to support development.
- In the Walthamstow area, new curves will improve services on the Chingford Branch.
- Chiltern Railways have plans for a Chiltern Metro to West Ruislip station.
- The Metropolitan Line is being extended to Watford Junction.
- Thameslink will integrate and expand the suburban services out of Kings Cross and St. Pancras.
But to use the well-known phase – “You ain’t seen nothing yet!”
South London In The Slow Lane
South London is very second-rate compared to the North with respect to railways.
My mother always told me to never go South of the River, as I’d get lost.
Look at the historic radial routes out of East, North and West London termini like Euston, Fenchurch Street, Kings Cross, Liverpool Street, Marylebone, Paddington and St. Pancras and the lines have a simple structure that the average child of ten could understand. The Underground also follows a simple structure.
But if you look at trains South of the River, there is not even any logic as to which terminus you use to get your train, with the exception perhaps of Waterloo. Only South London’s crazy rules would mean that going to East Kent would be from the most western Southern terminus at Victoria.
It is mainly down to the fact that much of the rail network South of the River were developed by companies, whose idea of co-operation was stopping the other companies from expanding.
My mother was so very right!
There are problems galore of inadequate infrastructure.
- Some stations are in desperate need of more platforms.
- Lines often cross each other in flat junctions, which severely limit capacity.
- Many of the lines have heavy peak-hour use from commuters and infrequent services in the off-peak.
- Any electrification is non-standard third-rail.
- The main lines don’t have enough capacity.
- Commuters are also often very vocal opponents of even the smallest change.
Even new lines like the Channel Tunnel Rail Link at Ebbsfleet International and Crossrail at Abbey Wood are only partly integrated into the existing network and don’t share a station.
The engineers are doing their best with innovative schemes like the Bermondsey Dive-Under, but the railways in South London need a whole new philosophy to meet the challenges of the twenty-first century.
North London may have a long list of projects in the pipeline, but after the upgrading of Thameslink and the Northern Line Extension to Battersea, South London’s future plan is very thin.
In some ways Crossrail 2 sums up the South. North London will be affected by this line’s construction, but all of the protests are from Chelsea, which can probably be ignored, and South London.
The Centre For London Proposals
In the June 2016 Edition of Modern Railways, there was an article entitled Turning South London Orange, which is a radical set of proposals from an organisation called the Centre for London, with the aim of improving rail services in South London.
This is a summary of their proposals, as they affect the lines across South London from Victoria to Peckham Rye, Herne Hill and Surrey Quays.
- A tunnel should be built from Battersea to South of Herne Hill under Brixton to remove fast services from Victoria to Kent from the area.
- The four-track South London Line should be reconfigured so that London Overground services use the Northern rather than the Southern pair of tracks.
- A new station is built at Battersea linking the Northern Line Extension to the South London Line.
One of the consequences of this, is that it would be possible to create three modern step-free stations at Wandsworth Road, Clapham High Street and Brixton, with the latter two connected to the Northern and Victoria Lines of the Underground using escalators and/or lifts.
A South London Metro
So what would a South London Metro look like?
I will assume the following.
- The fast line tunnel under Brixton is built.
- The South London Line is reconfigured to put the London Overground service on the Northern pair of tracks.
- A new interchange station is built at Battersea.
In the next few sections, I will look at the various parts of the South London Metro.
The Brixton Tunnel
Although not actually part of the South London Metro, the Brixton Tunnel must be built before the Metro can be created, as it removes all the fast Chatham Main Line services between Victoria and Kent, from the lines across South London.
Trains will use a tunnel between Battersea and South of Herne Hill.
So what Southeastern Mainline services, that serve Victoria could use the tunnel?
- 1 tph to Ramsgate via Chatham with a first stop at Bromley South.
- 1 tph to Dover via Chatham with a first stop at Bromley South.
- 1 tph to Dover via Chatham with a first stop at Orpington and a second at Bromley South.
- 1 tph to Canterbury West via Maidstone East with a first stop at Bromley South.
- 1 tph to Ashford International via Maidstone East with a first stop at Bromley South.
There are another nine trains per day running in the peak.
The question has to be asked, if extra services can be provided through a fast tunnel, as the current number of trains might even be within the capacity of a single-track tunnel.
But I suspect that for redundancy and safety reasons that the five-kilometre tunnel would probably be built as double track or a twin-bore tunnel.
At present non-stop services take sixteen minutes between Victoria and Bromley South stations, which is a distance of 20.4 kilometres, which gives a start-to-stop average speed of about 75 kph. At that speed the trains would take around four minutes to pass through the tunnel. So even if the Class 375 trains, that generally work the line went through at full speed of 160 kph, not much would be saved on the journey.
But given the transit time through the tunnel of four minutes or less and the generally low number of trains through the tunnel, I suspect that a single-track tunnel is under serious consideration.
But I would future-proof the line by providing a double-track tunnel.
As Bombardier have said, that the Class 375 trains could be retro-fitted with on-board energy storage, I suspect too that the tunnel could even be left without electrification, as an electrically-dead tunnel must be safer in the unlikely event of a train needing to be evacuated. Evacuation will probably be through the side doors of the trains onto a walkway, as is proposed for Crossrail.
I think that the developments in infrastructure creation and the powering of trains in the last few years could enable a very radical and affordable approach to building this tunnel.
I think there’s a chance we’ll see this five kilometre tunnel bored as a single bore, with either one or two tracks, but no electrification.
Remember that the Severn Tunnel, which is the longest main line rail tunnel in the UK and was built by the Victorians, is seven kilometres long.
London’s latest tunnel which is the Lee Tunnel for sewage is just under seven kilometres long, seven metres in diameter and at a depth of over seventy-five metres under East London. It is probably big enough for a third-rail electrified double-track railway. According to Wikipedia, the Lee Tunnel cost an estimated £635 million.
As we’re moving towards a Golden Age of Tunnelling, I think we’ll be seeing more tunnels proposed.
The Core Section
I would define the core section of the South London Metro as between Wandsworth Road and Peckham Rye stations, so it would also include the following intermediate stations.
- Clapham High Street
- Brixton
- Denmark Hill
If fast services from Victoria to Kent are in a tunnel under Brixton and Herne Hill, the Centre for London Report says that it would be possible for London Overground services to use the Northern pair of tracks rather than the Southern ones. Freight, empty stock movements and other non-stopping services would continue to use the Southern tracks.
At present there are just four tph each way on the Overground along the current line, but as the East London Line core is currently handling sixteen tph, I would think it possible, subject to some reorganisation of the tracks at the two ends of the core section, that all Metro and Overground services could share the Northern tracks and platforms.
Similar sharing has been done successfully between New Cross Gate and Norwood Junction on the Overground, since the East London Line was extended to West Croydon in 2010. On that existing route, the fast trains have their own separate tracks out of the way, just as under the Centre for London proposals, fast trains between Victoria and Kent will be separated in a tunnel under Brixton.
As to the ultimate capacity of the core section, who knows? Figures of 24 tph have been quoted as possible for the East London Line, but twenty through the core will do well for several years.
I suspect that as the only trains on the Northern pair of tracks through South London will be slow Overground/Metro trains, that any routing problems could be solved by simple flat junctions, of which there are many already.
So how would this affect the stations on the core section?
- Wandsworth Road would have two new Northern platforms. As the lines split for Victoria and Clapham Junction just after the station, would each pair of lines and platforms be for appropriate destinations?
- Clapham High Street would have two new Northern platforms for Metro/Overground services. As the Northern platforms are closer to Clapham North station, it might be sensible to create an escalator connection between the two stations and not generally use the Southern platforms.
- East Brixton is a station, that has been discussed for rebuilding.
- Brixton would have reopened Northern platforms for Metro/Overground services. Services via Herne Hill would still use the current platforms and as no trains on the high-level lines over the station would stop, providing step-free access between the Victoria Line and Metro/Overground services would be much easier.
- Many believe that Loughborough Junction station should be connected to the Overground. If Metro/Overground services are moved to the Northern tracks as they go over Loughborough Junction station, I believe that step-free connection between new Metro/Overground platforms and Loughborough Junction is now possible.
- Denmark Hill station would need some reorganisation, but it is already step-free.
- Peckham Rye station would need some reorganisation and it is on the list of being made step-free.
The list of projects to create a core section of the South London Metro would include.
- Build the Brixton Tunnel
- Add the extra platforms and station infrastructure at Wandsworth Road station.
- Add the extra platforms and station infrastructure at Clapham High Street station.
- Create an escalator/lift connection between Clapham High Street and the Northern Line at Clapham North station.
- Reopen the Northern platforms at Brixton station.
- Create an escalator/lift connection between the low-level platforms at Brixton with the Victoria Line.
- Add two high-level platforms at Loughborough Junction station on the Metro/Overground lines.
- Make Loughbrough Junction station fully step-free.
- Make various changes to the tracks, so that all required routes are possible.
There would obviously be other small projects, but I can’t see anything major except for the building of the Brixton Tunnel, that would be needed to create a sixteen train-per-hour route from Victoria across South London.
All projects and that includes the Brixton Tunnel could be carried out without large disruption of the existing train services, which in my view is a tribute to the Centre for London proposals.
I think that without any further major infrastructure after the Brixton Tunnel has been built, and some other smaller projects that are already being planned, the core section of the South London Metro could be a run of step-free stations interchanging with the Northern and Victoria Lines, Thameslink and other services out of Victoria and London Bridge.
Reversal Stations
I also wonder if any of the core stations could be created with an island platform, so that passengers can reverse direction without going up and down stairs. This can already be done at Queens Road Peckham station if say you are on a Dalston Junction to Clapham Junction train and want to go to South Bermondsey or London Bridge.
Never underestimate passengers’ ability to duck and dive!
Connectivity just encourages passengers to take more outrageous, faster and convenient routes.
The Western Termini
At present there are two western termini for the services along the South London Line; Victoria and Clapham Junction and Victoria.
There is probably not enough platforms, if it is desired to run sixteen tph or more through the core, as is done on the East London Line.
Clapham Junction As A Western Terminus
At present 4 tph run to Clapham Junction and as I wrote in Increased Frequencies On The East London Line, this will be increased to 6 tph in 2019.
I suspect that despite the rather unusual platform arrangements at Clapham Junction, which I call The Clapham Kiss, that 6 tph can be handled at the station.
So I think it will be very much Carry On Clapham!
Victoria As A Western Terminus
At present, the following services serve Victoria along the South London Line.
- 4 tph to Orpington, which turn off at Brixton.
- 2 tph to Dartford via Bexleyheath, which turn off at Peckham Rye.
Combined with the 6 tph from Clapham Junction, between Wandsworth Road and Brixton, there are 12 tph.
Given that Victoria is crowded and needs more platforms, would it be possible to handle the South London Metro from a dedicated platform or pair of platforms in Victoria?
Assigned platforms at Dalston Junction certainly helps passengers, as you know where your train to the various destinations will call.
- Through Platform 1 for Highbury and Islington
- Bay Platform 2 for New Cross
- Bay Platform 3 for Clapham Junction
- Through Platform 4 for Crystal Palace and West Croydon
This is certainly what is happening today as I write.
I think it would be a great advantage if you went to a particular platform or pair of platforms to pick up the South London Metro.
This mini sub-station concept is used at.
- Cheshunt for the Lea Valley Lines
- Clapham Junction for the East London Line.
- Crystal Palace for the East London Line.
- Liverpool Street for the Lea Valley Lines.
- Richmond for the North London Line.
- Stratford for the North London Line.
Usually, you just look for the orange!
Battersea As A Western Terminus
Given that Victoria is crowded and probably needs more platforms, an alternative terminus is probably needed.
Just as when Dalston Junction was rebuilt for the East London Line, two bay platforms were incorporated, could the same thing be done at the new Battersea station?
Certainly, the system works well at Dalston Junction, so why wouldn’t a similar arrangement work at Batttersea?
- Passengers needing to get to Victoria on a train terminating at Battersea would just walk across the platform and wait a couple of minutes for the train to Victoria.
- Passengers from Victoria on a train going to a wrong destination would only have to go to Wandsworth Road to get a train to any destination, including those served from Clapham Junction.
It is a system, where to do any journey you either do it direct, or with a single same-platform change.
Old Oak Common As A Western Terminus
Because of the capacity problems and the unusual layout at Clapham Junction station, it might also be possible to use somewhere on the West London Line as a Western terminus.
Old Oak Common station with its connections to the West Coast Main Line, HS2, Crossrail and the North London Line would be an obvious choice.
The Eastern Termini
At present services from Victoria and Clapham Junction, go although the South London Line to the following destinations.
- Dalston Junction – 4 tph from Clapham Junction – 6 tph from 2019
- Dartford – 2 tph from Victoria via Bexleyheath
- Orpington – 4 tph from Victoria
Even with Dartford services raised to 4 tph, that is probably still below the capacity of the core section of the line.
Dalston Junction As An Eastern Terminus
I would assume that the current Dalston Junction to Clapham Junction service will continue.
Currently there are 4 tph, but this will go to 6 tph in 2019 as I wrote about in Increased Frequencies On The East London Line.
As TfL’s predictions in the document I found for 2016 and 2017 have already happened, I would think the 6 tph is likely, if the new Class 710 trains are delivered to boost the fleet.
With the increase in service frequency, London Overground Syndrome means that the passengers using the service will increase.
Dartford As An Eastern Terminus
At present, 2 tph go between Victoria and Dartford via Bexleyheath.
But is Dartford, the best terminal in the area for the South London Metro?
Consider.
- A Crossrail extension to Gravesend has been safeguarded, which goes through Dartford.
- Crossrail surely should connect directly to HS2.
- If Crossrail served Dartford, some of the other services would be simplified.
- Dartford will probably come under TfL control.
I wouldn’t be surprised to see 4 tph service along a South London Metro to a Dartford station, where Crossrail calls to give a direct link to HS2 at Ebbsfleet International.
London Bridge As An Eastern Terminus
As London Bridge station used to be linked along the South London Line to Victoria, this important station must be added.
Especially, as there were a lot of passengers, who objected to losing the direct service along the South London Line between London Bridge and Victoria.
On the East London Line, there is a short 4 tph service between Dalston Junction and New Cross which is used as a short direct service through the core, perhaps to boost train frequencies there.
So could a service with a similar frequency be run on the South London Line between Victoria and London Bridge? It could call at.
- South Bermondsey
- Queen’s Road Peckham
- Peckham Rye
- Denmark Hill
- Loughborough Junction
- Brixton
- Clapham High Street
- Wandsworth Road
- Battersea
It would have step-free connections to the Northern and Victoria Lines and Thameslink, if the appropriate stations were upgraded.
Orpington As An Eastern Terminus
I think that Orpington has the greatest potential as a terminal.
This map from carto.metro.free.fr shows the route from Kent House station via Beckenham Junction and Bromley South to Orpington.
It has very good connectivity.
- Beckenham Junction connects to the Tramlink.
- Bromley South connects to Thameslink, the Chatham Main Line and the Maidstone East Line.
- Orpington connects to the South Eastern Main Line and the Hastings Line.
Because of all this connectivity, Bromley and Orpington might be able to provide enough passengers for more than four trains per hour going to Victoria and/or Battersea.
Remember there will still be the five fast trains per hour through the Brixton Tunnel in addition to the stopping ones of the Metro.
Bellingham As An Eastern Terminus
When the Overground took over the line, there was some discussion about a service between Victoria and Bellingham.
So could Bellingham station be a terminus?
This Google Map shows the area around Bellingham station.
There doesn’t seem to be much of importance in the area, except the leisure centre.
In addition.
- The station doesn’t seem to have a suitable bay platform, but there may be space to build one.
- The station would provide a link to Thameslink.
- It only handles a couple of trains an hour most of the day, so perhaps the terminating of trains was to be slipped in the large gaps.
Perhaps it was all to stimulate development in the area.
An HS1 to HS2 Link
If Old Oak Common is chosen as a Western Terminus with a 4 tph service down the West London Line and the core route of the South London Metro, what would be a suitable terminal in the East?
Given what I said about Dartford as an Eastern terminus, surely a four tph service across South London linking HS1 and HS2 must enter into the route planners’ thinking.
As Crossrail does the business linking HS1 and HS2 for North and Central London, a South London Metro could be configured to do a similar job for a whole swath of South and West London.
A Brockley Interchange
The Centre for London report proposes a new pair of platforms on the South London Line between Nunhead and Lewisham stations, providing interchange with the existing Brockley station.
I gave my views on Brockley station in A Report On The Bakerloo Line Extension, which I now repeat in an edited form.
This Google Map shows Brockley station.
The Bexleyheath Line between Nunhead and Lewisham stations crosses the East London Line and Brockley station at a high level.
I wrote A Four-Poster Station about connecting these two lines.
It would appear that Transport for London have advanced this project from one word in their 2050 Infrastructure Plan to a proposal.
If the South London Metro included the services to Dartford via Bexleyheath, then this interchange at Brockley station might make some passengers journeys a lot easier.
A Penge Interchange
The Centre for London report proposes an interchange between Penge East station on the Chatham Main Line with Penge West station on the East London Line.
This Google Map shows the lines and the two Penge stations.
The report suggests that it would be possible to reduce the walking distance between the two stations from 650 to 400 metres and there might be potential to move Penge West station to the North of the High Street.
As the walking appears substantially to be flat, I wonder if a section of travelator would be possible!
I recently walked from East to West station and took these pictures.
One of the station staff said that they need step-ladders to access the Crystal Palace line, that runs over the top.
The walk incidentally took me fifteen minutes, so if it decreases from 650 to 400 metres, by moving the station North of the High Street that should reduce the time to under ten minutes.
Will a travelator be added.
As with the extra platforms at Brockley station, this interchange has the potential to ease some passengers journeys.
My Proposed Schedule
I will give my view of the trains on a South London Metro.
- 6 tph between Dalston Junction and Clapham Junction.
- 4 tph between Dartford and Old Oak Common.
- 4 tph between Victoria/Battersea and London Bridge
- 6 tph between Victoria/Battersea and Orpington
This gives a total of 20 tph, which would be the same as the East London Line will be in 2019.
The Rolling Stock
Due to platform restrictions on the East London Line, I would envisage that the trains between Dalston Junction and Clapham Junction will probably still be the same five-car Class 378 trains.
The trains on the other destinations can probably be anything suitable and would include Class 375, Class 377 or even some new Class 710 trains.
But as there is no platform restrictions to the other destinations, the trains could probably be any desired formation between four and twelve cars.
Any new platforms would of course be built to accept twelve-car trains.
Getting To Heathrow
At the present time, getting to Heathrow can be a bit of a problem from some places in South London.
But after Crossrail and Old Oak Common station are opened, it would just be a matter of getting one of a 4 tph South London Metro train to Old Oak Common and changing for Crossrail.
It may of course be easier to use one of the other possible routes to Crossrail.
- Take the Northern Line to Tottenham Court Road from Battersea or Clapham North.
- Take Thameslink to Tottenham Court Road.
- Go via Whitechapel.
We’ll all develop our favourite routes.
Getting To Gatwick
At the present time, Thameslink haven’t published their full route yet, but anybody on the South London Metro should be able to do one of the following.
- Go to Clapham Junction and get a direct train.
- Go to Victoria and get Gatwick Express.
- Go to London Bridge and get Thameslink.
Unfortunately, it looks like I might lose my option of going to New Cross Gate and getting a direct train.
Conclusion
A South London Metro running 16 tph or more between Wandsworth Road and Peckham Rye stations, with multiple termini at either end, must be a feasible and affordable possibility, if the following is done.
- The Brixton Tunnel is built to give fast Victoria to Kent services a by-pass.
- The Overground/Metro services are moved to the Northern pair of tracks on the South London Line.
- Various station and track improvements are carried out.
It looks to me, that this project could transform South London and improve the lot of people like me, who live on the East London Line.
The Lines At Battersea Power Station On the Way Into Victoria
This Google Map shows the area to the West of Battersea Power station, where the various lines go across the Thames into Victoria.
This image was taken a couple of years ago and the iconic gas-holders next to the power station and between the rail lines were still standing.
The lines to the West of the gas holders include the Brighton Main Line. They go through Battersea Park station before turning towards Clapham Junction station and all places to the South.
The lines to the East of the gas holders include the Chatham Main Line. They go via Wandsworth Road, Chatham High Street, and Brixton stations to places in Kent and the South-East.
There is also a set of lines that come from the station and go under the Chatham Main Line before turning to the West towards Clapham Junction.
It certainly is a complicated layout of tracks and points.
This map from carto.metro.free.fr might make things a bit clearer.
Note on the map, there is a Battersea Park Road station on the Chatham Main Line. The new station wouldn’t surely be far from this position.
This set of images were taken on a train from a Clapham Junction to Victoria train show the Chatham Main Line, as it passes the power station and the Dogs Home.
Note.
- The new modern viaduct, where the Chatham Main Line crosses over the third set of lines.
- The massive area, where the gas-holders once stood.
- There is quite a space between the lines going through Battersea and the Chatham Main Lines,
- How the Dogs Home seems to be using any bit of space they can.
Although not a lover of the power station, the flats do seem to be hiding any decent view of the iconic building.
This is another set of images, which were taken coming in to Victoria on the Chatham Main Line.
Note that taken with the previous set of pictures, they certainly reinforce what I said there.
This third set of images show the other side of the Chatham Main Line going out from Victoria.
Note.
- There wouldn’t appear to be much space between the flats and the line, so the new Battersea station will probably be built further towards the South.
- If you look at these pictures carefully, you can see when the train is on the new concrete viaduct.
- It would appear that there are three tracks on the viaduct.
- The blue building is only shown as it puts a marker on the line.
If I was going to be pushed, I would suspect that a new station could be built fairly easily, that was linked by escalators and lifts to Battersea Power Station station.
I’ll leave the position and design to the architects and engineers.
But before I finish this post, look at this Google Map.
In the South-West corner, there is Battersea Park station.
Some think it an architectural gem, but I think, it’s a dump and a death-trap for anybody with any movement problems. This post entitled Battersea Park Station gives some more details.
In the North-East corner, you can just see Battersea Power Station.
The map of the lines earlier in this post, showed that the Northern Line Extension points at Battersea Park station, if the map is correct.
So could it be that now the gas-holders are cleared, that it would be possible to create a surface level walkway between all three stations.
- Battersea Power Station tube station on the Northern Line Extension.
- The proposed Battersea station on the Chatham Main Line into Victoria.
- Battersea Park station on the Brighton Main Line into Victoria.
It would certainly make things a lot easier for architects, construction companies, train operators and passengers.
It would probably just be called Battersea! Or Perhaps Cats and Dogs! Would it be the first station in the world named after a charity?
One point is that the remains of Battersea Park Road station are still tucked into the bridge, that takes the Chatham Main Line over Battersea Park Road.
As you often find in this country, the railway arches under the viaduct seem to be in very good condition.
A combined station would be a station with very good connectivity.
- There would be the Northern Line to Central London.
- There would be the Southern services that stop in the current Battersea Park station.
- There could be new Metro services going along the South London Line via Brixton, Denmark Hill and Packham Rye to London Bridge, Dalston Junction, Abbey Wood and Orpington.
One interesting possibility, is that a terminating platform could be provided at the station. Occasional services to Dalston Junction do already terminate at the station and perhaps if reorganised South London Line services were created. then Victoria And Battersea could share terminating duties, just as Dalston Junction and Highbury and Islington stations do at the Northern End of the East London Line.
The proposed tunnel under Brixton would start somewhere to the South of Battersea Park Road.
The London Tramlink Is Now Shown Properly On The Tube And Rail Map
The new London Tube and Rail Map, that is now shown in all good tube and rail stations has a redrawn and understandable tram map.
At last!
Note the treatment at West Croydon!
I suppose to get from East Croydon station to West Croydon station, you just need to get on a tram, that’s going round the loop, rather than on to Wimbledon.
It still doesn’t answer the old chestnut of how you get from West bCroydon station to somewhere like Wimbledon or Ampere Way for IKEA.
Improving Lewisham Station
In the June 2016 Edition of Modern Railways, there was an article entitled Turning South London Orange.
One of the proposals is to try to sort out Lewisham station.
My mother used to tell me never to go South of the Thames as you’ll get lost. Perhaps she had Lewisham in mind, as just look at this Google Map of the lines through the station.
The rail lines in the Lewisham area are.
- The lines to the West of the map is the South Eastern Main Line from Charing Cross to Dover and Folkestone.
- The line curving down from the station to the South Eastern Main Line is the Hayes Line, which meets it in a complicated junction.
- Going off to the East from the station is the North Kent Line.
Was the designer of the lines in this area having a laugh, as it must make running trains through Lewisham in an efficient manner extremely difficult.
I also assume that anybody going to and from Dover, can’t change trains at Lewisham, unless they an force a window and jump out.
In order to try to improve matters, the Centre for London report is proposing Lewisham South interchange platforms on the South Eastern Main Line, which are connected to the main station using a travelator running alongside the Hayes Line.
The thinking behind all this is detailed in this document from JRC consultants.
Some major points and recommendation from the document include.
- There are too many flat junctions and other track problems.
- The service levels from the area into London is erratic and nowhere near TfL’s oreferred level of four trains per hour.
- Getting to and from anywhere other than the City or Central London in the peak can be difficult.
- Connectivity to Lewisham to get the DLR to Canary Wharf could be improved.
- Southeastern’s commuter services should be taken over by TfL.
- Extending the East London Line to Lewisham wll be difficult and expensive, if not impossible.
The document also includes a map of the proposed travelator on Page 14.
It shows the travelator curving along the Eastern side of the Hayes Line to an island platform on the South Eastern Main Lines.
It also says this.
However a southern location closer to Lewisham High Street, placed over the Hayes branch line, in low value or empty land on the slow lines alongside Parks Bridge Junction and north of the Courthill loop, would permit a 12-car island platform connected into the Lewisham Interchange and making that much more of a hub station. A direct entrance to the southern part of Lewisham High Street could also be opened up. A travelator alongside the Hayes line, in several segments, would link to the interchange in 540 metres and also provide fast access to Lewisham shopping centre at an intermediate point.
This Google Map shows the area from the current Lewisham Interchange to the proposed Lewisham South.
Note the blue roofs of the DLR station at the top of the map and the crossing by the South Eastern Main Line of the Hayes Line at the bottom, where it is surrounded by green space.
To get a better feel for the area. I took these pictures ass I walked from where the South Eastern Main Line crosses the High Street back to the station.
After this walk along the dual-carriageway from the Western end of Lewisham High Street to the station, I certainly think that a better walk could be created.
Let’s hope that when the current construction and road works are complete, that the current walking route between the station, the Shopping Centre and Lewisham High Street is improved.
What disappointed me was that surely better use of the Ravensbourne River, which I called a Hidden Waterway in the pictures. This Google Map shows how it twists and turns through the area.
I certainly think something better can be done.
For those who think a travelator is a bit naff, the JRC report also suggests that the DLR could be extended.
Consider.
- If it’s worth extending the DLR to Lewisham South, perhaps it should go further.
- One of the themes of the JRC report is prudence and affordability, which I think pushes the author to the travelator solution.
- The travelator route may make it easier to serve the Shopping Centre.
- A travelator might make it easier to catch the buses on the other side of the Shopping Centre, which every time I go to Lewsiham, I seem to have to do.
I also think that to extend the DLR would probably involve some impressive engineering to get over the roads by the station, whereas a walking route/travelator might even start from or beside the Hayes Line platform (2) on the bridge over the road. The latter option would mean that at the station end, all of the lifts are there for step free access to the other platforms.
I also think that not many passengers would want to transfer between Platform 1 at Lewisham station and the Lewisham South platforms, so starting the walkway from Platform 2, which has a level connection to Platform 3 and good connections to the DLR, would not be a bad idea.
Overall, I don’t think we make enough use of travelators and outside escalators.
But I do like the idea of the new platforms at Lewisham South and a travelator.
Something will have to be done at Lewisham, before the Bakerloo Line is extended to the area.
Improvements To Clapham High Street And Wandsworth Road Stations
In the June 2016 Edition of Modern Railways, there was an article entitled Turning South London Orange.
The report suggests putting platforms at Clapham High Street and Wandsworth Road stations on the Southeastern tracks to enable a direct service to Victoria to be reinstated.
This map from carto.metro.free.fr shows the lines through the two stations.
If the proposed Brixton Tunnel were to be built, that would mean that only local stopping services and the London Overground trains would call at these two stations.
So would only two platforms be needed to handle all the trains? The frequency would probably be something in the region of twelve trains per hour, with possibly six on the Overground and six going to and from Victoria.
I know of many places in London and the rest of the UK, where a train every five minutes would be considered easy to handle. Crossrail and Thameslink will be handling a train at twice this frequency.
The great advantage of all trains in one direction being handled on a single platform face, is that if say you wanted to go from Dalston Junction to Victoria, you could get off one train at either of these stations and then get the next to your appropriate destination.
You could even use a wide island platform, which would allow changes where direction is reversed without leaving the platform. It would also only require one lift, so could the money be used for an escalator?
Because of the problems of providing platforms and a step-free connection at Brixton, undoubtedly, the platforms there would be built on the Northern pair of tracks. So I suspect that they would on these two stations.
This would have various knock-on effects.
- Freight, empty stock movements and other non-stopping services would use the Southern pair of tracks.
- There would probably need to be some reorganising of the junctions to the West of Wandsworth Road station, as part of the tunnel works.
- There would need to be some sorting out of the junctions East of Brixton to make sure all of the trains got to and from the correct places.
- Clapham High Street station could be properly integrated into Clapham North station with an escalator connection.
In some ways, it all shows how a tunnel under Brixton could be a masterstroke.
A New Station For Clapham East
In the June 2016 Edition of Modern Railways, there was an article entitled Turning South London Orange.
One of the proposals in the article is to create a new station at Clapham East. The location is half a mile North-East of Clapham Junction station on the East London Line.
This Google Map shows the location.
Note Wandsworth Road station at the East of the map, with Clapham Junction station, off the map a short distance to the West.
I’m not too sure of the exact location of the proposed station but it would appear to be on the East London Line, where it runs along Eversleigh Road, close to the junction of Culvert Road.
These pictures were taken as my East London Line train passed through in the area.
This map from carto.metro.free.fr might help.
The bridge in the pictures is where the lines from Victoria go over the East Lo0ndon Line to get to Clapham Junction station.
I think the station will be on the East London Line, which is shown in orange, just above the words “Pouparts Junction.
The Centre for London report, says that the area rather lacks a train service and that a station is needed.








































































































