Superlink (railway network)

For other uses, see Superlink (disambiguation).
The proposed railway network would connect London, the south-east Midlands and south-east England.

Superlink was a proposal for a new UK railway network to connect London, the south-east Midlands, East Anglia, and south-east England.

It was an alternative proposal from a group of senior railway managers, who played leading roles in other UK rail projects. It suggested changes and enhancements to the Crossrail network. The proponents of Superlink claimed Crossrail gives poor value for money and was unlikely to be built. They suggested that benefits of the Crossrail scheme, including relief of congestion on the public transportation network within London, had been overstated.

Superlink was rejected. Crossrail received Royal Assent in 2007 and a funding agreement in 2008.

2005 report

In a 2005 report, CLRL examined the proposal and rejected it on the following grounds:[1]

Superlink responded in detail to each of the criticisms.

In any case, the Crossrail scheme seems to have been modified in line with some of Superlink's suggestions. Plans for a depot at Romford in east London have been abandoned, with Crossrail now planning to utilise the depot at North Pole in west London, recently vacated by Eurostar. Plans for a branch to Kingston and Richmond were dropped. In its 2011 Route utilisation strategy for London and the southeast, Network Rail put forward Superlink's proposal that Crossrail take over the Northampton line trains with a new connection at Old Oak Common. This would complement proposals for a new interchange station between Crossrail and the proposed High Speed 2 line at this location.

See also

References

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