Monday 5 Dec 2011

COUNTDOWN TO COMPLETION AT BLACKFRIARS

Region & Route:
| Southern

Network Rail today announced dates for the final phase of its plans to redevelop Blackfriars station.

The countdown to completion starts today as the first passengers use a new station entrance on the south bank of the River Thames. This will be followed by a new station entrance on the north bank on 12 December, with the first ever 12-car trains on the Thameslink route calling at Blackfriars on the same date. A new look London Underground station will open in February 2012, followed by a further two new national rail platforms in May.

Blackfriars Underground station, currently being completely rebuilt to provide space for more passengers and better access between Tube and rail services, had been scheduled to open at the end of December this year. Owing to complexities encountered by Network Rail during the construction and fit out of the new station, the reopening will now take place on Sunday 26 February 2012. The overall Blackfriars project remains on track to be delivered in summer 2012, and work has been scheduled so that passengers begin to benefit from new facilities this December while work continues behind the scenes.

Lindsay Vamplew, Network Rail’s project director for Blackfriars, said: "Our plan to transform Blackfriars station is nearing completion, and over the coming months passengers will begin to reap the benefits including new entrances, a new underground station, a better train service and direct connections to new parts of London including Bankside, Tate Modern and the South Bank.

“The Blackfriars project is a unique challenge, we’re simultaneously building a new Underground station, reconstructing a Victorian rail bridge and creating the first ever station to span the River Thames. While the overall project remains on schedule for completion next summer, we’ve taken the decision to postpone the opening of the Underground station until February, in order to give us the time we require to complete the job to the highest standard.”

Today will see the first commuters using the new station entrance on the south bank of the River Thames, benefitting from direct links to businesses and cultural attractions on the South Bank and Bankside. Blackfriars will be the first ever station to span the River Thames and the first new station on the south bank for 125 years.

The Blackfriars upgrade is part of the Thameslink Programme, which will see longer trains and more frequent services on the route from Bedford to Brighton through central London. The rebuild of Blackfriars station will dovetail with improvements at Farringdon and other stations along the route, including the planned reconstruction of London Bridge, to provide a metro-style service through central London, with trains running every 2 ½ minutes.

Notes to editors

1) Countdown to completion at Blackfriars

· Spring 2009: Work to restore and widen the eastern side of Blackfriars rail bridge begins
· January 2010: Tracks switched to the eastern side of the bridge to allow work to begin on the west, while trains continue running
· October 2011: Work begins to install 4,400 solar panels on the roof of Blackfriars, creating London’s largest solar array
· 5 December 2011: First passengers use new entrance on the south bank of the Thames
· 12 December 2011: First 12-carriage Thameslink trains serve Blackfriars; new northern entrance opens
· 26 February 2012: New London Underground station opens
· May 2012: Two more terminating platforms completed; south bank entrance complete
· Summer 2012: Full passenger benefits delivered, two new entrances, capability for 12-carriage trains and a new Underground station fully operational ahead of Olympic and Paralympic Games

2) Blackfriars by numbers

· 2,000 engineers working on site daily
· 13,000 rivets removed from the Victorian rail bridge
· 5,500 tonnes of new steel installed
· 300,000 people moving through the worksite daily, on the railway, Underground, roads and river
· 4,400 solar panels being installed on the roof of Blackfriars will provide for 50% of the station’s annual energy needs

3) The Thames Path, which runs along the south bank under Blackfriars bridge and has been closed to pedestrians during construction, will reopen on 5 December. Some closures of the Thames Path will be required over the coming months to allow certain pieces of construction work to take place. These will be advertised in advance.

4) From 12 December, the new northern entrance to Blackfriars on New Bridge Street will be open between 6am and 8pm. Outside of these hours, the station will be accessed from Queen Victoria Street due to ongoing construction work. When the London Underground station reopens in February the New Bridge Street entrance will remain open throughout the hours of station operation.

Contact information

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