53 F
London
HomeThe TubeLondon Underground Northern Line extension to Nine Elms and Battersea opens to...

London Underground Northern Line extension to Nine Elms and Battersea opens to great fanfare

London Forecast

London
scattered clouds
53 ° F
55.8 °
50.9 °
71 %
1.9mph
40 %
Thu
53 °
Fri
53 °
Sat
60 °
Sun
52 °
Mon
59 °
USD - United States Dollar
GBP
1.31
EUR
1.09
CAD
0.73
AUD
0.67

Popular London Tours

Popular

Your Complete Guide to Visiting Speakers’ Corner in Hyde Park

"Speeches, London Copyfighters' Drunken Brunch and Talking Shop speeches...

Port of London Authority Relaunches Thames Mudlarking Permit Scheme

The Port of London Authority (PLA) has officially reopened...

Great London Buildings: Marble Hill House

Marble Hill House, situated on the banks of the...

The Tube: 10 Interesting Facts about the Circle Line

The Circle Line is one of London’s oldest Tube...

Great London Buildings: Hazlitt’s Hotel in Soho

Nestled in the heart of Soho, Hazlitt's Hotel stands...

How London Changed During the Victorian Period

The 19th Century was a time of great change...

Big List of Cockney and London East End Films and TV Shows

Editor's Note: The following is an excerpt from Londontopia's...

Share

London Underground’s first major line expansion this century has opened (discounting a new station at Heathrow in 2008).

Two new Northern line stations opened in south London following a £1.1 billion project.

The first train on the new route departed from Battersea Power Station at 5.28 am.

The ticket hall at Nine Elms station
The ticket hall at Nine Elms station (TfL/PA)

It called at the other new station, Nine Elms, before reaching the existing station of Kennington.

London mayor Sadiq Khan says the services will play “a major role” in the capital’s recovery from the pandemic by “supporting thousands of new jobs, homes, and businesses.”

This is the first major expansion of the Tube since the Jubilee line was opened in the late 1990s.

The Greater London Authority borrowed £1 billion for the project, which will be funded through business rates from the local area and about £270 million of contributions from developers.

Major construction on the two-mile twin railway tunnel between Kennington and Battersea began in 2015.

There will initially be a peak-time service of six trains per hour, falling to five per hour during off-peak periods.

Frequencies will be doubled by the middle of next year.

TfL estimated that the new services will support 25,000 new jobs and 20,000 new homes.

Billions of pounds of investment have been pumped into the area in recent years, including through the redevelopment of Battersea Power Station for residential and business use and the building of a new US embassy in Nine Elms.

The opening of two new stations will bring the total number on the network to 272.

London Underground’s first major expansion this century demonstrates how the capital must “play its part” in the UK’s recovery from the coronavirus pandemic, Mayor of London Sadiq Khan has claimed.

Mr. Khan, who has been embroiled in a long-running row with the Government over funding for Transport for London (TfL), said he was “proud and grateful” to be joined by Transport Secretary Grant Shapps on one of the first trains to serve Battersea Power Station.

He told the PA news agency: “It’s great to see the difference teamwork makes; it’s great to see the difference investing in infrastructure makes in relation to unlocking jobs and homes.

“Most of the things we’re using today were built around the country. Every pound we spend on the Underground, 55 pence goes to the rest of the country.

“That’s good for the Secretary of State to see. I’m quite clear; you don’t make our country more equal by making London poorer.

“If we’re going to get a national recovery, we need London to play its part.”

Mr. Khan has repeatedly called for the Government to give TfL a long-term funding package as its finances struggle to cope with the collapse in fares revenue during the pandemic.

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan and Transport Secretary Grant Shapps
Battersea Power Station is one of two new Tube stations (David Mirzeoff/PA)

Londontopia Staff
Author: Londontopia Staff

This article was submitted and adapted by Londontopia Staff and used with a license from the Press Association UK (PA Media). All images and content used with permission.

Book London Tours Now!