Give Your Views on Old Oak Common Rail Interchange


Consultation roadshow comes to Westfield on Friday

As Old Oak Common looks looking increasingly likely to become the London interchange station for the nationwide high speed rail network, a roadshow coming to Westfield shopping centre on April 1 gives local people the opportunity to find out more about the project.

The roadshow, which will be open from 8am through till 8pm on Friday is one of a series of public information events being held at locations along the proposed route of the network.

They will provide an opportunity to view the proposals, presenting information in a clear, accurate and accessible way, as well as offering the chance to speak to the HS2 team and officials from the Department for Transport.

People can also find out more and have their say via the online consultation which runs for another 120 days until July 29.

If the proposal goes ahead, it could offer a "once in a lifetime opportunity" to bring 10,000 new homes and 5,000 extra jobs to Hammersmith and Fulham.

According to Hammersmith and Fulham Council, local residents and organisations including Imperial College, West London Business and the Park Royal Partnership and the council itself are all backing the plan. Nationally around half of Britons also favour the super-fast link with just 9% opposed, according to a poll published by Transport Secretary Philip Hammond.

Mr Hammond said the country faced a "once in a lifetime" opportunity to create new jobs and prosperity, adding that the high-speed plan would deliver £44billion worth of benefits to the UK economy. However, the proposals need to successfully pass through the current round of consultation and it is possible they may change depending on the feedback received.

While it is close to a number of prosperous neighbourhoods, the area within 1.2 miles of Old Oak contains some of the most deprived communities in England. Only a half of 16-74 year olds living within 1.2 miles the Old Oak site are in employment and some parts of Old Oak fall within the 1% of most deprived areas nationally.

H&F Council Leader, Cllr Stephen Greenhalgh, says: "High-speed rail is not just important for the future competitiveness of the UK economy but is vital for the future of this borough.

" Locally, a high-speed interchange station at Old Oak will create thousands of skilled jobs and new homes for local people and properly link Heathrow to the national rail network for the first time."

The Old Oak site intersects the Great Western mainline and the West and North London Lines and provides links to a future Crossrail station. The site creates an ideal interchange linking Heathrow Express services to Birmingham, the north and Gatwick Airport. Journey times from the Old Oak hub to Heathrow would be just 11 minutes.

If the plans go ahead, following the current consultation, high-speed trains will run between the capital and the north at speeds of up to 225mph. Each train can carry up to 1,100 people every five minutes – meaning 13,000 commuters an hour, in each direction, would be added to the already overcrowded tube at Euston if the Old Oak interchange doesn’t go ahead.

March 31, 2011

Related links

Related links

High Speed Rail Consultation