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  ColourName Orange
  TextColour Black
  YearOpened 1869
  DeepOrSurface Sub-Surface
  RollingStock A Stock
  StationsServed 9
  LengthKm 74
  LengthMiles 46
  AnnualPassengers 10,429,000
  Depots New Cross<br />Neasden


The East London Line is a line of the London Underground , coloured orange on the Tube Map . It runs north to south in the East End and Docklands areas of London . Its history is connected with those of six other railway companies since its opening in 1865. It runs under through the Thames Tunnel , built by Marc Brunel and opened in 1843 as a pedestrian tunnel, which is the oldest part of the Underground's route.


HISTORY

: '' see also'' East London Railway ''for early details of the Line''
The ELR was opened in 1869, at the time constituting the most easterly crossing of the River Thames . It was jointly owned by six railway companies, although after the 1923 Grouping passenger services of the Metropolitan Railway and goods trains of the London And North Eastern Railway worked the line. When the railway came under the London Passenger Transport Board in 1933 it was operated as a branch of the Metropolitan Line , known as the "East London Branch" and later as the "Metropolitan Line - East London Section".

Underground services ran from the East London Railway's southern termini at the two New Cross stations (SER & LBSCR - the LBSCR station was later renamed New Cross Gate ) to South Kensington via Edgware Road . This was diverted to Hammersmith (providing the core of today's Hammersmith & City Line ), while through services from the East London Railway ceased in 1941. The line was left as an isolated appendage on the edge of the Underground network. Its only passenger interchange to the Underground was at Whitechapel, with interchanges to British Rail trains at the two New Cross stations.

On tube maps it was the same purple colour as the Metropolitan but was distinguished by a centred white stripe. In the 1980s it was quietly renamed to be a line in its own right, and later in the early 1990s the colour used was changed to the present orange.

The opening of the is the shortest), with an end-to-end journey time of only 15 minutes; and it is the only Underground line not to enter Travelcard Zone 1 .

As of 2003, the line is maintained by the Metronet consortium under a Public-Private Partnership .


ROLLING STOCK


The line uses Metropolitan Line A60 And A62 Sub-surface Rolling Stock . Trains on the East London Line used to be operated with guards as well as a driver; the decision to withdraw the guards prompted an unsuccessful strike on the line in May 1985. The current rolling stock, built in the early 1960s, was upgraded in 1994 with improved suspension, lighting, heating and ventilation. The rolling stock is regularly interchanged with that used on the main Metropolitan Line and usually carries both East London and Metropolitan Line maps.

Only five trains operate on the line, each one consisting of four cars. This makes them some of the shortest trains on the network and is necessitated by the line's short platforms. The small number of trains makes the East London Line particularly sensitive to disruption caused by vandalism or train faults, as the withdrawal of a single train amounts to a 20% cut in capacity. By contrast, the Metropolitan Line would have to lose nine trains to suffer the same capacity cut.

Light maintenance and stabling are provided at a small depot near New Cross . For heavier work trains are sent to the main Metropolitan Line depot at Neasden .

New rolling stock

As part of the upgrade of the East London Line, new rolling stock will enter service to replace the A Stock (which will be 50 years old by the time Phase 1 is complete in 2010). There are four bids for the supply of rolling stock - Siemens , Bombardier and Hitachi are all offering new build, while Porterbrook is proposing reconditioned stock cascaded from from the National Rail network modified for use on the ELL.


STATIONS


''In order from north to south''



PROPOSED EXTENSIONS

Extensions of the East London Line have been discussed for many years, with the intention of expanding the line from a small stub in the network to a major transport artery. In 1998, London Transport announced that it was seeking private funds to realise plans that had been discussed for some years to extend the line into south London, sharing track and stations with the main line network (as already happens on parts of the Bakerloo Line , District Line and Metropolitan Line ).

In 1999, proposals emerged for the East London Line and other "sub-surface" London Underground lines to be transferred to Railtrack (now Network Rail ), responsible for maintaining the national rail network. This would have seen the line being integrated with the London suburban commuter network. Because of an inability to extend the platforms at the existing Wapping and Rotherhithe stations and make them fully compliant with current rail safety regulations, it was thought that they would be closed, but on 18 August 2004 Ken Livingstone , Mayor Of London , announced that both stations will remain open, at least when Phase 1 of the project opens in 2010.

After the Government gave the go-ahead on 9 October 2001 , the construction of the northern extension was due to begin in December 2001. However, it was held up when it came to light that Grade I Listed 17th Century Braithwaite arches in the former Bishopsgate Goods Yard was to be demolished as part of the project. Campaigners launched legal action against London Underground in an effort to prevent the demolition, but the project finally received legal clearance in the Court Of Appeal on 7 July 2003 . It is now anticipated that the northerly extension should open in 2010 (at least to Dalston ), in time for the 2012 Summer Olympics being held in London, a timescale confirmed by the project team in January 2006. As part of the work for the extension, the entire line will be closed for eighteen months in the spring of 2008 . {Link without Title}

This triple extension project is the first London Underground project to be funded through a Private Finance Initiative scheme, though the recent Jubilee Line Extension project was funded through a similar Public-Private Partnership scheme. The project will cost some £ 600 million and is projected to yield £10 billion in economic regeneration. It is still not entirely certain whether it will be completed, as the Treasury has not yet confirmed the full funding. On 12 October 2004 the Mayor of London formally confirmed that phase one of the East London Line Project would be delivered as part of the Capital Investment programme. A month later, on 16 November , he announced that control of the project had formally passed from the Strategic Rail Authority to Transport For London , so that the project may be initiated and funded from TfL's five-year investment programme. The planned service is described as a "metro-style (National Rail) train service" {Link without Title} , although it seems that at present the plan is that the line will retain the London Underground branding.

Apart from the Braithwaite arches, the route of the northern extension was uncontroversial, as it was essentially confined to reusing the disused viaduct to the former Broad Street Station . By contrast, the southerly route underwent many changes. The initial 1999 proposal mooted four options, all starting south of Surrey Quays:



Northern extension

As a part of phase 1 of the extension project, the line is to be extended northwards from Whitechapel, with new stations created at Shoreditch High Street , Hoxton , Haggerston and Dalston Junction . In phase 2, the line will be extended to run parallel to the North London Line , going through Canonbury and terminating at Highbury & Islington , for interchange with the Victoria Line , North London Line and Northern City Line . The northern extension will require only about 4 Km of new railway to be constructed, as existing but disused trackbeds (principally the Broad Street viaduct) will be used for most of the distance.

Shoreditch , currently served only in peak hours and on Sunday mornings, is sheduled for permanent closure in June 2006, and will join the lengthy list of Closed London Underground Stations . The new tracks will diverge before the current Shoreditch station, traverse the former site of the Bishopsgate Goods Yard, before running north along the Broad Street Viaduct. A New Shoreditch Station will be located near to Shoreditch High Street. Statutory planning powers for the extension were granted in January 1997.

Early in the project's life mention was made of the possibility of further extending the line from Highbury , to Finsbury Park to the north, and Willesden Junction to the west, by way of Camden Road , Primrose Hill and Queen's Park , following the above-ground Network Rail North London Line tracks. This was known as the Mayor's Orbirail project. These ideas are not in the present project. The project's web site states that Finsbury Park is omitted because of operational complexity and says that the Willesden Junction branch could be considered as a separate project in the future.


Western extension

As a part of phase 2 of the extension project, a 2.5 Km link is planned to connect the line south of Surrey Quays to the overground Network Rail South London Line to Clapham Junction , by way of Queens Road Peckham , Peckham Rye , Denmark Hill , Clapham High Street and Wandsworth Road . A new station at Surrey Canal Road would also be built. Initially, it was planned to run this line via East Dulwich to Wimbledon, but this plan has been shelved, probably permanently.


Southern extension

In phase 1, the line will also be extended with a flyover link at New Cross Gate Station to the Network Rail Brighton Line , through Brockley, Honor Oak Park, Forest Hill, Sydenham, Penge West, Crystal Palace (by way of a branch), Anerley and Norwood Junction and terminating at West Croydon. Beyond the construction of a train servicing facility and flyover at New Cross Gate, little work will be needed to achieve this. Both of these plans were approved in October 2001.

There was some campaigning for this extension to go further to Sutton , but estimates indicated that passenger usage would be so great that the line would be unable to take much traffic north of West Croydon and this option was not adopted.


EXTERNAL LINKS



REFERENCES

Various sources have been used in the creation of this article, including the external links above, .