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London's rail passengers will soon be able to board the 'London Overground',
under plans announced by Ken Livingstone, Mayor of London. The new
brand, complete with its own TfL 'Roundel', was unveiled at London's
City Hall on 5 September 2006.
From November 2007, 'London Overground' train services will operate
on the North London Railway under the management of Transport for
London (TfL), when it assumes responsibility for the line from the
Department for Transport.
Operating under a new TfL London Rail Concession, 'London Overground'
services will also run on the East London Railway when it opens in
2010, following TfL's £1bn extension of the existing East London
Line.
The contract to run 'London Overground' services on both these lines
will be awarded by TfL to a single train operator, under strict conditions
to meet TfL's requirements for safety, security, staffing, ticketing
and train frequency.
Launching his vision for the 'London Overground', the Mayor Ken Livingstone
said:'For decades, national rail services in London have been neglected
and in many cases under-utilised.
The Mayor signalled his commitment to deliver a rail link at Dalston
Junction to connect the North and East London Railways by 2010, ahead
of the London 2012 Olympics. This will allow 'London Overground' passengers
to travel between Richmond and West Croydon via Dalston Junction and
is the first step towards an orbital rail link for London. The Mayor
continued: 'By joining together the North and East London Railways
ahead of the London 2012 Olympics, we will create a new rail artery
around the city, serving 20 London boroughs.'This will create new
opportunities for Londoners and encourage inclusion across our diverse
economic and cultural centres.
'It will also be a vital means of increasing capacity on public transport
as London's population grows over the next twenty years.'
Other Improvements
From November 2007, 'London Overground' passengers will benefit from
a programme of improvements to stations and services on the North
London Railway, funded by TfL's £10bn Investment Programme.
These include:
More staff at stations to provide assistance and reassurance
Oyster ticketing at all stations and more ticket gates to improve
security and reduce fare evasion
A phased programme of station upgrades, delivering more help
points, CCTV, better lighting and customer information systems
A fleet of new trains from 2009 that are more comfortable,
more accessible, have greater capacity and the latest security features
The provision for longer trains and more frequent services
in the future, subject to infrastructure improvements which are outside
the remit of TfL
Ian Brown, Managing Director, TfL London Rail added: 'TfL's policy
is to put passengers first and we look forward to putting this into
practice on London's rail network from November next year. 'Over the
next few years we hope to develop the 'London Overground' to its full
potential, using TfL's values to raise security and standards for
rail passengers, as we have for other transport modes in London. 'TfL's
vision for the 'London Overground' is a safe and secure railway with
frequent, Metro-style train services. Passengers will benefit from
a better quality of service with new, reliable trains, staffed stations
and Oyster ticketing to ensure consistent fares. 'We want the 'London
Overground' to be as comfortable and familiar to Londoners and visitors
to the capital as the London Underground. We're entering a new era
for London Rail and this is just the beginning.'
The 'London Overground' brand will join the TfL family as a new orange
roundel, featuring on trains, stations and maps, including TfL's world-famous
Tube map.
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