New Signalling Goes Live from Hammersmith to Latimer Road


Local tube line is first to benefit from upgraded system

The new Thales signalling system will boost capacity on four Tube lines and this local section is the first part of the network to benefit from the improvements.

The new signalling system will allow trains to run closer together on the Circle, District, Hammersmith & City and Metropolitan lines, meaning the train frequency will increase in central London from 28 to 32 per hour when complete.

TfL says it will also improve the reliability of these lines. The frequency increases will be introduced from 2021, with the project targeted for completion in 2023.

This will lead to a capacity increase of a third on the four lines, equivalent to the space for an extra 36,500 customers during peak times.

This modernisation programme will eventually transform the oldest parts of the Tube network into one of the most modern railways in the world, providing better customer information and making journeys quicker and more comfortable.

The new, state-of-the-art signal control centre at Hammersmith is already operational, and the new S-stock Tube trains have been running exclusively on the four lines since 2017.

Stuart Harvey, TfL's Director of Major Projects, said: "The modernisation of these four lines will make a massive difference to hundreds of thousands of customers every day by making journeys quicker and more comfortable.

"It will also make customer information more accurate and improve reliability in the long-term. The introduction of the first section of new signalling is a really exciting step for the Tube, and for everyone who uses these lines."

TfL says that although there is a chance of some short delays on the Circle and Hammersmith & City lines as the new system gets underway, so far it has been working well. It has worked hard to make the system as reliable as possible, and plans have been put into place to ensure that any potential delays are kept to an absolute minimum.

The modernisation of the four lines will mean that some of the oldest equipment on the Tube network will be replaced. This includes signal boxes across the network, including one at Edgware Road that was built in 1926.

The lines carry a combined 1.3 million customers per day, all of whom are already benefitting from the new, walk-through, air-conditioned trains that were introduced for the first time in 2010.

The programme will play a key part in encouraging more people to use public transport, contributing to the Mayor's target of 80 per cent of journeys made by public transport, cycling or walking by 2041. Other projects, like the improvement of timetables and provision of better accessibility across the network, will also play an important role.

March 29, 2019